mardi 30 septembre 2014

Ronaldinho signs pitch invader's shirt during match, later scores with well placed free kick


Ronaldinho has now played four matches for Mexican club Queretaro and the excitement over his presence is holding strong. So strong that some people can't even wait until the end of a match to ask for his autograph.


In the 51st minute of Queretaro's match against Atlas, a pitch invader in a Brazil shirt interrupted play when he sprinted up to Ronaldinho and handed him a pen. Ronaldinho, being the obliging sort that he is, signed the man's shirt and sent him on his way, with a member of staff escorting him away. The match was then able to carry on, thankfully without everyone else in the stadium attempting to get Ronaldinho autographs of their own.


With Atlas up 2-0 in the final seconds of injury time, Ronaldinho denied the opposing keeper's clean sheet by converting a free kick from a position that would've been a gimme for him if this were some sort of weird golf football hybrid game.



The Brazilian now has two goals and an assist in his four matches with his new club.


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Brooks Peck is the editor of Dirty Tackle on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him or follow on Twitter!






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Mats Hummels on big money transfer rumors: 'Dortmund pay me enough'

(Photo by Christof Koepsel/Bongarts/Getty Images) Borussia Dortmund defender Mats Hummels has confused top footballers and corporate executives everywhere by saying he makes "enough" money and ruling out a move just for the sake of a pay increase. The World Cup winner has reportedly become a transfer target for Manchester United, who have been shelling out big money in the transfer market this year in an attempt to quickly climb back to the top of the Premier League. But Hummels' latest comments would suggest that he won't be tempted with cash alone.


From the Telegraph:


"It's nice to hear that big clubs like that are interested in you," he told Bundesliga Magazine International. "I take that as a compliment. But it doesn't influence me in any way, otherwise. We earn enough here in Dortmund.

"There will always be someone who can pay more than BVB. But Dortmund have made a lot of progress during my time here. In any case: I believe that it's enough for me. If one day I start thinking about playing abroad, money won't be the reason. But I don't even think about that at the moment. We still have so much further to go here."

After so many top players have left Dortmund for bigger clubs (namely Bayern Munich, where Hummels began his career) in recent years, Jurgen Klopp will likely interpret this as a cruel ruse intended to drive up Hummels' price in January. That or he will hug the defender forever and repeatedly thank him as he weeps tears of joy.


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Brooks Peck is the editor of Dirty Tackle on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him or follow on Twitter!






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Denver Nuggets mascot Rocky appeared at a Colorado GOP rally, upsetting the franchise

Sep 29, 2014; Denver, CO, USA; Denver Nuggets mascot Rocky poses for a portrait during media day at the Pepsi Center. (Isaiah J. Downing-USA TODAY Sports) Professional sports franchises, like most businesses, do whatever they can to appeal to the most potential consumers possible. In most cases, this means that they shy away from making any statements or stands that could offend a sizable portion of their fan base. Few topics divide more than politics, and so teams typically reserve comments on social issues for special occasions in which a groundswell of support makes silence untenable. This phenomenon is certainly not unique to the NBA or other leagues, but it's apparent enough that any crossing of that line tends to stand out.


An official mascot appearing at an event for a state political party would seem to qualify. Rocky, the plush mountain lion who represents the Denver Nuggets, showed up alongside 2012 presidential candidate Mitt Romney and others at a rally for the Colorado Republican Committee and the party's various candidates for office this November. This tweet proves as much (via Deadspin):



Rocky poses with Colorado GOP members and candidates (via Deadspin).

The tweet was deleted soon after its posting. All registered voters, even those who wear animal costumes, are able to support any candidates they wish. Of course, most don't do so in association with a major sports franchise, and that has upset Rocky's bosses with the Nuggets. From David Krause for The Denver Post:


Nuggets marketing manager Graham Wincott, who handles Rocky and his appearances, said the team's mascot showing up at the GOP event was "an unsanctioned, unpaid appearance that we had no knowledge of." [...] "As a sports team, we want to be apolitical," Wincott said. "Two things we never touch on are politics and religion." [...]

Wincott said the matter was being handled "internally" but the organization is setting "new protocol for anyone who wears a mascot uniform for a Kroenke sports team."

Ken Solomon has played Rocky for more than 20 years. As Rocky, he posed for pictures Monday and danced on stage with various GOP volunteers at the event before the political speeches began. [...]

"I was surprised and pleased to see Rocky before the rally yesterday, and understand he was there at the invitation and as a guest of a long-time supporter of Mitt Romney and Bob Beauprez," Colorado Republican Party chairman Ryan Call wrote in an e-mail Tuesday. "Although he did not play a role in the formal program, it was terrific to see him interacting with Nuggets fans and putting smiles on the faces of people in the gathering crowd before the rally started.

"I'm sure everyone understands that his appearance in no way implies an endorsement by the Denver Nuggets of any candidate or party. Nuggets fans also understand that even Rocky has First Amendment rights and the Colorado Republican Party stands with him."

It's hard to know where to start when a report involves someone saying that Mitt Romney knows an NBA mascot well enough to extend a personal invitation to a political rally, but let's begin by noting that Rocky does not have First Amendment rights because he is a creation of the Denver Nuggets, not a citizen of the United States. Ken Solomon does have those rights, though, which is why he has received a stern talking-to and maybe a punishment from bosses instead of being taken off to jail for dancing with a bunch of political candidates and GOP officials. I assume that Call does not want businesses to lose their legal ability to discipline their own employees internally. Plus, Stan Kroenke, owner of Kroenke Sports Enterprises, is known as a longtime Republican (though he has given to Democratic candidates, including U.S. senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri in 2012), so the Nuggets aren't exactly carrying the flag for the GOP's opposition.


The issue here isn't just that dunking off trampolines doesn't have a lot to do with repealing Obamacare, but that Solomon used an image associated with the Nuggets in the service of political candidates. It's understandable that he would feel some ownership of the Rocky character after 20 years. However, the Colorado GOP presumably wanted him there because the Nuggets are a popular organization in the area and it would be beneficial to connect with their brand. It's the sort of appearance that must be cleared with the franchise first, because Rocky is more a symbol for the Nuggets than a freestanding character. It's easy to see the team acting similarly if Rocky showed up at a restaurant to dance for an endless appetizers promotion.


It probably didn't help matters that it was a political event, especially given that the event was not limited to Republican challenger for governor Bob Beauprez and could therefore be seen as a broader stance a month away from an election, when animosity between parties can get fairly intense. Franchises will support certain controversial causes when they deem it appropriate, but aligning with an entire party suggests deeply held allegiances. A single issue can eventually become less prominent over time — ideology doesn't go away easily.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Geovany Soto leaves wild-card game with thumb injury after play at the plate

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Oakland A's catcher Geovany Soto left the game with what the team said was a left thumb injury after a play at the plate with the Kansas City Royals' Eric Hosmer in the first inning.


Hosmer attempted to score after A's pitcher Jon Lester picked Billy Butler off at first base. As Butler got into a rundown, Hosmer broke for home and was out for the third out of the inning.


The tag from Soto was high up on Hosmer's body and Soto's glove ricocheted off Hosmer.




Soto batted in the top of the second inning and struck out looking. He was replaced by Derek Norris behind the plate. Soto, who was acquired from the Rangers in August, hit .262 with a .354 on-base percentage and a .357 slugging percentage in 49 plate appearances with the A's.


His absence may hurt the A's most defensively. The Royals have the most stolen bases in baseball and Soto caught nine of 17 baserunners stealing with the A's this year. Norris has thrown out 12 in 72 stolen base attempts against him. He's also never caught Jon Lester, who the A's acquired before the trade deadline from the Boston Red Sox.


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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Royals fans soak in the feeling of the team's first playoff game in 29 years (Photos)

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – As Royals fans poured into Kauffman Stadium Tuesday night for their team's wild card game against the Oakland A's, you had to look harder than usual to spot George Brett jerseys.


Five years ago, the star of the Royals' 1985 World Series win and last playoff appearance might have been the most popular player apparel item. While the links to the ghosts of the Royals' 29-year playoff drought were visible – there were a few fans wearing shirts from that series with the Cardinals, including Mark Gruber's Don Denkinger shirt (pictured at right) – Tuesday night was all about the present.


When you're the fan of a team always thinking back to the glory days of a World Series that gets further and further in the rearview while simultaneously waiting for next year, living in the present is an odd feeling. And one Royals fans were ready to seize.


"I was 6 years old [when the Royals went to the World Series]," Morgan Grippin said while donning a Royals flag like a cape. "I don't remember a thing. This is, in my opinion, my very first playoff game ever."


Chad Ayler was also 6 during the Royals' last success. He was in a full gorilla costume.




Alex Hankins was 11 months old when the Royals beat the Cardinals. When the Royals clinched a playoff berth on Friday night against the White Sox, he terrified his 16-month-old daughter.


"I was screaming so loud that that I scared her," Hankins said. "She started crying and we started jumping together and cheering."


Mike and Donna Shields are Royals season ticket-holders. While the 13 years they've had tickets seems like a long time, it's shudder-worthy when you realize it's less than half the length of the Royals' futility, which was the longest playoff drought in sports.


"We have been and we will continue to be Royals season ticket-holders and come to games," Donna Shields said. "But this is the best feeling ever."


And it's a feeling that Royals fans all know could be fleeting.


"My feeling is: I've got to come tonight because no matter how far we go, we might win the World Series this year, but who knows, it could be 29 years," Grippin said. "Who knows when we'll get back."


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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Iowa plans to play both Jake Rudock and C.J. Beathard at quarterback

Iowa has a bye this week, but it won’t be using its extra time to narrow down whom will be its No. 1 quarterback moving forward this season.


Offensive coordinator Greg Davis said Tuesday that once junior Jake Rudock returns to action after recovering from a hip injury, the Hawkeyes will split playing time between Rudock and sophomore C.J. Beathard.


“Jake is about 80%, so we'd start C.J. if we played today. We don't play today. We play in ten days or 11 days, whatever it is. We feel like we have two good quarterbacks, and we'll look at it in these next 11 days and then we'll go from there,” Davis said. “What you can expect is that we'll probably play two with no set series, numbers or whatever. We feel like we have two guys that have earned the right to play and have played pretty well. So that's the way we'll approach it.”


Rudock started the first four games for the 4-1 Hawkeyes, but went down with a hip pointer against Pitt. Beathard came on in relief and completed 7-of-8 passes for 98 yards in a comeback 24-20 win. With Rudock still injured, Beathard started over the weekend at Purdue and struggled, completing just 46 percent of his passes in a 24-10 win.


Before his injury, Rudock threw for 798 yards and five touchdowns while completing 66.9 percent of his passes. Despite Rudock’s solid play, Davis and the coaching staff believe Beathard has shown enough to earn playing time.


“I thought (Beathard) handled the Pitt game extremely well,” Davis said. “He made a third down conversion in that ballgame that was pretty special. They brought a blitz and did a nice job with the hot receiver and he reset his feet and found the second receiver. It was a big time play. We like the two quarterbacks. We're going to play both of them right now.”


Davis said there won’t be any special packages or formations designated to a particular guy or even a percentage of snaps devoted either way. The coaches will simply go by feel and ride the hot hand.


“We want to see who is playing better on that particular day,“ Davis said. “I’m not talking about any kind of sequence or numbers. Part of it will be a feel. Part of it will be we definitely want to play two guys.”


The coaching staff is confident that both quarterbacks will be comfortable with the arrangement moving forward, even though Beathard was the clear backup who attempted only three passes prior to Rudock’s injury.


“I think they'll totally be fine. They're good guys and they're good players. I think they both know the other guy’s pretty good. They're not blind to the fact that the other guy does some pretty good stuff also,” Davis said.


Seven regular season games remain on the schedule, giving the two ample time to try to outperform the other. In the end, Davis thinks that’s exactly what will happen – one quarterback will separate himself from his competition.


“The truth is, as a staff, we think we have to (play two QBs) and we're going to play two, and at some point it will shake itself up.”


For more Iowa news, visit HawkeyeReport.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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Kevin Martin swears he didn't know Kevin Love was traded until training camp hit

Former Minnesota Timberwolves superstar Kevin Love was, in effect, dealt to the Cleveland Cavaliers during the first week of August. The Wolves and Cavs could not execute the deal until Aug. 23 because of the NBA’s bylaws regarding the trading of rookies, but eventually the two teams did follow through on the agreed-upon move to send Love (in essence) to Cleveland for youngsters Andrew Wiggins, Anthony Bennett, and scoring forward Thaddeus Young.


That’s a pretty large franchise shift, especially for a player in Kevin Martin who decided to join Minnesota two summers ago so as to ride out his prime with a knowing coach in Rick Adelman (since retired) and a sweet-shooting forward in Kevin Love (since traded). Trading a 26-and-12 guy for a couple of young men born during the Clinton Administration would seem to be a bit of a lifestyle shift, especially for a player about to enter his 11th NBA season, as Martin is.


A season that Martin, unless he was pulling off the driest sense of dry humor in Minnesota’s history since the last time someone from Minnesota pulled off some dry humor (they’re really good at it!), didn’t know until recently would start with Kevin Love in Cleveland.


From Jerry Zgoda at the Pioneer-Press:



“I didn’t know Kevin Love got traded until yesterday,” Martin said with a straight face at Monday’s annual media day at Target Center that preceded a midnight start to training camp in Mankato. “I’m not big on looking at blogs and all that.”



That’s, I suppose, possible.


To credit “blogs” for solely dealing in rumor is a little 2005-ish, what with most websites, cable TV channels, tickers, radio, social media, and, I dunno, OTHER PLAYERS IN THE NBA INCLUDING YOUR TEAMMATES possibly talking about the potential trade involving the most prominent teammate on the franchise that you work for. Not only did Adrian Wojnarowski break the story for our website weeks before the deal could be legally finalized, but if an agreement to deal Adrian Wojnarowski away from Yahoo Sports were agreed upon and released to the press, I’d probably find out at some point after seven weeks between the beginning of August and the end of September. And I’m not even on Facebook.


Still, there’s no way Kevin Martin didn’t know, right? He has to be keeping his tongue placed firmly in cheek. That’s the way you attempt to keep yourself sane while you prepare to enter life as a 31-year old shooting guard alongside a cadre of (however fantastically entertaining) youngsters. It’s only normal, especially when faced with endless questions (off record) from friends, family and teammates as to just how you’ll deal with work without Kevin Love around.


If Kevin Martin does need some blog suggestions, though, I’ve got an idea of where he can go.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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The 10-man rotation, starring the unique resolution to the Morris twins' contract negotiation

Markieff (left) and Marcus Morris might need a refresher on how Instagram works. (Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports) A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


C: Bright Side of the Sun. From Phoenix Suns Media Day, Dave King relays the story of how the team re-upped twin brothers Markieff Morris and Marcus Morris to four-year contract extensions: "With the agreement of managing partner Robert Sarver and GM Ryan McDonough, [president of basketball operations Lon Babby] offered a total of $52 million over 4 years to the brothers as a package deal, and asked them to split it how they wanted."


PF: Charlotte Observer. Rick Bonnell takes a look at all the work the Charlotte Hornets have put into breaking down and rebuilding Michael Kidd-Gilchrist's busted jumper: "'Does it feel that different? Well, it’s going in a lot more,' Kidd-Gilchrist said with a big grin."


SF: The Starters. Sure, you could stop with just Marcin Gortat and Martell Webster when identifying the Washington Wizards as brands of sexual chocolate, but if you did, you wouldn't be Trey Kerby.


SG: Heat.com. Good stuff from Couper Moorhead on how "flex four" Josh McRoberts — who, as I wrote earlier this summer, was sort of a weird combination of a stretch four and a point forward for the Charlotte Bobcats last year — could represent the Miami Heat's best chances of maintaining a top-10 offense in the aftermath of LeBron James' departure.


PG: The New Republic. Christopher Beam has more details on that Chinese play starring Stephon Marbury: "For a show named after Marbury, starring Marbury, 'I Am Marbury' actually contains very little Marbury […] Marbury is less a character in the show than an idea, i.e., that underdogs can triumph."


6th: Waiting for Next Year. A fun graphic-inspired breakdown of the game of Dion Waiters, who may be the wild card for the championship-hopeful Cleveland Cavaliers.


7th: Denver Post. Amid media-day optimism in Colorado, Benjamin Hochman sees some familiar dark skies hovering over the Denver Nuggets: "Once again, we're hearing that a Ty Lawson-Gallinari-Faried nucleus can win a playoff series. Once again, this is the season Denver takes a step up."


8th: The Triangle. Zach Lowe on how the 2011 collective bargaining agreement created conditions that make establishing and maintaining continuity borderline impossible in today's NBA, and what that means for teams trying to open, and keep open, title-competing windows.


9th: USA TODAY Sports. Sam Amick takes a ride with Kevin Durant, and the reigning NBA Most Valuable Player opens up — about free agency, about all the "come back to D.C." talk, about building something with the Oklahoma City Thunder, and more — in a way we've rarely seen over the years. (The cutting-room floor material wasn't half-bad, either.)


10th: Detroit News. Vincent Goodwill talks at length with Stan Van Gundy about how the heck he's going to juggle the "nine guys who very fairly consider themselves starters" on the Detroit Pistons, headlined by the seemingly ill-fitting frontcourt troika of Andre Drummond, Greg Monroe and Josh Smith.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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David Beckham, Jay-Z and Beyonce have a splendid time together at the PSG-Barcelona match

Everyone who doesn't wear cargo shorts and Crocs on a daily basis is currently in Paris for Fashion Week. And since they can only look at so many models dressed in things that aren't actually clothing, David Beckham, Jay-Z and Beyonce decided to attend PSG's Champions League match against Barcelona together.


Beckham, who finished his career with PSG in 2013, served as the couple's host as they watched PSG mount a 3-2 victory in the company of former Italy captain Fabio Cannavaro and France manager Didier Deschamps. Jay-Z is on record as an Arsenal fan but he and Beyonce were surely just at the Parc des Princes to say that they were in the same building as true power couple Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Helena Seger.



 (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

Jay-Z: So If I invest in your MLS Miami team you'll call the club "JZ Alkmaar"? Like the Dutch club?


Beckham: Yes, I would be willing to do that.


Jay-Z: I don't know, man. That's pretty corny.


Beckham: Fine. It can be anything you want. I just really need this. That city is giving me so many headaches that I can no longer concentrate on my underwear designs. You know y-front underwear? I tried to create y-backs. It didn't work. At all.


Beyonce: I've been critical of Laurent Blanc's insistence on using a 4-3-3 formation in the past, but it's working out nicely here. That could be more a comment on Barcelona early in the post-Carles Puyol era, though. Anyway, are you sure Kim Kardashian isn't going to be here? If she shows up, we're flying to Germany for the second half of Schalke-Maribor.


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Brooks Peck is the editor of Dirty Tackle on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him or follow on Twitter!






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Power Rankings: Three drivers, one top spot. Who gets it?

Our Power Rankings are far from a scientific formula. In fact, it's the perfect blend of analytics and bias against your favorite driver. And you think we dislike your favorite driver, so it makes sense, right? Direct all your complaints to us at happyhourmailbag@yahoo.com.


1. Brad Keselowski (LW: 1): We're not going to dump Keselowski from the top spot for finishing second. That's cruel and unusual punishment. While we realize we're suggesting tweaks to a Chase system that seems like it's constantly tweaked, but what if drivers got three bonus points for the next round of the Chase for winning a race in the previous round? It'd give Keselowski, Joey Logano and Jeff Gordon something to show for the their wins, even if it was a net of three positions in a single race.



2. Joey Logano (LW: 2): We mentioned this in Happy Hour on Thursday, but Logano has quietly become one of the best in the Cup Series. That was evident again on Sunday where he finished fourth. Sure, he didn't have the best car or even led a lap, but if Logano keeps this up, don't act surprised when he's going for the title at Homestead.



3. Jeff Gordon (LW: 6): This isn't a slight to Gordon putting him here. Would you really put him above Logano or Keselowski at this point? And if so, why? It's close, but the flat tire at New Hampshire puts Gordon at the third of three. He's the defending champion at Kansas and Charlotte is up after that. Gordon could tie Keselowski's win total soon, assuming Keselowski doesn't win a race.



4. Jimmie Johnson (LW: 5): Six-time's finishes in the first three races went 12th, fifth and third. Only in his world can that be considered a disappointment. I Johnson keeps that up, it should be good enough to get in the last race. An average finish of between sixth and seventh is going to be incredibly tough to beat. But we're going to go out on a limb and say Johnson wins a race in the next round.



5. Kevin Harvick (LW: 3): Harvick's season is a broken record. We all know why he's a championship contender. It's the speed he showed at Dover in utterly dominating the race when he was up front. But we all know why there's a big asterisk as well, and it's because of the flat tire. Kansas was a place where Harvick had a mistake to help give Gordon the win in May. He'll have one of the best cars again on Sunday.



6. Kyle Busch (LW: 4): Busch is another example of the lack of separation at the front of the field. He finished in the top 10 in all three races of the first round of the Chase and would be sixth in points if the ponts system didn't reset. But hey, it does, and that's good news for Busch and everyone below him. Now, if Busch could just get a top 10 on Sunday, he'd be all set.



7. Kyle Larson (LW: 7): Another week where Larson was the highest finishing non-Chase driver. If he can keep that up it'll be one hell of a streak and force us to research how proficient Larson is being among non-qualifying drivers. Given how well Larson performed at Chicago, we're preparing to dive deep into the archives.



8. Matt Kenseth (LW: 9): A top-five is good enough for Kenseth to swap spots with Junior. It didn't feel like Kenseth was in danger of being eliminated from the Chase, but he was only eight points ahead of Denny Hamlin, who was in 13th before the race. Finishing fifth meant a drama-free day for Kenseth.



9. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (LW: 8): Junior was not happy after finishing 17th, saying his team never was competitive for a moment throughout Sunday's race. Plus, he said it's not good enough to win a championship. He's right, the lack of top speed the No. 88 team has shown so far in the Chase won't win them a title, but it'll probably be good enough to advance to the final eight.



10. Ryan Newman (LW: NR): Newman's eighth place finish was his 11th top 10 all year. Not a good omen for his title hopes. But if you're looking for one, here it is. The drivers eliminated on Sunday were the top four drivers in a ranking of A-Z of the last names of Chase drivers. If the eliminaton by alphabet thing becomes a trend, congratulations, Newman. He'll be the last driver standing.



11. Carl Edwards (LW: NR): Edwards finished 11th, so we'll put him 11th. And 11th s pretty close to where Edwards would be over the course of the season. (He'd be ninth.) It's not going to be a surprise if Edwards makes the final eight and it won't be a surprise if he misses it. Making the final four is a different story.



12. Denny Hamlin (LW: NR): Hamlin was 12th and advanced to the Chase because everyone else around him had days that were considerably worse than his. Given that Hamlin had a bad day the week before to put him in that position, you can't say that he feels too lucky to benefit from others' misfortune.


Lucky Dog: Martin Truex Jr. finished seventh. It's just his fourth top-10 of the season.


The DNF: Aric Almirola needed a good run and was instead 28th.


Dropped out: Almirola, Allmendinger, McMurray


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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Oregon wearing black and pink jerseys Thursday (Photo)

Oregon won't be wearing pink helmets Thursday night against Arizona but the Ducks will still have pink accents to support women's cancer awareness.


The school revealed this year's uniforms via Twitter on Tuesday.



Last year's uniforms had pink helmets and socks while the numbers and trim were Oregon's colors. This year, the helmet is black and the numbers and name on the backs will be in pink. There will also be pink shoe options as well.



While the pink helmets were a cool look, overall, these uniforms look better than last year's did because of the matching numbers and trim. With the gray trim and matte black helmet, these are sharp without looking garish.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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The 10 most intriguing players of the MLB postseason

Playoff baseball is upon us. Ten teams have a chance at advancing to the World Series, and they'll need a combination of great performances and great luck to get there. This time of year isn't just about stars excelling. It's also about a player making a big play when it's most needed.



Likewise, when you're thinking about the most intriguing players of the postseason, it's not always just a team's biggest star (though in some cases, that player is the most intriguing). Our list of most intriguing players includes guys with a compelling story, guys who could be a hero, guys with a lot on the line.



So here they are, 10 players we'll be watching — some for different reasons than others — as the MLB postseason begins. Click the image of Mike Trout above to begin the slideshow and read about each player.


More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:



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Mike Oz is an editor for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Congressman asks Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany to investigate Shane Morris incident

U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr., a Congressman from New Jersey, reached out to Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany Tuesday, urging him to launch an investigation into Michigan’s handling of quarterback Shane Morris on Saturday against Minnesota.


Pascrell is the co-founder and co-chair of the Congressional Brain Injury Task Force and wrote in his letter to Delany that “allowing a possibly concussed player to determine whether or not he is fit to return to play not only violates common sense, but is also an egregious violation of standard concussion protocol.”


The play in question occurred in the fourth quarter of the Wolverines’ home loss to Minnesota. Morris, a sophomore quarterback, was hit hard in the helmet and was visibly dazed as he stood up. Despite needing to lean on teammates in order to maintain his balance, Morris looked to the sideline and waved off coaches and trainers and stayed in the game for an additional play. Later on, he returned to the game for another play after his backup, Devin Gardner, was forced to come out for a play when his helmet came off.


Pascrell’s letter then cites head coach Brady Hoke’s comments about the situation from Monday.



“During a press conference on Monday afternoon, Michigan coach Brady Hoke initially stated that he “[didn’t] know if [Morris] has a concussion or not.” Hoke also stated that "Shane's a pretty competitive, tough kid. And Shane wanted to be the quarterback, and so, believe me, if he didn't want to be, he would've come to the sideline or stayed down." Allowing a possibly concussed player to determine whether or not he is fit to return to play not only violates common sense, but is also an egregious violation of standard concussion protocol, including protocol set forth by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Big Ten Conference.”



Pascrell then asks for Delany to investigate the matter and “reexamine the protocols in place and what changes can be made to improve them” while also establishing “penalties for violations of concussion protocols.”


Since Hoke addressed the media Monday afternoon, Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon released a statement early Tuesday morning saying that Morris did, in fact, suffer a concussion and apologized for miscommunications which allowed Morris to continue playing.


The entire letter from Pascrell to Delany can be viewed here.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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Why should Trey Burke have to apologize for taking nude pictures of himself?

Perhaps I’m missing something here.


Actually, I know I’m missing something here. By choice I’m working without a working knowledge of what Utah Jazz guard Trey Burke looks like without his clothes on, which is not something I can say for dozens of other athletes I’ve been around in various states of undress while working in NBA locker rooms. Burke’s reason for disrobing wasn’t to change back into his everyday clothes following a Jazz game, in this instance, as apparently he took nude photos of himself and sent them to someone who apparently appreciated receiving those sorts of photos via phone.


As, you may have heard, thousands if not millions of people do.


(I understand that feigning ignorance before lecturing an audience is a common sportswriter trope, but this genuinely does baffle me.)


Unless there’s something we’ve yet to learn, Burke wasn’t sending unsolicited photos to someone. He wasn’t harassing someone who wanted nothing to do with pictures like these. If it turns out that Burke was harassing a second party in texting the intended against their wishes, we’ll be the first in line to characterize the person who received and then released the photos as a victim in this case. Guys, if they don’t want it, don’t do that.


If Burke did share these photos with someone who was into that, and they decided (after, presumably, a relationship’s end) to leak them, then why are we getting statements from Burke like this:



"Publicly, I want to first and foremost apologize to my family [and] apologize to the Miller family, as well as my teammates," he said. "We already talked about it in the locker room. From this day forward, it won't happen again. They were old pictures. They were meant to be kept private but they weren't. So from this day forward my actions and my judgments will be much better."



And this:



"We were made aware of the situation this morning," general manager Dennis Lindsey said. "We’ve collected a lot of the facts. We still have a few things to collect and a couple of people to visit with. It’s safe to say … that we are disappointed in what we’ve learned so far but we are going to move forward. At this point in time, we’re collecting facts and we’re going to reserve final judgment for a later date."



Why is Trey Burke apologizing for having photos of his leaked onto the internet?


There’s been a rash of this recently, as you know, mainly centered on female celebrities having personal pictures of themselves (or, as it presumably is in Burke’s case, pictures sent to prospective or current partners) being stolen and posted to the internet for morons that apparently have a really tough time finding pictures of willingly naked ladies on the internet.


Viewers of these photos, and to a far greater extent the criminals behind the theft of these photos, were rightfully shamed (if, sadly, not prosecuted yet) in one of the few recent internet movements that actually should make you feel good for humanity in general. Also understand that this is not a pathetic men’s rights (just typing that phrase has me shaking my damn head) treatise, as I’d write the same thing if a female NBA executive was forced to publicly apologize for something that someone else on the other end of a phone did wrong. Or “illegally,” even.


Unless we find out that Burke was making someone’s life miserable by pushing out photos of himself to someone that didn’t want those sorts of photos on their phones, there is absolutely no reason why he should be publicly apologizing. If he wants to personally apologize to his teammates and the Miller family (who own the Utah Jazz, as you no doubt noted in the quote above), fine. Admit embarrassment over the temporary, minor distraction that lasted a day and a half.


Beyond that, though, the Jazz should really clarify what type of disappointment (their word, not mine) that they’re feeling. Are they disappointed that their employee had personal photos of his leaked onto the internet? Disappointed in the breach of privacy and altogether awful thing that someone did to him?


Or are they embarrassed that Trey Burke took photos of himself without clothes on and passed them on to someone else? “Someone else,” in this case, that purportedly was acting as a willing recipient.


If the latter is the case, then we are disappointed in the Utah Jazz. If the latter is the case, Trey Burke should not have to apologize for that. In either case, he should not have to be shamed by media, fans, his teammates, and most of all he should not be shamed by his employer.


Again, if the recipient of the photos did not want the photos, then Trey Burke is in the wrong here. If the Utah Jazz know that this is the case then they shouldn’t be offering press statements, and they should disclose as much prior to working with authorities to make sure everything is on the level. To put it mildly.


If Trey Burke sent photos of himself to a willing partner and that partner decided to leak them onto the internet later, however, then Trey Burke has nothing to apologize for. Absolutely nothing.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Report: Oakland Raiders to name Tony Sparano as interim head coach

The Oakland Raiders are planning to name Tony Sparano their interim head coach, according to ESPN's Jim Trotter.



The Raiders fired head coach Dennis Allen after the team's 0-4 start and 10 straight losses dating back to last season.


[Join FanDuel.com's $1.5 million Week 5 fantasy league: $25 to enter; $150,000 to first]


Sparano had the Raiders' assistant head coach/offensive line coach dating back to the start of last season. It's not clear if he will continue to coach the offensive linemen going forward.


Sparano, who turns 53 next week, has a regular-season head-coaching record of 29-32 (0-1 in the playoffs) from his three-plus seasons with the Miami Dolphins from 2008-2011. Sparano was fired in 2011 after the Dolphins' Week 14 loss that season.


The Raiders are on bye in Week 5. They face the San Diego Chargers in Week 6 five days after Sparano's birthday.


Sparano is not considered a long-term candidate to keep the job — although we suspect we know one man who is.


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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Texas WR John Harris continues the Longhorn trash talk against Baylor

Texas players do not want let Baylor's ascension to the top of the Big 12 go quietly.


Earlier this year, Texas LB Steve Edmond expressed his disdain for the Bears, long the Longhorns' little brother in the state of Texas. Heck, it's more than little sibling. For a while, Baylor was the third of the three other Texas schools in the Big 12.


In the past four seasons, Baylor has finished ahead of Texas in the conference standings three times. The teams meet on Saturday and while Baylor is undefeated and Texas is 2-2, Texas WR John Harris is confident about his team.


“I mean, they’re still Baylor,” Harris said via the Dallas Morning News. “I mean, just because they started playing better in this era, that’s good for them. We are who we are — we’re still Texas. … Baylor has never changed. They are who they are.”


Baylor QB Bryce Petty did not want to get into a war of words.


“Just so we’re clear, not answering any questions about their tweets or whatever,” Petty said.


Baylor coach Art Briles was confused when asked about Harris' remarks.


“Nothing. What am I supposed to say?" Briles asked. "We’re still Baylor, TCU is still TCU, Oklahoma is still Oklahoma. I don’t know what that means.”


While Harris isn't incorrect in his remarks the teams haven't changed, either in name or by very recent history, the history of each team has no bearing (no pun intended) on the outcome of the 2014 game. Baylor is Baylor, in the sense that the Bears have one of the best offenses in the country. In the three seasons Baylor has finished ahead of Texas, it's also beaten the Longhorns. There's no continued dominance by the team in Austin despite the standings.


Baylor is also a two-touchdown (or more) favorite.


"That's something," Texas head coach Charlie Strong said Monday. "They deserve every bit of it. If you watch that team, it's just amazing to see how that team developed over the last three or four years. This season with the quarterback, and the threats they have at the wide receiver position … and you look outside with [WR KD Cannon]. On defense, [LB Bryce Hager] does a great job in the middle of just directing the defense. They have good, strong leadership out of him. They play so well. They play as a team. [Briles] has built that team and built it together. That's probably why were' sitting where we are, and that's why they are where they are right now. They're the number one offense in the country."


Texas is Texas in the sense that, well, the Longhorns do not have the number one offense in the country. While Texas scored 23 points against Kansas, the Longhorns had 24 points combined in the previous two games.


"I think the offense is coming together great," Texas DE Cedric Reed said. "I don't think, I know they are coming along great. Tyrone, he's been leading them really good. Just his progression coming up. It hasn't been one of the greatest, but he's still young. As a defense, we're going to try to pitch a shutout, but if we hold them to under 30 or less points, that will be great."


While we appreciate Reed's optimism, the Texas offense will need a best case scenario to stay competitive, especially if Baylor nudges towards the top of his 30-point threshold, the top mark of a pretty wide range of points. It's pretty improbable that Baylor will score less than 30. The Bears failed to score 30 once last year and in the past three-plus seasons, a span of 43 games, it's happened five times. To win, Texas will likely need to make it six in 44.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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NFL enjoys record TV ratings despite Ray Rice, Adrian Peterson scandals

The media storm surrounding Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti and the NFL has actually led to a TV ratings bonanza. (AP Photo)

Despite the public relations nightmare the NFL has endured throughout the first month of the season, football fans continue to watch in record numbers, according to Reuters.


Following Roger Goodell's highly criticized two-game suspension of former Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice, his concession the league botched the punishment upon TMZ releasing footage of Rice's domestic violence incident and his stumbling through a series of media appearances in the aftermath — not to mention the Minnesota Vikings' mishandling of running back Adrian Peterson during his child abuse case — many fans vowed to stop watching the NFL in protest of a global brand gone awry.


Through the first three weeks of the season, CBS, NBC and ESPN have seen a rise in their NFL broadcast ratings, according to the latest Nielsen data obtained by Reuters. CBS has reportedly seen the most significant jump, skyrocketing from an average of 17.8 million viewers in 2013 to 19.5 million per week this year. Meanwhile, "Sunday Night Football" on NBC has seen a 2 percent increase to 21.8 million viewers, and even ESPN's cable numbers are up slightly to 11.5 million weekly watchers.


While Fox's viewership remains in line with last season (20.7 million vs. 20.5), Sunday's high-profile, down-to-the-wire game between the Philadelphia Eagles and San Francisco 49ers is expected to give those numbers a boost when Week 4 figures become available on Thursday, according to the Reuters report.


If you were among those who figured the NFL was too big to fail in the wake of one of the worst PR months in league history, these latest numbers seem to support that theory, as the viewing audience has actually increased in that span. Then again, people stop to watch car wrecks, too, so it'll be interesting to see if the spike in ratings persists and how the NFL's merchandise has fared in the same timeframe.






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Michael Phelps arrested for DUI in Baltimore

Michael Phelps competes during the 4 x 100m individual medley final at the Pan Pacific Championships in Australia on August 24, 2014 (AFP Photo/Michael Hamilton) Michael Phelps, the winningest Olympian of all time, has been arrested for DUI in Baltimore, police are reporting. Maryland Transit Authority police arrested Phelps about 1:40 a.m. in the Fort McHenry Tunnel on I-95.


“A Maryland Transportation Authority (MDTA) Police Officer was operating stationary radar on southbound I-395 leaving Baltimore City when a White 2014 Land Rover entered the radar’s area of influence at excessive speed (84 mph in a 45 mph zone)," the MDTA said in a statement. "The officer followed the vehicle onto northbound I-95, through the tunnel and initiated an enforcement stop just beyond the tunnel’s toll plaza. Mr. Phelps was identified as the driver by his driver’s license and appeared to be under the influence. He was unable to perform satisfactorily a series of standard field sobriety tests. Mr. Phelps was cooperative throughout the process.”


Phelps was charged with driving under the influence, excessive speed, and crossing double lane lines, and was later released. Phelps, 29, was also arrested in 2004 on DUI charges. In a plea agreement, he was placed on 18 months' probation.


“I recognize the seriousness of this mistake,” Phelps said at the time. “I’ve learned from this mistake and will continue learning from this mistake for the rest of my life.”


Phelps last swam in the Olympics in 2012, but has been swimming competitively in recent months as part of an apparent comeback for 2016 in Rio.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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N.C. State coach Dave Doeren apologizes to FSU coach Jimbo Fisher

After accusing Florida State players of faking injuries over the weekend, N.C. State head coach Dave Doeren apologized to FSU head coach Jimbo Fisher Tuesday morning.


In a statement released on the N.C. State football Twitter account, Doeren said:



“I have apologized to Jimbo Fisher and want to apologize to his staff, players and FSU fans for my comments that took away from a tremendous football game. I left an emotional locker room and took those emotions with me to the press conference. It was a great college football game with tremendous plays made by both teams. That is where the focus deserves to be. I have the utmost respect for Jimbo, his staff and players. FSU played a great game and earned the win.”



Doeren’s statement sings a much different tune than the sentiment he shared Saturday and in his weekly press conference on Monday.


Following the Wolfpack’s 56-41 loss to FSU at home Saturday, Doeren said the team’s up-tempo offense was extremely effective until “all the crazy fall-down things were going on and the clock kept stopping.” Doeren’s team jumped out to a 24-7 first quarter lead before the top-ranked Seminoles stormed back.


“You know the refs can’t do anything about that, but it’s horrible the way the tempo gets slowed down by these injuries,” Doeren said. “We went fast in the first quarter, I guess there were no fake injuries.”


Though he softened his stance a bit by saying that other teams besides Florida State are doing the same thing, Doeren maintained Monday that it is “unsportsmanlike” to fake injuries.


“I think it's unsportsmanlike, personally,” Doeren said. “I just wish there was a rule that if a guy left he has to stay off for more than one play if he leaves with an injury. One of the players they stopped the game for Saturday, the guy walked off the field as slow as humanly possible, and he’s back in the game. I get it, if they are hurt, they’re hurt. I’m not going to say a guy isn’t hurt, but if they come back in the game then he might not have been hurt.”


Reporters in Tallahassee asked Fisher about Doeren’s comments Monday and it was clear he wasn’t too pleased with what he heard.


“I accuse him of not knowing what he’s talking about. They’re not fake injuries. No one faked injuries, and we wouldn’t do that. We’ll coach Florida State, and he can coach North Carolina State,” Fisher said.


The Wolfpack had a handful of chances to pull off the biggest upset of the season Saturday, so Doeren’s frustration after the game was certainly understandable, though it is a bit puzzling that he felt the need to issue an apology after what he said Monday. It appears he did not want the focus to be on his comments instead of a hard-fought game.


The Wolfpack, now 4-1, will take on Clemson on the road Saturday while the 4-0 Seminoles will host Wake Forest.


For more North Carolina State news, visit TheWolfPacker.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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BDL's 2014-15 NBA Season Previews: Detroit Pistons

It’s when you know you’re right, even though you want to be left. When you want to be wrong, because being wrong could bring about so many wonderful things.


The 2013-14 Detroit Pistons were never going to work out. Josh Smith was never going to cut it as a small forward, Brandon Jennings was never going to kick it with that contract on a team like this, Maurice Cheeks was never going to be the sort of voice or bring the sort of vision that would put it all together. We knew this in July and August, and it played out from October until April. We were right, about this team’s potential to fail, even if we wanted to see something pretty cool out of this cadre of seemingly mismatched players.


The Pistons lost that “seemingly” qualifier early in the season, incumbent big men Greg Monroe and Andre Drummond were lost in the miasma almost immediately, and Cheeks seemed helpless as the team lost five of its first seven games. Even in an Eastern Conference that was universally hailed for its awful depth beyond the top two seeds, the Pistons failed to make a dent, and Cheeks was fired after serving barely half of the first year of a three-year contract he signed with the team.


Most importantly, after nearly 29-year run with the organization, a 14-year placement in the front office and 13-year stint as general manager, Joe Dumars was let go following the 2013-14 season. His latest attempts at turning the corner – after years of working through coaches, lottery picks, free agents and bum trades – failed miserably. He was ahead of the game when he started, and well behind it when he left. He was the prized asset of a franchise that struck deep in the NBA playoffs for half a decade, and its biggest millstone in the six years that followed that run.


In steps another hoped-for savior in the form of Stan Van Gundy. The former Heat and Magic coach won’t act as the outright general manager, the much-respected Jeff Bower will handle that nasty work, but SVG will have the final say in all personnel decisions, while running the day to day operations from the practice court and the sidelines. He’ll coach things, and he’ll settle things; a needed presence for a team that is as unsettled as ever.


Josh Smith and Brandon Jennings still remain, as nobody is lining up to deal for either of those players even as they work in their mid-to-late 20s. Greg Monroe is back for another season after failing to come to terms with the Pistons on a contract extension, working for the qualifying offer and likely counting the days until July. Andre Drummond is just as likely to receive a massive contract extension during the 2015 offseason, just as Monroe flees elsewhere. The litany of Dumars-drafted wing help – Kyle Singler, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, the departed Brandon Knight – has yet to make much of an impact.


This is why 2014-15 has to be a turnaround year. An attempt to drive up Smith and Jennings’ trade value. A chance to see what can be done with Caldwell-Pope (the team’s 2014 lottery pick was dealt to Charlotte by Dumars in a cash-saving maneuver, used to unload the final year of Ben Gordon’s contract). A move to turn Drummond into a franchise player. A holding pattern pitched to potentially make the playoffs under steeled leadership while keeping long term options open.


In short, more a recovery effort than a rebuilding project. These Pistons have a long road ahead of them, and it’s going to take Stan Van Gundy quite a while to find his footing on Joe Dumars’ stretch of salted soil.



Andre Drummond makes sure that it's real. (Getty Images)

2013-14 season in 140 characters or less:


*unfollows Jennette McCurdy*


Did the summer help at all?


Mindful of the holding pattern, Bower and Van Gundy went after swingman helpers that they could trust as a band-aid of sorts, so as not to make Stan’s life help as he sorts out this mess.


Jodie Meeks (three years, $18.8 million) seems like a bit of a stretch at that price, but he’ll also stretch the floor and be working for a salary that will soon rank below the league average. Caron Butler (working on his fifth team since the NBA’s 2011 lockout) also seems like a reach at two years at $9 million total, but that second year is completely unguaranteed. D.J. Augustin at half of the league’s average salary for the next two seasons will help. These aren’t championship-level additions, but they will help Van Gundy keep his sanity. On a relative level, at least.


Go-to offseason acquisition:


Greg Monroe sticks out, whether he’d like to or not. Despite his obvious scoring and rebounding gifts, the big forward received little to no interest in the open free agent market this offseason mainly because Monroe wasn’t truly an free and open free agent – his restricted free agent status made it so the Pistons could match any offer, and any reasonable offer sheet Monroe signed to would likely be matched by Van Gundy and Bower.


Rumors have been shot back and forth as to whether or not Monroe actually received an offer from Detroit, whether he turned down a four-year deal, but all of this is beside the point. Monroe is going to be coveted as possibly the NBA’s biggest consolation prize free agent next summer, and there is next to nothing the Pistons can do about it outside of hoping that their potential offer (which could include more guaranteed years and more money, should they choose to go that route) trumps all. The team cannot deal Monroe this season without his consent, and there is no good financial reason for Monroe to give consent, as his new team would be forced to abandon the ability to go over the salary cap to sign him this summer.


This puts Monroe, already under pressure as he attempts to find his place in Detroit’s too-big frontcourt, in a rough spot. He’ll be playing for less than his production would usually make him, with many a furrowed brow looking for any hint of lame duck play as he steadies himself for a massive 2015 payday. Toss in an early-season suspension for driving under the influence, and you’ll have quite the uneasy season for Detroit’s power forward.


Glaring weakness:


The Pistons don’t defend, they don’t shoot well from the outside, and they don’t make their free throws. If you can think of three more pertinent and utterly necessary tenets to modern NBA basketball, I’d like to hear them.


Presumably, Van Gundy would help change the defensive aspect of things, but that’s still slow-going when you have slow-moving (relative to their position) incumbents at both forward positions, and a lead defender in Brandon Jennings that has all but given up on that end of the court in the years since his splash as a rookie.


Contributor with something to prove:


Andre Drummond’s potential is respected for a reason. The NBA has little use for back to the basket centers as this league evolves into something sleeker by the hour, but it still badly needs rim protectors to make life hellish for anyone looking to make the quick finish in the paint.


Read whatever you want into it, we’ve terribly disagreed with coach Mike Krzyzewski’s poor attempts at international scouting before, but Drummond was a bench fixture in his disappointing turn with Team USA this summer. He sat in favor of Anthony Davis and Kenneth Faried, two players known best for highlight-level blocks and rebounds, but little in the way of sound screen and roll defense and consistent rim protection. Whether this was more a sign of Krzyzewski’s missteps or Drummond’s work this summer remains to be seen – Davis and Faried played well enough at times, and we have no idea what happened behind the Team USA scenes.


What needs to be seen this season, as the Pistons try to stop the bleeding, is for Drummond to step forward on both ends and earn that contract that he’ll probably sign for regardless of how he plays in 2014-15. In his third season, potential has to turn into production.


Potential breakout stud:


The easy choice here is Monroe, who would seem to be keen to take as many shots as humanely possible in order to drive up his free agent value. The problem with that selection is that this isn’t 1977, and scoring power forwards aren’t afforded endless touches and room to work while they pad the stats. D.J. Augustin will likely receive closing minutes once Van Gundy sours on Brandon Jennings, and Smith intrigues while he attempts to drive up his trade value, but the real breakout player will probably be Andre Drummond.


Stan Van Gundy came to Detroit to coach this guy, so Drummond will have every chance to bust out.


Best-case scenario:


Stan Van Gundy can coach. He can whine, too, and he can attempt to characterize himself as an old school, cut-the-fluff sort of coach, but this man has always been ahead of the curve when it comes to scouting, thinking on his feet, and relaying his spot-on message to players. If he can get through to them, despite this roster’s endless array of holes and obvious bad chemistry (which is, to the players’ credit, no fault of their own), this could be a playoff team.


If everything falls apart:


This team, to its discredit, has bad chemistry. As stated above, this is not the players’ fault, as they didn’t run the Detroit Pistons’ front office from 2000 until 2014. Even with stabilizing additions like Augustin and Caron Butler and spacing additions like Jodie Meeks, this remains a roster in flux, one that no amount of coaching can turn over in one season. Toss in potential injuries and/or petulance, and you could have another stinker of a season.


Kelly Dwyer’s best guess at a record:


Tenth in the East, 30-52.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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High-flying new-look Timberwolves show off athleticism in 'Dunks After Dark' camp kickoff (Video)

Andrew Wiggins, Anthony Bennett, Thaddeus Young and Zach LaVine greet their adoring public. Ricky Rubio entered the Minnesota Timberwolves' 2014-15 training camp looking to find out if the sky really is the limit with his new young running buddies, most notably first-round draft picks Andrew Wiggins and Zach LaVine.


“I like to run and I like to throw the ball up in the air,” the effervescent Spanish point guard said during the Wolves' media day session on Monday, according to Jerry Zgoda of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. “They’re players who can catch the ball. Hopefully, they make me look good. I haven’t seen them in real life, but I’ve seen them in video and they can jump high. So I’m going to throw the ball over the backboard and see if they can catch it.”


I'm not sure you can necessarily call "Dunks After Dark" a "real life" NBA experience. But at the Wolves' camp-opening scrimmage and exhibition on the campus of Minnesota State University, Mankato, in the wee hours of Tuesday morning, Rubio — and the rest of us — got our first glimpse at how the exciting rookies look finishing the break in Timberwolves togs.


The first scrimmage began by giving the fans in attendance and all those watching on NBA TV the Rubio-to-Wiggins 'oop we've been envisioning ever since the completion of blockbuster trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers that shipped out All-Star Kevin Love and imported the last two No. 1 overall picks:



We also saw new Wolves power forward Thaddeus Young and incumbent swingman Corey Brewer show some hustle to spark a sharp-passing break that finished off with a flush by the skywalking LaVine:



... and a thunderous fast-break finish by a slimmer, sleeker and seemingly more explosive Shabazz Muhammad:



After the scrimmages wrapped up, the Wolves capped the evening with an impromtpu end-to-end freestyle dunking display featuring some impressive work from Wiggins, LaVine, Bennett and fellow bouncy rook Glenn Robinson III, as highlighted — in slow motion, and with some very dramatic background music! — by our friends at the National Basketball Association:



Man, Wiggins and LaVine really make getting off the floor look easy, don't they? (For my money, though, the free-breathing Bennett's two-hand windmill might've been the best of the night.)


Things won't be quite so easy for these Timberpups once "real life" NBA play starts, of course; there'll be defenders to beat and defense to play, and clogged passing and driving lanes, and shots contested a bit more vigorously than those taken at 1 a.m. local time on a college campus in September. But even with the harsh lessons of professionalism, and likely a raft of losses, waiting just around the corner, Minnesota's youth movement gives its fans something to get excited about. More from Zgoda:


“With our rookies, we’ve got a lot of potential,” Rubio said. “I wouldn’t say we took a step back to make two forward; we just have to see how they fit in the league. A player can be all hype and have great potential, but not everybody fits well in this league. We’ll see how the rookies fit and how they fit with us, too.”

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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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FCC votes to end government approval of blackouts

Chicago Bears fans watch the warmups before an NFL football game between the Bears and Green Bay Packers Sunday, Sept. 28, 2014, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) The FCC has voted unanimously to end its support of a decades-old rule allowing the NFL to black out games in markets where tickets remain unsold.


The NFL blocks all local broadcasts of games if a team does not sell out before 72 hours of kickoff. The league did so with the FCC's blessing and backing, but Tuesday's 5-0 vote vote ends that support.


"The sports blackout rules are a bad hangover from the days when barely 40 percent of games sold out and gate receipts were the league's principal source of revenue," FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler recently wrote. "The NFL no longer needs the government's help to remain viable."


Only two games were blacked out by the NFL last season, and none have been this year. The NFL has warned that if the blackout rule is ended, more games could move from broadcast to cable television, an argument that sounds more like a threat than a defense.


It's worth noting that this action does not prohibit the NFL from enforcing blackouts on its own. This merely ends the government backing and support of the practice. However, the NFL could enter into agreements with its broadcast partners that allow for blackouts under certain conditions.


The NFL has reason to be concerned about shrinking attendance at games, the ostensible reason for mandating the blackouts. On one hand, attending one NFL game means you're missing out on the other half-dozen going on at the same time. HD TVs (and private bathrooms) are far more attractive for a large segment of the viewing public. Plus, the cost of an NFL game has spiraled, and there's always the chance that you'll get swept up in a fight or two.


Still, the blackout rule is an anachronism, and the NFL now has one less reason to tout it as a reasonable business practice.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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BDL's 2014-15 NBA Season Previews: Cleveland Cavaliers


INDEPENDENCE, OH - SEPTEMBER 25: Kevin Love #0 Kyrie Irving #2 and LeBron James #23 of the Cleveland Cavaliers pose for a photo during media day at Cleveland Clinic Courts on September 25, 2014 in Independence, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)

Is there any precedent for the Cleveland Cavaliers' fantastically successful summer? A massively disappointing team that couldn't even make the playoffs in a terrible conference when actively trying to earn any seed parlayed their geographical location, the vagaries of narrative, and lottery luck into the best player of his generation, another perennial All-Star, and genuine contender status. Sometimes good fortune does more than all the effort in the world.


As LeBron James has said many times this summer, it will take time for the Cavs to round into championship form, if only because the key members of his supporting cast have never been in a similar situation. In Miami, LeBron could rely on the championship pedigree of Dwyane Wade and, to a much lesser extent, Chris Bosh's awareness of the postseason — he was even seen as the unsteady one in the wake of his failings against the Boston Celtics. By contrast, neither Kevin Love nor Kyrie Irving have appeared in the playoffs. From one angle, David Blatt, seasoned in Europe but never an NBA coach of any kind, is even more of a question mark than boy wonder Erik Spoelstra was thought to be way back when. Add in the fact that the Heat didn't figure out the best way to use LeBron for more than a season and it's easy to see why the team would preach patience.


On the other hand, those concerns figure into what level of contender the Cavs will be, not if they figure into the title mix at all. With Paul George out and Derrick Rose not yet proven as a star after another knee surgery, LeBron and Co. look like the clear favorite to represent the East in the finals. Irving is coming off a stellar World Cup for the gold medalists, Love is as sure a statistical producer as anyone in the sport, and presumably some of the ring-seekers who joined the club in the summer — James Jones, Shawn Marion, Mike Miller, and anyone who joins the team after a trade-and-buyout at the deadline — should stay healthy enough to provide a stable bench. This team has a very high ceiling, especially on offense, but their floor isn't too much lower.


Figuring out where they end should be a lot of fun. Blatt is known as a master tactician, which means his solution to the problem of fitting James, Love, and Irving (and, uh, Dion Waiters) into the same offense could open some minds. LeBron's versatility makes him a welcome addition to any situation, but it can also make him difficult to place. It's possible that he'll play in the post, or on the wing, or everyone at once. Maybe Blatt will unleash hell upon the NBA and turn the Cavs into a run-first outfit. If they do, how will they balance potent scoring with the need to defend?


We have a whole season to see how it goes. I, for one, can't wait.


2013-14 season in 140 characters or less:


Failing upwards is an art, not a science.


Did the summer help at all?



Go-to offseason acquisition:


The guy who does everything really well.


Glaring weakness:


The Cavs are very light on rim protection, to the point where it wouldn't be a huge surprise to see James serve as the team's lead interior defender. Anderson Varejao, Kevin Love, and Tristan Thompson are all fine-to-elite rebounders without shot-blocking reputations, and Shawn Marion is 36, hasn't averaged a block per game since 2008-09, and doesn't figure to play heavy minutes. Losing out on Chris "Birdman" Andersen in free agency could hamper this team significantly. It's a safe bet that GM David Griffin, because it's basically unheard of for championship teams to lack this presence.


Contributor with something to prove:


Dion Waiters has made few fans in his first two years with the Cavs, having teamed profligate shooting with a high usage rate and isolated contributions elsewhere. The fourth pick in the 2012 draft — ahead of Damian Lillard and (more crucially for the Cavs' needs) Andre Drummond, although several teams screwed up on the latter — cannot be the same player on a team with so many other excellent scorers. If he jacks up bad shots while Kevin Love and LeBron James wait, it's a fair bet that he'll find himself on the bench. The Cavs will hope that he learns restraint and turns into a trusted shooter.


Potential breakout stud:


Most Rookies of the Year/All-Star Game MVPs/Team USA stars have already broken out, and Kyrie Irving has certainly accomplished a lot after only three seasons in the NBA. However, there's a sense that he's only really scratching the surface of his skills, including the ability to turn his individual brilliance into team success. With Love and LeBron now in the lineup, Irving will be forced to focus less on beating teams by himself and more on nuances and how to excel without the ball. He's the rare player with the opportunity to rise to the level of a superstar while seeing his scoring average dip.



Cleveland Cavaliers head coach David Blatt, center, poses with his assistant coaches at the NBA basketball team's practice facility in Independence, Ohio Friday, Sept. 26, 2014. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Best-case scenario:


Blatt and his stars figure out the offense quickly, the defense is good enough until Griffin can add a big man at the deadline, and the Cavaliers roll through the East on their way to the franchise's first NBA title.


If everything falls apart:


LeBron doesn't jell with his new teammates, Irving stays the same, Love gets hurt, no interior defense comes, and the Cavs crash out before the conference finals due to a bad matchup.


Kelly Dwyer's Crystal ball:


60-22, 1st in the East


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Ed Orgeron is interested in the Kansas job

Ed Orgeron is interested in a chance to turn the Kansas football program around.


The former USC interim coach and Ole Miss coach has been out of coaching since he wasn't hired as the Trojans' full-time coach for the 2014 season. He wants to get back in, and expressed his interest at a Little Rock, Ark., Touchdown Club meeting where he spoke at.


From USA Today:



Kansas? You bet he's interested.




"It's a Power Five (job)," he told USA TODAY Sports. "(Mark) Mangino went 12-1 and went to the Orange Bowl. It's in a great conference. His staff proved that you can do it."




And if the program is mired at the bottom of the Big 12? So what?




"It's a challenging job," he said. "But most jobs you get, there's gonna be some things you're gonna have to fix."



Orgeron had things to fix at USC when he became the interim coach in 2013. He took over after Lane Kiffin was fired following a September loss to Arizona State. Orgeron relaxed the atmosphere at USC and the Trojans went 6-2 while he was the coach. He didn't coach the bowl game after the team hired Steve Sarkisian as coach.


He's been spending the time off in Lousiana with his family. He compared not getting the USC job to a death in the family.


"Really, not getting the job for me was like a divorce or a death in the family," Orgeron said. "It was something you've kind of just got to get over, you know? I am now, in a positive way — but it just took a little while."


He was the coach at Ole Miss from 2005-2007. He took over after Ole Miss went 4-7 in 2004 under David Cutcliffe and was 10-25 in his three seasons there. The job at Kansas, where Charlie Weis went 5-22 in over two seasons, is a tougher turnaround than Ole Miss is, but Orgeron has been open about how much he's learned since his time with the Rebels. (The Jayhawks are 10-41 since Mangino's departure.)


"I believe I put my résumé out on the TV those last eight games," he said of his time at USC. "They know who I am and what I've done."


While Orgeron may not be an up-and-coming coach that Kansas could be looking for, the Jayhawks could do far worse. Someone with the recruiting ability of Orgeron would be a big plus at Kansas, and if last year is any indication, he's good at changing the culture of a program that's become morose. Kansas needs that.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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