Sunday, March 31, 2013

Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva Promises Second Fight with Cain Velasquez Will Be Much Different

MMA Weekly5 hours ago
When Antonio “Bigfoot” Silva steps into the cage against UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez at UFC 160 on May 25 in Las Vegas, he will be re-matching a man who – at almost a year to the day – gave Silva the worst beating of his eight-year career. Only this time, he knows exactly what he won’t be doing come fight time.
“First thing, no kicks. That is very important,” Silva said recently during a press tour in anticipation of the Memorial Day Weekend meeting with Velasquez.
It’s understandable that Bigfoot doesn’t want to throw kicks against the hulking Mexican-American. In their inaugural meeting, it took about 30 seconds for Velasquez to grab a kick from the Brazilian, rip him to the mat, and beat him senseless by 3:36 of the opening frame.
That loss, on May 26, 2012, was the second consecutive loss for Silva. He was previously knocked out by Velasquez’s teammate and perennial contender Daniel Cormier at the Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix Semifinals in September of 2011. Since those crushing defeats, the six-foot-four, 265-pound Brazilian behemoth has back-to-back knockout victories over the previously undefeated Travis Browne and a vicious “Knockout of the Night” third-round comeback over top-ranked Dutch striker Alistair Overeem at UFC 156 in February.
Despite being 2-2 in his last four fights, Silva is quick to dismiss any criticism of him earning this title shot against Velasquez. For Bigfoot, it’s just simple math.
“I fight two of the best guys in the weight division in the UFC,” he stated. “Travis Browne never lost. He’s a tough guy. And the other guys, Alistair Overeem was number two or three in the world, and if he would have beaten me he was going to fight for the belt.”
By defeating the widely viewed number one contender in Overeem, Silva dispatched of the hype-train that was “Ubereem” and earned the respect of MMA fans across the globe. Silva says that he never had been so enraged at a fighter’s pre-fight trash talk, a feeling that was more than evident when Silva stood over a lifeless Overeem, taunting the former K-1 Grand Prix Champion at the conclusion of their scrap.
“I said, get up! Get up! You don’t want to fight, (expletive)!”
A truly terrifying visual to any of those who had the pleasure (or pain) of watching that fight unfold.
Now with a re-match looming against Velasquez, Silva faces questions about whether or not he will be mustering the same anger that helped fuel his comeback win against Overeem.
“Yes (I’ll be angry),” he said. “The first reason why, is, I want the title.
“And the second thing, every day I get up and look in the mirror (and see) the big cut on my face, for this, I’m very angry.”
After giving Silva 15 stitches in the center of his face, Velasquez went on to reclaim the heavyweight title from Silva’s countryman and sometime training partner, Junior dos Santos, at UFC 155.
“Cigano,” who also was in attendance on Wednesday, had some very poignant advice for his comrade; advice that will surely be elaborated on more as the fight draws near.
“I think he has to put some pressure on him,” said the former heavyweight champion. “You can’t stay waiting too much for Cain Velasquez.
“You have to go there and beat him like this: you have to go in there and put pressure on him. That’s my opinion. We already talked a little bit about this and I truly believe that he will win.”
As the two Brazilians share a massive meal of steak and shrimp, they go back and forth about a myriad of subjects and shared memories. Silva listens intently to dos Santos, but he wants to make one thing clear, although this is a new fight, he won’t be changing his strategy when he meets Velasquez for a second time.
“I’m going to train the same strategy as I trained before,” said Bigfoot. “The problem was my mind, my adrenaline. But I’m going do the same thing. I have a lot of skills to win this fight.”
Like many championship-level fighters, Silva realizes that your losses are just as important as your wins if you’re going to grow as a martial artist.
“The first fight with Cain is very important because I learned a lot from it,” said Silva. “[That] fight, I was very nervous because it was my first fight in the UFC. Now I’m very, very different. I have a good camp. I’m going to do the same strategy, and this fight will be very different.”

Pat Riley's shut-the-bleep-up message to Danny Ainge a show of support for LeBron James

Pat Riley called Celtics general manager Danny Ainge a "whiner." (AP)

Miami Heat emperor Pat Riley isn't responsible for creating the NBA's culture of hard fouls and cheap shots, but no one in its history has profited so handsomely in the pursuit of perfecting it.
In honoring two historically indisputable professional habits – establishing himself as the patriarch and protector of his star player; and wrapping himself in downright disdain for the Boston Celtics – Riley sent a missive to one of his messengers on Good Friday.
"Danny Ainge needs to shut the [expletive] up and manage his own team," Riley proclaimed. "He was the biggest whiner going when he was playing and I know that because I coached against him."
This was a spectacularly jarring response to Ainge, who had chastised LeBron James and his declaration that the NBA and its officials don't do enough to protect him. "I think that it's almost embarrassing that LeBron James would complain about officiating," Ainge had told WEEI radio in Boston.
For Ainge, he has been his vintage self: agitating, inciting, inspiring an irrational over-the-top response. If Riley's response feels unprecedented, remember something: The re-recruitment of James to re-sign in 2014 is underway, and this was Riley's way to back his franchise star. Even so, Riley's never needed a noble reason to grandstand. When it serves his agenda, no one steps down off Olympus and delivers the arrows like him.

In a season when James had manufactured no storylines beyond the perpetual testimonials about the greatness of his game, his venting in Chicago on Wednesday night promises to be the beginning of the framing of how he'll be officiated in these playoffs.
This is a copycat league, and this episode will turn out to be one more way in which Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau has become the most mimicked of all.


Ainge criticized LeBron James for complaining about opponents' hard fouls. (AP)


When Golden State Warriors coach Mark Jackson wanted to install a defense, he made young assistant Darren Erman – a Thibodeau disciple in Boston – his defensive coordinator. The improvement's been dramatic. And when teams want to defend James, they'll study Thibodeau's blueprint.
Of course, everyone doesn't have the Bulls' personnel to be physical with James, nor the ferocious defensive mindset within their players. Still, Thibodeau is stubborn and he'll never let his players back down to James and the Heat. So stubborn, in fact, Thibodeau still hasn't signed the four-year, $17.5 million-plus contract extension that Bulls commemorated with an Oct. 1 news conference.
"The deal's done," Thibodeau told Yahoo! Sports on Wednesday night. Nevertheless, he wouldn't acknowledge that it had been signed because that still hasn't happened, several sources with direct knowledge of the contract told Y! Sports.
This is how Thibodeau operates, part of his maddening genius. He wears everyone down until he gets everything he wants – front offices, players, and often opponents too.

Back in his assistant coaching days in Boston, his contracts lingered unsigned, too. Looking back, no one is sure that Thibodeau ever signed the waiver confirming that he'd never sell his personal engraved 2008 championship ring when those were handed out to staff.
In the end, remember something: Thibodeau is a disciple of Jeff Van Gundy, who is a disciple of Riley. Deep down, Riley understands something: the way with which those Bulls engaged James to end that 27-game winning streak had been the ultimate tribute to Riley himself. Thibodeau sent those Bulls hard for James, and it stirred something within the NBA's MVP that no one had heard out of him this season.


James wasn't happy with the officiating in the Heat's loss to the Bulls. (AP)

James is a product of a different day in the NBA, a different generation and the evolution of the sport spared him the beatings delivered in the 1980s and '90s. Nevertheless, how James is officiated is an issue for the NBA this season and beyond. That's been true forever with the league's best players, and always will be.
More and more, the league office has made life easier for offensive stars – legislating easier paths to scoring, punishing hard fouls with free throws, fines and suspensions. Once, David Stern changed the rules to make it harder for the Chuck Dalys and Rileys to beat up on Michael Jordan.
Now, it will be Adam Silver's turn with James. Make no mistake: James and his inner circle have a strong relationship with Silver, who'll replace Stern as the NBA's commissioner in 2014. Silver is so fond of James' business manager Maverick Carter, he granted an interview with Forbes to render some fluffy quotes for a profile on Carter.
Stu Jackson has long overseen basketball operations for the NBA, but he's begun the pursuit of returning to the front office of a team, sources told Yahoo! Sports. The restructuring of the league office could ultimately be dramatic, and those within the NBA are watching closely to understand how it'll eventually trickle down to the product on the floor.

In the end, Riles' statement was one for the history books, one of the best two-sentence releases pro sports has ever seen. Riley needs enemies, and the Celtics and Ainge will forever play the part for him. At the highest levels, the Celtics and Heat share a visceral hatred and that's increasingly rare in this buddy-buddy era.
After a Game 2 loss to Miami in the Eastern Conference finals in May, Ainge cornered the NBA's vice president of referee operations, Joe Borgia, in an American Airlines Arena corridor and tried to understand how James could go to the free throw line 24 times, the Heat 47.
Just trying to break free, Borgia finally blurted to Ainge, "I'm sure we missed five or six calls somewhere."
Boston believes Dwyane Wade went out of his way to hurt Rajon Rondo with a tackle that dislocated his elbow in the 2011 Eastern Conference playoffs. And, of course, there was the Heat's successful free-agent recruitment of Ray Allen last summer.
So, yes, James spoke out about all those non-basketball plays that have endangered him this season, borne out of a night when Thibodeau had his players honoring the lessons that Riley had taught Thibs' own mentor, Van Gundy, so long ago.

And upon stepping out of the shadows on Good Friday, as much as Pat Riley was taking shots at the Celtics GM and defending his own superstar player, he had done something else too: Riley took a bow.
They're all coming for James, coming harder and harder. Remember that it was the emperor of these Miami Heat who taught them all how to do it, who glamorized the hard foul and the cheap shot and the culture that comes for LeBron James now.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Sunderland 0-1 Manchester United: Bramble own goal sees leaders grab seventh-straight league win

Manchester United sealed its seventh consecutive league victory to inch ever closer towards the club's 20th Premier League title thanks to a 1-0 victory at Sunderland. The hosts battled hard throughout but the Red Devils were ultimately comfortable and a first half own goal from Titus Bramble was all that was needed to secure the win.

Sunderland made four changes to the side that struggled to a 1-1 draw at home to Norwich. Stephane Sessegnon was declared fit to start up front alongside Danny Graham after top scorer Steven Fletcher was ruled out for the rest of the season.

Sitting pretty at the top of the Premier League, Sir Alex Ferguson rotated his squad ahead of their FA Cup quarterfinal replay with Chelsea on Monday with the likes of Rio Ferdinand, Wayne Rooney and Ryan Giggs left out.

Martin O'Neill may have been recently accused of lacking spark but his team certainly came roaring out of the blocks, forcing David de Gea into a couple of decidedly shaky clearances in the first five minutes. However, it did not take long for the visitors to assert their authority on proceedings and they could have gone ahead on 11 minutes when full back Alex Buttner bundled his way into the box only to be denied by Simon Mignolet.

Sunderland's early fire was well and truly extinguished on 26 minutes when Robin Van Persie cleverly turned away from Phil Bardsley and arrowed a shot that had been heading wide only for Titus Bramble to deflect it into his own net.

The lead could have been doubled before half-time when first Anderson burst onto a quick-fire United counter-attack but just failed to get the better of Bramble before a confident-looking Van Persie stung the hands of Mignolet with a wicked curling free kick.

For all of Sunderland’s bluster and effort there appears to be a distinct lack of both quality and confidence running through the Stadium of Light at the moment. The start of the second half proved no different to the first as some early Mackems running was let down by poor decision making in the final third, with Adam Johnson a particular culprit.

On the hour Danny Graham showed good speed to negotiate a way past Nemanja Vidic but Sessegnon could not quite get his head to the ball ahead of Jonny Evans. From the resulting corner, David de Gea confidently punched clear but clattered into Vidic in the process to leave him needing medical attention.

The hosts suddenly had some momentum and roared on by their vociferous home support, proceeded to have their best spell of the match. It was nearly capped with an equalize but Chris Smalling defended superbly to stop Graham from nodding in a Johnson cross.

With 10 minutes to play, Buttner and Van Persie were both denied again by a sprawling Mignolet save as United closed in on the three points and a tiring Sunderland could not find an equalizer despite six minutes of stoppage time.

Three Periods: Flames fumbled Jarome Iginla for years; Sharks test trade waters; 'Canes comfy with Alex Semin gamble

FIRST PERIOD: Flames fiddled around with Jarome Iginla for far too long


Former Flames captain Jarome Iginla at his farewell press conference in Calgary. (Reuters)


The Calgary Flames should be embarrassed. Deeply, deeply embarrassed. Because this goes beyond the obvious – that they waited far too long to trade captain and icon Jarome Iginla, that they let one team believe a deal was done only to have him waive his no-trade clause for another team, that they got far too little in return. Let’s not lose sight of why they had to trade Iginla in the first place.

This has been a misguided and mismanaged franchise for years, and it certainly didn’t start with current general manager Jay Feaster, who presided over this shortly after the Ryan O’Reilly offer sheet fiasco. The blame reaches back to former GM Darryl Sutter – which has to just burn Flames fans, who watched him come out of his Alberta exile last season and win the Stanley Cup as coach of the Los Angeles Kings. It extends to team president Ken King and up to chairman Murray Edwards.

Bad drafts. Bad trades. Bad signings. Bad decisions in so many areas for so many years. The Flames didn’t just waste Jarome Iginla as an asset. They wasted Jarome Iginla as a player. A good organization would have recognized reality – that this was not a playoff team, let alone a potential Cup contender – and would have moved Iginla long ago in a smart way to start the rebuild. A better organization wouldn’t have had to move Iginla at all because it would have actually built a playoff team around him.


Iginla had a no-trade clause and was close to Edwards. He loved Calgary and was beloved by Calgary. Maybe he was just as delusional and stubborn as management, and maybe all that made him more difficult to trade. At a news conference Thursday, he wouldn’t rule out coming back to the Flames, saying: “I think the organization is going in the right direction.” He slipped and still called the Flames “we.”

But it was not Iginla’s job to make tough decisions, and it was not his job to surround himself with talent. It was his job to lead and perform, and his loyalty and class helped make him more than just a star player. He did his part even as he aged and his teammates struggled, all his numbers going for naught.

Iginla scored 32 goals at age 32 in 2009-10, when the Flames didn’t make the playoffs. He scored 43 goals at age 33 in 2010-11, when the Flames didn’t make the playoffs. He scored 32 goals at age 34 last season, when the Flames didn’t make the playoffs. And he has nine goals in 31 games at age 35 this season – a 22-goal pace over an 82-game schedule – with the Flames out of playoff position yet again.

Had the Flames decided to trade Iginla a year or two ago, they could have done this the right way. They could have worked with Iginla to create a market that would reap a decent return, and theoretically the assets they acquired would be paying dividends by now. It would have been brutal, but it could have been dignified and productive. Most fans and media would have understood. Many were calling for it.


By waiting, they ended up stuck – under pressure to do something with Iginla on an expiring contract, with Iginla in control because of his no-trade clause. The Boston Bruins offered the best deal, even if it wasn’t great, and the Flames agreed to it. But Iginla picked the Pittsburgh Penguins, who offered even less than the Bruins did, and so the Flames had to accept only a late first-rounder and what experts consider two C-list college prospects. They are not going to start a rebuild with that.

But worst of all, by managing the team so poorly after their run to the Cup final in 2004, they squandered the back end of Iginla’s prime and made their captain the subject of trade rumors for years, testing his character in all sorts of uncomfortable situations.

Could they have refused to trade Iginla to Pittsburgh and tried to force him to Boston to get the best return? Could they have refused to trade him at all? Maybe. But they’re the ones who gave him the no-trade clause, they’re the ones who put him in this position, and they’re the ones who would have looked classless, not just clueless, had they tried to play hardball. And what if they alienated him so much that he left for nothing as a free agent?

Failure begets failure. Even though the Flames have finally recognized the need to rebuild and finally traded Jarome Iginla, there is no reason to believe they are about to break the cycle. Their future looks as bleak as ever.

They’re lucky Iginla wanted to stay for so long. It’s incredible he won’t rule out coming back. You’d think it would have been Iginla asking for a trade, not the other way around.

SECOND PERIOD: Sharks test the water ahead of NHL trade deadline


The Sharks have some big decisions on the eve of the NHL trade deadline. (Getty)


Listen to what San Jose Sharks GM Doug Wilson said Monday after trading defenseman Douglas Murray to the Penguins: “Can it lead to other deals? Sure, it can. There are certainly a lot of teams that are in contact with us.”

Wilson said it was “not acceptable” how the Sharks had played after their 7-0-0 start, and he made it clear that their performance before the trade deadline would have a great impact on what he decided to do.

“They’re all big boys,” Wilson said. “They know what’s on the line here. To me, actions speak louder than words. Play well. Let us know where you’re at with your game. … I’d like to see us over the next little while in particular step up our game. There’s no reason why we can’t.”

Well, look what has happened since: The Sharks have won back-to-back games over the Anaheim Ducks, the second-ranked team in the Western Conference. They won on the road, and they won at home. They won by a combined score of 8-3, when their biggest issue has been a lack of offense.

So now what? Should Wilson read too much into that, considering the Ducks have now lost four straight?

The Sharks entered Thursday night in eighth place in the West. They had three more games before the deadline – Thursday night against the Detroit Red Wings, Saturday night against the Phoenix Coyotes and Monday night against the Vancouver Canucks, all at home.

Can they show Wilson enough to keep this group together?

Change is coming, whether it’s now or in the near future. Veteran forwards Ryane Clowe and Michal Handzus, who have combined for only one goal this season, are pending unrestricted free agents. Veteran stars Joe Thornton, Patrick Marleau and Dan Boyle all have one year left on their contracts. By design.

“We knew that this window would be getting here, or this time, if you look at how our contracts are structured, what we have in committed dollars,” Wilson said. “We don’t use the world ‘rebuild,’ because that classically means six, seven years. … We like to use the term of ‘reset and refresh.’ ”


The Sharks have players to reset and refresh around: Antti Niemi in goal; Brent Burns on defense, when he’s not moonlighting at forward; Logan Couture and Joe Pavelski up front. But now might be the time to part with players like Clowe and Boyle, and they need to make decisions soon on players like Thornton and Marleau, the two who have been cornerstones.

Wilson supported coach Todd McLellan and his staff. He said the coaches have addressed the areas management wanted – penalty killing, goals against, play around the net. When the Sharks play the way they’re supposed to, they play well. But they have struggled to score and perform consistently.

“Do I think that’s coaching preparation? No,” Wilson said. “I think it comes down to players sticking with it, not altering our approach to a game just because we’re down a goal or whatever. … The offensive side, it’s hard to fathom. We’ve got some guys that have been goal-scorers in this league that all went dry at the same time, or guys that were scoring at a very high clip before …”

He did not finish his sentence. He did not identify Marleau, who scored nine goals in his first five games but has seven since. He didn’t need to.

“This is coming to crunch time,” Wilson said. “We’ve had some inconsistency. If you look at any teams that have separated themselves from the pack, they’ve played by committee. They’ve played strong defense. They’ve created some offense and played a consistent approach to it. We haven’t done that. We need to do that now. …

“We have a pretty clear, concise plan. We knew as we were entering into this timeframe – whether it be now or this summer – exactly how we were going to execute that plan, and I guess the timing is dictated by performance.”

THIRD PERIOD: Carolina comfortable with all-in gamble on enigmatic Alex Semin


Alex Semin didn't take long to convince Carolina that he was worth the risk of a long-term deal. (USA Today)

Jim Rutherford understands your skepticism.

Alex Semin signed three straight one-year contracts – two with the Washington Capitals, then one with the Carolina Hurricanes. He is known for offensive production, but not for showing up every night.

Yet after only 30 games with the ’Canes, less than half a full season, Rutherford, a GM who used to avoid in-season extensions, gave Semin a five-year, $35 million contract.

And he did so knowing full well how difficult it will be to fit a $7 million cap hit into his budget, not just because the cap will come down to $64.3 million next season, but because Carolina doesn’t spend to the cap, anyway.

“I’ve added seven million to our payroll next year,” said Rutherford, who put Jussi Jokinen on waivers this week, hoping someone would take his $3 million cap hit for the rest of this season and next, only to watch him clear. “I’ve got to start to figure out ways that we can get our payroll in better line with what our business does.”

Let him explain:

The Hurricanes gave Semin a one-year deal initially because they simply didn’t know him. They knew both his ability and his reputation, but they wanted to give him a clean slate. Could he play in their system? Would he like coach Kirk Muller, and would Muller like him?

“When we did the one-year deal, it was with hopes that this would work,” Rutherford said. “And it has worked for us.”

Semin has eight goals and 30 points in 31 games. That’s a 21-goal, 79-point pace for a full 82-game schedule. Just as important, he has boosted the totals of Eric Staal and Jiri Tlusty, giving the Hurricanes an excellent first line. He has clicked with Staal better than anyone since Cory Stillman, Staal’s right winger when the ’Canes won the Cup in 2006.

“Alex gets Eric the puck more than he’s ever gotten it,” Rutherford said.

Semin is also plus-15, even though he was minus-5 over the past three games.

“People view him as an offensive player, but he’s done some things in games defensively that’s saved the game for us,” Rutherford said. “He’s played the game at both ends of the rink.”


But what about the small sample size? Isn’t Rutherford worried Semin will start coasting now that he has security? And why has Rutherford started giving extensions during the season?

“I believe with a player like this, if you wait too long, you could very well miss an opportunity,” Rutherford said. “I can tell you that I’ve had two teams in particular – and I can add another, more in a casual way – that asked if we were going to re-sign Alex or if we would consider trading him.

“So once I get those calls, and there’s other teams thinking about it now, the judgment call becomes more, do you make that decision after 30 games based on what you’ve seen, or do you also factor in how far you can run the risk until you get closer to free agency?”

More teams are locking up their key players, which means fewer key players are reaching the free-agent market, which means they are more difficult to replace. So more teams are locking up their key players, creating a snowball effect.

That’s why Rutherford changed course last year and locked up Tuomo Ruutu, and that’s why he locked up Semin. Had he let Semin hit the market, he likely would have lost him. Had he lost him, he likely would not have found an equivalent replacement. Had he not found an equivalent replacement, what would have happened to his first line?

“I think that if a team decides they want a player – certainly if we decide we want a player – we’re going to jump in and do it before the season’s over instead of waiting now,” Rutherford said, “because it becomes a lot riskier.”

Even riskier than giving Alex Semin a rich, long-term deal.

If only Jarome Iginla were the only issue in Calgary.


Does Miikka Kiprusoff intend to play the final year of his contract? (USA Today)


Defenseman Jay Bouwmeester has a no-trade clause and one year left on his contract at $6.68 million. He could, and should, be asked to go if the Flames can get something decent in return for him.

Goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff does not have a no-trade clause, but he reportedly will retire rather than play the final year of his contract if the Flames try to move him. That’s ostensibly because he and his wife just had a baby.

But Mike Keenan has said the Flames and Kiprusoff had a mutual understanding that he wouldn’t play the last year of his contract, anyway. Keenan was the Flames coach when they signed Kiprusoff to a six-year, $35 million deal with the following structure: $8.5 million, $7 million, $7 million, $6 million, $5 million, $1.5 million.

The last year seems phony, tacked on to lower the cap hit to $5.833 million. That’s why the NHL fought to outlaw back-diving contracts in the new collective bargaining agreement. And Keenan’s comments seem to prove cap circumvention. But will the NHL take action? Probably not, and certainly not at this point.

League officials aren’t naive. It’s likely the Flames and Kiprusoff considered the idea he might retire before the end of his contract. But even though Keenan was their coach then, he is now a media personality and his comments alone aren’t enough to establish a pre-existing agreement that Kiprusoff would not play the last year of the deal. The NHL will at least see what Kiprusoff actually does before exploring it further or making any judgments.

SHOOTOUT: Last shots from around the NHL

— The NHL continues to work on ways to keep the Coyotes in Glendale, Ariz. But the league does not know if any of them will work, and this has been going on for years. Relocation has to be considered. But will the league make a decision before the playoffs? Not necessarily. It depends on the progress that is made – or is not made – in the coming weeks. Deputy commissioner Bill Daly said the NHL’s “current focus remains on selling the Coyotes to ownership in Glendale. We haven’t spent much time on anything else.”


— Eric Staal had 24 goals, 70 points and a minus-20 rating in 82 games last season. He has 14 goals, 35 points and a plus-16 rating in 31 games this season. Three reasons: his own determination to improve, his chemistry with Semin and his brother Jordan’s arrival from Pittsburgh. Eric still faces the toughest matchups as the No. 1 centerman, but Jordan takes a lot of pressure off him as the No. 2. “When you’re rolling two 6-foot-4 centericemen back to back, that gives a guy a comfort level,” Rutherford said. “Jordan’s eating up a lot of minutes. He’s playing over 20 minutes a game, and he’s done a good job for us despite the fact he’s playing with a whole lot of different guys. But we’ll get that straightened out here when we get everybody healthy.”

— Now that the Tampa Bay Lightning has fired coach Guy Boucher, the heat is on GM Steve Yzerman. He has been through struggles before as a player and executive, but this is perhaps the first time he has been singled out and blamed, at least to this degree, for his team’s failures. He might have made a good hire in Jon Cooper, but it remains to be seen whether Cooper is just the next Guy Boucher, a well-regarded, up-and-coming coach with no NHL experience. Like Boucher, Cooper won’t succeed unless Yzerman gives him better goaltending, a more mobile defense and increased scoring depth. One thing about Yzerman, though. He works hard, relishes challenges and never gives up.

Jim Boeheim stands guard over Syracuse as Big East takes its final breath

WASHINGTON – One last time the Baron of the Big East stalked the Verizon Center hallways on the day before a big conference game. Strange, that of all the men who could be the face of the first basketball league made for television, it would be the one with the balding head, tiny glasses and upturned nose who became its visage.

Come Saturday afternoon, the dying conference will take its final, unexpected gasp on the floor of a league arena, no less, and Jim Boeheim will stand guard before one bench, just as he did in the Big East's first season back in 1979. Through all those years, John Thompson and Louie Carnesecca and Jim Calhoun then departed, Boeheim never left. Mainly because he had nowhere else to go.

In a transient world of college basketball where a coach's commitment to a school lasts until the private jet of another university's booster lands at the local airport, Boeheim never left the shores of Onondaga Lake. No place else ever seemed right. His people were there. Why change all of that for a bigger bag of money?

The two men Boeheim relies upon most for counsel – former players turned assistants Mike Hopkins and Adrian Autry – think he would make a fantastic NBA coach. They rave about his consistency, his lack of wild emotions, the fact that he doesn't fall to the temptation of most college coaches to over-manage their teams. They say he handles egos as well as Pat Riley or Phil Jackson or any of those NBA men so blessed with an even keel. Then they smile when asked why he never took the chance, because the thought of Boeheim in Showtime is ridiculous.

"I think he knows what he wants," Hopkins said as he sat in the Orange's locker room on Friday afternoon. "He's an upstate New York guy."



Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim has the third-most wins in Division I history. (AP)

For all the waving of the arms and the high-pitched pleas and the tie askew, he is a simple man. And that is a genius for which he does not get enough credit.

College coaches today make one of two great mistakes. They either over-coach, pushing and pushing their teams into March until the players collapse from the pressure, or they are too hands-off, forgetting that 19-year-old men must be taught as much as coached. What Boeheim mastered long ago was the ability to do both. It's a hard balance to achieve.

"I think he lets guys enjoy college a little bit," Autry says. "But it's not out of control. He's not loosey-goosey."

Where Boeheim thrives is in not being complex. He doesn't throw volumes of information at his players. He doesn't oversell. He doesn't change the plays during the season. Syracuse doesn't even have the traditional game-day shootaround.

Strangely, some of the best coaches work this way. Talk to New England Patriots players about their coach, Bill Belichick, and the massive changes he makes to the game plan each week, and they will tell about a man who makes those switches seem easy. Perhaps Belichick's greatest gift is the way he can distill complicated concepts into easy-to-grasp PowerPoint slides and short videos.
In many ways, this is Boeheim's strength, too.

"Steve Jobs' genius was that he would make something complicated seem very simple," Hopkins said. "He can simplify anything. For instance, he can watch 10 minutes of game film and say, 'That's what they are going to do.' It's almost like Rain Man."

This isn't to say that Syracuse's coaches don't work. Like their counterparts, they stay up all night breaking down opponent's video, dissecting tendencies, looking for edges. Boeheim himself watches endless hours of college basketball. He has the cable package at his home and will stay up until 2 a.m. to catch the West Coast games. The difference is that he doesn't bury his players with his knowledge, dispensing just enough so they can get by.

"Just keep everything simple," Autry said.


As he sat on an interview dais beneath the Verizon Center court on Friday, Boeheim chuckled.
"We probably watch less tape than anybody in the country," he said.
Then he added:

"I always laugh at football coaches. They know every play, every position, every move that these other guys are going to make because they watch 36,000 hours of tape," he said. "Their players have no clue what they're talking about. …I always say, 'If the football player can do 1/10th of what those coaches know, they would be geniuses, because they can't.' It's not what the coaches know or what you know, it's what the players know and how they execute."

Sometimes simple works. Last week, Boeheim won his 900th game. He has the third-most wins in Division I history. He's coached for 37 years, and little about him has changed. When Autry and Hopkins are pressed for ways that he is not the same, the only thing they can come up with is that he seems, as Autry says, "more patient." That is hardly a great evolution.

Syracuse's last few seasons have been a swirl of controversy. Yahoo! Sports reported in 2012 that the team ignored players' positive drug tests. The NCAA is supposedly looking into the eligibility of last year's center Fab Melo. And Boeheim's longtime assistant Bernie Fine left after two former ball boys made allegations that he sexually abused them. Fine was not charged following a yearlong federal investigation.

"Hurricane-ish," is how Hopkins described the swirl of problems around the basketball program in recent years. Yet with each blow, each story that chips away at the 37 years, Syracuse continues to play well. Thrive, actually.

"These last four years have been some of our best," Hopkins said.

Come Saturday evening, the Big East will probably have played its final game. The last Big East arena will be empty. Maybe Boeheim will be cutting the nets on the way to his fourth Final Four. Maybe he will be walking these halls one last time. Either way, he will have been the Baron of the Big East. The face of a league built for TV.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Hamlin has compression fracture in lower back

By JENNA FRYER (AP Auto Racing Writer) | The Associated Press12 hours ago
Denny Hamlin suffered a compression fracture in his lower spine during a last-lap crash while racing for the win against former teammate Joey Logano, and Joe Gibbs Racing gave no indication Monday how long its driver could be sidelined.
 
''I just want to go home,'' Hamlin tweeted from a hospital in Southern California. He later posted a photo of himself giving a thumbs-up and appeared to be wearing a back brace.

The team said he had what is called an L1 compression fracture; essentially, the first vertebra in the lumbar section of his spine collapsed.

Hamlin was released from the hospital Monday night, and JGR said he'd return to North Carolina to be evaluated by Dr. Jerry Petty of Carolina Neurosurgery and Spine Associates. A reporter from USA Today spoke to Hamlin outside the hospital and reported Hamlin, wearing a back brace, walked out on his own.

NASCAR does not race this weekend, but returns to action April 7 at Martinsville Speedway, where Hamlin, who is 10th in the Sprint Cup standings, is a four-time winner.

Hamlin was airlifted from the Fontana track after a collision with Logano sent him nearly head-on into the inside wall in a place where Auto Club Speedway does not have energy-absorbing SAFER barriers. There are barriers on the inside of some of the walls, but portions of the track between Turns 1 and 2 and Turns 3 and 4 are not protected.

Track spokesman David Talley said Monday the SAFER barriers are installed upon NASCAR's recommendation, and track officials will wait to see what, if anything, NASCAR recommends after Hamlin's accident.

''NASCAR is reviewing the incident and any improvements that can be made, will be made,'' Talley said. ''If NASCAR feels that additional SAFER Barriers are needed, then we will absolutely make those enhancements. SAFER barrier recommendations are based on past history and this is a situation we, nor NASCAR has ever seen at this track before.''

IndyCar last year returned to Auto Club Speedway for the first time since 2005 and the season finale is scheduled to be held at the track in October.

But the issue of the SAFER barriers and Hamlin's impact seemed to be overshadowed by the most recent flare-up in this new feud.

Logano managed to finish third despite wrecking into the outside wall after hitting Hamlin, who spun Logano last week at Bristol to spark a bitter post-race confrontation.

Because of the recent bickering between the former teammates, Logano was somewhat defiant after Sunday's accident.

''He probably shouldn't have done what he did last week, so that's what he gets,'' Logano said.

On Monday, Logano's car owner said the driver was unaware of Hamlin's condition when he made the comment during a television interview.

''That's a tough thing, Joey had no idea what the situation was with Denny when he was doing the interview,'' Roger Penske said. ''It's one of those things that came out and taken out of context isn't what he meant. He can't take it back, but people are certainly blowing that up to mean something different than what he knew at the time.''

Tony Stewart also got into a post-race shoving match with Logano, who aggressively blocked Stewart on a late restart. Stewart claimed Logano threw a water bottle at him when he approached, but crews separated the two before it turned into a full fight.

Stewart later railed against the 22-year-old Logano in several interviews and accused him of being ''nothing but a little rich kid that's never had to work in his life.''

Logano was 18 when he broke into NASCAR with Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008 with the nickname ''Sliced Bread.'' He'd risen rapidly through the racing ranks with the financial backing from his father, Tom, who used funds from the family's Connecticut waste management company to help his two children pursue their dreams.

Logano had the means to pursue a racing career, and was in Georgia racing quarter midgets at the age of 6 while his older sister chased a life of competitive ice skating.

But Tom Logano's near-constant presence at the NASCAR races hurt Logano's reputation, and him angrily demanding his son go after Kevin Harvick after a 2010 incident at Pocono only made things worse.

On Monday, Patricia Driscoll, girlfriend of Kurt Busch, referred to Logano as (hash)TrustFundRacer in a series of tweets that accused him of reckless racing with ''no less than 5 drivers.''

''We were lucky that none of the others were hurt by his actions,'' Driscoll tweeted.

An agitated Penske thought the criticism of Logano's upbringing was out of line.

''He's a solid young man and his family has supported him in racing as many families of professional athletes do in every sport,'' Penske said. ''Anyone who looks at that as a criticism, to focus on that is just petty.''

He also said he supported his driver, who signed last year to join the Penske Racing organization as teammate to defending Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski.

''Listen, Joey is a great driver and what happened at the end there wasn't anything more than hard racing,'' Penske said. ''I stand behind him and I think he's going to go down as one of the greatest drivers to ever race.''

It never developed at JGR, where Logano replaced Stewart in 2009 and was teammates with Busch and Hamlin. Signs of a rift between Hamlin and Logano didn't show publicly until after this year's season-opening Daytona 500, when the two exchanged barbs on Twitter.

Then came an on-track incident at Bristol last week, more exchanges on Twitter, and finally their last-lap battle for the win at Fontana. Although the crash seemed to be a result of hard racing, Logano's lack of empathy immediately after the race gave the impression his contact with Hamlin was intentional.

Hamlin got himself out of the car, but then slumped to the ground beside it before an ambulance arrived. He was eventually airlifted out due to traffic around the track.

The injury is a bit more common in open-wheel racing, which has had three incidents of drivers breaking their backs since 2009.

Will Power broke several vertebrae in his lower back in a 2009 crash during practice at Sonoma and missed that event and the final three races of the season. He couldn't train for two months and wore a back brace for almost four months.

He also suffered a compression fracture of his fourth thoracic vertebra in the 2011 season finale at Las Vegas but missed no racing as he healed during the offseason.

Justin Wilson fractured his fifth thoracic vertebra in 2011 and missed the last six races of the season. Wilson said he was in a back brace for 10 weeks.

Three-time Indianapolis 500 winner Dario Franchitti fractured the L1 vertebra in his back in a 2003 motorcycle accident. He needed surgery and was out of a race car for almost nine months.

In NASCAR, Sterling Marlin missed the last seven races of the 2002 season with a fractured vertebra in his neck.

 

Ovechkin, Backstrom, Kadri named NHL's 'Three Stars'

By The Sports Xchange | The SportsXchange20 hours ago
The NHL announced Monday that Washington Capitals left wing Alex
Ovechkin, Minnesota Wild goaltender Niklas Backstrom and Toronto Maple
Leafs center Nazem Kadri were named the league's "Three Stars" of the week.
Ovechkin led the league with five goals and eight points in four games. He has scored in five straight games overall. He combined for five points in back-to-back games at the Winnipeg Jets. He had a goal and two assists on Thursday and two goals on Friday.
Ovechkin leads Washington with 16 goals in 32 games and is second with 31 points.
Backstrom went 3-0-0 last week with a 1.00 goals-against average, .972 save percentage and one shutout as the Wild extended their win streak to a season-best five games. He combined for 104 saves over last week's games, including a season-high 36 against the host Detroit Red Wings on Wednesday.
Backstrom is second in the NHL with 16 wins this season with a 2.23 goals-against average and .921 save percentage in 25 games.
Kadri tallied seven points in three games with three goals and four assists. He had a career-best three assists and had a plus-3 rating in a 4-2 win over the Tampa Bay Lightning on Wednesday. He followed that up with two goals and an assist in a 5-4 shootout loss at the Buffalo Sabres on Thursday.
Kadri leads Toronto with 34 points in 32 games. He is tied for the team lead with 14 goals and 20 assists.