Kevin Ollie addresses speculation he could leave for NBA gig

Hoping to douse the speculation over whether he'll leave for an NBA job this spring, UConn coach Kevin Ollie released a carefully worded statement Wednesday reaffirming his commitment to the Huskies.

"As I have said many times, I am proud and honored to be the head basketball coach at the University of Connecticut and I have no plans to pursue other opportunities," Ollie said. "We are already excited about next season and I am looking forward to preparing our team to be the best we can be on the court, in the classroom, and in our community."

Ollie's statement comes amid speculation that he could become Oklahoma City's next coach if the franchise opts to part ways with Scott Brooks. My Yahoo Sports colleague Adrian Wojnarowski wrote last week that the Thunder are still evaluating Brooks and that Ollie and Florida coach Billy Donovan were both potential candidates should the job open.

Ollie is potentially a good fit for Oklahoma City because of the respect he earned during his brief stint there as a player at the end of his career. Thunder general manager Sam Presti acquired Ollie in 2009 in hopes that the hard-working 36-year-old journeyman guard would serve as a mentor for young stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook.

Presti told Yahoo Sports in 2012 that he was so impressed by Ollie's approach to the game at the end of the 2009-10 season that he took the veteran to lunch to discuss his post-basketball goals. What Presti learned was Ollie had interest in a coaching or front office position with the Thunder but his first choice was to return to his alma mater and coach under Jim Calhoun.

Ollie could have to make a similar decision again this spring if the Thunder job opens and Presti decides to make him an offer — and his statement Wednesday leaves him plenty of wiggle room to go in whichever direction he chooses. Ollie insisted he will not pursue another job this spring but stopped well short of guaranteeing he'd be at UConn next season.

In reality, Wednesday's statement was likely aimed at opposing coaches who will use the interest Ollie has received from NBA teams as a way to negatively recruit against the Huskies. This statement is Ollie's way of speaking directly to recruits and telling them he intends to remain at UConn even if he still leaves himself an out should the job of his dreams come along.

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Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!





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Jimbo Fisher thinks Winston Publix 'hook up' was 'isolated incident'

TALLAHASSEE, FL - APRIL 11: Head coach Jimbo Fisher of the Florida State Seminole watches action during Florida State's Garnet and Gold spring game at Doak Campbell Stadium on April 11, 2015 in Tallahassee, Florida. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)In an episode of ESPN’s “Draft Academy,” former Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston said he had a “hook up” for free food with a Publix employee that led to his infamous citation for shoplifting crab legs.

A day after the episode aired, FSU head coach Jimbo Fisher said he believes Winston’s belief that he could walk out of the store with free food was an “isolated incident,” according to Warchant.com.

In past interviews, Fisher said that Winston made a mistake when he walked out without paying. Fisher said Wednesday that Winston’s explanation on “Draft Academy,” which took place in a classroom segment with Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh, was the first time he heard of the “hook up” arrangement.

“If he says it is (true), I guess it is,” Fisher said on an ACC coaches’ teleconference. “I had no knowledge of it until I came in this morning.”

Fisher said FSU’s compliance department reached out to Publix after the incident.

“We did make contact with Publix back then to make sure there was nothing going on … talking to our compliance this morning. They had communications about that before, and they’ve had communications today,” Fisher said. “They think it’s a totally isolated incident that happened. They’re in the process of working with it right now. They don’t think it’s anything else more than that.”

Winston never made a public comment about the incident, but did say he made a “terrible mistake” in a statement released through FSU.

“In a moment of youthful ignorance, I walked out of the store without paying for one of my items,” the statement said in part.

Winston was suspended from the Seminoles’ baseball team for three games and performed community service after being cited.

For more Florida State news, visit Warchant.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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BLS Roundtable: Which team's surprising hot start is for real?

Sample size can be a dangerous thing. After two weeks, some surprising clubs have gotten off to hot starts, and have found themselves near the top of their respective divisions. While winning a ton of games in April doesn't guarantee success, it's certainly helpful.

It's usually unwise to dramatically alter our opinions after just two weeks of play, but that's exactly what we're doing here. If you had to pick one surprising team you think is for real, which team would you pick? 

NEW YORK METS
While the first two weeks have brought forth concerns about their health, the key takeaway about the New York Mets is such: They know how to win ballgames. The Mets, 11-3, have the best record in the NL, and are winners of nine straight. Their strength has been pitching — with Matt Harvey returning in ace form and Bartolo Colton impressing as an elder statesman. Their ERA is good, their strikeouts are nice and they've given up the second fewest walks in MLB. Pitching wins, all year long, so that's the best reason for optimism about the Mets. They'll probably need another bat, and they can't sustain too many more injuries, but these Mets have every opportunity to make a run. Especially with the Marlins underwhelming and the Nats only playing so-so. (Mike Oz)

(Getty Images)

COLORADO ROCKIES
For the past four seasons, the Rockies have been two players away from being relevant. Those two players have been on the roster the entire time, but not on the field nearly enough. Of course, I'm talking Troy Tulowitzki and Carlos Gonzalez. As long as they're healthy, Colorado will be a difficult team to contend with. The starting pitcher is what it's always been, inconsistent and unattractive. But with emerging stars like Nolan Arenado and Corey Dickerson joining the big two, in addition to a highly underrated bullpen, they could easily continue rolling out West. (Mark Townsend)

HOUSTON ASTROS
Sure they’re just 8-6, but these are the Houston Astros we’re talking about. Losers of 92 games last season, 111 the season before that, 107 in 2012, and 106 in 2011, a plus-.500 record even at this early juncture is sign of progress in Houston and actually has them in first place in the AL West. They’re not scoring many runs  the Astros are third to last in the AL in runs scored at 41  but their pitching staff is giving them a chance to win. Led by unheralded starters Dallas Keuchel (2-0, 0.90 ERA) and Collin McHugh (3-0, 2.41 ERA), Houston is already proving they’re not going to get pushed around like they have been in the past. (Israel Fehr)

(AP Photo)

ATLANTA BRAVES
After the Braves spent the offseason trading Jason Heyward and Justin Upton and Evan Gattis and Melvin Upton and Craig Kimbrel, it seemed like they were going into rebuilding mode. Instead, at 8-5, they trail only the New York Mets (?) in the suddenly formidable NL East. Why can they keep it going? Pitching, mostly. The Braves acquired Shelby Miller in the Heyward trade with the Cardinals and at 24 he’s already in his third full season and has the pedigree to be a star. Miller along with Julio Teheran, an All Star in 2014, and budding star Alex Wood form a young, very good top three in the rotation. If they can continue to get offense from new outfielders Nick Markakis and Jonny Gomes, and from holdovers like slugger Freddie Freeman, the Braves will be able to keep up with anybody in the East. (Ian Denomme)

OAKLAND ATHLETICS
After a strange offseason, many expected the Athletics to be decent, but still finish behind both the Mariners and Angels in the West. Thus far, the A's have been passable, at 7-8. That's not a tremendous start, but there's still a lot to like here. The Athletics are currently getting by without Jarrod Parker or A.J. Griffin. Parker appears to be about a month away, so any wins the team can bank before getting those players back is significant. On top of that, it's starting to look like Stephen Vogt's performance last season wasn't a fluke. The A's have been willing to embrace platoons in recent years, and early returns on Ike Davis are proving that this strategy can work. This team is run by smart people, both in the front office and on the field. We were foolish to doubt them coming into the year. (Chris Cwik)

Which team do you believe in? Be sure to let us know on Twitter, Facebook or in the comments. 





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Nate Silver trashes NHL Las Vegas plan, puts over Canadian expansion

Nate Silver took time away from predicting who wins Montana’s House District 37 with frighteningly accuracy to trash the NHL’s expansion potential in Las Vegas. 

He says the idea makes “little sense” and lays out several reasons for this conclusion; and while there’s no question Silver’s protests are valid (and, frankly, well-trodden), some of them are a little specious.

Writes Silver:

Our 2013 analysis estimated that there are just 91,000 NHL fans in metro Las Vegas. That’s tiny even by comparison to the six smallest NHL markets that I mentioned before, which have between 146,000 (Nashville) and 279,000 (Tampa) hockey fans. And it’s well below Seattle’s 241,000 or Quebec City’s 530,000 fans.

Please recall the patently absurd methodology Silver used to arrive at those numbers: Taking the metro population for each city, and then using how many people searched the term “NHL” on Google to extrapolate the “NHL fan population.”

Which means that the fan population is determined by (a) how many people use a given product to locate things on the Internet and (b) how many people search for the league rather than a specific team or player, which is what an active fan would do (think of your own fan behavior) and (c) completely ignores social reach and regional traffic to NHL.com, for example.

(Also, based on the last 12 months, the NHL should expand to Wisconsin.)

Silver continues:

But here’s another reason to be skeptical about Las Vegas: The city has had several professional sports franchises (albeit none from the four or five largest North American sports leagues), and it hasn’t supported them very well.

That’s a hell of a parenthetical caveat.

The difference in fan engagement for a minor league team and a major league team in the U.S. strains the credibility of the thesis. Especially when dealing with Las Vegas, which we all know is going to rely on tourism to help fill seats: What does an ECHL’s team attendance have to do with an NHL’s potential in an arena on the Strip?

From Silver:

It’s asking a lot for Las Vegas to support a major league team when it’s struggled to support pretty much every minor league team that’s tried to play there. If the city has some positives, it also has some negatives, like irregular working hours, middling public transit and abundant competition for the entertainment dollar, which may depress sports attendance.

All super completely valid, and the things the NHL and Bill Foley are going to have to convince the Board of Governors aren’t death knells for Vegas expansion.

Silver believes the NBA would be a success with a Vegas expansion team, partially because the UNLV Runnin’ Rebels drew so many students whose attendance at games was as much a social engagement as it was a passion for basketball … I mean, “fans.”

Where would Silver like to see NHL team movement? Why, away from the U.S. and more into Canada!

There ought to be more NHL teams in Canada, which has only seven of the 30 NHL franchises despite having about as many hockey fans as the United States. And there perhaps ought to be fewer in midsize American markets, especially those far from the Canadian border.

If only the good people of Tampa Bay spent less time filling their building to 98-percent capacity and searched “NHL” more on Google. 

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J.J. Watt thrills fan at Rockets game, twerks after Houston win

If you saw J.J. Watt rushing at you wearing full pads, you'd probably be terrified and drop into a fetal position. But if you saw J.J. Watt rushing toward you to congratulate you on a job well done, your reaction would probably be exactly like this:

That's young Nicholas Connor, who sang the National Anthem before Tuesday night's Mavs-Rockets game. Afterward, Watt tried to locate the young lad:

The Rockets won the game 111-99, and Watt got his Gronk on with a fellow fan:

 

 

This only adds to Watt's sterling rep as the NFL's Nicest Nasty Guy.

[Thx to Fox Sports for the find]

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

And keep up with Jay over on Facebook, too.





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Jameis Winston opens up on crab legs to Jim Harbaugh, and it cracks the internet

Now we know about Jameis Winston's crabs.

The Florida State quarterback has been a lightning rod for attention, some good and plenty bad, the past two seasons. There was the very serious rape allegation, which later was dismissed. There also was the very stupid incident where Winston shouted out an expletive-laced joke that went bad in the crowded school cafeteria.

But beyond ridiculous was the crab leg-stealing incident that made people ask of Winston, "What exactly is his deal?"

We hadn't really gotten the full story. Until now.

Winston joined now Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh prior to the NFL scouting combine, and ESPN was there to tape it for a segment on it's "Draft Academy" show. The topic was character, and Harbaugh and Michigan offensive coordinator Jedd Fisch (who worked for the Jacksonville Jaguars the past two years) walked Winston through a mock interview like the ones Winston was soon to face from NFL teams.

The rest is seafood history.

When asked about his past issues, Winston fails to mention the shoplifting incident (or the rape accusations, but that's another story altogether). Fisch warns Winston that this comes off as the QB trying to cover it up when all 32 NFL teams know all about it.

Harbaugh, straight-faced, says either "stone crab" or "snow crab," and I'm just laughing my face off when he does.

Winston seems to hint that the crab was given to him. This is different from what we've heard before. FSU head coach JImbo Fisher said he thought Winston was unfamiliar with the grocery store concept and that he might have walked out of the Publix accidentally. But Winston suggests the crab was given to him, which leads us to Harbaugh Confusion Face (around the :57 mark), a face the Michigan-area media will get to know well soon.

So we come to find out that Winston was receiving free crab handouts by a Publix employee, which is plausible in the sense that the school would have to cover that up. Why? Otherwise, it could be deemed impermissable benefits and could have led to a suspension.

But more than anything it's Winston's explanation (and Harbaugh's reaction to it) that are worth the entertainment. Does it change your opinion of Winston? Make you feel any better about him staying out of trouble in the NFL? Whatever you think, it's easy to see the kid is going to take us on a wild ride.

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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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Random Recap: The 1985 Wrangler Sanfor-Set 400

Welcome to Random Recaps, our new weekly feature at From The Marbles. In this space, we'll recap a race from the past at the track the where Sprint Cup Series is racing next.

This week's race is the 1985 Wrangler Sanfor-Set 400. Need to know how Random Recap works? Click here.

Darrell Waltrip led the final six laps of the Wrangler Sanfor-Set 400 to beat Terry Labonte.

Labonte led 52 laps prior to being passed by Waltrip, who was able to cut into points leader Bill Elliott's advantage with the win. Elliott finished 12th and scored 127 points. After getting 180 for the win, Waltrip is now 153 points behind Elliott with seven races to go.

It's Waltrip's third win of 1985 and the 67th of his career.

Richard Petty finished third, Dale Earnhardt was fourth and Ricky Rudd was fifth. Harry Gant was the last car on the lead lap in sixth and polesitter Geoffrey Bodine was a lap down in seventh.

Greg Sacks, who started sixth, finished 20th, eight laps down. Why are we talking about Greg Sacks? Well, because he spun in front of most of the field early in the race and NASCAR didn't throw a caution flag. After starting 22nd, Waltrip narrowly avoided Sacks' car during the incident.

Epilogue: Waltrip ended up passing Elliott in the standings to win the 1985 championship. He'd win 17 more races in his career and retire with 84 career Sprint Cup Series wins. The $1.3 million he won that season stands as the high-water mark of his career, though he made over $1.2 million in 29 starts without a top-10 in 2000.

And can you imagine NASCAR not throwing a caution flag if a similar situation happened during Saturday night's Richmond race? No, neither can we.

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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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Stanford RB Kelsey Young transfers to Boise State for fifth year

Stanford running back Kelsey Young runs against Utah during the second half of an NCAA college football game on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014, in Stanford, Calif. Utah won 20-17 in overtime. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)Boise State received a boost to its depth at running back on Tuesday.

Head coach Bryan Harsin announced that Stanford running back Kelsey Young is joining the Broncos as a graduate transfer for the 2015 season. Young, who earned a degree in computer science, will be eligible to play immediately.

Young was the Cardinal’s second-leading rusher in 2014 with 331 yards on 66 attempts. He also caught five passes for 31 yards in 2014. In 2012 and 2013, Young combined for 270 yards and three touchdowns rushing and had 11 catches for 111 yards.

Young, the older brother of Boise redshirt freshman running back Cory Young, joins a group of backs looking to fill the void left by Jay Ajayi, who declared for the NFL Draft after his junior season.

In addition to Kelsey and Cory Young, the Broncos have sophomore Jeremy McNichols (159 yards, TD), senior Jack Fields (31 yards) and junior Devan Demas (173 yards, 2 TDs) on scholarship at running back. Raymond Sheard, a 2015 signee, won’t enroll at BSU after being arrested earlier this month.

Young wasn’t the only member of the Stanford backfield to transfer this week. Fullback Patrick Skov announced on Twitter Tuesday that he’ll transfer to Georgia Tech after graduating from Stanford in June. Skov played in 39 games for the Cardinal in the past three seasons and scored four rushing touchdowns. 

For more Boise State news, visit Blue-Turf.com. For more Stanford news, visit CardinalSportsReport.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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Need to brush up on the NFL draft? Here's a guide to the top 50 players

Yahoo Sports draft expert Eric Edholm broke down the top 50 NFL draft prospects for Shutdown Corner over the past few months and we've gathered all the profiles together for easy reference. Click on each athlete’s name for full analysis of his strengths and weaknesses. 

For easy reading of the profiles, check out the #Shutdown50 hashtag.

Have a question for Eric? Head over to our Ask Us Anything page on the ShutdownDraft 365 Tumblr.

1. QB Jameis Winston Florida State 
2. WR Kevin White West Virginia 
3. DE-DT Leonard Williams USC
4. DE-OLB Dante Fowler Florida
5. WR Amari Cooper Alabama

6. OLB-DE Shane Ray Missouri
7. QB Marcus Mariota Oregon
8. OLB-DE Randy Gregory Nebraska
9. DT Danny Shelton Washington
10. RB Todd Gurley Georgia

11. WR DeVante Parker Louisville
12. OLB/DE Vic Beasley Clemson
13. OT/OG La’el Collins Louisiana State
14. OL Brandon Scherff Iowa
15. S Landon Collins Alabama

16. CB Trae Waynes Michigan State
17. OT Andrus Peat Stanford
18. LB/RB/S Shaq Thompson Washington
19. DT Malcom Brown Texas
20. DE/DT Arik Armstead Oregon

21. OLB/DE Alvin “Bud” Dupree Kentucky
22. OT/OG T.J. Clemmings Pittsburgh
23. CB Marcus Peters Washington
24. DT Eddie Goldman Florida State
25. Dorial Green-Beckham Missouri

26. RB Melvin Gordon Wisconsin
27. LB Benadrick McKinney Mississippi State
28. OLB/DE Eli Harold Virginia
29. TE Maxx Williams Minnesota
30. LB Eric Kendricks UCLA

31. CB P.J. Williams Florida State
32. OT Ereck Flowers Miami
33. OT D.J. Humphries Florida
34. CB Jalen Collins Louisiana State
35. OT Cedric Ogbuehi Texas A&M

36. LB Paul Dawson TCU
37. DE Owamagbe Odighizuwa UCLA
38. WR Jaelen Strong Arizona State
39. OL Cameron Erving Florida State
40. DT Jordan Phillips Oklahoma

41. WR/TE Devin Funchess Michigan
42. WR Devin Smith Ohio State
43. OT Jake Fisher Oregon
44. DE Preston Smith Mississippi State
45. RB Jay Ajayi Boise State

46. RB Duke Johnson Miami
47. RB Ameer Abdullah Nebraska
48. CB Kevin Johnson Wake Forest
49. WR Breshad Perriman Central Florida
50. DL Michael Bennett Ohio State





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Nick Saban says satellite camps are 'ridiculous'

FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2015, file photo, Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks to his players in the first half of the Sugar Bowl NCAA college football playoff semifinal game against Ohio State in New Orleans. Saban is expected to address the media Monday, March 30, 2015, after two Crimson Tide players were arrested in separate cases over the weekend. Defensive back Geno Smith and defensive lineman Jonathan Taylor are facing legal trouble again.(AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File)Add Alabama’s Nick Saban to the list of SEC coaches who aren’t pleased with Big Ten coaches working at satellite camps in the South.

Michigan unveiled its “Football Summer Swarm Tour” last week that includes appearances at nine camps in seven states from June 4-12. One stop is right in Saban’s backyard at Prattville High School in Prattville, Ala. When asked at a Crimson Caravan stop Tuesday evening, Saban said satellite camps are “ridiculous.”

“If we’re all going to travel all over the country to have satellite camps, you know, how ridiculous is that?” Saban said, per Al.com. “I mean we’re not allowed to go to all-star games, but now we’re going to have satellite camps all over the country. So it doesn’t really make sense.”

As detailed in a column from Yahoo Sports’ Pat Forde on Tuesday, incoming SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, who called the camps “recruiting tours,” said that the league preferred the NCAA to outlaw the practice of coaching staffs being “guests” at other school’s camps.

The NCAA currently prohibits programs from hosting camps more than 50 miles from their own campus, but a loophole does allow coaching staffs to participate as guests at camps hosted by other schools – whether it’s at the high school level or a lower level of college football.

While other programs across the country have taken advantage of that loophole in the past, the issue first seemed to cause a stir among SEC coaches when Penn State coach James Franklin brought his staff to camps in Florida and Georgia last summer. Franklin will continue the practice this summer with stops in North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, suburban Chicago and Detroit.

The SEC forbids its member programs from taking advantage of that loophole and Sankey said that the issue would be discussed at next month’s SEC meetings.

“I’m not sure that the others want our coaches going to places like State College, Pennsylvania, because very clearly, if we do take the approach others have, they will go places and run those satellite camps, and it will certainly, I would expect, change the tone of the conversation,” Sankey said.

Saban considers the camps a “competitive disadvantage” that needs to be addressed.

“I certainly think that we need to address this if it’s going to be a competitive disadvantage and other people are going to have these kind of camps,” Saban said. “So, I think it’s something that we’ll probably address as a conference, and I think it’s something we ought to look at from an NCAA standpoint because I think it’s best to have a rule where people come to your campus, they can come to your camp.”

For more Alabama news, visit TideSports.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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Puck Daddy Power Rankings: NHL Player Safety, selling ice cream, Mike Babcock

[Author's note: Power rankings are usually three things: Bad, wrong, and boring. You typically know just as well as the authors which teams won what games against who and what it all means, so our moving the Red Wings up four spots or whatever really doesn't tell you anything you didn't know. Who's hot, who's not, who cares? For this reason, we're doing a power ranking of things that are usually not teams. You'll see what I mean.] 

5. So we're just not suspending anyone, huh?

So far in these playoffs, there have been about 100 suspension-worthy incidents (rough estimate). Incidents that, if they'd happened in the regular season, would have resulted in multi-game bans for the perpetrators, who would have earned every ounce of the discipline.

Instead, the NHL's Department of Player Safety seems to have taken the postseason off, presumably after hanging a “Gone Fishin'” sign on Stephane Quintal's still-spinning desk chair.

First PK Subban didn't get suspended for breaking Mark Stone's wrist — or whatever he did, I'm still not totally sure anyone 100 percent knows — but maybe you say the game misconduct was enough of a punishment. Okay. But if he did that in the regular season, maybe-breaking a guy's wrist on a baseball-swing slash 40 miles from the puck and the play, he's gone for at least a game. That much is obvious.

And what about Dustin Byfuglien charging in after Corey Perry scored a goal and just straight up punching him in the head? A shot to the noodle after a play doesn't seem at least worthy of some sort of discipline? Oh, right, he got a two-minute minor. Gotcha.

Or what about almost everyone in this Calgary/Vancouver series? Both Deryk Engelland and Alex Burrows have had late instigators — which necessitate a suspension — rescinded. Kris Russell didn't get a thing for cross checking Nick Bonino in the back of the head (pretty similar to that Dustin Byfuglien hit on JT Miller a few weeks ago that got him tossed for four). Michael Ferland didn't get a thing for boarding Luca Sbisa. Nothing to Brad Richardson for punching Matt Stajan repeatedly after the latter was already on his back on the ice. Nothing to Derek Dorsett and Dan Hamhuis for double-teaming a guy and not even getting broken up by officials for a good minute? And there are more. After all the bad behavior in this series, both teams should be playing with half an AHL lineup at this point.

You can frankly go on for a while here, but apparently everyone in DOPS is sitting on the beach, enjoying some margaritas, and waiting until the next regular season — when games don't matter as much — to start teaching guys lessons about trying to severely injure their opponents.

Johnny Gaudreau might want to try lighting his stick on fire for the rest of this series and using it as a weapon, because the playoffs are Thunderdome. Just about anything goes.

And even if someone does get suspended at some point (yeah right!) it'll only be for half the games they actually deserve because playoff suspensions count double or whatever unwritten rule the league must follow says.

4. Selling ice cream

So Jim Rutherford took a run at a Pittsburgh reporter after the team lost, and this is being spun as, “Jim Rutherford is losing his composure because his team is bad and he did a bad job building it.”

That doesn't really seem like a reasonable assessment.

Rob Rossi's critique — the big criticism he has of Rutherford's job as GM so far, apparently — is that the Christian Ehrhoff signing, a bargain at $4 million, didn't address the team's needs? “The last thing the Penguins needed last offseason was another veteran defenseman,” Rossi wrote.

Well, maybe he'd have been able to prove himself a little better, and maybe even help the Pens play a little better in these playoffs, if he'd been healthy. Or if Kris Letang were healthy. Or if Olli Maatta were healthy. Were any of these things the case, we're not having a conversation about how badly Rutherford screwed up.

But the Penguins are, in fact, missing all of their top three defensemen. All of them. Their three best D, one of whom may be considered among the best in the league when he's playing well, on the shelf. And that means ice time they should be getting are going to Paul Martin (23:24 per game) and Ian Cole (22:54) and — oh god — Ben Lovejoy and Rob Scuderi (21:50 and 21:02). Shuffle those guys down in the lineup for a healthy top-three and one of them's not even dressing. Let alone playing more than 21 a night.

And this isn't to defend Rutherford, either, because he's not really a great GM and he didn't do enough to fix the team. But who are the team that's looking the best in these playoffs right now? Tampa and Anaheim? Take their top three defensemen away and boy all of a sudden they're not looking quite so dominant.

So yeah, you got yelled at by a GM. And sure it's funny that he told you to sell ice cream. But if your critique is “he spent too much on a very good defenseman who got hurt,” you weren't right about that first part.

3. Conspiracy theories

Finding evidence that the NHL might have screwed up the draft lottery isn't the same thing as finding evidence that the league acted in bad faith. No one outside of Edmonton wanted Connor McDavid in Edmonton.

If you start looking at every screw-up the league makes as evidence that there's a conspiracy to screw [your team] afoot, the world's gonna close in around you awful quick. The NHL screws everything up. That's the default setting. Messing up the draft lottery ball situation is a feature, not a bug.

2. Trophy season

Congrats to Winnipeg fans on their shiny new medal from the NHL media this week. You win!!!! Even if your team is getting its brains beat in and you should be miserable!!!!!! Hooray for you!!!!!!!!!!

Look, it's nice that hockey fans in Winnipeg finally got an NHL playoff game after all this time, I guess. But boy, act like you've been there before.

1. Coaching candidates

In the past few weeks a lot of coaches have gotten fired by or — haha — Mutually Parted Ways With their teams. More will probably be coming soon enough (like, say, when the Penguins get eliminated). Which means there will be a lot of job openings this summer, which you'd have to think only start to get filled after the playoffs.

That's because the big fish here is obviously Mike Babcock. Every team in the league is like, "Oh yeah, we have a job opening. We definitely want Babcock to take it." And Babcock is wise to not disabuse them of the idea that they might actually be able to let that happen. If he hits the open market on July 1 — and he almost certainly will — there's going to be a feeding frenzy. Everyone wants Mike Babcock because he is a good coach (probably not the best in the league, but certainly up there). He's going to be paid as such very, very soon.

But the odds that he's going to, say, Buffalo or Philadelphia, which apparently have him just as high on the list as everyone else, seem incredibly, almost impossibly low, do they not? Even if Terry Pegula backs a dump truck full of money onto Babcock's front lawn at 9 a.m., is that the situation Babcock really wants to get into? Similarly, does he want a defense with a top pairing (in terms of ice time) of Mark Streit and Mike Del Zotto? You'd need a lot more money than what you probably think is reasonable — we're talking Toronto money here — to make that happen.

But hearing every team's preferences in a coaching candidate is like hearing who they'd like to draft in June, regardless of draft position ("We're picking No. 12 and we hope McDavid falls to us there.") or who they'd like to sign this summer ("Isn't that Stamkos kid a free agent soon?") or which supermodel they'd like to marry.

Where would this league be without wishful thinking, I guess.

(Not ranked this week: Winnipeg fans.

Oh you said “Katie Perry” to the Anaheim forward Corey Perry. Because their surnames are the same. And the implication is that women are bad and it would be bad to be a woman. So you're making fun of him with the idea that he is a woman himself, and therefore bad. Haha, that's classic. Great work. You are cool and good.)





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FSU trustees discuss ACC's place in CFB landscape during meeting

People associated with schools outside the Big 12 were also apparently frustrated with the College Football Playoff's process in 2014.

According to Warchant.com, two members of the Florida State Board of Trustees expressed concern at a March meeting over the ACC's status and one called for an expansion of the College Football Playoff.

"I think the perceived bias of the ACC in general, [with] Florida State falling to No. 4 in the rankings and still being undefeated and being [No.] 3 at the end of the season … a one-loss ACC team or two-loss ACC team is going to have a hard time breaking that top four," trustee Joe Gruters said. "I think the top ACC team over the next four or five years, we're going to be in that [No.] 5 to 8 category. And we're going to be on the outside looking in."

Gruters then asked for the school to urge the ACC to ask the Playoff to expand to eight teams. Not long ago, TCU coach Gary Patterson expressed his disappointment at the process that knocked the Horned Frogs from the top four of the standings during the last week of the season.

Trustee Edward Burr brought up the ACC's long-debated television network and said he wanted tangible signs of progress that the network was moving forward.

"All of the Big Five is going to have one except for us if we don't get something moving soon," Burr said. "And that's a major revenue source."

The ACC Network has been discussed ever since the last major round of conference expansion. While it's likely to happen eventually, the ACC and the Big 12 are the only Power Five conferences without a television network. And yes, we want to quickly point out that we don't think there's a correlation between CFP favoritism and conferences who have television networks. It's not like a bunch of people have access to the Pac-12 Network.

Does the ACC have a chance of its champion missing out on the Playoff in the next few years? Of course. And as FSU has been the conference's dominant team, it's natural that someone associated with the school would play the role of Chicken Little after one season of the CFP. But, as we saw last year, the chances of missing out are not limited to just the ACC. Until the final week of the season, the Big Ten was looking like it'd be left out.

According to ACC commissioner John Swofford, the conference hears the calls for CFP expansion but isn't endorsing them.

"I don't think there's any significant support for expanding the playoff at this point in time, particularly at the presidential level," Swofford told Warchant. "The feedback that we are getting is that the vast majority of individuals that make these decisions are completely supportive of the four teams at this point in time. And I would expect that to hold true through this 12-year contract in all probability. That remains to be seen, but there does not seem to be much momentum at all for expanding from four to eight."
For more Florida State news, visit Warchant.com.

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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 position rankings: No first-round-caliber TEs, not even Maxx Williams

The NFL loves its tight ends these days, which makes the 2015 draft allotment so disappointing.

It’s not a strong group overall — one of the weakest in years, one NFL evaluator told the Shutdown Corner last week, in fact — and the player with the highest ceiling, Minnesota’s Maxx Williams, is far from perfect prospect.

Williams is an enticing talent, and he’s still only 20 years old, but he doesn’t separate from coverage very well on tape and must get stronger. Still, he’s the best receiving option of the group and could be a solid contributor in time.

After that, it’s thin.

Miami (Fla.)’s Clive Walford stood tall at the Senior Bowl and might be like recent Hurricanes products that show better in the NFL than they did in college. Similarly, Rutgers’ Tyler Kroft was held back by bad quarterback play and injuries and also might have a nice pro future.

But they and the next handful of tight ends are far from sure things, and very few can be considered good two-way players as both proficient receivers and blockers. Although it’s a moderately reliable “hands” group, the overall athleticism in this year’s tight end collection appears marginal at best.

Here are our top 10 tight end prospects for the 2015 NFL draft:

Ranking Player School Height Weight Notable statistic Scouting skinny
1 Maxx Williams Minnesota 6-4 249 28 of 36 catches in '14 went for first down or TD Cocky, smooth-muscled, natural receiver needs work as blocker;only 20 years old
2 Clive Walford Miami (Fla.) 6-4 251 Averaged 15.3 yards per reception past three seasons "Move" tight end who doesn't run well but does almost everything else well
3 Tyler Kroft Rutgers 6-5 246 Only 24 catches, 269 yards, zero TDs last season Talented receiver with limited explosion who has solid, all-around skills
4 Jeff Heuerman Ohio State 6-5 254 Caught 52 passes in 50 college games Well-built, large-framed positional blocker who was better as junior
5 Nick Boyle Delaware 6-4 268 Avergaed 9.7 yards per catch over four-year career Thickly built blocker with underrated receiving skills despite athletic limitations
6 Rory "Busta" Anderson South Carolina 6-5 244 Only TE at combine to have hands smaller than 9 inches Injury-prone, athletically intriguing "F" receiver who needs time to develop
7 Jesse James Penn State 6-7 261 37-inch vertical leap, 27 bench-press reps at combine Long-armed, explosive man with mass who doesn't dominate but is functional
8 Blake Bell Oklahoma 6-6 252 Accounted for 40 TDs at OU as QB, tight end Converted QB, "Belldozer" has Tim Tebow-like run skills but not yet NFL-grade blocker
9 Nick O'Leary Florida State  6-3 252 13 touchdowns past two seasons combined Chris Cooley-esque H-back has athletic limitations but tries hard
10 A.J. Derby Arkansas 6-4 251 22-303-3 receiving in one year as TE Versatile, short-armed athlete who could be a quality reserve

SLEEPER
Anderson

The confident, linear Anderson has some really intriguing receiving skills and could end up being a good detached tight end. His best blocking also comes on the perimeter, and unlike other similarly skilled players he gives good effort in that department. Small hands and so-so strength always could be limiting factors, and he has been banged up a lot, but Anderson might be a surprise pass catcher with a better quarterback.

Ben Koyack (Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images)OVERRATED
Ben Koyack, Notre Dame

The recent run of Irish tight ends who have been high draft picks and solid successes in the NFL has set the bar high, and Koyack unfortunately doesn’t stack up to his predecessors. He looks the part, is smart, has massive hands and does just enough to tempt you. But the pieces don’t all add up, and he appears to be a one-speed player with limited blocking function who will always leave you wanting more.

SMALL-SCHOOL WONDER
Wes Saxton, South Alabama

The late-blooming, still-raw Saxton had a 36-inch vertical leap and turned in the fastest 10-yard split of any tight end at the NFL scouting combine and shows on tape some real burst and explosion and fluid movement skills. He’s still raw as heck as a receiver, is coming from a crude passing attack and could take years to fully develop (a la Lardarius Green). But a patient team might be rewarded in time with a surprisingly good athletic receiver.

COULD RISE IN DRAFT
Kroft

He’s not a “wow” prospect, but Kroft does a lot of things well and scouts believe he can continue to grow and get stronger. Playing both in-line and detached, Kroft showed good blocking effort and technique and did what he could in the passing game despite poor QB play and a revolving door of coordinators, position coaches and schemes in college. His athletic skills are limited, but Kroft has the look of one of the more dependable tight ends in this draft and could sneak into the second day of the draft because of it.

LATE-ROUND STEAL
Derby

The former Iowa quarterback has taken the long road to get here and has had to answer questions about his character after an alcohol-related arrest a few years ago. But despite a smaller, compact frame and limited blocking development, Derby has some real intrigue. His one year at tight end in a run-heavy offense opened the window of possibilities with a good position coach in his corner. Derby can catch the ball easily and at least appears willing to learn and play a number of roles to help a team win.

PLAYER WHO WILL GO UNDRAFTED BUT SHOULDN’T
Eric Tomlinson, TCU

The hulking Tomlinson can be a sixth offensive lineman in a run-based scheme and should endear himself to an old-school, throwback coach willing to use heavy sets for smashmouth, tone-setting football. Although Tomlinson is merely a short-area receiver, he has dependable hands. A very reliable No. 2 in-line TE prospect.

IDEAL FIT
Walford to the Broncos

The smart, hard-working, well-sculpted Walford was underused at Miami (go figure!) but raised his stock with a good Senior Bowl week and has the look of an excellent No. 2 or a solid No. 1 tight end. One year might not be enough time to earn the trust of Peyton Manning, but the Broncos need more depth at this position and would be smart to develop a future starter for down the road. Walford doesn’t run all that fast, but look past the numbers and you’ll see a good football player. 

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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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2015 NFL Rookie Predictions: Ameer Abdullah demands your attention

Poked, prodded, pricked -- pro prospects have been thoroughly examined by franchises leading up to this month's NFL Draft. However, fantasy owners are just now dissecting their Year 1 potential. Over the next several weeks, we'll attempt to channel our inner Mayock determining whether Rookie X will be fantasy flame or lame material this fall. Wednesday's profile: Nebraska running back Ameer Abdullah.

College Highlights: The second-team All-America and Doak Walker finalist had a splendid run in his four years with the Cornhuskers. He's the only player in school history to rush for three-consecutive 1,000-yard seasons. Over his collegiate career, he amassed 4,588 rushing yards, second only to Mike Rozier all-time at Nebraska. His 174.8 all-purpose yards per game was the fourth-highest in college football last year. He also found the end zone 22 times in 13 games. Over his 813 career carries, he netted a sensational 5.64 yards per carry. No dummy, the history major was academic All-Big Ten in 2013 and 2014. 

Pluses: Attempting to tackle Abdullah is trying to wrangle a ghost. His ankle-breaking cuts, balance, patience, vision and burst make him highly elusive. Gets downhill quickly and finishes runs strong. Chooses to attack aggressively. Instead of running side-to-side in an attempt to hit home runs he seeks out cutback lanes and creases to maximize the most of what defenses give him. Accomplished receiver who hauled in 73 passes in four seasons with the 'Huskers. Shifty in space. Great pad level strong 'power' indicator despite underwhelming size (5-foot-9, 205 pounds). Burrows in short-yardage. High character player with superb leadership qualities. Excelled in agility tests at the Combine leading all RBs in the three-cone, 20-yard/60-yard shuttles, broad jump and vertical jump. 

Minuses: Abdullah isn't a burner by any stretch. He clocked a 4.60 40-yard dash at the Combine, but did follow up with a 4.53 at Nebraska's pro day. His smallish build likely means he's destined for a tandem backfield. Pass pro is average at best. Must show competency in that area immediately if he wants to earn noteworthy touches in 2015. Plagued by occasional butter hands. Coughed it up an unacceptable 13 times in four years in Lincoln. 

Pro Comp(s): Justin Forsett, Andre Ellington, Giovani Bernard, Pierre Thomas, Ahmad Bradshaw

Team Fits: Baltimore, Arizona, Dallas, Minnesota, Jacksonville

Projected ADP/Auction Value ($200 cap): 125-135 (RB38)/$8-$12

Fearless Forecast: Todd Gurley and Melvin Gordon have, understandably, received more pub than Abdullah, but the firefly is a fantastic talent who could prove instantly useful in PPR settings. His eagle eyes and cutting skills are perfect fits for a zone-blocking scheme. However, unless he blasts oncoming rushers in training camp, he could be nothing more than a role player initially. Still, there's enormous potential for him, pending landing spot. His work ethic and unique on-field contributions will be viewed appreciably in war rooms. If he shines in camp, it's no stretch to think he registers 40-plus catches for 900-1100 combined yards and a handful of scores this fall. Label him an upside bench back in 12-team leagues. 

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Jameis Winston explains crab legs issue to Jim Harbaugh (Video)

We now have an explanation from former Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston about the crab leg incident from a Tallahassee, Fla.-area Publix last spring.

Almost a year ago, Winston was issued a citation for shoplifting crab legs and crawfish and suspended from the Florida State baseball team. The 2013 Heisman winner did community service as part of his punishment and was the butt of many, many jokes throughout the rest of the season.

In an episode of ESPN's Draft Academy filmed earlier this year and released Tuesday, Winston met with Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh and Michigan quarterbacks coach Jedd Fisch. The three were discussing topics that would come up in interviews with teams and Fisch brought up the crab legs incident. Harbaugh, after telling Winston to be "as serious as a heart attack" when mentioning the incident then asked Winston exactly what happened. Here's what he said.

"Well, a week before was my buddy’s birthday and we had got a cake," Winston said. "We met a dude that worked inside Publix and he said 'hey, anytime you come in here, I got you.' So that day, we just walked out and he hooked us up with that. And when I went to get crab legs, I did the same thing and he just gave them to me and I walked out. And someone from inside the store had told the security that I didn’t pay for them and that’s how the whole thing started."

Despite the off-field questions surrounding not only the crab legs incident but Erica Kinsman's allegations against him and a series of profanities in public that got him suspended for a game in 2014, Winston is the presumptive No. 1 overall pick in the 2015 NFL draft and will likely be a member of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Of course, free food from a grocery store because of a football player's status could be an NCAA violation, though it's unlikely this is going to result in any punishments or a big investigation, just as Braxton Miller's Instagram photo netted little from the NCAA. But now, thanks to the coach of another college football team, we have a public explanation from Winston. You've gotta love draft season and the programming it creates.

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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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Closing Time: Mark Melancon's missing velocity

The Mesa Years (Upper Deck)For a solid 20 years, the Pirates didn’t have to evaluate their bullpen situation with any great deal of urgency. The Bucs downshifted into non-contender mode after the 1992 season (not coincidentally, when Barry Bonds left town), and Pittsburgh didn’t see a single winning club from 1993 to 2012. When you’re not a threat for the playoffs, every situation takes on a little less gravity. Smart brushfires don’t turn into ten-alarm calls.

Ah, but the 2015 Pirates are different. The Men of Clint Hurdle are coming off two straight playoff appearances, and they’re expected to contend again this year. So when their closer goes off the rails, even in a smaller sample, it’s something we have to take seriously.

Mark Melancon, you’re on the hot seat.

The Pirates closer suffered his first blown save of the year in Tuesday’s 9-8 loss to the Cubs, giving up three hits, two walks and three runs over a messy ninth inning. It’s the second three-run hiccup for Melancon, who now sports an 8.53 ERA. Batters swung and missed at his pitches 13.7 percent of the time last year; in the short sample of 2015, that number has tumbled to 7.6 percent. 

It’s important to look at the process over the results, and that’s really the crux of the problem. Melancon’s velocity has fallen off a cliff thus far in 2015. His fastball is down almost five mph, and his cutter and curve have dropped a couple of ticks on the gun. The Pirates insist Melancon isn’t hurt, for what that means, but something seems wrong. 

Pittsburgh has one of the best pitching coaches in the business - take a bow, Ray Searage - so if there’s any team that can get this fixed in short order, it’s the Bucs. But what if Melancon’s velocity drop is tied to a physical issue? We need to do our full diligence here, take a look around the bullpen. 

Lefty Tony Watson has been a key bullpen deputy for the last few years, posting superb ratios. He collected 10 sneaky wins last year, a couple of leftover saves, along with a 1.63 ERA and 1.02 WHIP. He’s the type of reliever you can roster simply for the quality innings. He hasn’t been terrific through his first nine innings this year (4 R, 2 HR), but then you see nine strikeouts against zero walks and you feel better. 

Of course, you know a lot of teams really don’t want to close with a southpaw. 

Tall right-hander Jared Hughes is coming off a 1.96/1.09 season of his own, though it was a pitch-to-contact special (19 BB, 36 K) that makes you suspicious. Arquimedes Caminero has a fastball in the mid-to-high 90s, if you want to see the radar gun pop, but he hasn't been anything special to this point. 

If I had to speculate on a non-Melancon option here, Watson’s my play. The velocity drop makes me nervous. And while smarter teams tend to be patient with most of their early slumpers, if there’s one position where the rules don’t completely apply, it’s at closer. Whatever gets you through the night.

There’s your first CT story on this fine Wednesday; we’ll have more bulletry shortly. 





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Carlos Rodon turns in shaky major-league debut as White Sox lose 6-2

Take a look around MLB with Big League Stew's daily wrap up. We'll hit on all of the biggest moments from the day that you may have missed, while providing highlights, photos and interesting stats.

Chicago is the place to be this season if you're looking for promising rookie debuts. The Cubs already made headlines by calling up uber-prospect Kris Bryant earlier in the season, but Tuesday gave the White Sox a chance to show off their young ace.

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Carlos Rodon made his major-league debut in the sixth inning of Tuesday's game against the Cleveland Indians. Much like Bryant's debut, Rodon's probably didn't go as well as he had hoped.

Rodon ran into trouble almost immediately. He walked Brandon Moss on four straight pitches, loading the bases. After going 2-0 to the next batter, Rodon received a mound visit from pitching coach Don Cooper. The visit wasn't enough, as Ryan Raburn hit a weak single, plating two runs. Rodon was able to get Lonnie Chisenhall out on a weak grounder to end the inning, but the damage was already done.

His control issues remained throughout the appearance. Rodon would walk the first two hitters he faced to open the seventh inning. Both players would come around to score later in the frame. 

Rodon calmed down a bit in the eighth. He allowed a double against Raburn, but notched his first major-league strikeout against Chisenhall. 

When all was said and done, Rodon allowed two runs on three hits over 2 1/3 innings. He walked three and managed one strikeout. 

Following the game, manager Robin Ventura said Rodon was probably a little too amped up during the outing. 

Rodon will continue to pitch out of relief, but it's assumed he'll eventually move to the rotation at some point this season. Like Bryant, he's probably hoping things get better quickly following a tough debut.

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REDS AND BREWERS COMBINE FOR THREE GRAND SLAMS, SCORE 26 RUNS

The Cincinnati Reds and Milwaukee Brewers showed how much they appreciated Bryan Price's rant Tuesday by trying to score as many runs as Price used profanities. While both clubs fell short, there's no shame in scoring a combined 26 runs.

The scoring began in the third inning. With the bases juiced, Jay Bruce clobbered a 91 mph fastball out to right field for the first grand slam of the contest. The Brewers would battle back in the bottom of the inning, however, tying the game at four.

That wouldn't last. In the fourth inning, Todd Frazier added the Reds' second grand slam of the night. Cincinnati's offense would continue to put crooked numbers on the board, finishing with 16 runs.

The Brewers did their best to get back into the game. In the sixth inning, they picked up their own grand slam. Elian Herrera belted a splitter out to right field, notching the third grand slam in the contest.

The Brewers would finish with 10 runs, but it wasn't enough.

(Getty Images)

STARLIN CASTRO STEALS THE SHOW DURING ADDISON RUSSELL'S DEBUT

Future shortstop Addison Russell may have been the biggest story line for the Chicago Cubs coming into the game, but current shortstop Starlin Castro stole the show Tuesday.

Castro went 3 for 5, with one run scored and four RBI during the contest. He singled in a run during the third inning and hit a solo shot in the fifth. Castro's biggest hit came in the ninth, though.

With his team trailing by two, Castro hit a ground ball to left field, plating two runs and tying the game. Welington Castillo wound knock in the go-ahead run later in the inning, and the Cubs would hold on for the 9-8 victory.

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Russell, who hit ninth during his debut, finished 0 for 5, with three strikeouts.

PADRES SCORE FOUR IN THE EIGHTH DURING COMEBACK VICTORY

The San Diego Padres continued their hitting ways Tuesday against the Colorado Rockies. With the team trailing by two in the eighth, the Padres started working their magic at the plate.

Things started with a leadoff single from Will Middlebrooks. After picking up one out, the Rockies opted to go to reliever Boone Logan. Logan promptly hit Yonder Alonso with a pitch, putting two men on. 

Yangervis Solarte then delivered a pinch-hit RBI single, bringing the game within one run. With two outs, Wil Myers would single in the tying run, and Derek Norris would double home two go-ahead runs.

Closer Craig Kimbrel would allow a solo home run in the ninth inning, but the Rockies couldn't complete the comeback, falling 7-6. 

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Chris Cwik is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at christophercwik@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!





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NHL Three Stars: Mrazek blanks Bolts; Hawks, Caps win in OT

No. 1 Star: Petr Mrazek, Detroit Red Wings 

The Detroit goalie bounced back from getting pulled in Game 2 with a 22-save shutout over the Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 3. He made a Pavel Datsyuk first-period goal stand up until Riley Sheahan made it 2-0 in the third. Detroit won the game, 3-0, and leads the series 2-1.

No. 2 Star: Brent Seabrook, Chicago Blackhawks

Seabrook’s goal one minute into triple overtime gave the Blackhawks the 3-2 win and the 3-1 series lead over the Nashville Predators. It’s his second goal of the playoffs.

No. 3 Star: Nicklas Backstrom, Washington Capitals

Backstrom assisted on Alex Ovechkin’s first-period goal and then scored the OT game-winner for the Caps in their 2-1 win over the New York Islanders. Braden Holtby made 36 saves in their Game 4 win, going back to D.C. tied at 2-2.

Honorable Mention: Jiri Hudler had a goal and an assist while Johnny Gaudreau scored his first of the playoffs in the Calgary Flames’ 3-1 win over the Vancouver Canucks in Game 4, going up 3-1. … Colin Wilson scored his fourth of the postseason.   

Did You Know? Detroit defenseman Brendan Smith made his 2015 playoff debut after being a healthy scratch in the first two games. (NHL.com)

Dishonorable Mention: Tampa was 0-for-6 on the power play. …  Johnny Boychuk and Nick Leddy were minus-2. … Eddie Lack was pulled in after the first period, giving up three goals on seven shots.

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Blackhawks win triple-OT classic, take 3-1 lead over Nashville

It was the 100th shot on goal of the night. It was the last shot on goal of triple overtime. It was the shot the Chicago Blackhawks needed, and the Nashville Predators dreaded to witness. 

Blackhawks defenseman Brent Seabrook blasted a shot from the blue line, beating Nashville Predators goalie Pekka Rinne through a Bryan Bickell screen just one minute into the third overtime for the 3-2 win in Game 4 of their Central Division semifinal series on Tuesday night. 

“I’m glad it’s over. It’s been a long night,” said Seabrook. “Our trainers do a good job of keeping us hydrated and fruit and all sorts of crap that makes us feel better. But five periods is a lot of hockey, and I’m glad it’s over.”

The play began with a great chance from Patrick Kane that was deflected to the goal and then nearly tipped home by Bickell. He skated to the corner, collected the puck, dished back to Kane who circled around the boards.

Kane sent a pass to a wide-open Seabrook – his right skate on the blue line, his stick raised high above his head – who blasted the one-timer through a screen set by Bickell, battling Mattias Ekholm in front of Rinne. The puck flew in on edge, and right past the Nashville goalie for the 3-2 win and the 3-1 series lead.

(Kane then skated over and attempted to lift Seabrook in victory. It didn’t work.)

It was Seabrook’s third career overtime game-winner in the playoffs. It was also the Blackhawks’ second multi-overtime win of the series, having taken Game 1 on a Duncan Keith goal in double-OT.

Game 4 was the longest in Nashville’s franchise history, topping a double-overtime win at Vancouver in 2011 (34:51 of OT).

It was also a brilliant goaltending battle between Rinne (45 saves) and Scott Darling (50 saves), the journeyman backup who has stolen the Chicago starting job from incumbent Corey Crawford early in this series.

Both goalies had their share of highlight reel, sprawling saves. Rinne was particularly good in helping Nashville kill all four power plays they faced in the game, including two in the second overtime.

Colin Wilson put Nashville on the board first at 11:38 of the first period on the power play. Antoine Vermette – the Blackhawks’ trade deadline coup who was a healthy scratch in the previous game – tallied the equalizer under two minutes later.

James Neal’s unassisted goal in the second period gave Nashville the lead until Brandon Saad’s second of the series tied it a 11:03 of the third.

After that, it was on to the marathon overtime, as Nashville posted 20 shots and Chicago had 18.

Their last one was their best one, putting Chicago in the driver’s seat in this series. 





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Go figure: Ike Davis was the Athletics best pitcher Tuesday night

Baseball blowouts can be tough to watch. Unless you're a diehard fan of the winning team, it's highly unlikely you're going to tune in to a game where one team has virtually no chance of coming back.

All of that changes the instant a position player takes the mound. 

That was the case Tuesday during Oakland's 14-1 loss against the Los Angeles Angels. With the club down 13 runs in the bottom of the eighth, first baseman Ike Davis took the mound.

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After all was said and done, Davis was the team's best pitcher during the contest. Davis threw nine pitches, picking up three groundball outs over a perfect inning. He was the only pitcher on the Athletics to not allow a run during the game.

Davis' success maybe shouldn't have been that surprising. His dad, Ron, was a former major-league pitcher. 

As Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle notes, Davis pitched in college as well. 

Following the game, Davis seemed to have a good sense of humor about the situation. After he was seen watching video of his performance in the clubhouse, Davis said he would be ready to pitch again the next time the A's needed him. 

He also was willing to discuss his repertoire.

That seemed to work for him. Davis topped out at 88 mph during the appearance. That's hardly considered fast for a pitcher these days, but that's not bad for a position player. He did appear to have some deception with his fastball as well, getting a swinging strike on his first pitch. 

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Davis seemed to be joking about pitching for the team again, but he might not realize what he's getting himself into. The Athletics have had some success converting former first basemen into closers. Sean Doolittle may be sidelined at the moment, but Oakland may have found his clone Tuesday.

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Chris Cwik is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at christophercwik@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!





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Calgary Flames push Canucks to elimination brink with 3-1 win

The Calgary Flames are one win away from making past the first round of the playoffs for the first time since 2003-04.

The team that was supposed to be the easiest Western Conference opponent has proved difficult for the reeling Vancouver Canucks, as in down 3-1 in a series tough.

Calgary got another goal from Sam Bennett and the below goal by forward Johnny Gaudreau to take a 3-1 win over the Canucks.

Vancouver is in a tough spot. Before the game they lost Alex Burrows to a reported broken rib. During the game goaltender Eddie Lack was pulled in favor of Ryan Miller meaning … a goaltender controversy for Vancouver! Miller was the starter for most of the year until he suffered a knee injury in February. Lack got the Canucks into the playoffs while Miller healed. Lack stopped just four of seven Flames shots on goal, while Miller was a perfect 15-for-15. Lack has not been great these playoffs with a 3.03 goals against average and .886 save percentage.

The Canucks are clearly the team with more issues than Calgary right now, which doesn’t bode well for Vancouver if they want to come back from down 3-1 against the Flames.

Have the Canucks ever done this before in their playoff history with Calgary?

Ah yes, there was that time in 1994. 

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Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

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Yunel Escobar celebrates walk-off home run by sliding into home plate

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Washington Nationals infielder Yunel Escobar has been asked to do quite a bit already this season. Escobar was initially acquired by the team to play second base, a position he hadn't played since 2007. 

After Anthony Rendon was injured, Escobar had to shift over to third. On top of that, Denard Span's injury pushed Escobar to the top of the team's batting order. 

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Despite the hectic and ever-changing situation, Escobar has put up solid numbers for the Nats thus far. That continued Tuesday against the St. Louis Cardinals.

With the game tied 1-1 in extras, Escobar launched a first-pitch fastball out to left for a walk-off home run. With his teammates waiting to pummel him at home, Escobar opted for a more peaceful celebration. As he approached the plate, Escobar sped up, and slid into home plate.

While he avoided a beat-down by his teammates, Escobar could not escape a Gatorade shower. That liquid must have been cold, as it sent most of the team running. It did cause a bonus Bryce Harper hair flip, and for that, we can all celebrate.

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Escobar's acquisition in the offseason flew under the radar, but it's paid off thus far for the Nationals. Through 52 plate appearances, he's hitting .277/.346/.447, with two home runs. 

Injuries have put the Nats in a tough spot early in the season. Escobar's versatility has kept them afloat in the early going. 

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Chris Cwik is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at christophercwik@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!





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Pekke Rinne loses puck in gear, causing hilarious delay in OT (Video)

 

In overtime of Game 4 between the Chicago Blackhawks and Nashville Predators on Tuesday night, Hawks defenseman Niklas Hjalmarsson shot the puck around the boards and goalie Pekka Rinne cut it off behind his goal cage.

Innocent enough, right? Well, the next moment was one of sheer panic for all the players on the ice: The puck disappeared. Rinne dramatically dropped to his knees trying to save an invisible puck.

The referee blew his whistle to stop play, and the comedy began – for the next three minutes, Rinne removed gear, shimmied around, put his hands in his pants and searched for the disc.

He then finally dug the puck out from inside his right leg pad, where it hopped into as it went around the boards, tossing it out to center ice.

Hey, if nothing else, this unanticipated delay gave all the dead-tired players a breather with 5:34 left in overtime.

This is actually the second time this has happened to a goalie this season, as Washington Capitals goalie Braden Holtby “hatched” the puck in a game back in January.

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Rockets dunk Mavericks into submission, grab 2-0 lead

HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 21: James Harden #13 high fives Josh Smith #5 of the Houston Rockets after a play against the Dallas Mavericks during Game Two of the Western Conference Quarterfinals of the 2015 NBA Playoffs on April 21, 2015 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Bill Baptist/NBAE via Getty Images)At first glance, a 12-point road loss to the Western Conference's No. 2 seed should not suggest that a team is in crisis. But the Dallas Mavericks' 111-99 loss to the Houston Rockets in Game 2 of their first-round series was no ordinary game.

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To be more specific, the fourth quarter saw the Rockets pummel the Mavericks into submission with a barrage of alley-oops and dunks keyed by an unlikely player — veteran forward Josh Smith. With MVP candidate James Harden struggling to shoot with consistency, Smith found Dwight Howard for several alley-oops and looked like his old dynamic self from his Atlanta Hawks heyday. Up just one point entering the period, Houston ended up with a 30-19 final-quarter advantage that looked far more dominant than the margin suggests. The Mavericks are now in a 2-0 hole and face many questions about their interior defense, a terrible performance from Dirk Nowitzki, and an apparent benching of Rajon Rondo.

Let's start with the Rockets' dunk party, because it jumped out for the sheer ease with which they seemed to finish at the rim. Smith served as the team's primary facilitator at the beginning of the fourth quarter and found his onetime AAU teammate Howard for several finishes at the rim. Dallas had no defensive answer — Nowitzki could not check Smith, and Amar'e Stoudemire and others could not impede Howard and others around the basket. The result was 14 dunks over the course of the game, as many as any team has had in a postseason game since the Los Angeles Lakers in 2001, when they had Shaquille O'Neal at his most dominant and Kobe Bryant at his athletic peak. Take a look at just one of the alley-opps here:

Or enjoy this emphatic slam from Smith:

It was a positive period of play for the Rockets for several reasons. Howard finished with a team-high 28 points (10-of-15 FG, 8-of-11 FT) and 12 rebounds in a performance that suggested he is nearly fully recovered from the right knee soreness injury that sidelined him for two months. It was also nice to see the Rockets play especially well without Harden on the floor. MVP arguments in Harden's favor have stated that the team's offense would be lost without him, and that's appeared to be the case for much of this season. But Smith was tremendous on a night where Harden went just 5-of-17 from the field (plus 13-of-13 from the line) and starting forwards Terrence Jones and Trevor Ariza combined to shoot 2-of-15 for nine points. Smith's 15 points, nine assists (seven in the fourth quarter!), and eight rebounds changed the game.

It's hard to know if he can reproduce this performance, because there have been few precedents for it in the last few seasons. While Smith nearly notched a triple-double in a late March game against the lowly Minnesota Timberwolves, he is mostly known these days for his poor shot selection. The furiously active monster who affected games in numerous ways with the Hawks is essentially no more, which is what made his excellent Game 2 so fascinating. If it doesn't happen again, then at least we got to experience this version of Smith in such an important situation.

The good news for the Rockets is that they don't depend on Smith playing in this way. On the other side, the Mavericks have to wonder if they can bounce back from such an overwhelming failure late. It was not a pretty sight for most of the night, but their interior defense was so lackluster as to suggest that Rick Carlisle might need to reform his big-man rotation for Game 3 to give Bernard James more minutes and perhaps add superior defenders to other spots in the lineup. No team can expect stellar defense from Stoudemire and Nowitzki at this point in their careers, but they were so bad Tuesday that it's worth wondering how their offense could possibly make up for it. That certainly wasn't the case in this game — Amar'e took only three shots (though he made them all) while Dirk went 3-of-14 for 10 points.

Perhaps part of the problem is that the team's regular point guard offered no positive impact. Rajon Rondo suffered through a horrible first half that included an unforced eight-second violation and was subbed out for good after a technical foul and personal foul in the first 34 seconds of the third quarter. Here's what he looked like as the Mavericks floundered to the loss:

Rondo finished with four points and one assist in 10 minutes, enough to compel questions about his role for the rest of the series. Not surprisingly, he didn't talk to media after the game. Rondo and Rick Carlisle have had issues with each other throughout this season, but it was supposed to get better in the playoffs, where the enigmatic point guard typically shines. If anything, though, Rondo has been at his worst in these first two games. Regardless of how the rest of the series goes, it is very hard to imagine him coming back to Dallas as a free agent this summer.

The best news for the Mavericks right now is that they play at home on Friday. A change of scenery and two days off could allow them to collect themselves and find something that works. Whether it involves Rondo or some other combination of players remains to be seen — all Carlisle and his staff know is that Game 3 can't possibly involve quite so many dunks.

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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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