Gregg Popovich's reaction to Mario Chalmers' beyond-half-court buzzer-beater was perfect

The San Antonio Spurs opened up their nationally televised matchup with the Miami Heat playing sound defense, holding Erik Spoelstra's club without a made field goal for the first 6 1/2 minutes of Tuesday's contest. The Spurs didn't capitalize early, though, committing seven turnovers that turned into 10 Miami points and kept the Heat up after 12 minutes.


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Things tightened up considerably in the second, as San Antonio coughed it up just twice while cranking up the ball movement and offensive effectiveness to outpace the Heat by nine points heading into the final seconds of the half ... only to see the Heat stay within a handful of points at intermission thanks to a wing-and-a-prayer, buzzer-beating, 53-foot 3-pointer by point guard Mario Chalmers:



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The best thing about Chalmers' 3? How Spurs coach Gregg Popovich reacted to it, naturally:



Such bemusement. Such resignation. Such grudging acceptance. This is the face of a man who knows that sometimes, the breaks won't go your way, and that as long as you're controlling what you can control, you can live with it.


It's also the countenance that confirms Pop's expression can be arresting even when he's not going from serious to cheesin' ...



... or vice versa ...



... in no time flat.


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



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Check out this 5-year-old's incredible ball-handling skills

A five-year-old Chinese boy has ball-handling skills most adults can only dream about. The website Shanghaiist posted a series of GIFs showing Mai Zizhou basically putting on an exhibition.



Courtesy Shanghaiist


Courtesy Shanghaiist


Courtesy Shanghaiist


Courtesy Shanghaiist

If he was in the U.S., he'd be getting ready for kindergarten. Shanghaiist reports that he started practicing when he was two years old – and if you look closely, you can see he's not just practicing his ball skills. He's can shoot daggers with his eyes, too.










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Ryan Newman loses 75 points after tire manipulation penalty

Tire manipulation is a confirmed reality in the Sprint Cup Series.


Just days after drivers and crew chiefs commented on the talk surrounding tire tampering in the Sprint Cup Series garage, NASCAR leveled a big 75-point penalty against Ryan Newman and the No. 31 team for issues found with the team's tires at Auto Club Speedway.


NASCAR had been taking tires from some teams after races for audits as suspicions of teams drilling holes in the tires to regulate air pressure became public (Newman's team was one of the teams who had tires taken after the race on March 22). Tuesday, NASCAR docked Newman the points and suspended crew chief Luke Lambert, tire technician James Bender and team engineer Philip Surgen for the next six races. Lambert was also fined $125,000.


The penalty is a P5 penalty under NASCAR's tiered penalty system. According to NASCAR it violates rule 20.16.2 which says tires can't be modified and 12.5.3.5.1 which defines a P5 penalty as "effecting, modifying and/or altering the standard tires in any way, other than through authorized means such as tire pressure adjustments within the recommended range, permitted tire cooling when mounted on the race vehicle; or heat-cycling on the race vehicle on the race track earlier in the event."


The standard P5 penalties are 50 points and a $75,000 fine for Lambert. However, the points penalty was increased 25 points and the fine increased $50,000 because the infractions were found after the race. Newman finished fifth at ACS. He was asked about manipulation rumors on Friday after qualifying at Martinsville and concluded his answer with "I'm not worried about anything."


It's fair to wonder how long the No. 31 team (and others?) have been modifying tires. Newman had 16 top-10 finishes in 2014, but qualified for the Chase with 10 in the first 26 races. He had six top-10 finishes in the final 10 races, including finishing second to Kevin Harvick in both the final race at Homestead and in the points standings.


The speed Newman had in the final races of 2014 carried over to 2015. He has three top-five finishes and four top-10 finishes in the first six races of the season. However he's now 27th in the standings with the points penalty.


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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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Suspended Alabama RB Tyren Jones arrest on marijuana possession

Alabama's week just got a little bit worse.


Running back Tyren Jones, who was already serving a team suspension, was arrested Tuesday for marijuana possession, the third arrest for the Tide since Saturday morning.


Jones was suspended on Feb. 10 for what coach Nick Saban called "conduct not to the standard of the Alabama football program." He has not been working out with the program.


According to AL.com, which obtained the arrest report, police stopped Jones and smelled marijuana in his car. Jones had a small amount of marijuana in the pocket of his pants, but officers also found digital scales in the Dodge Challenger belonging to Brandon Lee Hansberry, who also was arrested.


Jones was charged with second-degree possession of marijuana and was released on $1,000 bond.


On Saturday morning, safety Geno Smith was arrested for DUI and later that day, Jonathan Taylor was charged with domestic violence. Taylor was dismissed from the team on Sunday and Smith was suspended. Saban said Smith would have to earn his way back.


For more Alabama news, visit TideSports.com.


Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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The NBA has a tanking problem because the NBA used to employ a lot of problems

On Monday evening, the Los Angeles Lakers downed the Philadelphia 76ers on a last-second shot from rookie Jordan Clarkson. Hands were rung and eyes rolled, as a significant portion of NBA fandom could hardly recall what number Clarkson wore prior to this professional event, and yet they could recite the two teams’ 2015 NBA draft odds by rote: Los Angeles keeps its pick unless it either continues to win, or in case bad lottery luck pushes the team out of the top five. If it falls out of the top five, the lowly Sixers takes in its own high end lottery pick, and the Lakers’ selection.


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Los Angeles has won three of five, quite the warming trend for a 20-53 club, putting its fans in an impossible position that we see yearly amongst the lower rungs of the NBA. The team’s fans understand that most of the current Lakers won’t have a spot in the rotation when the franchise finally turns it all around, there is no point in rooting for their growth and success, and every added win lowers the team’s odds at the draft pick of their choice – presuming they get to keep it anyway.


Philadelphia? They’ve spent the better part of two seasons auditioning players for rotation spots nine through 15 on the 2017-18 Philadelphia 76ers. The guy they drafted in June of 2013 didn’t play until October of 2014, the guy they drafted in June of 2014 won’t play until October of 2015, and another really good guy they drafted in June of 2014 possibly won’t play until October of 2017. Their best young prospect from last season, Michael Carter-Williams, was recently traded for a draft pick that may not make his debut until October of 2016 – if then.


Minnesota coach Flip Saunders recently had to back down from earlier, heated comments he made about Utah Jazz broadcasters that he called “irresponsible” after they discussed the Timberwolves’ decision to rest several key (and also injured) starters as the team worked its way toward its tenth straight lottery appearance. The Wolves have the second-best odds at entering 2015-16 with the last three top overall NBA draft picks on its roster, and yet the team will still be ages away from a playoff berth, and not likely to end a postseason drought that is about to enter its second decade.


Phil Jackson’s New York Knicks have the best odds at a top overall pick, but even with cap space and the return of Carmelo Anthony, the Knicks are still several significant moves away from even playoff contention. They’re so far away that Jackson even asked season ticket holders to turn their frowns upside-down as the team readies itself to ask its fans to reward the worst season in Knick history with the highest ticket prices in the NBA.


The Sacramento Kings haven’t sniffed relevance in nearly a decade, and yet the team is still content to possibly sit DeMarcus Cousins down for the rest of the season. Cousins, the team’s beleaguered franchise star working for a franchise in turmoil, is coming off his first All-Star appearance, and he’s been hustling since Team USA training camp in July. Sitting Cousins would also give the Kings better odds in keeping its first-round draft pick this year, as a dip out of the top ten this season would mean the selection would move on to the Chicago Bulls.


Denver, essentially, gave up on its season midway through 2014-15. Boston, rightfully, has its fans worried that the team may perpetually overachieve its way out of earning the chance to acquire a star. Talk of tanking used to dominate NBA headlines in March and April, but the modern cycle has fans discussing it on draft night in June, and wondering if the reboot will take two or three years, as could be the case with the Lakers, as opposed to the single-year dive.


This is where the hand-wringing comes in. The NBA could do away with the weighted lottery. It could fine teams for blatantly sitting winning prospects. Khrushchev's shoe, on the table, Mark Madsen shooting three-pointers, all that fun stuff.


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The NBA doesn’t need to revisit how it deals with such thing. The NBA, simply, needs to get rid of bad general managers. The NBA is also well on its way toward achieving that.


By now the GM shaming has become a well-worn trope (and you’re welcome!). The deal that sent a Kings first-rounder to Cleveland (and eventually Chicago) for J.J. Hickson was laughed at as much then as it is now, as the Bulls watch the Western standings. Brooklyn GM Billy King was mocked almost from the outset of his time with the team. Even while pegging the 2012-13 Lakers for a championship run, we all wondered why the Lakers felt compelled to send a potential first-round pick Phoenix’s way in the Steve Nash sign-and-trade. Fans had no idea what Minnesota was chasing when it declined to give Kevin Love the contract he deserved or when it handed Kevin Martin four years and $27.7 million in 2013.


We’re slowly getting away from this, however. Several teams, unfortunately, have had to play dumb this season in order to make up for past mistakes. Teams are getting smarter, though.


Even the Knicks, just a few months from being roundly mocked for trading draft picks for Andrea Bargnani, declined to send a draft pick to Toronto for a player in Kyle Lowry that was soon to be a free agent. Phil Jackson’s longtime buddy and former assistant coach Charley Rosen may want the team to trade the top overall pick for Greg Monroe (something that isn’t NBA-legal) on draft night, but Charley Rosen (thankfully) does not work for the New York Knicks. Meanwhile, the Lakers might be playing possum currently, and might enter 2016 without Kobe Bryant, without Byron Scott, with three high-end draft picks, cap space, and the waves of Malibu to offer.


The game has passed some general managers by, like Washington’s Ernie Grunfeld (who once traded the aforementioned Jordan Clarkson for freaking cash considerations), but they’re probably not long for the league in that role. King is out of Brooklyn as soon as new owners swoop in. Soon enough, general managers won’t have to take several rebuilding years to clean up the messes of their predecessors, as we’re currently seeing in Detroit, Orlando, Sacramento, Philly, New York, Minnesota, and …


That’s a lot of teams, but the NBA has also rid itself of several very poor general managers over the last few years. This isn’t to say that parity will hit and the ranks of competition will level, as you still may have GMs being hired partially because they’re from the same state that the team plays in, but things are changing in ways that don’t have to lead to a change of the lottery rules.


This is what happens when you let Dwight Howard run your franchise, or David Kahn, or Joe Dumars, or Doug Collins, or James Dolan, or when you basically give up on basketball while trying to sell your team. A goodly chunk of the NBA is in a bad place because the work of some lacking ex-GMs put their teams in bad places. Outfits in Philadelphia, Los Angeles and New York aren’t guaranteed future success with the NBA draft still three months away, but these front offices had to start somewhere.


There are five to a side in basketball, stars matter, and there will always have to be 25-win teams. This is part of the reason why so many of us follow the NBA, and the biggest reason why comparisons to other sports or leagues are anachronistic at best and pointless at worst. The NBA’s job right now, as it recovers from the work of so many executives who were stuck in 1991 while working in 2011, is to get smarter.


Not more unhinged. We’ve tried that already, and it didn’t work.


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










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Kyle Larson released from hospital, not cleared to drive yet

Kyle Larson was released from a Charlotte-area hospital Monday evening. However, the driver of the No. 42 car is still not cleared to drive in the Cup Series.


“After extensive testing and observation over the last few days, Kyle Larson was released from the hospital last night and has finished up final tests today," a Chip Ganassi Racing statement said. "He is currently waiting for final doctor recommendations in order to clear him to return to all NASCAR related activities.”


The Sprint Cup Series is off Sunday because of the Easter holiday. The next race is Saturday, April 11 at Texas Motor Speedway.


Larson missed Sunday's race when he fainted after an autograph session on Saturday. He was taken for tests -- tests that the team said found no issues -- but was told by doctors that he needed to miss Sunday's race for further tests.


Regan Smith drove the No. 42 in his absence and finished 16th. Larson is now 24th in the points standings.


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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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NBPA's Michele Roberts sees no reason for 2017 work stoppage, warns NBA against 'cry of poverty'

NBPA executive director Michele Roberts (left) and the Detroit Pistons' Anthony Tolliver attend the H.I.S. Official Launch Party at the Park Hyatt New York on Feb. 12, 2015. (D Dipasupil/BET/Getty Images) It's been a pretty exciting regular season, and it looks like it ought to be a similarly thrilling postseason push to June's NBA Finals. But amid all the bright, shining Stephen Curry bombs, James Harden stepbacks and Anthony Davis detonations, it's become difficult to ignore the stormclouds gathering on the labor relations front.


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The collective bargaining agreement struck by the NBA and the National Basketball Players Association in November 2011 stretches through the 2020-21 campaign, but both the league and the union can elect to opt out of the CBA after the 2016-17 season in favor of renegotiating its terms. There are arguments for doing so on both sides — for the NBPA, to attempt to recoup some of the hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenues that were shifted from players to owners in the 2011 resolution, and for the owners, to have their way on issues like the imposition of a hard cap on team salaries, an increase in the minimum age at which a prospect can be eligible to enter the NBA draft, human growth hormone testing and perhaps contract structures.


Under the leadership of new executive director Michele Roberts, it's considered all but a foregone conclusion that the players' union will opt out of the CBA by the Dec. 15, 2016, deadline. But despite the seemingly contentious atmosphere between the league and union — most recently highlighted by the NBPA's rejection of Silver's "cap smoothing" proposal for gradually phasing in the monster influx of cash from the NBA's new $24 billion broadcast rights deal — the commissioner doesn't think we should start worrying about the possibility of a work stoppage preventing the start of the 2017-18 season. In somewhat heartening news, neither does union leader Roberts, according to Gary Washburn of the Boston Globe:


[...] Roberts said she views the $24.9 billion war chest from the nine-year television deal as a positive, suggesting the league is fully healthy.

“We want a deal. We want a deal that is as fair as we can get. We understand you’ve got to give a little to get a little,” she said. “There’s going to be a deal and my view is let’s get it done. Silver has said the same to me, so I think the good news is we don’t have the backdrop of poverty. There’s all this money. The game is growing in popularity. Everyone should be singing, ‘Hallelujah.’ They’ve got a new commissioner. I’m new. I have no bad blood with Adam because I don’t know him. Nor he with me. Everything in the world suggests we should be able to get through this without a problem. And if that doesn’t happen I would be, and I think Mr. Silver would be, disappointed.”

When asked whether a deal could get done before 2017, Roberts said, “Sure. Wouldn’t it be great for everybody, the players, for the owners, and God knows the fans, if we could say these were the major issues that we knew we had to deal with and we saw no reason to wait until 2017, so we got them done? Not only is there not going to be any opting out, but we’ve agreed to these new terms and an extension of the CBA. Wouldn’t everybody just be delighted? It would be great for the game.”

So the commissioner doesn't see any reason not to get a deal done, and the players association's executive director doesn't seen any reason not to get a deal done. OK! Great!


And yet ... the problem here is that, even if there's not a problem now, there was a problem then.


The players are still smarting from the beating they took in the last round of negotiations, a whitewashing precipitated by claims that NBA owners were losing money — claims that few players likely ever believed then, and that hardly any players are likely to believe now, in the aftermath of the multibillion-dollar rights bonzanza and record-setting franchise valuations. While David Stern was still the commissioner during the last round of bargaining, then-deputy Silver was right there alongside him, holding the owners' hard line in negotiations, and while Roberts wasn't there, she's still got to show her membership that she's capable of charting a better path forward than ousted predecessor Billy Hunter.


So, with a nod to Faulkner, part of Roberts' preparation for 2017's negotiations seems to have to consist of continuing to make noise about the raw deal of 2011 at a volume that might make friendly conversation difficult. More from Washburn:


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“$24.9 billion ain’t a problem,” Roberts said from her New York office. “There’s only a problem because the owners have suggested that there is, that there’s a problem with the injection of that money into the system. Frankly, we don’t quite understand why that’s a problem. If it’s not a problem that the teams can make more money, why is it a problem if the players are going to make more money?

“It’s too bad that this successful [television contract] negotiation has suddenly become a problem that I can’t get my arms around.” [...]

“That’s why it may have been unfortunate if there was some misrepresentations made about the health of some of these teams because you only create mistrust going into the next round of negotiations,” Roberts said. “That’s unfortunate. I would submit that it’s in the league’s best interest not to try to do that again. Don’t try that again. There’s no human being out there that’s reasonable that, having heard about the TV deal, and if you’re aware that gross receipts are going up, ticket sales are going up, I’d be very disappointed if we heard that cry of poverty again.

“So if we could avoid a repetition of that cry of poverty and all the mistrust referenced by the players can be resolved, we can go on and not say, ‘You lied to me,’ but just go back to business.’’

Both Silver and Roberts say there are no contentious feelings on either side of the table, and that there's no ill will that will make arriving at an agreement impossible. The question, though, is whether there's enough lingering mistrust on the players' side and enough willingness from ownership to stand firm and stop writing checks to make arriving at an agreement in time for the start of the 2017-18 season impossible. These seem to represent Roberts' most collegial comments on the matter, which offers some hope for the future, but when you re-read that "Don't try that again" section, it gets that much harder to ignore the encroaching cloud cover.


Hat-tip to Brett Pollakoff at ProBasketballTalk.


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



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J.J. Watt shows off acting, singing chops in 'New Girl' episode


When he's not training in a log cabin of sorts, J.J. Watt is acting. And singing.

Seriously.


The Paul Bunyan-esque offense wrecker for the Houston Texans is apparently a big fan of the show "New Girl." Although we confess to having not seen the critically acclaimed program, we are fans of the work of leading lady Zooey Deschanel. And now Ms. Deschanel and Mr. Watt can say they've been teammates, having worked together on an episode of the show.


Watch above for a tease of Watt singing and — we think — ad libbing through what could be a funny few scenes in "The Right Stuff" episode. We don't assume anything about Watt's day job status changing, but a brief glimpse at his acting chops actually has us feel that the 6-foot-5, 290-pound beast could have been.


Is he Peyton Manning-on-SNL good? No, we're not ready to go there yet, but Watt might be far better at acting than your typical NFL player.


The singing, well, that's another thing altogether. We're not quite sure what key he's in, actually.


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USF former starting QB Mike White granted his release

South Florida quarterback Mike White, who started 15 games for the Bulls, has been granted his release.


White, who opened last season as the team’s starter, appeared to be trailing in the quarterbacking competition this spring behind Quinton Flowers and senior Steven Bench.


"Mike and I talked after the conclusion of spring practice and he expressed his desire to pursue the remainder of his career at another school," coach Willie Taggart said in a release by the school.


“We wish Mike all the best in his future and thank him for his contributions to our program and university.”


White won the starting job during fall camp last August and while his grip on the role was tenuous, he did rally the Bulls from a 20-point halftime deficit for a 38-30 win against Tulsa. However, he threw two interceptions in the first half against Cincinnati the following week and was benched at halftime. His only playing time at the end of the season came in the fourth quarter against SMU where he rallied the Bulls to a 14-13 win.


White was a big-league pitching prospect during high school, but turned his attention solely on football last spring in an effort to become the Bulls starter.


White will have to sit out a season if he transfers to another FBS school. However, he could play immediately if he transfers to lower division program.


Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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The 10-man rotation, starring Zach Randolph going to work on the low block

A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


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C: Sports Illustrated. Rob Mahoney talks with Zach Randolph about the finer points of low-post positioning, and how a player who has spent most of the last decade and a half viewed largely as a bruiser has built an All-Star career out of precise footwork, sharp angles and all the little things that can make a successful big man.


PF: Waiting for Next Year. The Cleveland Cavaliers have been crushing opponents for the past two months, but even as he makes his push for a fifth Most Valuable Player trophy, LeBron James is committing turnovers at a career-high rate. What gives? Kirk Lammers digs into the tape to find out.


SF: Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Lori Nickel explores Jared Dudley's value to the Milwaukee Bucks, which comes less from his floor-spacing (although he can do that) or his team defense (although he helps there) or his experience (although he has that) than from his ability and willingness to communicate.


SG: Talking Points. Tim Kawakami lays out Stephen Curry's MVP case, which includes turning one of the more common critiques — he's played about 350 fewer total minutes than James Harden, and about 100 fewer in fourth quarters — on its head: "Curry should win the MVP because he doesn't play meaningful fourth-quarter minutes. He destroys teams in the third quarter."


PG: Scout.com. Evan Daniels chats with the recently returned Emmanuel Mudiay to get the likely top-five draft pick's perspective on how his decision to pass on enrolling at SMU to play professionally in China wound up working out, and what he's taken away from his year studying abroad: "I was playing against 30-year-old men that are trying to feed their family. In college, they are trying to get an education and try to get a job after that."


6th: SI Vault. A very cool collection of some of the magazine's most arresting NBA portraits over the years. Not many slideshows more worth your time than this one, I'll wager.


7th: New York Post and Posting and Toasting. Charley Rosen, longtime NBA scribe and Phil Jackson's former assistant coach back with the Albany Patroons, thinks Kentucky star Karl-Anthony Towns might have an insufficiently significant backside to be the sort of low-post anchor the New York Knicks need in the triangle offense, which means Knicks draft talk will include a fair amount of butt chatter, which sounds about right, really.


8th: Mavs Outsider Report. Whether he's part of the problem, part of the solution or somewhere in between, is Monta Ellis too tough for his own good?


9th: Grantland. A pretty gutwrenching read from Jonathan Abrams on the death of former Charlotte Hornets guard Bobby Phills, and the impact it had on his family, teammates, coaches and friends.


10th: The Triangle. Zach Lowe identifies the potential problem with the Boston Celtics' mid-rebuild rise to contention for an Eastern Conference playoff berth: "The Celtics have made the leap to mediocrity so fast that they may have no easy way out."


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



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Path to the Pros: Melvin Gordon says, 'I want to be the best back'




With a month left before the draft, one of the more interesting prospects is Wisconsin running back Melvin Gordon.


There has been a ton of talk about running backs not going in the first round for consecutive years, a lot of talk about Georgia back Todd Gurley's ceiling (and his knee injury), and there sits Gordon, coming off a phenomenal near-Heisman season at Wisconsin.


In a "Path to the Pros" interview with Stack.com, Gordon lays out his goal, and that's to outdo every other back in the 2015 class.


"I want to be the best back, that's my goal," Gordon said.


Gordon is known for his big runs, and his speed, but in the video above he looks pretty strong and he's not a small back at 215 pounds. To get into the first round, teams will have to be convinced that he is more than a home-run threat.


Gordon has another goal, and that's to be a part of a winner. He didn't win a state title in high school or a national championship in college and he wants to experience being a champion.


"To win a Super Bowl, that's better than a national championship, that's better than anything," Gordon said to Stack.com. "But you have to put in the work."


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!










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Cincinnati QB Jarred Evans acquitted of assault, hopes to rejoin team

Cincinnati backup quarterback Jarred Evans was found not guilty of assault after a jury sided with his claim that he punched a fellow student in self-defense.


On Friday, Evans testified that he and his girlfriend were walking down the street when they heard a series of racial remarks. Evans is black and his girlfriend is white. The couple ignored the comments and continued walking, but Evans said one of the men, Ryan Smith, blocked their path.


"He flinched at me with his hands up," Evans testified, "and I just reacted with a punch, a jab."


That punch left Smith unconscious on the sidewalk.


However, Smith gave a contradictory account, stating that he was behind the couple and that Evans sought him out and punched him for no reason.


The jury took three hours to deliberate. Judge Robert Taylor also declared a mistrial on a disorderly conduct charge after jurors could not reach a verdict.


"We're very, very happy with the outcome," Kimberly Reese, a spokeswoman for Evans' family told the Cincinnati Enquirer. "(And) thankful for a jury that saw what really happened."


Evans is still awaiting a sentence after pleading no contest to obstructing official business. Prosecutors said he ran from police after the incident. He will be sentenced on that charge April 28.


Evans had been suspended since last October when the incident occurred, Reese said the hope is he will be allowed back on the field for spring practices, which are currently underway.


For more Cincinnati news, visit BearcatReport.com.


Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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Clemson coach Dabo Swinney loves his moped anonymity

Attention residents of Clemson, S.C., we have a game for you. Notice coach Dabo Swinney on his moped.


After safety Jabar Johnson wore a non-contact jersey at practice on Monday after he had an incident with a moped, Swinney was asked about his scooter opinion. Instead of pontificating about the risks of the automated transportation, he supported the method.


"They have to handle their business," Swinney said via TigerIllustrated.com. "Wear helmets and be safe whether you're in a car or a moped or a bike. Sometimes there are things you don't control. I ride a moped, wear a helmet. I cruise all over town and nobody knows who I am. I love it. It's fun."


If Swinney isn't noticed much, he must not have an "I troll South Carolina" sticker on his helmet or have his scooter painted in bright Clemson orange with tiger paw logos plastered all over it. And we're also assuming the "wear helmets" advice doesn't apply to a car. Because it'd be pretty hard to be anonymous at an intersection if you're the driver wearing a helmet.


For more Clemson news, visit TigerIllustrated.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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UCLA WR Devin Lucien to transfer

UCLA's Devin Lucien will play at a different school in 2015.


The Bruins' third-leading receiver in terms of receptions in 2014 has decided to transfer according to the Los Angeles Times. He could graduate in the summer and be immediately eligible at his new school.


Per BruinSportsReport.com, Lucien said "a lot" went into his decision to make the move out of UCLA though he didn't get into specifics. In 2014, he had 29 catches for 225 yards and two touchdowns.


While losing a receiver with over 20 catches is rarely considered a positive, UCLA is well-equipped to handle his departure. While Lucien was third on the team in catches, he was sixth in yards. All five of the players ahead of him in the yardage column are returning for 2015.


Lucien's most productive season was his redshirt junior year. After redshirting in 2011, he had 29 catches combined in 2012 and 2013. According to BruinSportsReport, Arizona State is a candidate to be his transfer destination. If he moves to the Sun Devils, he could be the second high-profile player to transfer in-conference if Iowa quarterback Jake Rudock moves to Michigan. The Wolverines have been considered a strong candidate for Rudock's services as he's a graduate transfer.


For more UCLA news, visit BruinSportsReport.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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Temple's Praise Martin-Oguike given extra year of eligibility

Praise Martin-Oguike will be a redshirt junior in 2015 after he was given an extra year of eligibility by the NCAA.


Martin-Oguike, a key contributor for Temple's defensive line in 2014, missed both the 2012 and 2013 seasons. In 2014, he had 37 tackles and 7.5 sacks.


"I said throughout this process that I just want to get back to the life I had before," Martin-Oguike said in a Temple statement. "There was a path that I was on, to play four years of college football and get my college degree, then hopefully, have an opportunity to play at the next level. I'm working towards that goal and I'm very thankful that I'm back on that path."

He missed those two seasons because of rape allegations. In 2012, he was accused of sexual assault in his dorm room and expelled from Temple. As the case moved on, prosecutors in 2013 withdrew the charges of forcible rape, false imprisonment and other offenses because of a lack of evidence. Martin-Oguike's attorney had said the relationship with the woman was consensual.


His attorney also said that one of the reasons the charges were withdrawn was inconsistency in the woman's text messages. Martin-Oguike had allegedly texted the woman about the incident and the attorney had said she wasn't truthful about the incident in texting others.


Martin-Oguike was reinstated to Temple in January 2014.


"I can't imagine what Praise and his family were put through from the time those accusations were made," Temple coach Matt Rhule said. "Hopefully he - and the rest of our players for that matter - learn from that experience how close they are to having the privilege of playing college athletics taken away. Fortunately, in this instance, Praise has been able to restore his life and his reputation. He has done everything we've asked of him since returning to the team."


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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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NBA Playoff Picture Update: Raptors soar past Rockets

With just a few weeks remaining until the NBA postseason, every night can impact the standings. NBA Playoff Picture keeps you up to date on all the most important news for all 16 berths and seeds.


A Raptors Resurgence?: While the Toronto Raptors have already clinched the Atlantic Division and are still very much in play for the No. 3 seed in the East, the team has been in a slump for more than a month. Since beating the Atlanta Hawks on February 20, Toronto had lost 10 straight to opponents over .500 during a 6-13 stretch overall. Despite their still-impressive record, they've looked like a squad that could be upset in the first round.


It's just one game, but the Raptors' 99-96 home win over the Houston Rockets on Monday may represent a change in fortune. DeMar DeRozan was the biggest reason for the victory, in part because of this tough jumper to put Toronto up three points with 18 seconds remaining in regulation:


That basket also brought DeRozan to a career-high 42 points (14-of-27 FG, 12-of-17 FT). You can watch his full highlights here:





The Raptors needed every one of those points with just two other players scoring in double figures and Greivis Vasquez replacing the injured Kyle Lowry in the starting lineup. Toronto got a break in that Dwight Howard sat out the contest for rest on the second day of a road back-to-back, but this was still a meaningful win over one of the strongest teams in the league. It also brought the Raptors within just a game of the Chicago Bulls for third place in the East.


The Rockets can explain away this loss with the absence of Howard and poor outside shooting (8-of-27 on threes), but it was certainly not the ideal performance on a day when starting point guard Patrick Beverley was declared out for the season. DeRozan's career night also stands out given that Beverley is an excellent perimeter defender on a team that now must ask much more of wing Trevor Ariza at that end.


Bear Necessities: The Rockets loss also stands out because of the Memphis Grizzlies much-needed home win over the Sacramento Kings. After three straight losses against the Cleveland Cavaliers, Golden State Warriors, and San Antonio Spurs — arguably the three best teams in the NBA right now — the Grizzlies fed on an undermanned Kings team playing without DeMarcus Cousins and won 97-83. That result combined with Houston's to lift Memphis back to the No. 2 spot in the West, although the half-game margin could very well become a tie when the Rockets play those same Kings on Wednesday. The Grizzlies will have a chance to lick their wounds further with no game until they face the Oklahoma City Thunder on Friday. That should also give the team's equipment managers plenty of time to stock up on fresh jerseys for Marc Gasol.


Put a Berth on It: The Portland Trail Blazers are officially the fifth team to clinch a spot in the West playoffs after handling the Phoenix Suns 109-86 at the Moda Center. Four starters scored between 16 and 19 points as the Blazers shot 51.2 percent from the field. The victory also brings Portland just a half-game behind the Los Angeles Clippers in the race for homecourt advantage in the first round, although they can drop no lower than the No. 4 seed once they clinch the Northwest Division title.


A Pistol for Avery Bradley: The long march to deciding the East's final playoff team continued apace on Monday, with the ninth-place Boston Celtics traveling to the 11th-place Charlotte Hornets and leaving town with a comfortable 116-104 win. Avery Bradley led the way with 30 points on 12-of-23 shooting, all of which seems like a misprint.


The win put the Celtics back into the No. 8 spot by virtue of holding one more win (and one more loss) than the Brooklyn Nets. But the Nets visit the Indiana Pacers (just a half-game back of both teams) on Tuesday, so it's possible that we'll enter Wednesday with a totally new and confusing tie. It looks increasingly likely that this race will go down to the final days of the season, driving us all insane in the process.


The Dirt of Buck: Two days after giving all their starters a much-deserved rest against the Hornets, the Hawks brought back their core and summarily bested the Milwaukee Bucks 101-88. The Bucks are now only 1 1/2 games in front of the Miami Heat for the No. 6 seed, a key spot because it would allow them to avoid the Hawks and Cavs in the first round. The Hawks gained little from the win, but they do have an outside shot at besting the Warriors for the NBA's best record at 4 1/2 games back.


Tuesday's Most Important Games


Pacers at Nets, 7:30 p.m. ET: It's pretty simple — if the Nets win, they'll be a half-game ahead of the Celtics for the final playoff spot in the East. If the Pacers win, they'll enter a tie with the Celtics for that same spot. Is that enough to get you to watch two middling squads?


Spurs at Heat, 8:00 p.m. ET: This NBA Finals rematch — seriously, they played each other last June, look it up — concerns each team primarily insofar as it allows them to put pressure on the teams ahead of them. A Spurs win would put pressure on the Clippers to avoid seeing their lead slip to a half-game later in the night, and the Heat can get within a game of the idle Bucks.


Warriors at Clippers, 10:30 p.m. ET: The Warriors have virtually nothing to lose or gain from this one, so we could see them make like the Hawks and rest their key players in their first game since locking down a No. 1 seed. If Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson, and others do sit out, then the Clippers can take advantage and potentially increase their lead on the Blazers and Spurs.


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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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Kyle Korver scores 11 points in 65 seconds as Hawks bring down Bucks

With six minutes remaining in the third quarter of Monday's game, the Atlanta Hawks led the Milwaukee Bucks by five points, and Kyle Korver was scoreless. With 4:40 remaining in the third, the lead was 16, and Korver had 11. Things escalate quickly in the Highlight Factory these days.


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Korver missed his first four shots, all from 3-point range, but finally got unstuck midway through the third. With the shot clock winding down, he took a pitch-back from center Al Horford and stepped into a 30-footer that soared past the outstretched hand of Bucks center and ex-Hawk Zaza Pachulia before finding sweet nylon, getting himself on the board with 5:49 left in the third.


After a missed layup by Milwaukee point guard Michael Carter-Williams, Atlanta pushed the ball up the court, with DeMarre Carroll finding Korver flowing to the left corner. A quick pump-fake allowed a backtracking Buck to breeze past into the crowd, giving Korver a wide-open look at a just-inside-the-line jumper to make it two in a row.


With the sharpshooting All-Star suddenly feeling it, the Hawks again pressed off a Milwaukee miss; this time, Carroll found Korver racing toward him on the right side of the court, which the heady Hawks swingman turned into a dribble handoff that freed Korver for an off-the-catch fading bomb that splashed through for a third straight jumper that got the Philips Arena faithful roaring.


Yet another Bucks miss, this time on a midrange look by Khris Middleton, again allowed the Hawks to race out off the rebound. Korver had already leaked out off the shot and was waiting on the left wing. As point guard Jeff Teague dribbled into the front court, he just angled himself toward Korver, handed it off and watched the long ball fly, barely even disturbing the net as it connected at the 4:44 mark.


All told: four shots, 11 points, 65 seconds. It's not quite Tracy McGrady in 2004, but it ain't a bad way to spend a minute and change.


The blink-and-you'll-miss-it burst took the lid off the basket for Korver, who had gone a pedestrian-by-his-standards 7-for-23 from 3-point land over the previous 4 1/2 games, and not a moment too soon:



The mid-third explosion caught the attention of quite a few NBA observers, including a pair of former Bucks:




Thankfully, it also caught the attention of the Bucks. Korver wouldn't score another bucket the rest of the way, as Milwaukee responded in kind with an 11-2 run over the ensuing 3 1/2 minutes to draw within two possessions and keep Atlanta from running away and hiding. Unfortunately for Milwaukee fans, though, the offensive troubles that have plagued Jason Kidd's club all season long — and especially since shipping out top scoring guard Brandon Knight at the February trade deadline — reared their ugly head yet again.


The Bucks managed just two points on 1-for-9 shooting in a four-minute, 40-second stretch spanning the end of the third quarter and the start of the fourth, allowing Atlanta to push its lead back up to a baker's dozen. Milwaukee couldn't string together enough buckets and stops to get any closer than nine from there, as the Hawks kept the Bucks at arm's length and finished off a 101-88 win.


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Do-everything forward Carroll led five Hawks in double-figures with 23 points on 9-for-13 shooting, eight rebounds, five assists and two blocks in 34-plus minutes in the win, which improved the No. 1-seeded Hawks to 56-18 on the season. Mike Budenholzer's squad needs just one more win to tie the franchise record for victories, set back in 1986-87 and matched in 1993-94, and two wins in the final eight games to set a new all-time mark in what's become a season for the ages in Atlanta.


Sophomore wunderkind Giannis Antetokounmpo scored a team-high 18 points on 7-for-9 shooting to go with six rebounds and four assists, while Pachulia chipped in 17 points, 13 boards and three assists for the Bucks, who have now dropped eight of their last 10 games, and 17 of 23 since the All-Star break. The Bucks now sit at 36-38, holding just a 1 1/2-game lead on the Miami Heat for the No. 6 seed in the East — a.k.a., the right to avoid either these Hawks or the Cleveland Cavaliers in the opening round of the playoffs — and, as their coach saw it, they played like a team that didn't seem to feel compelled to fight for a chance at surviving and advancing:




The Bucks don't have a whole lot of time before the playoffs start to find that collective spirit. Perhaps they can take some inspiration from their Monday night opponents, who took a minute out during the third quarter to show them just how quickly your fortunes can change.


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



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Marc Gasol takes frustrations out on clothing, rips jersey during Grizzlies-Kings

It's been a frustrating few weeks for Marc Gasol. He's seen his Memphis Grizzlies, one of the league's most brutalizing and dominant squads through the first 3 1/2 months of the season, stumbling around .500 since the All-Star break, with in-fighting and locker-room malaise providing the backdrop for a vast array of losses that have dropped Memphis beneath the charging Houston Rockets into third place in the Western Conference playoff chase. The Grizzlies' late-winter puttering has sparked questions about whether Gasol, inarguably one of the most skilled and cerebral big men on the planet, can consistently serve as the sort of aggressive, take-charge leader that Dave Joerger's club can often seem to need when things get stale, and whether the Grizzlies have the firepower necessary to run the Western gauntlet if he can't.


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We're not quite sure if all that was running through Gasol's mind as he trotted back on defense early in the first quarter of Monday's meeting with the Sacramento Kings. Maybe he was just thinking about how bummed he was to miss the sort of deep 2-point jumper he regularly cans. Either way, something clearly put grinded Gasol's gears, because he found himself not only gritting and grinding, but also gripping and ripping:



Man, that's a deep rip:



Deep enough, in fact, to land Marc's jersey on the disabled list:



Must be something in the water that these Memphis centers drink. Here's hoping Marc doesn't follow in his predecessor's footsteps, decide to give up hoops and decide to pursue combat sports.


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Thankfully, NBA teams employ equipment managers who keep backup uniforms on hand for ... well, not necessarily for "just such an" occasion, but for unexpected uniform malfunctions, at least. So Gasol discarded his rent garment:



... and returned to the court with a crisp new top soon thereafter. It's one night late for such a "Wrestlemania"-appropriate tribute, but we're sure the Hulkster appreciates it just the same.


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



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Judge: Paterno family can't suit NCAA, PSU for breach of contract

Jay Paterno, son of Joe Paterno, pauses during his speech during a public memorial for former Penn State Football coach Joe Paterno at the Bryce Jordan Center on the campus of Penn State, January 26, 2012 in State College, Pennsylvania. Paterno, who was 85, died due to complications from lung cancer on January 22, 2012. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) A Pennsylvania judge ruled Monday that the family of late Penn State coach Joe Paterno cannot sue the NCAA or the university for breach of contract.


Per the Associated Press, the Paterno estate has argued that the NCAA and university violated the rights of the late coach with the way the Jerry Sandusky sexual abuse scandal was handled, including signing the 2012 consent decree that stemmed from the Freeh Report which questioned Paterno’s response to allegations made against Sandusky. Sandusky, the longtime PSU defensive assistant, was sentenced in June 2012 and will spend the rest of his life in prison


Judge John Leete dismissed the breach-of-contract claim in the Paterno family’s lawsuit, which had been previously amended.


“Plaintiffs are not amending their complaint to include a new cause of action or even a new theory of an existing cause of action; rather they are attempting to resurrect a claim on which this court already dismissed,” Leete wrote in his decision.


Aside from Leete dismissing the breach-of-contract portion of the lawsuit, the rest of the lawsuit will proceed. However, Leete did turn down a few other requests from the Paternos, who are suing defendants from the NCAA for commercial disparagement.


From the AP:



On Monday, Leete also turned down the Paternos' request to let them make public more of the material they are getting from the NCAA. And he rejected a request from the NCAA that would have required the Paterno estate's lawyers to conduct depositions of some people before they issue subpoenas.



A lawyer representing the NCAA said the organization will “continue to defend vigorously” what remains in the lawsuit.



The NCAA issued a statement that said Leete's decision means the organization did not breach any obligation it owned Paterno, under its rules, when it and Penn State entered into the consent decree.



Former Penn State assistants Bill Kenney and Jay Paterno, Joe’s son, are also plaintiffs in the case. They claim that the NCAA has hindered them from finding NCAA coaching positions since not being retained on PSU’s staff after Paterno’s tenure as head coach came to an end.


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











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Why don't casinos do full bracket challenges?

Bettors wait in line to place a wager on the NCAA college basketball tournament in the sports book at The Mirage in Las Vegas Thursday, March 20, 2014. (AP Photo/Las Vegas Review-Journal, John Locher) Every year, the faithful journey to Las Vegas to lay down March Madness money, and every year, they target their own schools and perhaps that fabled 5-12 upset. But why don’t Vegas casinos, the heart and soul of gambling in this country, offer up some kind of overall bracket challenge?


You’d think a full bracket game would be an easy way for casinos to make money, given how many brackets get busted like eggshells by the tournament’s first Friday. Heck, if the guy over in Human Resources can whip up one with a copy machine and a coffee can, surely a multimillion-dollar casino operation could do so. No-brainer, right?


Wrong, as it turns out. The limitations are both logistical and technological, according to Jay Rood, VP of Race and Sports at MGM International.


At the moment, MGM does not have the software capable of handling thousands of complete-bracket bets. Think about what’s involved in entering a single bracket – 63 different games – then consider thousands of similar brackets all hitting the system at once. It’s a technological hurdle MGM hasn’t yet cleared.


“Grading the brackets is a nightmare,” Rood says. “We’re upgrading our system in the fall, and we may be capable of handling more.”


Plus, there are simple logistical challenges. In Vegas, you have to place your bet in person, which is far trickier than banging out 63 picks on a Yahoo bracket ten minutes before the first tip-off. A significant percentage of March Madness casino-goers arrive after the first games have tipped off – Friday is one of the busiest sports days of the year – making them ineligible to deliver a pre-tourney bracket.


“So many of our customers are transient,” Rood says. “Only a small number get in on time.”


That said, there’s the possibility that bracket picking could be in play soon. Some smaller casinos in Vegas, primarily catering to locals, do a version of a round-by-round bracket challenge. They pick the first round, compile point totals, then return to pick the second, accumulating points along the way. But again—this is an option not available to non-Vegas folk. Legal gambling on the Internet remains a murky-at-best prospect.


Still, it’s clear the interest is there. Where there’s interest, there’s money, and where there’s money, there’s a solution. Rood said he’s tinkering with the possibility of offering various odds for various point totals after each round – getting 25 of 32 right pays out at a certain rate, and getting 30 of 32 pays out at a better one, for instance.


A Vegas payout for bracket acumen would be a wonderful thing. For now, though, you’ll have to content yourself with beating everyone in your office.


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



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Joe Dumars' replacements in Detroit have really nice things to say about Joe Dumars

Joe Dumars is the guy that put together a championship team. He sustained a winner in Detroit that made it to six consecutive Eastern Conference finals. He worked as an executive for 14 years, and as the head honcho for 14.


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He’s also the man that drafted Darko Milicic. He extended Rip Hamilton, twice, crippling the Pistons’ salary cap potential. He spent gobs of money on Ben Gordon, Charlie Villanueva, and Josh Smith – all major free agents signings, and three guys the Pistons had to pay to get rid of.


Joe Dumars contains multitudes. Could the better half of Dumars’ executive career earn him another job running a team?


Detroit coach and president Stan Van Gundy, the man who essentially replaced Dumars with the Pistons, thinks so:



"Joe is a class guy who did a great job and had a ton of success," Van Gundy said. "Anytime you get good people in the league it is good for the league so yeah absolutely. Joe has a good track record. Hopefully if that is what he wants to do he will get another opportunity."



SVG was asked about Dumars’ prospects after Detroit News scribe Terry Foster followed up on a months-old statement from Ric Bucher at Bleacher Report, reporting that the New Orleans Pelicans could turn to the Louisiana-born Dumars in the offseason to take over their front office.


Pistons forward Greg Monroe, a Dumars draftee from 2010, also had nice things to say about the 2003 NBA Executive of the Year:



Forward Greg Monroe believes Dumars deserves a second chance.




"I mean, yeah," Monroe said. "He put together a championship team. Obviously he knows what it takes to get it done. For a stretch he had one of the most successful teams in the league. Obviously he is good at that job. I don't see how that would be a problem to get back."



We’ve been routinely critical of Dumars’ time in Detroit here at BDL, and for good reason. The Milicic selection was a bit of a blip, just about every NBA team was lusting over Darko back in 2003, and while most wouldn’t have taken him ahead of Carmelo Anthony, many would have considered it and all would have taken the 17-year old ahead of Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade with the next pick. Dumars did sound, chance-y work on his Pistons’ roster and coaching staff in the months that followed, building an eventual champion along the way.


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Dumars’ team, however, just about gave up on Flip Saunders as coach in 2007, and a series of follow-up coaching hires failed the franchise while former ownership pinched pennies in anticipation of an eventual sell. This doesn’t excuse Dumars’ repeated missteps in the years that followed – dealing for Allen Iverson, needlessly extending Richard Hamilton, whiffing in free agency – and by the time Detroit finally let their beloved former Piston go in 2014, it was safe to conclude that Dumars had received one chance too many.


With that in place, the same spark that led Dumars to act ahead of the curve in his first few years with the team – taking on reclamation projects and taking advantage of teams looking to cut salary and start over – could return in a new gig.


It’s fair to say that Danny Ferry more or less wasted his shot at building a champion around LeBron James in Cleveland, but in his second stint with Atlanta he’s built the East’s best basketball team (until James and the Cavaliers eventually trounce them in May). Larry Bird has done well in his second go-round with Indiana, the highly-regarded Jeff Bower is on his second chance working Dumars’ old job in Detroit, and Washington’s Ernie Grunfeld … well, they can’t all be success stories.


Detroit, working at 28-45, will need years to get out of what Dumars left them with, but they’ll also be attempting to rebuild with three cornerstones that their former GM put in place: Andre Drummond, Greg Monroe (after some consternation), and Brandon Jennings. Joe Dumars’ tenure in Detroit had its faults, but it doesn’t mean he can’t turn it around with another team.


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










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Other side of concussion issue: Austin Collie can't find NFL work

When linebacker Chris Borland walked away from the NFL, he said it was because he was aware of the concussion risks and decided that wasn't for him anymore.


Receiver Austin Collie presumably knows all the risks too. But he can't land an NFL job, even though he wants to. He thinks his concussion history is the reason.


Collie signed with the Canadian Football League's B.C. Lions earlier this year as he attempts his comeback. His NFL story is a tough one: A fourth-round pick with the Colts in 2009, Collie was off to a great start with 15 touchdowns and more than 1,200 yards in his first 25 career games through two seasons. Then he suffered three scary concussions. He played one game in 2012, seven in 2013 and none in the NFL last season.


And Collie thinks that his concussion history is the reason he has had a hard time getting a chance to further his career, given the NFL's recent sensitivity to it.



"Why am I not in the NFL? I don’t know," Collie told the Vancouver Sun. "I would think, I would say, the big part is the injury history that’s right there."



Many NFL players will give you plenty of excuses why they're not in the league anymore, after they are unable to get a job. It's possible Collie just isn't the same receiver that looked on his way to big things early in his career. The New England Patriots, who can use available talent as well as any team, had him play seven games in 2013 and he caught just six passes. And the NFL has no problem employing other talented players with long concussion histories. But Collie is also correct in his comments to the Sun that he was having trouble finding a new team after the Colts moved on right as the NFL was starting to become very aware of the concussion dangers.



“The bottom line is, if those didn’t happen when they did, right at the height of the concussion discussion, I’d probably still be playing,” Collie told the Sun. “Everybody can comment on it. Everybody has their opinion. But I’m not them. Football is a childhood dream for me. It’s a way to provide for my family and play a game I love. To not be playing, because of a label, is hard. I’ve been labelled.”



Is that fair? Is Collie being left out of the NFL because of concussion concerns? Wes Welker could wonder the same as he remains unsigned after many concussions. Was Collie, and perhaps other players, passed over because of concussion dangers? it seems unfair if so, if they're aware of the risk and willing to take it. On the other hand, one could argue they're being saved from further medical problems down the line.


Either way, Collie is playing in Canada now, and he believes it's because the NFL is being more careful about concussions.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!










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Byron Scott swears opposing players have approached him about becoming Lakers

Byron Scott has had to talk himself into quite a bit this season, working with a Los Angeles Lakers team that was built to lose, but his particular brand of delusion may have hit its peak over the weekend.


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The Laker coach, working with a 19-53 record in the months following a misspent 2014 offseason, claimed on Sunday that player have openly approached Scott during games to express their interest in moving to Los Angeles in order to take advantage of the Lakers’ significant 2015 salary cap space. He’s seriously pushing that as something that has actually happened.


From the Los Angeles Daily News’ Mark Medina:



“You have a lot of free agents out there who would love to play for us. They’ve been making it pretty clear,” Scott said. “You have guys during the games come by the bench saying, ‘Hey Coach, I would love to be in L.A. next year.’ That makes you feel good there are players out there that want to be here. I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that we’re taking it in a different direction. They know this organization and the history of the organization is going to be back.”



Again, that’s during a game in full view of all manner of cameras, fans and media personnel. Players openly reaching out to Los Angeles Lakers coach Byron Scott in order to express their interest in leaving their incumbent team as a free agent in order to play for the Lakers.


Medina reports that Scott refused to name names out of legitimate fears of tampering charges, nor would he discuss how many players had come by the Lakers bench to talk about 2015 free agency during a game being played against the Lakers.


Again, we know the Lakers are rebuilding and tanking the season in order to ensure that they have the best odds in place to keep their lottery pick, but we don’t know just how big a role the team’s hiring of Byron Scott has to do with this. The team’s brain trust knew that 2014-15 was going to be a wash when major free agents turned down the Lakers’ max deals and the opportunity to play alongside Kobe Bryant last summer, but is Scott secretly part of his tanking plan? Is hiring Byron Scott, who infamously eschews three-pointers while presiding over some of the NBA’s worst defensive teams over his last four seasons as coach, the sideline version of signing Carlos Boozer?


Are we giving the Lakers’ front office too much credit, as they wait out this season and 2015-16 (likely Bryant’s final year) while gobbling up high draft picks and cap space?


Consider that, in a loss to the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday, the Lakers “rested” big man Ed Davis despite the fact that Davis only averages 23 minutes a game, and despite the fact that Davis is just 25 and hardly winded at this point in the long season. Davis, who had 16 points and 14 rebounds in Los Angeles’ other meeting with Brooklyn in February, was not in favor of the move.


From Mike Bresnahan at the Los Angeles Times:



"Honestly, I don't like it," the Lakers forward said Sunday before the Lakers lost to Brooklyn, 107-99. "I didn't ask to sit out or anything. I wanted to play 82 games this year. But, you know, it's not my decision."



Davis is one of the few players on the Lakers that could see his Los Angeles stay carryover to the post-Bryant era.


Jeremy Lin, presumably, will not be one of those returning players. From Pable S. Torre’s excellent ESPN profile of Lin, published last week:



Or take the other viral Lakers Vine this season, from a game against the Grizzlies, down one with 24 seconds left. A clapping Bryant, standing near his man on the baseline, screams at Lin, who's guarding a dribbling Conley at the top of the arc, to intentionally foul. When Lin doesn't do it, Bryant sprints across the court, fouls Conley himself and throws a left hook into the emasculated air, basketball's Last Alpha Male flushing Charmin down the drain.




In reality, Lin couldn't hear Bryant because he had also been telling Scott, on the sideline, "We have to foul!" And Scott kept telling him no.



The Houston Rockets, looking to make their own move in free agency, paid the Lakers the princely sum of a first-round pick for taking the final year of Lin’s contract off their hands. The Lakers made the move for Jeremy knowing full well (we hope, at least) that his style of play is completely ill-suited to work alongside Bryant or under the tutelage of Byron Scott, and despite some impressive recent play (Lin is averaging over 21 points and 5.4 assists in his last four games) the expected results have taken hold.


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Los Angeles is a fantastic place to live, the Lakers basically print money due to their significant local television deal (even though ratings for 2014-15 are understandably down), and the team will have salary cap money this summer and likely the next. Players will eventually want to play there, but believing Scott in this instance is a stretch, especially as the team attempts to punt games.


By sitting contributors like Davis and Jordan Hill, the Lakers are ensuring that they’ll have strong odds to keep their first-round pick this season (though the team has split its last four games, and played competitively in a loss to Brooklyn on Sunday), and the irony behind the team’s “no, you lose first”-matchup with the Philadelphia 76ers on Monday isn’t lost on anyone. If the Lakers do drop out of the top five in the NBA draft lottery this year, the team’s pick goes to the Sixers.


The Lakers whiffed in free agency last year, however, and despite those scads of players that Byron Scott swears are coming up to him DURING AN ACTUAL GAME to discuss how much they’d love to be a Laker next season, context, timing and NBA rules will likely influence all of the major 2015 free agent stars to stick with their current teams. This is why the Lakers, with Kobe still around and with Kobe’s hand-picked coach running the show, could look an awful lot like the same current awful Laker team in 2015-16.


This would be by design, as the team would then enter the 2016 offseason with a cleared roster, cap space, and several high-end lottery picks already in place. All with the lure of Los Angeles and Laker legend making their cap space look all the more enticing than some other random team’s cap space.


Whether or not they’d enter that offseason with Byron Scott as coach is entirely up to how much credit you’re giving the Lakers’ front office.


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










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