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At Chuck Noll's funeral, former Steelers coach is remembered as great teacher who molded men, changed lives

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Steelers past and present joined several hundred friends and family on Tuesday for a funeral mass honoring Noll, who passed away last week at age 82.

PITTSBURGH — The lessons Chuck Noll passed down to his players — maxims that often applied as much to life as to football — are tacked on the wall in Mike Mularkey's office.

They say things like "stress is when you don't know what you're doing" and "I wasn't hired to motivate players, I was hired to coach motivated players." They ring as true now as they did when Mularkey heard them the first time playing tight end for the Pittsburgh Steelers' Hall of Fame coach 25 years ago.

It's why Mularkey made sure he had a chance to say goodbye, joining Steelers past and present, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and several hundred friends and family on Tuesday for a funeral mass honoring Noll, who passed away last week at age 82.

"I've gotten more from Chuck off the field as much as I got on the field about how to do things the right way," said Mularkey, now a tight ends coach with Tennessee. "Family was important. Balance in life was important."

And that, as much as the record four Super Bowls Noll won while transforming the Steelers from an NFL afterthought into a dynasty during the 1970s is what will resonate for the city he championed and the team he built from scratch.

The men he molded embraced at Saint Paul Cathedral. They clutched programs featuring a picture of a vibrant Noll wearing a polo shirt, shorts and the closest he ever came to a smile while at work. Each vowed to carry on the lessons Noll imparted from his first day of coaching to his waning days.

Born in Cleveland, Noll attended Benedictine High School, where he played running back and tackle, winning All-State honors, before gaining a scholarship to play for the Dayton Flyers. He was drafted by the Cleveland Browns, Pittsburgh's biggest, most traditional rival, in 1953.

Noll retired as a player from the Browns in 1959 at age 27.

Steelers President Art Rooney II and Hall of Fame defensive tackle Joe Greene were among the pallbearers Tuesday, a responsibility Greene wished he could have avoided but one he ultimately welcomed as a final gift from the coach who changed his life.

"It meant Chuck was thinking of me," Greene said, "and that's special."

Noll and Greene will be forever entwined in Steelers history. Noll was a rookie head coach in 1969 when he selected the massive but somewhat unknown Greene in the first round of the NFL draft. It was a pick met with skepticism but one that changed the course of the organization and Greene's life.

"If he hadn't chosen me, maybe I wouldn't have been a Pittsburgh Steeler," Greene said. "Maybe I wouldn't have had the opportunity to be coached by Chuck Noll. And that probably would not have fared very well for me."

Instead, Noll and Greene served as the core of a team that dominated the 1970s, winning four titles in a six-year span thanks to a seemingly never-ending stream of Hall of Famers guided by a man who made it his mission to ensure they learned more than just X's and O's.

Greene, nicknamed "Mean Joe" for his menacing demeanor on the field, remembers destroying a door one day "when things weren't going my way."

Rather than let Greene off the hook or rip into the cornerstone of the "Steel Curtain" defense, Noll took a different approach.

"Chuck came to the room and knocked on the door and said 'That'll be $500' and that was the end of the story," Greene said.

Despite rising to the top of his profession, Noll preferred not to bask in the limelight.

It's telling that while Hall of Famers like Greene, Blount, running back Franco Harris and wide receiver John Stallworth sat in the pews at the cathedral — just a few miles across town from where Noll worked at bygone Three Rivers Stadium — they were surrounded by longtime employees of the organization and friends from all walks of life.

Bishop David Zubik, who performed Tuesday's ceremony, was a young priest in the late 1970s when he somehow managed to get Noll to agree to give a speech on leadership to a group of high school athletes.

They set it up in the spring of 1979. The speech wasn't until January 1980. Months passed. The season came and went, ending with the Steelers beating the Los Angeles Rams at the Rose Bowl to claim the team's fourth Vince Lombardi Trophy.

Two days later back in Pittsburgh, Noll drove himself to the retreat where he found a stunned Zubik waiting for him. Noll delivered as promised, giving a rousing talk to a group of young players that included future Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino, then a local prep star.

It didn't matter that Noll might have been exhausted. It didn't matter that he had every right to cancel. That simply wasn't Noll's way. He made a promise. He had to keep it.

"That's the thing about coach Noll," Zubik said. "Everybody was important."

It's a legacy that will carry on in the city Noll called home and within the walls of the franchise he defined.

"Four championships, you've got to feel that," current Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey said. "We walk by those Super Bowl trophies every day here, and it all started with Coach Noll."


Columbus linebacker Nick Conner, a four-star recruit, commits to Ohio State: Buckeyes recruiting

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Four-star linebacker Nick Conner of Dublin (Ohio) Scioto committed to Ohio State on Tuesday.

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio State will host an array of top prospects Thursday at one of its most important instructional camps of the summer, but Urban Meyer got a head start on what he hopes becomes a trend over the weekend. 

Landing commitments. 

According to his Instagram account, four-star linebacker Nick Conner of Dublin (Ohio) Scioto pledged to the Buckeyes on Tuesday, the same day he camped at Ohio State and earned his scholarship offer. 

Rated by Rivals.com the No. 8 inside linebacker in the 2015 recruiting class, Conner had scholarship offers from Boston College, Indiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Oregon, Virginia Tech, West Virginia and others. 

As a junior, Conner recorded 129 tackles (19 for a loss), six sacks and three interceptions for the Irish defense. 

Conner became Ohio State's seven commitment in the class, joining safety Tyler Green of Hyattsville (Md.) Damatha Catholic, Grant Schmidt of Sioux Falls (S.D.) Roosevelt, Canton McKinley's Eric Glover-Williams, Florida defensive back Jamel Dean and Athens, Ohio, quarterback Joe Burrow.

Ohio State is still hoping to land oral commitments from two other in-state linebackers – Cincinnati St. Xavier's Justin Hilliard and Cleveland Benedictine's Jerome Baker

Check back with cleveland.com soon for more on Conner. 

World Cup 2014 roundup: The legend of Mexico's Guillermo Ochoa, and replacing USA's Jozy Altidore

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The legend of Guillermo Ochoa began Tuesday as the Mexican goalkeeper put in a stunning performance to shut out powerful Brazil.

For those people who bemoan soccer's perceived lack of scoring, we bring you the new legend of Guillermo Ochoa. 

The Fortress of Fortaleza, the Great Wall of Mexico, the Six-Fingered Man -- call him what you will. He just put in one of the best goalkeeping performances in World Cup history. 

Ochoa, 28, stonewalled World Cup favorites Brazil on Tuesday in Fortaleza and made a 0-0 draw seem as exciting as a 10-goal match. He made six saves against the offensive juggernaut, the most of a Mexican goalkeeper in the World Cup since 1966, and they weren't easy. If you're not marveling at Ochoa's performance in a city whose name means "fortress" in Portuguese, the rest of the world is. 

Skeptical? 

Watch:

Ochoa's heroics allowed Mexico, a massive underdog, to hold scoreless one of the world's best attacking squads. 

To get a sense of how poorly Mexico was regarded coming into the tournament, consider this: They were the fourth of four North and Central American teams to qualify for the World Cup, and they needed major help to get there. Many felt they didn't even deserve to be in the tournament. 

Now, Mexico just needs a draw or win against Croatia in their next game to make it to the tourney's second round. 

They owe it to Ochoa, a free agent whose stock and myth rose so much Tuesday that some felt obligated to debunk the claims that Ochoa has six fingers on his right hand. 

He doesn't, outside of PhotoShop. It just looked that way. 

Or maybe to Brazil, it looked like this: 

Or perhaps just this: 

Tuesday's World Cup scores

Belgium 2, Algeria 1

Brazil 0, Mexico 0

Russia 1, South Korea 1

Forget the president, bring on the supermodel!

Gisele BundchenBrazil has just given us one more reason to watch the World Cup: Gisele Bundchen. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP) 

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff had been set to present the World Cup winner with the trophy after the final, but there was a problem: She's terribly unpopular. 

So what's a nation full of supermodels to do? 

Oh yeah. 

Enter Gisele Bundchen, superstar model and wife of New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady.

The Boston Globe reports that Bundchen will replace Rousseff at the final ceremony and present the trophy to the winning team -- barring any riots. 

Who will replace Altidore for the United States? 

Doctors are evaluating how bad the injury to U.S. striker Jozy Altidore actually is. The New Jersey native suffered a hamstring injury in the first half of Monday's 2-1 win over Ghana and had to leave the game.

Altidore's prospects for a return don't look good, and that's a huge blow to U.S. hopes against Portugal and then Germany. U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann brought no backup with a style similar to Altdore, which means Klinsmann will have to change his game plan significantly upon inserting replacements. Substitute Aron Johannsson was invisible in the role Monday. 

Brazil Soccer WCup Ghana USUnited States' Jozy Altidore pulled up lame in the first half of his team's 2-1 win over Ghana Monday in Natal, Brazil. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa) 

Once thing is certain: Altidore's replacement won't be Landon Donovan, the all-time leading scorer for both the U.S. national team and Major League Soccer. Klinsmann controversially left Donovan off the team's final 23-man roster, and now he may regret it. 

It's not that Donovan, 32, would be the perfect man-for-man replacement for Altidore. They are two very different types of players. Altidore is a big, strong target forward, akin to a basketball power forward in the Karl Malone or Tim Duncan model. He uses his strength to establish position, maintain possession and free himself up for shots. Meanwhile, Donovan is a much smaller player who finds openings with excellent vision, instinct and shooting accuracy, and he still maintains the quick-twitch speed to get past defenders. 

Rather, Donovan's versatility to play both wide midfielder and forward could have freed up a roster spot for a backup target forward. Donovan could have replaced midfielder Brad Davis, giving Klinsmann a proven option on the wings or at striker. That could have allowed Klinsmann to leave home one of his smaller, quick reserve strikers -- Johannsson or Chris Wondolowski -- and bring a backup target forward like Eddie Johnson or Terence Boyd. 

Instead, Donovan is doing commentary for ESPN, Johnson and Boyd are at home, and Klinsmann is searching for answers. 

Akron RubberDucks cruise to 15-10 victory over Reading Fightin' Phils

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The RubberDucks have a half-game lead over Richmond in the Eastern League's Western Division.

Outfielder Anthony Gallas had two doubles and four RBI, and second baseman Joe Wendle had four hits, including a double and triple, and three RBI as the Akron RubberDucks defeated the Fightin' Phils, 15-10, Tuesday night in a Class AA Eastern League game in Reading, Pa.

RubberDucks third baseman Ronny Rodriguez was 3-for-4 with two doubles, three runs scored and two RBI. Akron had 16 hits overall.

Toru Murata (5-2, 4.30) got the win for the RubberDucks despite giving up seven runs on seven hits in just five innings. Enosil Tejada pitched two scoreless innings of relief and had three strikeouts.

Designated hitter Jake Fox led the Fightin' Phils, going 3-for-4 with two home runs and four RBI. Fox has 17 homers on the season.

The RubberDucks are now 41-30 and have a half-game lead over the Richmond, Va., Flying Squirrels for first place in the Western Division.

Josh Tomlin breaks down his worst outing of the season: Video

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Josh Tomlin never felt comfortable on Tuesday night. Part of it was the Los Angeles lineup, but manager Terry Francona said Tomlin didn't seem right in the bullpen before the game.

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Josh Tomlin never felt comfortable on Tuesday night.

Part of it was the Los Angeles lineup, but manager Terry Francona said Tomlin didn't seem right in the bullpen before the game.

The Indians lost to the Angels, 9-3

Tomlin allowed a season-high 11 hits and five earned runs as he took his fourth loss of the season. He was chased from the game in the fifth inning after allowing his second homer of the night – this time to Howie Kendrick.

The Indians starter met with the media after the game and talked about the Los Angeles lineup, not having his command and his battle with Mike Trout before giving up a three-run home run to the Angels outfielder. 

L.A. Angels overpower Cleveland Indians: DMan's Report, Game 72, Tuesday

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The Angels are 4-1 against the Indians this season.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians played the Angels in the second of a four-game series Tuesday. Here is a capsule look from The Plain Dealer reporter Dennis Manoloff:

Game: 72.

Opponent: Angels.

Location: Progressive Field, Cleveland.

Time of day: Night.

Time elapsed: 3 hours, 8 minutes.

Attendance: 14,639.

Result: Angels 9, Indians 3.

Records: Angels 38-32, Indians 36-36.

Scoreboard watch: The Indians fell to 3.0 games behind first-place Kansas City (38-32) in the AL Central. The Royals defeated Max Scherzer and the Tigers, 11-4, at Comerica Park to take over first by one-half game. The Royals have won nine straight.

Streaks snapped: The Indians lost for the first time in four games overall and for the first time in 11 home games. Their previous home loss had been May 18 against Oakland. They swept three-game series against Detroit (May 19-21), Colorado (May 30-June 1) and Boston (June 2-4) and won the first game of the series Monday.

Runs scarce: The Indians have scored a total of 19 runs in their past seven games (2.7 per). They are 3-4 in that span, the victories coming by scores of 3-2, 3-2 and 4-3.

Halo power: The Angels amassed 15 hits, including eight for extra bases. They smacked four homers. They saw 177 pitches.

Enjoying themselves: The Angels are 4-1 against the Tribe.

Tale of two beasts: The game was supposed to feature two of the hottest hitters in the majors matched against each other. It didn't work out that way.

The Angels' best player, center fielder Mike Trout, put on a show. He went 3-for-5 with two homers, one double and four RBI. He extended his hitting streak to 12 games (19-for-49).

Trout is batting .311 with a 1.008 OPS, 16 homers, 54 RBI and 47 runs in 66 games.  

The Indians' best player, left fielder Michael Brantley, came to the ballpark hoping to do damage. He was in manager Terry Francona's posted lineup, only to became a late-afternoon scratch because of head and neck issues.

In the third inning Monday, Brantley's helmet banged into the left knee of Angels shortstop John McDonald during a double play. Brantley exited the game before the top of the fifth. He passed concussion tests that night and felt good upon arriving at the ballpark Tuesday, but the head bothered him as he ramped up baseball activities. He underwent further exams.

Brantley is not in Trout's class. Few, if any, are. But Brantley is having an All-Star-worthy season. He is batting .323 with a .909 OPS, 11 homers, 46 RBI and 49 runs in 69 games. The reigning A.L. player of the week, Brantley has hit safely in eight straight (15-of-28).

Nothing doing: Brantley's replacement in left, Ryan Raburn, was 0-for-3 with two strikeouts. He saw nine pitches. Raburn, who batted ninth, has a .208 average (27-for-130) and .522 OPS.

Through June 17 of last season, Raburn was batting .275 with a .906 OPS.

Rough outing: Indians right-hander Josh Tomlin allowed six runs (five earned) on 11 hits in 5 1/3 innings. He walked none and struck out four.

Tomlin gave up more than three earned runs in a game for the first time this season (nine appearances, eight starts).

Tomlin (4-4, 3.86 ERA) lost because he pitched poorly, but the Angels deserve some credit, too. They fouled good pitches and punished mistakes.

The best example of both sides creating trouble for Tomlin came in the fifth. With one run in and the score tied, 2-2, Trout batted with runners on first and third and one out. Here is the pitch sequence:

1. 74-mph curve, called strike (0-1). Trout thought it was inside.

2. 85 cutter, foul (0-2).

3. 89 fastball up and away, ball (1-2). Ball out of the hand.

4. 74 curve, foul (1-2). Trout reacted a tad late to the depth of the pitch, but his lightning-quick hands enabled him to recover and actually pull it foul.

5. 89 fastball inside, foul (1-2). A well-executed pitch almost turned into a pop out near the Angels dugout.

6. 85 cutter on outside corner at knees, foul (1-2). A decent pitch that Trout spoiled off the end of the bat.

7. 75 curve high and inside, ball (2-2). Tomlin tried to make the perfect pitch and it squirted on him.

8. 89 fastball over middle at knees, three-run homer to right to make it 5-2. Catcher Yan Gomes had set up away. Tomlin doesn't overpower, so his margin for error is small. He can't miss over the plate with a fastball to a great hitter. Trout did what he is supposed to do to a pitch that missed its target and didn't have much on it.

The game effectively ended on that swing.

Non-starters: The Indians' rotation has struggled to get deep into games since Tomlin went eight innings in a victory at Texas on June 7. Here is what the starters have done since:

Justin Masterson (5 2/3 IP, 2 ER; W @ Tex).

T.J. House (3 1/3 IP, 5 ER; ND @ Tex).

Corey Kluber (5 IP, 3 ER; L @ KC).

Trevor Bauer (5 1/3 IP, 3 ER, L @ KC).

Tomlin (5 2/3 IP, 3 ER; L @ Bos).

Masterson (2 IP, 5 ER; L @ Bos).

House (5 1/3 IP, 2 ER; ND @ Bos).

Kluber (5 1/3 IP, 2 ER; ND @ Bos).

Bauer (6 2/3 IP, 3 ER, W vs. LAA).

Tomlin (5 1/3 IP, 5 ER; L vs. LAA).

Making a mess: Indians shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera's error helped set up the Angels' four-run fifth. Cabrera, on the right side because of the shift, tried to field Raul Ibanez's grounder, tag the runner going to second and record a double play. Instead, Cabrera never secured the ball and got none out. Three batters later, Trout homered.

Cabrera's error -- his 13th -- snapped the Tribe's errorless streak at three games.

Supporting role: Angels right fielder and leadoff man Kole Calhoun was 4-for-5 with one homer, two RBI and three runs.

Welcome back: Indians third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall went 2-for-4 with one homer. He entered the night in an 0-for-13 skid over four games.

King Matt: Chisenhall had two of the five hits allowed by Angels righty Matt Shoemaker in eight innings. Shoemaker and his beard gave up two runs, walked one and struck out 10.

Shoemaker (4-1, 3.83) was superb, no question. He consistently got ahead and mixed his pitches well. But he wasn't Felix Hernandez-superb. In the majority of their at-bats, the Indians swung as if they had no idea what was coming.

Five-star defense: Tribe second baseman Jason Kipnis denied Albert Pujols with a terrific play in the fifth. Kipnis, on the left side because of the shift, dived to make a backhand stop and threw on-target to first. Credit Carlos Santana with a good pick.

Terry Francona talks about the Indians' 9-3 loss against the Los Angeles Angels: Video

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The Indians lost to the Los Angeles Angels, 9-3, on Tuesday night, a loss that snapped the Tribe's 10-game winning streak at Progressive Field.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians lost to the Los Angeles Angels, 9-3, on Tuesday night, a loss that snapped the Tribe's 10-game winning streak at Progressive Field.

Lonnie Chisenhall – who busted out of an 0-for-13 slump – blasted a solo home run to give the Indians the lead in the bottom of the fourth inning. Carlos Santana added an RBI in the ninth, but the Indians couldn't keep up with Los Angeles. The Angels belted four home runs in the game, two of them from Mike Trout, who finished with four RBIs.

Following the game, manager Terry Francona talked about the difficulty of facing Trout and the Angels, Josh Tomlin's struggles, how tough it was to face Matt Shoemaker and bad defense for the Tribe.

Breaking down the Indians' loss against the Angels: Postgame show

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The Indians lost to the Angels, 9-3, on Tuesday night at Progressive Field. The loss snapped the 10-game winning streak at Progressive Field.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians lost to the Angels, 9-3, on Tuesday night at Progressive Field. The loss snapped the 10-game winning streak at Progressive Field.

After the game, cleveland.com's Chris Fedor was joined by Zack Meisel to break it down. They discussed the performance of Josh Tomlin. They also talked about the team's most indespensible player and what can be expected of Justin Masterson on Wednesday.

Get complete coverage of the win at cleveland.com/tribe.

More video:

Josh Tomlin postgame

Terry Francona postgame


Mike Trout leads Angels past Cleveland Indians, 9-3, with two home runs

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Angel rookie Matt Shoemaker strikes out 10 in eight innings to end Indians' 10-game home winning streak.

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Tuesday was a good night for Mike Trout and the 300 dogs who strutted their stuff around the warning track at Progressive Field before the game as Puppypalooza returned to the corner of Carnegie and Ontario in all its howling glory.

The same cannot be said for Josh Tomlin, the Indians and the search party that prowled the vast landscape of empty seats in the upper deck along the right field line searching for Raul Ibanez's foul ball in the fifth inning. They numbered about 50 strong at one point before being chased back to their seats empty handed by ushers.

The Indians, beaten convincingly by the Angels, 9-3, know the feeling.

Trout hit two homers, the first being a three-run shot in the critical fifth inning, to help end the Indians' 10-game home-winning streak. Trout's first homer barely made it over the right field wall on a 2-2 pitch by Tomlin, but it turned a 2-2 tie into a 5-2 Angel lead.

"There's a lot to like about Trout," said manager Terry Francona, tongue-in-cheek. "I actually think for his sake they should rest him on Wednesday. He's got a chance to be a pretty good player. You don't want to tire him out."

Howie Kendrick and Kole Calhoun added homers for the Angels, who won for just the second time in their last six games.

Trout's second homer was much more impressive, a 422-foot leadoff drive over the 19-foot wall left center field, but by that time it was mostly for window dressing. Trout, who also doubled off the left field wall in the first to set up the Angels initial run, has 16 homers.

The consolation prize went to Lonnie Chisenhall, who ended a 0-for-13 skid with a single in the second. He followed it with a 434-foot homer into the Indians' bullpen in the fourth for a temporary 2-1 lead. It was Chisenhall's eighth homer.

"The skid was short-lived and I think that's the maturation of Lonnie," said Francona. "Everyone goes through periods where they don't swing the bat well. His are shorter now."

Rookie Matt Shoemaker (4-1, 3.83), signed by the Angels as an undrafted free agent in 2008 out of Eastern Michigan University, handled the Indians with ease. Shoemaker made the club out of spring training as a reliever, but Tuesday was his sixth start of the season.

After allowing a Yan Gomes' double in the fifth, Shoemaker retired 10 straight before Michael Bourn singled with two out in the eighth. Shoemaker, 4-0 as a starter, struck out a career-high 10 after entering the game with 35 strikeouts and eight walks in 34 1/3 innings.

"Shoemaker threw a very good breaking," said Francona. "Off of that, he threw enough fastballs where he got above our barrels when we were looking for the breaking ball. Plus he threw a lot of strikes."

Tomlin (4-4, 3.86) entered the fifth with a 2-1 lead. David Freese started the inning with a single. Ibanez, after sending his much-coveted foul ball skyward, sent a slow roller between second and first. Shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera, shifted to the right side of the infield, grabbed the ball and tried to tag Freese as he ran past before throwing to first for the double play.

The ball, however, flew out of his glove as Freese and Ibanez were safe. Cabrera was charged with his 13th error of the season.

"I think I had a chance at the double play," said Cabrera, "but I never really felt the ball in my glove."

Said Francona, "You always want to get at least one out, but I know what he was trying to do there."

Tomlin retired Hank Conger, but Calhoun singled to score Freese. Trout homered to score everyone else. Tomlin jumped ahead of Trout 0-2, but eventually lost him in an eight-pitch at-bat.

"Josh just couldn't put Trout away in that at-bat," said Francona. "The more pitches he saw, the more dangerous he got. That was obviously a key blow."

The inning ended with Josh Hamilton getting thrown out at the plate on relays by Ryan Raburn and Cabrera as he tried to score on Erick Aybar's double to left.

Tomlin started the sixth, but gave up a first-pitch homer to Howie Kendrick for a 6-2 lead. Tomlin has allowed nine homers in 51 1/3 innings this season.

The Angels took a 1-0 lead in the first on a leadoff single by Calhoun, Trout's double and a ground ball by Albert Pujols. Trout's double off the left field wall moved Calhoun to third and Pujols grounder delivered him.

The Indians tied it, 1-1, in the second. Carlos Santana walked, took third on Chisenhall's single to right and scored on David Murphy's ground out to second.

Tomlin, facing the Angles for the first time since 2011, allowed six runs, five earned, on 11 hits. He struck out four and didn't walk a batter in 99 pitches.

Shoemaker, in his first appearance against the Indians, allowed two runs on five hits in eight innings. He had just one walk among his 10 strikeouts.

After the Angels scored twice in the ninth on Calhoun's homer and Kendrick's single, the game was delayed for 11 minutes by rain.

The Indians came back to score their final run as Jason Kipnis doubled and came the way around to score on Santana's single in front of the plate

Northeast Ohio Baseball Coaches Association features 90 seniors in All-Star game and All-District honors (photos)

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The Northeast Ohio Baseball Coaches Association featured 90 seniors in All-Star game and with All-District honors.

AVON, Ohio -- On Monday, the Northeast Ohio Baseball Coaches Association' All-Star game featured 90 seniors from the Northeast Ohio area.

This week, the NEOBCA also released its All-District list, which included the players who played in three All-Star games at All-Pro Freight Stadium in Avon.

Here are those results: 

Game 1: Lorain County defeated Cuyahoga County (West), 5-4

Game 2: Cuyahoga County (East) defeated Lake County, 9-7

Game 3: Summit/Wayne/Stark County team defeated Portage/Trumball/Mahoning County team 14-4

The NEOBCA All-District teams are selected with first team, second team and honorable mention distinction from Division I through Division IV and are broken into Inland Teams and Lakeland Teams. The Inland teams are made up of Ashland, Columbiana, Mahoning, Stark, Summit and Wayne counties. The Lakeland teams are made up of Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Portage and Trumbull counties.

The 2014 NEOBCA All-District teams are as follows:

2014 NEOBCA All-District Teams

Inland Teams (Ashland, Columbiana, Mahoning, Stark, Summit and Wayne counties)

Division I 

First Team

Nick Bebout, Wadsworth; Tim Benner, Walsh Jesuit; Cam Daugherty, Wooster; Ryan Feltner, Walsh Jesuit; Blake Jenkins, Walsh Jesuit; AJ Kimes, Aurora; Jake Miller, Jackson; Ben Murphy, Wooster; Nate Romans, Walsh Jesuit; Nanak Saran, Hudson; Ty Shoaff, Walsh Jesuit; Tim Turner, Jackson; Kevin Zullo, Hudson.

Second Team

Matt Blasiole, Uniontown Lake; Riley Campbell, Wadsworth; Dominic Canzone, Walsh Jesuit; Cory Carl, Uniontown Lake; Austin Evans, Twinsburg; Brian Groves, Stow-Munroe Falls; Dan McMullen, Twinsburg; Kyle Mottice, Jackson; Michael Urban, Stow-Munroe Falls; Andy Weber, Aurora

Division II

First Team

Kip DeShields, West Branch; Vinnie Galizio, Buckeye; Chris Gray, Tallmadge; Eli Kraus, Buckeye; Calvin Miller, St. Vincent-St. Mary; Jerry Nightingale, Ravenna; Tony Rupert, Marlington; Justin Whitley, Woodridge.

Second Team

Jackson Buda, Norton; Jake Jones, Marlington; Kevin Krukemeyer, St. Vincent-St. Mary; Joshua Lock, Southeast; Tom Morehouse, Woodridge; Edmond Pilolli, Canfield; Carter Rhoads, Canfield; Austin Rosalez, Ravenna; Jake Smith, West Branch.

Honorable Mention

Tucker Cavanaugh, Norton; Nick Tarter, Southeast. 

Division III and Division IV

First Team

Manny Garza, Rittman; Bill Goodall, South Range; Riley Harpster, Hillsdale; Jacob Hawks, Hillsdale; Luke Keck, Warren John F. Kennedy; Gage Lau, Tuslaw; Dan Macinga, South Range; Patrick Murphy, Canton Central Catholic; Pavin Parks, Manchester; Ty Ramsier, Rittman; Ben Wake, Tuslaw.

Second Team

Adrian Birchler, Fairless; Preston Caparanis, Warren John F. Kennedy; Chandler Diles, Warren John F. Kennedy; Shawn Jones, Canton Central Catholic; Anthony Marino, Warren John F. Kennedy; Anthony Marzullo, Warren John F. Kennedy; Mason Nist, Manchester; Lance Priest, Tuslaw; Alex Reed, Tuslaw; Derek Stoller, Norwayne; Cody Swords, Fairless; Zach Weinman, Norwayne.

Lakeland Teams (Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Portage & Trumbull counties)

Division I

First Team

Cody Callaway, Midview; Cody Cantrell, Eastlake North; Perry Dellavalle, Brecksville-Broadview Heights; Brad Hamilton, Avon Lake; Kyle Hegedus, St. Edward; Kurt Kuszmoul, Howland; Russell LaMovec, Willoughby South; Max Lavisky, Lakewood; Evan Lovick, Mentor; Brad Novak, North Olmsted; John Schreiber, Mayfield; Isaiah Thompson, Garfield Heights; Joseph Watts, Kent Roosevelt.

Second Team

Brandon Bartiome, Lorain; Bryan Bielak, North Royalton; Evan Burnell, Olmsted Falls; Drew Gittins, Chardon; Brian Keller, Eastlake North; Nate Kocan, North Royalton; Will Meyer, Solon; Chase Miller, Lakewood; Justin Mott, Amherst Steele; Aaron Pinsoneault, Kent Roosevelt; Anthony Savarino, Olmsted Falls; Garrett Storm, North Royalton; Drew Tornow, Painesville Riverside; Sam Vilk, Mentor; Alex Watts, Amherst Steele; Joe Weisenseel, St. Edward. 

Honorable Mention

Nate Alstadt, Solon; Graham Becker, Painesville Riverside; Colton Carney, Brecksville-Broadview Heights; Ryan Hanna, Olmsted Falls; Tyler Lienerth, Midview; Chris Makaryk, Solon; Grayson Novak, Garfield Heights; Tyler Spain, Howland; Mike Velez, Lorain; Kyle Watson, Howland; Evan Willman, North Royalton; Zac Wilson, Midview.

Division II

First Team

Joe Borkey, Lake Catholic; Ryan Falls, Norte Dame-Cathedral Latin; Collin Fitzgerald, Keystone; Tyler Gullett, Keystone; Connor Kaucic, Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin; Tyler Kennedy, Chagrin Falls; Mike Koller, West Geauga; Ryan Leonard, Holy Name; Conor O'Hara, University School; Frank Spinelli, Holy Name; Kendle Stiner, Keystone; Gabe Surgeon, Crestwood; Chandler Waszak, University School; Pierce Young, Keystone.

Second Team

Matt Byron, West Geauga; Cody Ewing, Perry; Sean Farrell, Lake Catholic; Chris Francati, Bay; Josh Hampton, Crestwood; Tom Hongosh, Benedictine; Kenan Irish, Harvey; Andrew Moyal, Orange; Collin Pecoraro, Benedictine; Marty Schuerger, Bay; TJ Szczepinski, Holy Name; Joe Velecheck, Perry; Ryan Willen, Orange; Tyler Zaluski, Chagrin Falls.

Division III and Division IV

First Team

Christian Adamo, Cornerstone Christian Academy; Michael Boey, Columbia; Zack Butcher, Cardinal; Giovanni Casella, Wickliffe; Benny Clark, Gilmour Academy; Dylan Denner, Cuyahoga Heights; Ethan Duryea, Cornerstone Christian Academy; Matt Finkler, Kirtland; Erik Guhde, Kirtland; Kyle Harris, Girard; Zac Lowther, Cuyahoga Heights; Mike Martin, Independence;  James Standohar, Girard; Tyler Underwood, Columbia; Brycen Wise, Independence.

Second Team

Joey Begany, Elyria Catholic; Robbie Bliss, Wellington; James Byler, Cardinal; Nick Carevic, Wellington; KC Cress, Cardinal; Tyler Evans, Cardinal; Danny Fulop, Lake Ridge Academy; Colin Hites, Fairport Harding; Lukas Redmond, Elyria Catholic; Jack Spellman, Lake Ridge Academy; Clark Thurling, Cardinal; Dominic Zingale, Wickliffe. 

Contact high school sports reporter Stephanie Kuzydym by email (skuzydym@cleveland.com) or on Twitter (@stephkuzy). Or log in and leave a message in the comments section below.

Cleveland Indians activate Zach McAllister from DL, designate Josh Outman for assignment

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The Indians activated pitcher Zach McAllister from the disabled list on Wednesday, one day before he is slated to rejoin the starting rotation. To make roster space, the club designated reliever Josh Outman for assignment.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians activated pitcher Zach McAllister from the disabled list on Wednesday, one day before he is slated to rejoin the starting rotation. To make roster space, the club designated reliever Josh Outman for assignment.

Outman posted a 3.28 ERA over 24 2/3 innings. He held left-handed hitters to a .180 average (9-for-50). He was out of minor league options, so the Indians have 10 days to trade him, release him or try to pass him through waivers.

The move -- and the timing of it -- is a bit odd, considering McAllister could have been activated on Thursday instead, and also because Outman, despite laboring through a 40-pitch appearance on Monday, has been one of the steadier members of Cleveland's bullpen. 

The Indians still have Marc Rzepzcynski and Kyle Crockett as lefties in their bullpen. McAllister is 3-4 with a 5.89 ERA in 10 starts this season. He made three rehab starts while on the disabled list with a lower back strain.

Cleveland Indians (sans Michael Brantley), L.A. Angels lineups Wednesday

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CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Here are the lineups for Wednesday night's game between the Indians and the Angels at Progressive Field: Angels (38-32) 1. Kole Calhoun RF (.276) 2. Mike Trout CF (.311) 3. Albert Pujols 1B (.254) 4. Josh Hamilton LF (.333) 5. Erick Aybar SS (.292) 6. Howie Kendrick 2B (.274) 7. Raul Ibanez DH (.153) 8. David...

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Here are the lineups for Wednesday night's game between the Indians and the Angels at Progressive Field:

Angels (38-32)

1. Kole Calhoun RF (.276)

2. Mike Trout CF (.311)

3. Albert Pujols 1B (.254)

4. Josh Hamilton LF (.333)

5. Erick Aybar SS (.292)

6. Howie Kendrick 2B (.274)

7. Raul Ibanez DH (.153)

8. David Freese 3B (.219)

9. Hank Conger C (.240)

C.J. Wilson LHP (7-6, 3.50 ERA)

Indians (36-36)

1. Michael Bourn CF (.268)

2. Asdrubal Cabrera SS (.255)

3. Jason Kipnis 2B (.254)

4. Carlos Santana 1B (.193)

5. Ryan Raburn RF (.208)

6. Nick Swisher DH (.200)

7. Yan Gomes C (.256)

8. Lonnie Chisenhall 3B (.368)

9. Mike Aviles LF (.259)

Justin Masterson RHP (4-5, 5.05)

The Cleveland Cavaliers should say 'no' to David Blatt: Chris Fedor's rant of the day

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The Cavs' coaching search is into the second month. The team has interviewed numerous candidates; a few of them have talked to the team twice during this extensive search.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cavs' coaching search is into the second month. The team has interviewed numerous candidates; a few of them have talked to the team twice during this extensive search.

The Cavs should pass on the opportunity to hire David Blatt as head coach (06/18/14)

For new general manager David Griffin, it's his first opportunity to hire a coach, and an opportunity to put his imprint on the franchise. Will it be David Blatt, who is being interviewed today? Or will it be someone else?

It's a big decision, but it's just one piece of the off-season puzzle for Griffin. He will also have to figure out what to do with the top pick in the NBA Draft and how to put the right pieces in place to get the Cavs back into the playoff picture. 

I give my thoughts on why Blatt is the wrong hire for the Cavs at this time.

You can download the MP3 or listen with the player to the right.

Be sure to follow Fedor on Twitter.

Five-star prospects Damien Harris, Rashad Roundtree only two of Ohio State's elite '15 visitors during hectic camp week: Buckeyes recruiting

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This is a big camp week for Ohio State, so it's only natural that Urban Meyer and his staff are hosting some of the top prospects in the nation. Inside is a list of some of those prospects who are set to visit Columbus this week.

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio State's 2015 recruiting class was off to a rather slow start. Then June happened. 

Ohio State has picked up seven oral commitments in the last three weeks – including one from three-star defensive end Dre'Mont Jones of St. Ignatius on Wednesday – and the momentum could carry through in a big way this weekend. 

That's because Urban Meyer and his coaches are hosting a three-day position camp starting Thursday, and some of the nation's top 2015 prospects are scheduled to be in attendance. 

Following a list of those prospects who have either already dropped in or are scheduled to be on Ohio State's campus this weekend: 

RB Damien Harris, Berea (Ky.) Madison Southern – Once committed to Michigan, Harris is a five-star prospect who has made multiple visits to Ohio State in the recent months. Harris, a 5-foot-11, 205-pound prospect, is one of the Buckeyes' top remaining 2015 targets, which makes sense considering Rivals.com rates him the top running back in the class. Harris has more than 20 scholarship offers, but he's most considering only eight: Ohio State, Michigan, Kentucky, Alabama, Oregon, Florida, Florida State and Notre Dame. The Buckeyes like their positioning.

TE Chris Clark, Avon (Conn.) Old Farms – Rated by Rivals the No. 4 tight end in the 2015 class, Clark visited Ohio State earlier in the week during a final tour of visits before he announces his decision in early July. Clark was briefly committed to North Carolina, but he reopened his recruitment shortly after. He's now mostly considering Ohio State, Michigan and Michigan State.

S Rashad Roundtree, Evans (Ga.) Lakeside – Ohio State has found some recruiting consistency in Georgia, and it would love to see that continue in 2015 with Roundtree, Rivals' No. 2 safety in the class. A five-star prospect, Roundtree visited Ohio State earlier in the week and has already returned home to Georgia, but the Buckeyes have been a consistent fixture in his recruitment. He has an impressive scholarship offers list that consists of Alabama, Auburn, Clemson, Florida, Florida State, Michigan and others. Georgia is viewed as a favorite to land his services.

DE Darius Fullwood, Olney (Md.) Good Counsel – A four-star prospect rated by Rivals the No. 18 strongside defensive end in the 2015 class, Fullwood already made a trip to an Ohio State camp earlier this summer. He told cleveland.com in early June that Ohio State "is high on my list," and the return visit has to be a good sign. Fullwood, who is only considering Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Miami (Fla.) Ohio State and Virginia Tech, will camp in Columbus on Thursday.

• LB Justin Hilliard, Cincinnati St. Xavier – Hilliard recently announced on his public Twitter account that he's going to be making his college decision in late June, so it's a good sign for the Buckeyes that he's planned to come to Ohio State this weekend to check things out again. Rated by Rivals the No. 1 inside linebacker in the 2015 class, Hilliard is most considering Alabama, Iowa, Michigan, Notre Dame and the Buckeyes.

WR Christian Kirk, Scottsdale (Ariz.) Saguaro – Rated by Rivals the No. 3 wide receiver in the 2015 class, Kirk would be a big pull for a Buckeyes program looking to stack their roster with elite skill talent. Kirk has more than 30 offers, and he's most considering Arizona State, Auburn, Georgia, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Stanford, Tennessee, Texas A&M, UCLA and USC. Ohio State is the furthest away, but getting him on campus for an unofficial could play into its favor.

** Check back with cleveland.com periodically as we update this list as we confirm more visitors. And be sure to stay tuned through the weekend because I'll be covering the camp and will have updates. 

Kirtland boys basketball hires Nick Gallo as head coach

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Gallo spent five years as an assistant at University School.

KIRTLAND, Ohio -- New Kirtland boys basketball head coach Nick Gallo has a simple plan as to how he hopes to build the basketball program -- make it like football.

"It's going to take transitioning from those great football teams and taking that mentality to the basketball floor," Gallo said.

Gallo, 27, will have several football players on the basketball team, and that was something that drew him to the position.

"I'm really excited, especially with the success the Kirtland football team has had over the years," Gallo said. "They enjoy competing, and I'm honored to be here."

Prior to getting this position, Gallo was an assistant coach at University School for five seasons. He's also the head boys golf coach at Wickliffe, which is where he went to high school and played basketball. He teaches at the eighth grade level at Wickliffe and played golf at Walsh University.

It was an extensive process to replace former coach Matt Ridgeway, but athletic director Matt Paul believes the school has found the best choice.

"We had a committee, and Nick was a unanimous choice at No. 1," Paul said. "It was his enthusiasm and the way he was curious about what coaches felt was important to maintain success at Kirtland."

Gallo said that his team will play fast, provide plenty of defensive pressure and be something that the community can be proud of.

"They're great kids and awesome to be around," Gallo said. "I told them about my three p's: passion, poise and purpose."

Contact high school sports reporter David Cassilo by email (dcassilo@cleveland.com) or Twitter (@dcassilo). Or log in and leave a message in the comments section below.


Chile 2-0 Spain: Dousing Spain's Talking Points

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The guard has changed in international soccer. Tiki-taka is dead. Spain's run is over. At least, a quick web search for any of those phrases over the coming 48 hours will turn up infinite hits after Spain — the World Cup holders and winners of the 2008 and 2012 European Championships — fell 2-0 to Chile on Wednesday. On...

The guard has changed in international soccer. Tiki-taka is dead. Spain's run is over.

At least, a quick web search for any of those phrases over the coming 48 hours will turn up infinite hits after Spain — the World Cup holders and winners of the 2008 and 2012 European Championships — fell 2-0 to Chile on Wednesday. On the heels of a 5-1 loss to the Netherlands in the opener, Spain is out of the World Cup. The third fixture against Australia is a dead rubber. All three of those phrases were uttered by Ian Darke on the ESPN telecast of the Chile match.

Through two matches, Spain's entire tally in this year's World Cup is a single (disputed) penalty goal against the Netherlands. Spanish goalkeeper Iker Casillas has allowed seven goals.

For perspective, in its 2010 title run, Spain allowed eight goals in seven matches.

For more perspective, beginning with that 2008 Euro, Spain went unbeaten in FIFA competitions through 2012, save a 1-0 loss to Switzerland in the opening match of  2010 Cup group play and a 2-0 loss to the United States in the 2009 Confederations Cup semifinals.

Thus, with Spain's elimination this year, the guard has changed, the methodical Spanish passing approach called tiki-taka is dead, and Spain's run is over. Very well, let's take it from the top.

The guard has changed. First of all, this is just an awful metaphor. Anyone who has witnessed a changing of the guard has witnessed reverence. Two guards salute. They steady their weapons. One guard takes great care in assuming the next guard's position.

What the world saw the Netherlands and Chile do to Spain over two matches was done with malice — a cartoon caricature of a bouncer throwing a customer through a tavern door onto the street. There was no reverence for Spain's run. The guard was not "changed" as much as "hurled onto the asphalt."

Tiki-taka is dead. Spain's 2014 roster included 16 players who were on the 2010 winners. The hot-take factory will say that the world has caught up to tiki-taka and the blueprint to beating Spanish football was set forth in this tournament.

(Never mind that the current champions of England — Manchester City — took a possession-based, methodical passing approach to the league title this year and that tiki-taka inventors Barcelona won La Liga by the largest margin ever in 2013 and narrowly missed repeating in 2014.)

A quick analysis of Spain's two losses reveals that Netherlands employed a counterattacking approach against La Roja — winning the ball in its own half and then using long passes and world-class finishes from Arjen Robben and Robin van Persie to take Spain out 5-1. Meanwhile, Chile pressed Spain high on the pitch, won the ball with ease, and poured into Spain's box.

Therefore, the blueprint to beating tiki-taka is to either sit back and counter or press high and take the match to Spain. This would be the equivalent of saying the way to beat the Seattle Seahawks is to either employ a running attack or a passing attack.

Professional analysis: Diagnose Spain with old. Twelve of its 23 in Brazil are aged 28 or over. Time has a way of doing what tactics never could — Sergio Busquets, Andres Iniesta, Xabi Alonso and Xavi still see space on the pitch with eyes lasers could never calibrate, but the muscles that threaded passes through legs in 2010 send them to opponents' feet in 2014.

This is the problem with golden generations: They do not allow room for successors. Spain's primary target man in the tournament was Diego Costa — playing in his first World Cup at age 25 — the soccer equivalent of becoming a front man for a death metal band for the first time at age 53. Spain's youngest starter against Chile was César Azpilicueta, 24.

How different would Spain have been if the 22-year-old legs of Isco had been on the roster to relieve Alonso, or if 23-year-old David de Gea (who was on the squad) had been given a chance to spare Casillas, 33, his indignity in goal?

Spain's run is over. The biggest takeaway against both Chile and the Netherlands is: Spain looked lost on the pitch. Its midfielders did not know whether to pass and build up or heave the ball forward and attack. Again, to make an analogy to American sports, this would be like the 2013 Cleveland Browns unsure of whether to run a spread or a wishbone offense in the third quarter (Fine. Awful example).

What actually happened to Spain was that the Netherlands and Chile forced its players to think. Tiki-taka is a cerebral approach right up until players take the pitch, and then it's racing around the field grabbing nickels to fill up a sock first before bashing opponents over the head with it.

Of relevance: In that 2009 match, the U.S. grabbed an early goal through Jozy Altidore and then drug a curtain across its own box, not bothering to deal with Spain's passing midfielders. Spain had to think about what it needed to do (pour forward and go at the U.S. defense) instead of what it wanted to do (break down the pitch in sections and leave itself tap-ins) and was ousted. It's plausible — and in hindsight likely — that the key to beating Spain for the last decade has always been to get in its head. Maybe this was never a run at all, as much as six years of the Spanish out-thinking the world.

Or maybe Isco and the rest of Spain's youth (who made a run to the FIFA Under-21 quarterfinals in 2013) deserved their first team shots before today, and it took humiliation on the world stage to crystallize that.

But first, Spain's ousting must be absorbed and distilled.

Experts and four-year analysts alike will tell you the guard has changed, that tiki-taka is dead, and that Spain's run is over.

Cleveland Cavaliers forward Luol Deng fighting to Save the Children

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Cleveland Cavaliers forward Luol Deng has donated $30,000 to Save the Children ahead of World Refuge Day on Friday. Deng became a refuge when his family fled his native Sudan when he was 5 years old.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Cavaliers forward Luol Deng never forgets his roots.
A refugee whose family fled his native Sudan when he was 5 years old, Deng has donated $30,000 to Save the Children ahead of World Refugee Day on Friday -- and he's asking his friends and fans to join the effort, too.

The Luol Deng Foundation is partnering with Save the Children to provide critical child protection services for the 2.5 million South Sudanese children who are at risk of being separated from their families and recruited into armed groups.

"Today I call Chicago, Cleveland and London home, but I never forgot where I came from,'' Deng said in a press release issued by Save the Children. "I know how it feels to be far from home. I know how it feels to struggle and to be afraid for my life and my family.

"I am calling on all of you who have provided me with support and encouragement throughout my career to join forces with me now. Let's create a better tomorrow for the children of South Sudan."

Using social media channels, including Facebook, Twitter @LuolDeng9, and Instagram @LuolDeng9#, Deng, who received the J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award from the Professional Basketball Writers Association last season in honor of his community service, is encouraging family, friends and fans to join him in supporting this cause and making a donation at www.savethechildren.org/deng. For more information about The Luol Deng Foundation, visit www.LuolDeng.org.

Johnny Manziel flashes the money sign but Blake Bortles received a lot more cash

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Comparing quarterback pay for 2014 NFL first-rounders shows the importance of being picked high.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - While the contract signed by Cleveland Browns rookie  Johnny Manziel involves a lot of money - $8.25 million over four years - it also illustrates the importance of where players are drafted under the NFL's rookie pay slotting system.

Three quarterbacks were picked in the first round and now have four-year deals.

Blake Bortles, the No. 3 overall pick, received a $20.65 million contract from the Jacksonville Jaguars, ESPN reported.

The $8.25 million Manziel is to receive as the No. 22 pick, as reported by Mary Kay Cabot of the Northeast Ohio Media Group, amounts to 40 cents for every $1 Bortles is due.

And Teddy Bridgewater, the 32nd pick of the first round by the Minnesota Vikings, signed for $6.84 million, ESPN reported.

Contracts were different before the collective bargaining agreement of 2011 that set a rookie pay scale and also established that all drafted players would receive four-year deals.

Brady Quinn, who has had a little bit to say about Manziel recently, was also a No. 22 overall pick chosen by the Cleveland Browns. But after he was drafted in 2007, Quinn landed a five-year, $20.2 million contract, The Plain Dealer reported at the time.

Quinn's contract included a $7.75 million signing bonus, or nearly as much money as Manziel will be paid over four years.


The contracts, based on 16-game seasons:

























 No. 3 pick
Bortles
No. 22 pick
Manziel
No. 32 pick
Bridgewater
Per game $322,656 $128,906 $107,024
Per season $5,162,500 $2,062,500 $1,712,376
4 years $20,650,000 $8,250,000 $6,849,504




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Live updates and chat with Glenn Moore: Cleveland Indians vs. Los Angeles Angels, Game 73

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The Indians (36-36), who had a 10-game home winning streak snapped, are batting .167 with runners in scoring position during a 3-5 stretch.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Get updates and chat with other users in the comments section as the Indians take on the Angels in the third game of a four-game set at Progressive Field. Also, stay tuned after the game for our postgame show.

Game 73: Indians (36-36) vs. Angels (38-32)

First pitch: 7:10 p.m. at Progressive Field

TV/radio: STO; WTAM AM/1100, WMMS 100.7

Starting pitchers: Justin Masterson (4-5, 5.05 ERA) vs. C.J. Wilson (7-6, 3.50 ERA)FREQUENTLY REFRESH this page to get the latest updates. If you're viewing this on a mobile app, click here to get updates and comment.



Johnny Manziel officially signs his four-year, $8.25 million contract with the Cleveland Browns

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Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel officially signed his four-year contract Wednesday worth $8.25 million.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel officially signed his new four-year contract Wednesday and expressed gratitude to all who have helped him get here.

"Incredible feeling to officially sign my NFL contract,'' Manziel wrote on his Instagram post. "Such a dream come true and so many people to thank who have helped me reach this point in my life.''

The contract is worth about $8.25 million, including a $4.3 million signing bonus and about $6.7 million guaranteed. It averages about $2.061 million a year and includes a club option for a fifth year.

Manziel is in Cleveland through next week participating in the Browns rookie school this week and the NFL Rookie Symposium next week. The Browns' program includes a youth football clinic at FirstEnergy Stadium Thursday morning and the NFL's features two Play 60 youth clinics at the Browns training complex in Berea, one for the NFC rookies on June 24th and one for the AFC rookies on June 27th.

The rookies will then disperse until training camp begins around July 26th.

Manziel will head into training camp as the No. 2 quarterback behind Brian Hoyer, with a chance to win the starting job in an open competition.




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