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Starting lineups for Saturday's Cleveland Indians -- Detroit Tigers game

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The Indians and Tigers will square off again on Saturday. Here are the starting lineups and the pitching matchup.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians and Tigers will square off again on Saturday. Here are the starting lineups and the pitching matchup.

Pitching matchups: Trevor Bauer (2-3, 4.20 ERA) vs. Justin Verlander (6-7, 4.98 ERA)

Lineups

Indians

1. CF Michael Bourn

2. SS Asdrubal Cabrera

3. LF Michael Brantley

4. 2B Jason Kipnis

5. 1B Carlos Santana

6. 3B Lonnie Chisenhall

7. DH Nick Swisher

8. RF David Murphy

9. C Yan Gomes

Tigers

1. 2B Ian Kinsler

2. CF Austin Jackson

3. 1B Miguel Cabrera

4. DH Victor Martinez

5. RF J.D. Martinez

6. 3B Nick Castellanos

7. C Alex Avila

8. SS Eugenio Suarez

9. LF Rajai Davis


Cavaliers new head coach David Blatt is both a risk and a no-brainer

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David Blatt has been ready for an NBA head coaching position for years, say those who know him. But the Cavaliers were the first to take a chance on hiring him.

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Earlier this week, the point guard for Maccabi Tel Aviv got married. This is big news. In a small country like Israel, just after its most heralded basketball team won the Euroleague championship, the marriage of Yogev Ohayon is the kind of thing that everyone is interested in and everyone wants to attend.

But Ohayon's wedding served mostly as a backdrop for everyone to discuss the real big news of the moment: David Blatt is going to be the head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers.

"It was almost as if the wedding was secondary," said David Pick, a journalist who writes for Eurobasket.com. "From his current players to former players to agents to league personnel and team sources – EVERYONE was talking Blatt." 

That's how revolutionary Blatt's move from the international sphere to the NBA is. It's wedding-stopping, league-conversation-starting, head-scratching and applause-inducing all at once. 

And if you listen to those who know Blatt and have played for him, it just might work. 

True, Blatt has no NBA experience. He is a Framingham, Massachusetts native, a product of Pete Carril's Princeton system, who left soon after graduation to play in Israel, began his coaching career a decade later in that same country, and has spent the last 20 years coaching internationally.

The question, now, is whether he can bring to the NBA the success he's had with Maccabi Tel Aviv (2014 Euroleague champion), the Russian national team (2012 Olympic bronze medal, EuroBasket 2007 title), and teams in Italy and Greece.

"To me it's almost comical we're making a big deal about the adjustment for Dave," said Anthony Parker, the former Cavaliers player and current Orlando scout who played for Blatt in Israel. "There's not as big a deal made about Steve Kerr and Derek Fisher adjusting. This is a guy who has coached for 20 years. He's been a head coach. He's been in games in the Olympics and pressure situations. Maccabi is a high-pressure job to take on. It's not the NBA, but it's not nothing in terms of the pressure to win. I think that's not going to be an issue." 

It's just that it's never been done before. But if it can be done successfully, Blatt might be the one who can summit the mountain simply for his unique mix of a brilliant offensive system, an intelligent and personal approach to players, and the simple fact that this is the opportunity for which Blatt has been waiting 20 years. 

As a former captain at Princeton, Blatt was a student of the game who soaked up all that Carril taught. In retrospect, his move to coaching was inevitable, said Craig Robinson, the former Oregon State coach who was his Princeton teammate. 

"Dave was one of those guy always interested in the game," Robinson said. "Whether it was playing it, watching it, scouting or knowing what the other team was doing. At that time, I didn't know anything about being a coach, so I'm using hindsight to come up with this evaluation, but he did all the things you do now as a coach. He knew the other team's scouting report as well as, if not better than, the other team, he played the game with the sense of being ahead of everybody because he had the great ability to see things that other people didn't." 

That unique eye for the game wasn't something that translated to his own play on the court at the highest level, however. When someone suggested playing in Israel when his college career was done, Blatt jumped at the opportunity.

More than a decade overseas eventually led to his first opportunities to coach in Israel in 1993. From the start, Carril's Princeton offense has been a bedrock of every team he's coached. 

"I think he's done a great job of incorporating the kind of things you learn playing for Coach Carril to the game today," Robinson said. "The spacing, I see. The looking out for each other, and even more importantly, seeing the game ahead of what's going to happen. That was a big part of Coach Carril's philosophy: Who could see. That was his term, and what he meant was, 'Who could see what was happening ahead of time.'" 

When Blatt took over the Russian national team in 2006, the team was disorganized and not accustomed to structured practices, let alone structured offensive sets. Blatt called the team together and told them, "If you want to be a part of something special, let's get to work." 

Practices became disciplined. Players were held accountable. And within a year, the team had won the 2007 FIBA European Championship with a fluid offense that focused on team play. 

"He's one of the best offensive coaches I've played for," said J.R. Holden, who played for Blatt on the Russian national team. "He puts you in a situation to be successful, and he's very good in games. We can be going through a stretch where we're struggling shooting, and he'll call a timeout and get us back on track. I think he's one of the best at in-game adjustments." 

Granted, the game is somewhat different in the NBA, so Blatt's game adjustments are something that will be scrutinized with the Cavaliers. 

As will just about everything Blatt does. 

"Maybe some things that are successful in Europe you could do there and maybe wouldn't have success here and vice versa," Parker said. "But he's obviously followed basketball. He's not isolated over there. He's coached internationally. I just think they're not going to present insurmountable obstacles for him to be successful in Cleveland. I think he'll face the same obstacles that any other coach coming in to Cleveland right now -- or anywhere else in the NBA -- would face." 

Along with Blatt's game strategy comes an intelligent, humorous personality that players have found easy to connect to. 

"He's a player's coach," said Steve Mills, the New York Knicks general manager who was Blatt's backcourt mate at Princeton. "I think he holds players accountable, but he understands things from a player's perspective." 

Said Holden: "He's not one of those coaches where you step off the court and say, 'Man, I'm glad I don't have to see him until tomorrow.' We've all had those kinds of coaches. He's not like that all. He's a guy you can laugh with. You can sit at the front of the bus with him and talk about movies with him." 

But is he the type of coach who can relate to a talented, young point guard such as Kyrie Irving? 

"That's the 64,000-dollar question," Robinson said. "But I have a lot of confidence in him. First of all, he played point guard at Princeton. Second, what a lot of people don't realize in playing for Coach Carril and the Princeton mystique is it's about player development. It's not the Princeton offense and playing for Coach Carril." 

"What I've noticed in my years of playing and coaching, and I've seen this with Dave and his teams and players, is everybody gets better. Every single person gets better if they're willing to listen to what you're teaching. ... I would venture to say Kyrie would keep his learning curve steep with Dave Blatt as head coach." 

Some say the Cavaliers landed a gem. Some say it's a risk to bring in an unproven NBA coach. Some think it's about time the NBA and Blatt finally are connecting. 

"I think he'll figure it out," Mills said. "The grind of the schedule and how that impacts players, and just managing the personalities of NBA players are all things that every coach at every level has to deal with. He and I would share stores of how hard it was to coach at Maccabi because of the importance of Maccabi's team to the city of Tel Aviv and how much pressure there was coaching that team."

Added Parker: "This is huge news in Maccabi. The fact is, we're talking about the high-pressure situation of Maccabi. It's what have you done for me lately there. He had a rough road this year. This wasn't an easy year for him. The fact that he persevered and ... he's always, in my opinion, had to do more with less in terms of budget. Maccabi is not one of the biggest budget teams in Europe, so he's always had to do more with less. To his credit, he's always been more of an overachiever in a lot of his coaching stops." 

Why now? Why make the move back to the United States after two decades abroad? Simply, the time – and the offer – both were right.

"It's been a Catch-22 for him," Mills said. "He's had so much success as a coach in Europe and he was a head coach -- and a very successful head coach. A lot of times there were jobs that were in the NBA that were assistant coaching jobs, and I just think he didn't feel he wanted to come over as an assistant. 

"It's rare for a guy who has his coaching resume to have a head coaching job in the NBA. This is not something that happens. [But] he's a perfect guy for it to happen to."  

Plain Dealer reporter Mary Schmitt Boyer contributed.

Terry Francona on Michael Brantley's return, Justin Verlander's struggles and Yan Gomes' improvement: Video

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Watch Terry Francona's pregame meeting with the media.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Michael Brantley is back, and that brought a smile to Indians manager Terry Francona's face.

Francona said prior to Saturday night's matchup with the Tigers that Brantley, who has been held out of the lineup the last three games save for a pinch hit appearance on Friday night, "is really turning himself into one of the best players in the game." Brantley is starting in left field and batting third tonight.

Francona also talked about the struggles of Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander. He touched on the improvement of Yan Gomes and on what is working for Trevor Bauer.

Get complete coverage of tonight's game at cleveland.com/tribe.

Live updates: Cleveland Indians vs. Detroit Tigers, game 75 (chat)

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Get live updates and chat during Saturday's Indians game against the Tigers. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians continue their three-game series against the Tigers on Saturday night at Progressive Field. The Tigers won the opening game of the series, 6-4, on Friday night.

Join in our live chat in the comments below and get game updates from cleveland.com's Dan Labbe in the press box. 

Scoring summary

2nd inning: for the Tigers - Victor Martinez hits a solo home run. for the Indians - Lonnie Chisenhall scores on an error on Ian Kinsler allowing Nick Swisher to go to second. Tigers 1, Indians 1.

4th inning: for the Indians - Carlos Santana hits a solo home run. Indians 2, Tigers 1.

6th inning: for the Tigers - Miguel Cabrera scores on an RBI single by Victor Martinez. Indians 2, Tigers 2.

7th inning: for the Tigers - Rajai Davis and Ian Kinsler hit solo home runs. Tigers 4, Indians 2.

8th inning: for the Indians - Michael Bourn scores on a double by Asdrubal Cabrera. Tigers 4, Indians 3.

9th inning: for the Indians - David Murphy scores on Bourn's single. Indians 4, Tigers 4.

10th inning: for the Tigers - Kinsler scores on an RBI double by Cabrera. Tigers 5, Indians 4.

Omar Vizquel inducted into Indians Hall of Fame: Tweets and photos

The next Carlos Hyde? That's how Ohio State sees 2016 North Carolina RB Robert Washington: Buckeyes recruiting

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"When I came up here the first time they said I was going to be at least 230 or maybe 240 like Carlos Hyde and I could tote the rock like Carlos," Washington said after visiting for Ohio State's camp on Saturday. "Hopefully I can be like him. That's a great guy to be compared to."

COLUMBUS – Listed at 5-foot-10, 205 pounds, Robert Washington knows he'll have to spend years in the weight room before he has a comparable body to former Ohio State running back Carlos Hyde. 

But that's what Urban Meyer and Buckeyes running backs coach Stan Drayton see when they look at Washington and then gaze off a few years into the future – a big, fast running back that can take over games. 

Like Carlos Hyde. 

"When I came up here the first time they said I was going to be at least 230 or maybe 240 like Carlos Hyde and I could tote the rock like Carlos," Washington said after visiting for Ohio State's camp on Saturday. "Hopefully I can be like him. That's a great guy to be compared to." 

Meyer hasn't been shy about making comparisons when courting prospects, but he isn't alone in seeing something special in Washington, a product of Huntersville (N.C.) Southlake Christian Academy. 

Though he's only a 2016 prospect, Washington has one of the most impressive offers lists you'll find of any prospect in the country. 

Now up to nearly 40 offers, Washington has become a top target for far more programs than Ohio State. He has offers from Arizona, Louisville, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Stanford, Tennessee, West Virginia and many others to go along with one from Ohio State. 

Meyer, though, tried to keep Ohio State at the forefront of Washington's mind. 

"The first time I met Urban Meyer on my first visit up here, he just dropped into the office and my mouth dropped," Washington said. "He's Urban Meyer, one of the greatest college coaches who has ever lived, so I was like 'Wow I was talking to Urban Meyer.' It hits you when you leave. It's fun being recruited by him.

"He told me (Saturday) that they love my film, the way I can go, that I'm quick, fast and big, and that I fit their offense."  

Ohio State already has a running back committed in the 2016 recruiting class in George Hill of Hubbard, Ohio, but Meyer would love to add Washington into the mix. But if that happens, it won't come as soon. 

Washington said he plans on releasing a top 15 in August, then reducing that list by five schools periodically until he gets to one that feels right. He said he probably won't make a decision until this time next year. 

But the Buckeyes are expected to be consistent fixture in his recruitment. 

"It's just really the people," Washington said. "Every school has great facilties, a great campus and a big stadium. It's really the people that makes a school stand out. I love coach Drayton and coach Meyer and the players are fun to be around.

"I'm coming out with a top 15 in August and Ohio State has a very strong chance of making it. I don't want to give anything away yet, but I just have a good relationship with coach Drayton and coach Meyer."

World Cup 2014 roundup, Day 10: Messi sends Argentina through in stoppage time; Bosnia-Herzegovina eliminated, officiating controversies (again)

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Argentina and Nigeria were victorious and Ghana and Germany played to an exciting draw on Day 10 of the World Cup.

Draws in soccer can be fun, contrary to the belief of some. 

Case in point, Ghana and Germany's 2-2 stalemate Saturday in Fortaleza. All four goals came in a wild second half. 

The result kept all four teams in the so-called "Group of Death," Group G, very much alive for the knockout round. Germany leads with four points, the U.S. is second with three, Ghana has one and Portugal zero. The U.S. and Portugal meet Sunday in Manaus, and a win for the U.S. sends it into the Round of 16. 

Ghana lost a chance to pick up three points and throw the group standings into even more chaos. But its fans always have a good time.

Germany's Miroslav Klose tied the all-time goals record by a single player in World Cups with his 15th, tying him with Brazil's Ronaldo. 

Saturday's Scores:

Argentina 1, Iran 0

Germany 2, Ghana 2

Nigeria 1, Bosnia-Herzegovina 0

Not Messi-ing around: Argentina became the fifth team to qualify for the knockout round of the World Cup with Saturday's 1-0 win over Iran. 

The Iranians played their hearts out in keeping the high-powered Argentines off the scoreboard for 90-plus minutes, until Lionel Messi broke Iran's heart with a wonder-strike despite good defense in stoppage time. 

It was Messi's second goal of this World Cup and it ensured that Argentina will join Chile, Colombia, the Netherlands and Costa Rica as teams that have already made it to the Round of 16. 

The final score might have been different had the referee awarded a penalty to Iran in the second half, when Ashkan Dejagah appeared to be taken down in the box. But Argentina got the benefit of the non-call, which wasn't lost on Iran's coach. 

Controversy in Nigeria's win: An incorrectly-called offside violation negated a goal for Bosnia-Herzegovina's Edin Dzeko, and a non-call on what looked like a foul by a Nigerian player led to the goal for the Super Eagles in their 1-0 win. 

Nigeria moved into second place in Group F with four points and eliminated the Bosnians, who suffered their second loss of the World Cup. 

Watch the Bosnian player (in white) go down, yet play is allowed to continue. Goal, Nigeria.

Americans in the Amazon: The U.S. team has landed in Manaus, deep in the heart of the Amazon jungle, for Sunday's match. Probably a good thing the U.S. didn't have to play Saturday. Just look at recent history on June 21 in the World Cup.

Portugal's coach sees this match as a must-win for his team. A draw wouldn't eliminate the Portuguese but they will need a win and some goal-scoring help from other teams in the group to advance.  With that in mind, superstar striker Cristiano Ronaldo, injured before the World Cup and trying to get back to top form, is expected to play. 

Player of the Day: Vincent Enyeama, Nigeria. The goalkeeper made seven saves as Nigeria got just the second win of the World Cup for an African nation. His biggest stop came against Dzeko moments before the final whistle, with Bosnia needing a goal to avoid elimination. 

Celebration of the Day: Ghana's second goal, from the affable captain Asamoah Gyan, elicited this little strut of a celebration. You can do this at home! (Points for Klose and his front flip after he tied the score at 2).

Ouch! On the final play of the match, Germany's Thomas Muller and Ghana's John Boye collided, Boye's shoulder ramming into Muller's head in the air on a free kick. Muller was a bloody mess but was not seriously injured, according to reports. 

Boye, by the way, is the same guy who with a high leg broke U.S. captain Clint Dempsey's nose in that match last week, also on a play when both were going for the ball in the air. 

Brazil Soccer WCup Germany GhanaGermany's Thomas Muller, right, is attended by his teammate Miroslav Klose after suffering a injury during the group G World Cup soccer match between Germany and Ghana at the Arena Castelao in Fortaleza, Brazil, Saturday, June 21, 2014. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
Jump on in and share your thoughts: You'll find a live chat during the Portugal-U.S. match on Sunday hosted by yours truly. It's available online at your newspaper's sports website. Join me!

Price too high for starting pitchers? Cleveland Indians chatter

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Reports say Indians kicking the tires on Jeff Samardzija and David Price, but reality says something else.

CLEVELAND, Ohio. – Seen and heard Saturday at Progressive Field.

Clubhouse confidential: There have been reports that the Indians have had scouts watching Cubs right-hander Jeff Samardzija and Tampa Bay left-hander David Price. Samardzija and Price won't be free agents until after the 2015 season.

The Cubs and Rays are last in their divisions and might be willing to deal, but the price for either pitcher would be high with more than a year and a half left before they're eligible for free agency. The Indians could certainly use a front-of-the-rotation starter, but the price is well beyond their reach.

Perhaps the Tribe scouts who were at Samardzija and Price's most recent starts were looking at other players.

Sign here: The Indians have signed their fourth-round pick, high school left-hander Sam Hentges, for $700,000. The signing bonus is just about $300,000 over Hentges' slot value.

Hentges is a 6-6, 245-pounder from Mounds View High School in St. Paul, Minn. He recently pitched Mounds View to its second straight state title. He went 8-0 with a 0.56 ERA and 85 strikeouts in 50 innings this season. Hentges had signed a letter of intent to the University of Arkansas.

The Indians have signed 10 of their first 12 picks. Mike Papi, their third overall choice, and Micah Miniard, taken in the eighth round, are still unsigned. Papi was selected with the Tribe's competitive balance lottery pick.

Papi, playing for the University of Virginia, is in the College World Series finals.

Stat of the day: The Indians entered Saturday's game having allowed six homers in their last three games. In the six games before that they allowed two homers.


Video: Omar Vizquel's induction into Cleveland Indians' Hall of Fame

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Watch as Omar Vizquel is inducted into the Cleveland Indians Hall of Fame.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Omar Vizquel, one of the best shortstops in Major League Baseball history, was inducted into the club's Hall of Fame before the sold out game Saturday against the Detroit Tigers.

The 11-time Gold Glove winner is the Hall's 40th member.  A plaque honoring Vizquel will have a permanent place in Heritage Park behind the center field wall at Progressive Field.

Vizquel is currently the all-time Major League leader at shortstop in fielding percentage (.985), double plays turned (1,735) and games played (2,709).

In 1993, General Manager John Hart traded Felix Fermin, Reggie Jefferson and cash to Seattle for Vizquel.

The three-time All-Star played 11 seasons with the Tribe (1994-2004).  The Indians won the American League Championships in 1995 and 1997.

Other members of the team from the 1990's to be inducted into the club's Hall are Charles Nagy, Kenny Lofton, Carlos Baerga, Sandy Alomar and Manager Mike Hargrove.

Vizquel is now first base coach for the Tigers.

On Twitter: @CLEvideos

Cleveland Gladiators rally to defeat Philadelphia Soul, 69-68, clinching playoff berth

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The Cleveland Gladiators earned a playoff berth on Saturday by defeating Philadelphia on the game's final play.

cleveland gladiators logo 


BRADLEY SCHLEGEL

Special to The Plain Dealer

PHILADELPHIA, PA – Thyron Lewis deflected the football over the goal line to a waiting Dominick Goodman who caught the pass and ducked into the end zone, completing a 47-yard touchdown catch from Shane Austin on the final play Saturday that lifted the Cleveland Gladiators to a 69-68 victory over the Philadelphia Soul.

"Anything can happen in this league," said Austin, who threw 11 touchdown passes. "As long as we kept it close I knew we'd have a chance at the end."

Lewis finished with eight catches for 172 yards and four scores for Cleveland (12-1), which overcame a 12-point deficit in the final three minutes to qualify for the AFL playoffs for the first time since 2011.

Goodman contributed 10 catches for 121 yards and two scores, while Collin Taylor chipped in with 45 receiving yards and three TD catches for the Gladiators, who have won four games on the final play in 2014.

"You never know what kind of a finish you're going to get in this league," said Steve Thonn, Cleveland's head coach. "We've got a lot of good character guys who battle through adversity."

Dan Raudabaugh threw for five touchdowns for the Soul (6-8), which built a 62-50 lead with 2:40 remaining in the fourth quarter on a seven-yard touchdown catch by V'Keon Lacey.

Taylor's two-yard scoring reception with 59 seconds to go pulled Cleveland within 62-57.

Marrio Norman recovered the ensuing onside kick. He dove on the ball after it took a high bounce past Lacey, who appeared to slip on the turf.

Lewis' 23-yard TD catch on third down staked the Gladiators to a one-point lead with 33 seconds remaining. Austin attempted to run for the two-point conversion, but was stopped one-yard short of the goal line.

The Soul – who squandered a 17-point lead in the final 52 seconds in a loss at Cleveland earlier this year – seemed poised to capture the rematch. They led 63-62 on Markee White's two-yard TD catch with two seconds remaining.

But after a touchback on the ensuing kickoff, Austin threw the ball the length of the field on the game's final play. The quarterback said he instructed Cleveland's receivers to keep the ball alive if they couldn't make the play.

"We've been in these kinds of situations before this season," Austin said. "We're able to respond. We're a team that battles through adversity."

USA-Portugal: The Recurring Impossible Dream

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For the United States' fans, players and coaches, tonight's match against Portugal represents the opportunity to accomplish a feat believed impossible. For those to whom soccer does not represent a preferred brand of gin, the same match represents the chance for U.S. fans to pull for the boring and mundane. Maybe even the un-American. But as watch parties grow,...

For the United States' fans, players and coaches, tonight's match against Portugal represents the opportunity to accomplish a feat believed impossible.

For those to whom soccer does not represent a preferred brand of gin, the same match represents the chance for U.S. fans to pull for the boring and mundane. Maybe even the un-American.

But as watch parties grow, in number and attendance (Town Hall in Ohio City has joined in the reindeer games), the mystery of soccer's appeal to outsiders becomes increasingly evident, or at least difficult to brush aside: The possibility of the impossible trumps all.

There's a reason Michael Jordan's buzzer-beater over Craig Ehlo that took the Cavaliers out of the 1989 playoffs is the one that's remembered over his 1993 buzzer-beater to take out the Cavs. Or why the "flu game" is remembered before any of Jordan's other MVP-caliber games in NBA Finals.

The first buzzer-beater happened before Jordan was Jordan, and the circumstances and reaction still seemed impossible — something so out of the realm of routine that seeing it did not quite equal believing it happened. By the time his career arc reached the flu game, his dominance was so routine that it took illness to make anything Jordan did seem impossible.

The key, of course, is "impossible," and bearing witness the impossible and holding onto its memory  is an essential part of fandom.

It applies across the board. History is kinder to Gibson's home run instead of, say, Joe Carter's, because Gibson hobbled out and did it on one leg. Either of Eli Manning's Super Bowl triumphs with the Giants has a place in lore above the Steelers' comeback over the Cardinals in early 2009 because the Giants toppled the Patriots, in the process slaying (and re-slaying) the Belichick dragon.

No matter the sport, when the apparently impossible happens, it captivates and enthralls. It becomes mythical to fans.

This is where soccer finds its way into bloodstreams.

Soccer's opponents, at least in the U.S., lay out a solid case: The sport is boring. The best athletes in the U.S. play other sports. Players cannot use hands. Flops happen, as do offside calls or half a dozen other technicalities that render competition tedious.

But here's where that sentiment falls apart: Soccer serves up all of the above on a formal platter, then rips the tablecloth out from under it all with the impossible, and it does it as a matter of sport.

On Saturday, Iran and Argentina — a World Cup favorite — were careening toward a 0-0 final (boring score) before Lionel Messi (built like any of a thousand other nondescript athletes) did something that the best athletes in the world do: He won the match by himself.

The end of Ecuador-Switzerland last week featured the near-impossible followed by the completely impossible, in stoppage time, to turn a draw into a Swiss win.

Two of the last three United States World Cup matches were plodding along until the impossible fell out of the sky — Landon Donovan's winner against Algeria in 2010 and John Brooks' stunner to defeat Ghana in this year's opener — and in the U.S.'s favor.

For detractors of the sport, it's not as simple as calling it boring, filing points in heads with free hands, and taking a nap. For detractors of the sport, avoiding it also necessitates willfully ignoring the chance that the impossible might happen. Knowing that every match could provide a Gibson homer and choosing to avoid it.

Ignoring soccer means ignoring all those bad things — the undersized athletes, the lack of hands, the boredom. But ignoring soccer means ignoring the opportunity to see a jaw-dropping feat of speed, grace or where-did-that-come-from athleticism rip through all that tedium, and in this World Cup or with this generation U.S. players, it's happening with regularity.

The U.S. and Portugal kick off at 6 p.m. Eastern on Sunday night. A win lands the U.S. in the knockout stages with one game to spare.

Before the tournament began, those who follow the sport would have called such an accomplishment impossible.

Indians fall to Tigers, 5-4: Postgame show and video

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Watch our postgame show where we break down the Indians' loss to Detroit and see video of Terry Francona and Trevor Bauer after the game.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians fell to the Tigers, 5-4, on Saturday night. Following the game, cleveland.com's Paul Hoynes (@hoynsie) and Dan Labbe (@dan_labbe) talked about the game.

In our Indians postgame show, we discussed Terry Francona's decision to pitch to Miguel Cabrera in the tenth inning. We also talked about the Tribe's missed opportunities, plus Paul tells us his favorite Omar Vizquel memory.

Of course, we have video of Terry Francona's postgame, too. Hear what Francona had to say about facing the middle of the Tigers' batting order, Trevor Bauer's outing and what happened on Cabrera's go-ahead double in the tenth.

Trevor Bauer pitched 6 1/3 innings during his start on Saturday night. He gave up four earned runs, three of them via the long ball. Bauer talked about his outing and the one pitch he threw tonight that upset him in the video below.

Get complete coverage of tonight's loss to the Tigers at cleveland.com/tribe.

Detroit Tigers beat Cleveland Indians, 5-4, in 10 innings on Miguel Cabrera's double

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Miguel Cabrera, Victor Martinez beat up the Indians for the second straight night.

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Saturday night was a strange one at Progressive Field.

There was a love-fest before the game as a sellout crowd cheered for Omar Vizquel, who was inducted into the Indians Hall of Fame. When the game began, and Vizquel pulled on a Detroit uniform to coach first base, a Tiger-fest broke out.

For a moment the Indians reclaimed the night when Michael Bourn singled home David Murphy with two out in the ninth inning to send the game into extra innings, but Miguel Cabrera, long-time Tribe tormentor, doubled home Ian Kinsler in the 10th to give the Tigers a 5-4 victory.

» Photos from the game

The indians strung together three straight two-out singles against closer Joe Nathan to make it a 4-4 game in the ninth. After Murphy and Yan Gomes singled, Bourn slapped a two-strike pitch through the hole at short to tie it.

Cody Allen started the 10th by giving up a leadoff single to Kinsler. Austin Jackson bunted him to second and Cabrera delivered with a double off the wall in left center field.

Allen (3-2) took the loss. Nathan (4-2) backed into the victory after blowing the save. Phil Coke pitched the 10th for Detroit to earn his first save.

As is so often the case against the Tigers, the game came down to a hard choice for the opposing manager, in this case Terry Francona. With first base open and the go-ahead run on second, would Frsncona walk Cabrera and face Victor Martinez or roll the dice against Cabrera?

Francona bet on Allen's stuff against Cabrera, the Triple Crown winner, two-time MVP and full-time Indians' nightmare.

"It seemed liked everytime we came through the middle of their lineup we got nicked up," said Francona. "If there's one guy where you're going to take a shot with it's Cody with his stuff. He just misfired.

"He was trying to go up and in and misfired. It was probably down the middle. He missed is spot by a lot and that's what Cabrera does with it."

The Indians tried the two-out rally route one more time when Carlos Santana singled with two gone in the 10th. This time the engine room was dead as Lonnie Chisenhall struck out to end the 3 hour and 41 minute game.

"We had some really good at-bats late in the game," said Francona. "We made Nathan throw 32 pitches. Gomes and Bourn laid off some some tough pitches and fouled some other ones off."

Tribe starter Trevor Bauer entered the seventh with the score tied 2-2. It did not stay that way long.

Rajai Davis, with one out, hit a 1-2 pitch onto the left field home-run porch for a 3-2 lead. Kinsler followed with a drive to the wall in left center field for a 4-2 lead. Crew chief Jerry Meals reviewed Kinsler's drive and the call on the field stood.

"The pitch to Davis was a bad pitch," said Bauer. "I wanted to bounce a curveball and hung it.

"I don't think it was a lack of stuff. The ball Kinsler hit was 96 mph. It was a lack of execution."

The Indians made things interesting in the eighth after Al Alburquerque relieved Justin Verlander. He hit Bourn to start the inning and gave up run-scoring double to Asdrubal Cabrera to make it 4-3 with no one out.

Lefty Blaine Hardy relieved and Cabrera moved to third on Michael Brantley's slow chopper to short. Jason Kipnis and Santana, however, could not deliver Cabrera as they grounded out to third.

"We're a tough team," said Bauer. "We don't give in. Even when we don't come back and tie it, we make it close."

Santana's 11th homer, and second in as many games against the Tigers, gave the Indians a 2-1 lead in the fourth.

Miguel Cabrera and Martinez didn't wait long to tie the score.

Cabrera doubled with one out in the sixth and scored on Martinez's single to make it 2-2. Martinez gave the Tigers a 1-0 lead with a leadoff homer in the second.

It was Martinez's second homer of the series, fourth of the season and ninth of his career against his old team.

Cabrera came into the game hitting .334 (150-for-499) with 32 homers and 105 RBI lifetime against the Indians.

"They're a good team and they hit well," said Bauer. "But the only pitch I'm upset about is the one to Rajai."

In his last start, Verlander allowed seven runs on 12 hits in six innings against Kansas City. He pitched back to form against the Indians.

Verlander allowed two runs, one earned, on four hits in seven innings. He struck out eight and walked one to break a three-game losing streak.

Bauer allowed four runs on eight hits in 6 1/3 innings. Three of the hits were home rus. He struck out five and walked two.

After Martinez's homer in the second, the Tribe tied the score in the bottom of the inning. Chisenhall doubled with two out and scored when Nick Swisher's hot shot to second bounced off Kinsler for an error.

It just the second sellout crowd of the season and the energy level was high.

"There was this energy that you could sense throughout the whole game," said Bauer. "It was definitely fun. Hopefully, that continues to happen more as the season goes along." 

World Cup 2014 live updates: USA vs. Portugal score, commentary and photos

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Get live updates and chat with other fans during Sunday's World Cup match between the United States and Portugal.

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The United States returns to action at the 2014 FIFA World Cup Sunday to face Portugal in a crucial Group G showdown at 6 p.m. ET (5 p.m. CT). The Americans will have to contend with Portugal star Cristiano Ronaldo and the oppressive jungle heat at Arena Amazonia in Manaus, Brazil.

We'll provide live updates and commentary in the chat below, and please join the conversation as you watch the game! If you're on your mobile device, click here for the latest updates.

 

Ohio State flips three-star offensive tackle prospect Kevin Feder from Miami (Fla.): Buckeyes recruiting

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The Buckeyes flipped three-star offensive tackle prospect Kevin Feder from Miami (Fla.) on Sunday after he earned an offer during a strong performance at Thursday's one-day instructional camp.

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio State's recruiting roll continues. 

The Buckeyes flipped three-star offensive tackle prospect Kevin Feder from Miami (Fla.) on Sunday after he earned an offer during a strong performance at Thursday's one-day instructional camp. 

Rated by Rivals.com a three-star prospect and the No. 50 offensive tackle in the 2015 class, Feder, a product of Ramsey (N.J.) Don Bosco, picked the Buckeyes over offers from Maryland, Michigan State, Rutgers, Syracuse, Tennessee and others. 

Feder becomes commitment No. 10 in Ohio State's 2015 class and the seventh oral commitment in June. 

Check back with cleveland.com for more on Feder's commitment. 


U.S. vs. Portugal in World Cup 2014 starts at 6 p.m.: Live chat with Tom Reed

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Cristiano Ronaldo is expected to play against the USMNT despite a nagging left-knee injury.

MANAUS, Brazil — The United States and Portugal play their second matches in World Cup 2014 today at 6 p.m. With Cristiano Ronaldo, Portugal still has a chance to reach the second round. Without him, the advantage might just switch to the United States.

Ronaldo has been carrying an injury to his left knee, and the world player of the year was seen using an ice pack on it during training on Wednesday. But he is still expected to play at the Arena da Amazonia in a match that Portugal can't afford to lose.

The Portuguese lost 4-0 to Germany in their opening Group G match, with Ronaldo playing despite the injury. The United States beat Ghana, 2-1, in its opening match.

Chat in the comments below during tonight's U.S.-Portugal match with Northeast Ohio Media Group reporter Tom Reed. Here is the Team USA lineup.

 

Glenn Moore and Zack Meisel recap the Tribe's 10-4 loss to Tigers (video)

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cleveland.com's Glenn Moore and Zack Meisel recap the loss and talk about the Tribe's weekend with the Tigers.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Indians were unable to overcome a seven-run fifth inning by the Detroit Tigers in a 10-4 loss to their AL Central foes.


The Tribe was swept in a three-game series at Progressive Field for the first time since May 16-18 against the Oakland A's. The Indians have stayed within two games of .500 though for 21 straight days.


cleveland.com's Glenn Moore and Zack Meisel recap the loss and talk about the Tribe's weekend with the Tigers.


Josh Tomlin allowed two runs through the first four innings before being touched for six runs (three earned) in the fifth. Two Indians' errors didn't help the cause.

Cleveland Indians lay egg vs. Detroit Tigers: DMan's Report, Game 76, Sunday

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The Indians have lost four of five, all at home.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians played the Detroit Tigers in the finale of a three-game series Sunday. Here is a capsule look from The Plain Dealer reporter Dennis Manoloff:

Game: 76.

Opponent: Tigers.

Location: Progressive Field, Cleveland.

Time of day: Afternoon.

Time elapsed: 3 hours, 44 minutes.

Attendance: 26,023.

Result: Tigers 10, Indians 4.

Records: Tigers 40-32, Indians 37-39.

Scoreboard watch: The Indians slipped to 5.0 games behind first-place Detroit in the AL Central. 

Broom service: The Tigers swept the series. They won, 6-4, Friday and 5-4 in 10 innings Saturday. In their previous visit to Progressive Field, May 19-21, they were swept in a three-game set.

All even: The season series is tied, 4-4 -- albeit with six of the eight having been played in Cleveland.

Slumping: The Indians have lost four of five, all at home.

Stage fright: The Tribe fizzled in front of large crowds this weekend. Paid attendance was 33,545 on Friday and 40,712 on Saturday.

Tiger tales: The Tigers amassed 12 hits, including six for extra bases, and drew four walks. They saw 189 pitches. Incredibly, hitting machine Victor Martinez went 0-for-4 with a strikeout, but he did walk once and score once.

Half-marathon: Detroit chased right-hander Josh Tomlin in a 12-batter, seven-run fifth inning that created a 9-0 cushion. Kyle Crockett and John Axford also pitched. According to SportsTime Ohio ace studio analyst Al Pawlowski, the half-inning lasted 37 minutes, 40 seconds.

Team Clank strikes again: Two errors and a play not made contributed to the fifth-inning fiasco. The Indians finished with three errors and lead the majors, by miles, with 67.

In the fifth, shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera dropped a throw from second baseman Jason Kipnis, negating a force on a grounder hit by Miguel Cabrera. Second-base umpire Chris Conroy signaled out, but the Tigers wisely challenged. Cabrera has committed 14 errors.

The next batter, Martinez, lined to center. The ball popped out of charging Michael Bourn's glove.

Later in the inning, Kipnis handled a grounder with a runner in close proximity but only was able to get one out. The runner who advanced to second, Andrew Romine,  scored when the next batter, Ian Kinsler, singled. It made the score 9-0.

Nothing doing: Tomlin allowed eight runs (five earned) on eight hits in four-plus innings. He walked two and struck out five. He threw 85 pitches.

Tomlin gave up two runs through four innings, but he was living dangerously. The Tigers were comfortable in the box and took good swings. Tomlin didn't possess anything that made them nervous. Even factoring in the shaky defense behind him, he pitched poorly.

Tomlin faced six batters in the fifth.

Leaking oil: In his last three starts, Tomlin is 0-3 and has given up 18 runs (13 earned) on 28 hits in 15 innings. Overall, he is 4-5 with a 4.39 ERA in 10 appearances -- nine starts -- since being recalled from Class AAA Columbus to replace Carlos Carrasco in the rotation.

Stark contrast: For the series, the Tigers' 3-4-5 spots in the lineup combined to go 13-for-38 with four homers, 13 RBI and 11 runs.

The Indians' 3-4-5 spots combined to go 10-for-40 with two homers, five RBI and two runs.

Late to the party: The Indians were held to one run on seven hits through eight innings. With two outs in the ninth, they strung four hits and scored three times.

Setting the tone: Miguel Cabrera homered with two outs in the first to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead.

Tomlin retired Kinsler (pop to second) and Austin Jackson (swinging strikeout) in a total of nine pitches. Here is a breakdown of the Cabrera at-bat:

1. 92-mph fastball outside corner, called strike. Cabrera thought it was outside; he appeared to have a point.

2. 91 fastball away, ball. A ball out of the hand.

3. 86 cutter down and away, swinging strike. Quality pitch in good location.

4. 78 curve inner half and low, ball. Barely. K-box showed it was a fraction below the zone, and umpire Gabe Morales gave the benefit of the doubt to Cabrera. Tomlin could  maintain that he was an inch from getting out of the inning in 13 pitches, but Cabrera could counter that if the pitch were an inch higher, he would have swung. Upon receipt of the ball, catcher Yan Gomes did not hold the glove steady -- or yank the glove up an inch and hold it. Whether a good frame would have influenced Morales is debatable; advanced metrics have shown that framing does matter.

5. 92 fastball outside, ball. A ball out of the hand.

6. 85 off-speed, foul. The pitch was a hanger, and Cabrera missed it. He gestured toward, and grinned at, Tomlin.

7. 91 fastball down, foul. Basic spoil by Cabrera while he waited for a pitch to his liking.

8. 86 cutter at knees on outside corner, homer to right. Cabrera got a pitch to his liking. He had seen it (No. 3) and did damage this time. It wasn't a mistake pitch in the classic sense, but it was up enough and provided swing room. Credit Cabrera for staying on the ball and not trying to pull. He moved into the outright lead among opponents with 19 homers at Progressive Field. 

Martinez and J.D. Martinez walked. Nick Castellanos lined to left on Tomlin's 34th pitch.

Finding a way: Tigers righty Max Scherzer allowed one run on six hits in six innings. He walked two and struck out eight. He threw 114 pitches.

Scherzer rebounded from a terrible start against Kansas City.

Scherzer (9-3, 3.71 ERA) was vulnerable early, thanks largely to leaving fastballs over the plate, but the Indians failed to capitalize because of bad swings. Through three innings, Scherzer had thrown 62 pitches but allowed zero runs.

The Tribe didn't break through against Scherzer until Michael Brantley's double in the fifth drove in Michael Bourn.

Brantley finished 3-for-5 with three RBI.

Knee shot: Lonnie Chisenhall drilled Scherzer on the right knee in the sixth. Scherzer recovered and flipped to Cabrera for the second out.

Finally: Asdrubal Cabrera's RBI single in the ninth was his first hit with two outs and a runner in scoring position this season. He had been 0-for-29.

Four-star Maryland DE Darius Fullwood to announce decision Saturday, Ohio State one of five finalists: Buckeyes recruiting

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Four-star defensive end Darius Fullwood of Olney (Md.) Good Counsel announced on his public Twitter account Sunday evening that he's announcing his college decision next Saturday.

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Four-star defensive end Darius Fullwood of Olney (Md.) Good Counsel announced on his public Twitter account Sunday evening that he's announcing his college decision next Saturday

Ohio State made his list of final schools with Maryland, Virginia Tech, Kentucky and Duke. 

But here's the real question - does he have a committable offer from the Buckeyes? 

Rated by Rivals.com the No. 18 strong side defensive end in the 2015 class, Fullwood camped at Ohio State multiple times in June to prove he's worthy of a Buckeyes offer. 

Though he reports one, Fullwood still wasn't clear after his camp performance in Columbus on Thursday whether he had an Ohio State offer. His participation was cut short after he pulled his groin early in the day

He was set to communicate with Ohio State defensive line coach Larry Johnson on Sunday, so the fact that the Buckeyes are included could mean he does in fact have a committable Buckeyes offer. 

If he doesn't, he simply included Ohio State in his final five and will select one of the other four programs on Saturday. 

Fullwood racked up more than 20 scholarship offers during the process. 

'We taking over': Michigan TE commit Chris Clark on the Wolverines' rivalry with Ohio State: Buckeyes recruiting

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Avon (Conn.) Old Farms tight end Chris Clark, once an Ohio State target, is now a Michigan commit. And now he's confident the Wolverines will be 'taking over' perhaps the biggest rivalry in college football.

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Last week at this time, Avon (Conn.) Old Farms tight end Chris Clark was one of the top remaining targets on Ohio State's 2015 recruiting big board. Now he's the Buckeyes' enemy. 

A four-star prospect, Clark committed to Michigan on Thursday, only days after unofficially visiting Ohio State. Clark was supposed to take a wave of visits before announcing in July, but he veered off plan when pledging to the Wolverines. 

Now Clark is embracing what makes the Ohio State-Michigan rivalry so special. 

Michigan quarterback commit Alex Malzone posted on his public Twitter account: "Won't be the last time I'm in a good mood driving home from Columbus #GoBlue." 

Then Clark quickly responded: "Bet your (explicit) it won't we taking over #GOBLUE." 

Clark is rated by Rivals.com the No. 4 tight end in the 2015 recruiting class

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