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For the Stretars of Independence, football is a family affair: Tim Warsinskey's Take

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In the visiting stands at Cuyahoga Heights this Friday, Betsy Stretar of Independence will have plenty of shoulders to cry on.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Everyone who's ever had anyone in their family play high school sports knows who suffers most during games. It's Mom.

Across Ohio this weekend, thousands of moms will watch sons play their final high school football game. Some will weep, and the tears will be spiced with pride, sadness and, surely, relief.

In the visiting stands at Cuyahoga Heights this Friday, Betsy Stretar of Independence will have plenty of shoulders to cry on, which she says she won't do. With moms, you never know until that heavy moment arrives.

Betsy and her husband, Frank, will send the youngest of their eight children, Sam, out against rival Cuyahoga Heights. All five of their boys played football and two of their three girls were athletes at Independence. The Stretar siblings have combined to win 21 conference championships.

For the first and only time, they all will gather from across the country to watch Sam play. Sam, a hard-nosed senior quarterback and defensive back, leads an 8-1 Independence team that needs to beat the Redskins (8-1) to win the conference title and earn a playoff berth.

sam-stretar-mug.jpg"It's going to be bittersweet, kind of the end of the era," says Independence QB Sam Stretar, the last of his family to play for the Blue Devils.

His brother, Todd, 32, who is in the Navy, is coming from California; Jake, 26, is coming from Florida; Frank, 24, from Connecticut; and Brad, 22, from Arizona. Sisters Grace, 29, Carrie, 28, and Hannah, 20, all live in Ohio.

Betsy said this is an opportunity to reflect and celebrate, not mourn.

"I want this to be more of a celebration of the positive effects that football, the program and the community have had on our kids because they're all doing really great in life," she said. "You raise them, and I don't want to hold on to my kids. I want to see them take the discipline and the values they learned on the field and go out and make a difference. Go find a strength and passion, and use it to make a difference in the lives of other people.

"We tell them it's not about you. We're here for a bigger purpose. That to me makes the closure all the more sweet."

Not that they have to be told, but Frank, who is an Independence assistant coach, has reminded his other kids Sam will need to focus on football until Friday night is over. Much of Independence's game plan centers on Sam, who has 22 touchdowns passing and rushing and 2,633 total yards.

Football has been part of Sam's identity since the day he was born. Named for close family friend and former Browns coach Sam Rutigliano, Sam said he will stay true to concentrating on football this week, but admits it won't be easy, especially when it comes to his mother and siblings in the stands.

"That's tough to think about because I was the water boy for my brothers and was able to see all their senior years, and witness all the emotion that comes out of your last game," he said. "It's going to be sad for me, but hopefully we will be celebrating on the field, and at the Stretar house this weekend.

"I'm really looking forward to it. It's going to be bittersweet, kind of the end of the era, but there's going to be a lot of good to come out of this."

Sam might be the end of this line of Stretars, but there is another generation in the offing. His sister, Carrie Sciano and her husband, Jason, recently welcomed a baby boy, Dominic Sciano.

There's just one problem.

They live in Cuyahoga Heights.


Your Space: Your High School Sports Photos of the Week

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What's going on at your high school? Go to cleveland.com/yourspace to send your pictures of varsity teams from your school. We'll publish the best picture each Tuesday in The Plain Dealer, and the entire photo gallery is featured on cleveland.com.

What's going on at your high school? Go to cleveland.com/yourspace to send your pictures of varsity teams from your school. We'll publish the best picture each Tuesday in The Plain Dealer, and the entire photo gallery is featured on cleveland.com.

Gallery preview


With smile firmly in place, Jamario Moon eager to start for Cleveland Cavaliers, but not to 'replace' LeBron James

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The Cavaliers' new starter at small forward is his own man, which is fine with his new coach.

moon-smiling-mediaday-ss.jpgView full sizeAs he prepares for Wednesday's season opener against Boston, Jamario Moon isn't worrying about the small forward that he's replacing in the starting lineup. "Come Wednesday night, there's going to be a whole new Jamario Moon and a whole new Cleveland Cavaliers," he said. "I'm ready to get the show on the road."

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- First, Jamario Moon took LeBron James' locker at The Q. Then he took his starting spot in the lineup.

But make no mistake: Moon is not trying to replace James.

"You can't replace a guy like that," Moon said as the Cavaliers prepare for Wednesday night's season opener against the Boston Celtics at The Q.

"He was everything. He scored. He passed. He rebounded. He played defense. You can't replace a guy like that. We're not trying to replace him. We're trying to work with the guys we've got."

In case you were wondering, no, there will be no powder toss at the start of Wednesday's opener against the Boston Celtics at The Q. Not even as a joke.

"If anybody did it on the team, I think that would be disrespectful," Moon said. "That was his trademark. That would be inappropriate."

A noted prankster, Moon thought for a moment and then continued, "It would be fun," he said, no doubt envisioning himself with the rosin. "If I did it, I would be doing it out of fun. I wouldn't be doing it out of disrespect. But the past has got to be the past."

Indeed, the Cavs have put James so far behind them that new coach Byron Scott, who never coached him, has not talked to Moon about trying not to be James.

Does he feel the need to?

"No, I don't," the coach said after practice on Monday.

Scott said he'll be relying on Moon for defense against the high-scoring small forwards and shooting guards in the league.

"If he can get eight, 10, 12 points for us, that's kind of gravy," Scott said. That's about a third of the 29.7 points James averaged last season, and is just the start of the differences between the two.

Moon, 30, has played for nearly 20 professional teams all over the world, including the Harlem Globetrotters, and is thrilled to finally have an opportunity to show what he can do. Until this summer, James, 25, had played for only one team and always was the main focus on both ends of the floor.

At 6-8, 200 pounds, Moon is much lankier than the 6-8, 250-pound James, who was built like a Mack truck. James also has seven years worth of experience, compared to just three for Moon.

They're both athletic, but in different ways. Scott admits that Moon's athleticism can help him recover if he finds himself out of position -- a trend the coach would like to see stopped.

They both can dunk, but, again, in different ways. Once last season, after Moon had two monster dunks -- including one on an alley-oop from James -- in an early home game against Philadelphia, he shared a conversation he had with James.

"I was telling him how amazing he looks to me," Moon said at the time. "But he was saying that mine look more amazing to him. He said when he jumps, it's more power. When I jump, it's more like flight."

They both can shoot the 3-pointer and Moon, at least, still plans to celebrate with the three-fingered goose-eye the team made popular last season.

That may the area in which the two are the most alike. They both love to have fun on the court -- although Moon is never without a smile on his face while James could be much more moody.

Moon admitted Monday that the team is trying to cook up a new pre-game routine for this season and he, no doubt, is heavily involved. In fact, when asked what he could do better than James, Moon smiled and said, "I'm a better comedian than LeBron."

How about dancing?

"I can cut a rug, now," he said. "I've probably got him in that category."

But when asked what James did better, Moon clearly had had enough of that line of questioning.

"I don't know," he said.

Then he added, "He's better at being LeBron James, and I'm better at being Jamario Moon.

"Come Wednesday night, there's going to be a whole new Jamario Moon and a whole new Cleveland Cavaliers. I'm ready to get the show on the road."

Williams still away: Starting point guard Mo Williams has yet to return to the team after leaving last week to attend the funeral of his father-in-law in Mississippi.

Scott said Williams would be back Tuesday. The coach admitted he was a little concerned that Williams had played just one preseason game after sitting out with a groin injury.

"I know he knows a lot of the stuff we're doing, but actual game-type situation is a little bit different," Scott said. "I don't think it will take him long, but in the last four days we have added some new stuff to our offense that we'll have to try and get him up to speed but I don't think it's going to be that big a problem."

Tough talk: Scott admitted he would continue to ride J.J. Hickson hard -- for his own good.

"I told him I'm going to be hard on him," the coach said. "I think he has the makings of being a great player. If I let it slide -- some of the mistakes that he makes mentally -- I'm not doing my job, and I'm doing him a disservice by not jumping on his butt when I need to.

"When it gets to the point where I'm not talking to you, then you should worry."

LeBron James, Miami Heat ready for tonight's season opener at Boston

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Former Cavaliers star opens season with Heat against former teammate Shaq tonight in Boston

lebron james powderFor the first time in 8 seasons, LeBron James will open an NBA year with another team.

MIAMI - Before leaving for the airport Monday and catching the flight to Boston, Dwyane Wade had a conversation with the friend he calls Larry.

As in, the Larry O'Brien Trophy. The one they give out for winning an NBA championship.

"I asked him where he's been," Wade said. "He's eluded me. He's been missing for a while."

Larry will be waiting for someone in June, and on Tuesday night the Miami Heat will take what they hope is their first steps toward winning him when a season of title expectations finally opens in Boston. Miami squares off against the reigning Eastern Conference champion Celtics in a matchup loaded with story lines.

LeBron James' opener with Miami after seven seasons in Cleveland. Wade's first time with James and Chris Bosh as his Heat running mates. Shaquille O'Neal — once a teammate to both Wade and James — playing his first game in Celtics' colors. Paul Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett motivated by a Game 7 loss to the Lakers in last season's finals. Miami's new Big 3 vs. Boston's not-so-new Big 3.

Oh, and the small fact that Wade and James were both ousted from the playoffs by Boston last spring, defeats that helped along their decision to play with one another.

"I think the NBA did an unbelievable job of picking a great first game," Wade said.

O'Neal says he believes it's just another game, noting that the only big games in which he's played in are the ones where "jewelry" — a ring — is up for grabs.

Not everyone is of that opinion.

"Once LeBron took his talents to South Beach, I think everyone got excited," Celtics coach Doc Rivers said.

The Heat practiced one last time in Miami on Monday morning, followed by coach Erik Spoelstra gathering his team in the locker room for a quick meeting.

He didn't have to say much. Spoelstra brought Miami's 2006 championship trophy and reminded everyone of the season's lone goal.

"We're all ready for this because of how long the summer has seemed," Spoelstra said. "Seemed like it's taken forever to get to this point. But it's finally here. And finally we can have most of the talk about the game and not all these other things which people are interested in right now, which is normal. But let's play."

James feels the same way.

By the time tip-off rolls around Tuesday night, 110 days will have passed since he made "The Decision" to leave Cleveland and join Wade and Bosh in Miami, and the NBA's two-time reigning MVP acknowledged Monday that South Florida still doesn't totally feel like home.

The team does, though. And after a summer of being a lightning rod for critics, James might be more eager than ever to play.

"I'll be ready tomorrow," James said when asked about his motivation level. "I'll be ready. I'll be ready."

His summer — and the fallout — was the theme for a Nike commercial released Monday, in which James is sitting on the set of the show in which he announced his decision and asked "What should I do?" He drives by the spot in Cleveland where the famous "We are all Witnesses" banner comes down, talks with Don Johnson while in Miami Vice-styled suits, even munches on a doughnut while taking a shot at Charles Barkley — one of the most outspoken who railed against James' decision, calling him "a punk."

"Should I be who you want me to be?" James asks to end the 90-second spot.

The Celtics know what the Heat did this summer is why this game was scheduled to open the NBA season. Commissioner David Stern won't be there; he'll be in Los Angeles handing the Lakers their championship rings three hours later.

Odds are, Stern will be watching. Like just about everyone else in the NBA world.

"All eyes will be on the game in Boston, but I think all eyes will really be on Miami," Rivers said. "We're the other team that's playing and we're just going to show up. But I'm sure everybody is there to see Miami."

Boston was a couple of plays away from winning their second championship in three years last June, ultimately losing Game 7 to the Lakers 83-79 — blowing a 13-point third-quarter lead in the process, and losing the seventh game of a finals for the first time in franchise history.

That title-winning window for Garnett, Pierce and Allen won't be open forever. That being said, they're still the East kings.

"There's never been an opening game that has been more heavily anticipated," Allen said. "I do believe that people are definitely excited to see them more than they're excited about seeing us. Truly they know, as a team, what we represented. The two teams are Eastern Conference powerhouses. It's going to be a game."

Neither team will be playoff-sharp, more than likely. James and Pierce both pointed out on Monday that it's the first game of a new season — and in Miami's case, a new era. That being said, Pierce pointed out that he's at least curious to see what Wade, James and Bosh will all look like in Heat colors together.

"Nobody has seen that type of talent on one team," Pierce said.

And there might a little bit of a "Hey, what about us?" factor going on Boston, after the Celtics won the 2008 title and nearly got another one four months ago.

"As far as the East, we're the champs," point guard Rajon Rondo said. "But that's in the past. New season. We're not going to go down without a fight."

Tuesday is just Round 1, but it has the ingredients to be a tantalizing open stanza.

"I think it'll be a very hostile environment," James said. "And us being the most hated team in the world right now, I think it'll be even more hostile."

___

AP Sports Writer Jimmy Golen and AP freelance writer Mike Petraglia contributed from Waltham, Mass.


Pro Football You-Pick-the Winners: Week 8

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You Pick the Winners football contest for Week 8 is now open.

Football Picks contestThis is the fifth of 17 contests. Enter for a chance at a $250 gift card.
Gas prices are on the rise and competition in the NFL is heating up. Lucky for you, Week 8 of our You-Pick-the-Winners contest is now open for entries!

Each week's finalist will receive a $25 gas card in addition to becoming eligible for the $250 prize at the end of the season.

The contest is simple. We're asking for straight-up picks, no point spreads. Whoever picks the most games correctly gets the $25 gas card and becomes a finalist for a $250 gift card to be awarded at the end of the regular season. The finalist also will be invited to appear on our weekly predictions show, hosted by Branson Wright and Chuck Yarborough. If there's a tie, whoever guesses closest to the total score of the Browns' game without going over will become the finalist.

Ready to play? Use this form to submit your picks.

Questions? Take a look at the official rules.

Important note No. 1: If you get an error when making your picks, be sure to fill in both lines of the address field.

Important note No. 2: Only residents of Ohio are eligible to win.

Make your picks now.

Got a Cavs question? Submit it to Hey, Mary!

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Got an Cavaliers question? Send it in. Whether it's about the intricacies of the Princeton offense or rumors about trades, log on to cleveland.com/heymary to submit your question. Plain Dealer Cavaliers beat writer Mary Schmitt Boyer will choose a few to answer each Sunday in the newspaper and all questions will be answered online. Got a question? Submit it...

Mary Schmitt BoyerRead Hey, Mary! this Sunday.

Got an Cavaliers question? Send it in. Whether it's about the intricacies of the Princeton offense or rumors about trades, log on to cleveland.com/heymary to submit your question. Plain Dealer Cavaliers beat writer Mary Schmitt Boyer will choose a few to answer each Sunday in the newspaper and all questions will be answered online.

Got a question? Submit it here now.

Note: Log on for Mary Schmitt Boyer's first live chat of the season Thursday, Oct. 28 at noon. She'll chat Cavs basketball with you every Thursday at noon throughout the regular season.

Plain Dealer Top 25 High School Football Poll

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Records through Saturday. Previous week's ranking in parentheses. 1. Glenville, 9-0 (1): Hosts John Marshall on Friday.

Records through Saturday. Previous week's ranking in parentheses.

1. Glenville, 9-0 (1): Hosts John Marshall on Friday.

2. Solon, 9-0 (2): At No. 22 Strongsville on Friday.

3. St. Edward, 9-0 (3): At St. Ignatius on Saturday.

4. Maple Heights, 9-0 (4): Hosts Warrensville Heights on Friday.

5. Lake Catholic, 8-1 (5): Hosts Cleveland Central Catholic on Saturday.

6. Mentor, 6-3 (6): Hosts Euclid on Friday.

7. Willoughby South, 8-1 (7): Hosts Chardon on Friday.

8. Avon, 9-0 (10): Hosts Bay on Friday.

9. Twinsburg, 8-1 (11): Tigers rebounded from Week 8 loss to Hudson by defeating Stow in a key Northeast Ohio Conference River Division game. Host Elyria on Friday.

10. Aurora, 8-1 (12): At Kenston on Friday.

11. Walsh Jesuit, 6-3 (8): At Toledo Bowsher on Friday.

12. Buchtel, 6-3 (9): At Firestone on Friday.

13. Chagrin Falls, 8-1 (17): At Perry on Friday.

14. Tallmadge, 9-0 (23): Hosts Green on Friday.

15. Elyria Catholic, 8-1 (20): Hosts Villa Angela-St. Joseph on Friday.

16. St. Vincent-St. Mary, 6-3 (18): Fighting Irish picked apart a good University School team, 56-7. Hosts Youngstown Ursuline on Thursday.

17. North Royalton, 9-1 (25): Bears all but clinched the Northeast Ohio Conference Lake Division championship with 42-7 thrashing of Parma. At Normandy on Thursday.

18. Avon Lake, 7-2 (13): Hosts No. 20 Amherst on Friday.

19. Olmsted Falls, 6-3 (--): Bulldogs threw Southwestern Conference title race into a three-team tie thanks to 17-14 edging of previously unbeaten Amherst. Host North Olmsted on Friday.

20. Amherst, 8-1 (14): At No. 18 Avon Lake on Friday.

21. Copley, 8-1 (16): At Revere on Friday.

22. Strongsville, 6-3 (22): Hosts No. 2 Solon on Friday.

23. Medina, 7-2 (19): Battling Bees hit a rough patch when Mayfield pulled out 17-14 Northeast Ohio Conference Valley Division upset. Host Brunswick on Friday.

24. Manchester, 9-0 (24): At Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy on Friday.

25. Parma, 7-2 (15): Hosts Valley Forge on Friday.

Dropped out: Brunswick.

Despite 31 points from LeBron James, the Miami Heat fizzle against the Boston Celtics, 88-80

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The Heat fizzled in the debut of their superstar threesome on Tuesday night, scoring just nine points in their first quarter of the season and falling behind the Celtics by 15 points at halftime. Then, James took over — just like he was forced to so many times in Cleveland — but his 21 second-half points weren't enough to prevent Boston from winning 88-80.

lebron-james.jpgMiami Heat's LeBron James reacts to a foul called on another Heat player during the second half, as Boston Celtics' Kevin Garnett (5) and Paul Pierce walk in the background during an NBA basketball game in Boston on Tuesday, October 26, 2010.
BOSTON — LeBron James and the Miami Heat were showered with chants of "overrated!" They sure looked that way in their debut as a team formed to win a championship.

The old Big Three of the Boston Celtics, playing under the franchise's 17 title banners, beat the new Big Three of James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh 88-80 on Tuesday night.

The Heat, though, knew it would take time to jell.

"It's a feel-out process," James said. "When you have so many options, it's something I'm not accustomed to, having that many threats out on the court at the same time."

Celtics coach Doc Rivers is convinced the Heat will progress into a title contender.

"They're going to be great," he said.

Not yet, though. Wade and Bosh weren't even all that good on opening night.

Wade was limited to 13 points on 4-of-16 shooting and Bosh added eight points and eight rebounds. The trio combined for 15 of the Heat's 17 turnovers — eight by James, six by Wade and one by Bosh. And Miami was outscored 16-9 in the first quarter.

"This is one of 82," said Wade, whose preseason action was limited to the first three minutes because of a strained right hamstring. "Sorry if everyone thought we were going to go 82 and 0. It just ain't happening."

James announced his intention to leave Cleveland for Miami, revealing "The Decision" on national television 110 days before the opener.

Tuesday's decision went to the Celtics behind 20 points from Ray Allen, 19 from Paul Pierce and 10 points and 10 rebounds from Kevin Garnett. Rajon Rondo had 17 assists, two more than Miami had as a team.

Shaquille O'Neal, James' teammate last season and a member with Wade of Miami's last championship team in 2006, had nine points and seven rebounds for Boston. The Big Shamroq was just another reason for all the excitement surrounding the game.

"I just said to Paul as we were coming in here," Garnett said after taking his seat at the postgame news conference. "I said, 'Are we in the finals already?' You know, but it did have a lot of hype on it."

Boston led 45-30 at halftime, but Miami cut that to 63-57 after the third quarter behind James' 15 points in that period. A layup by James made it 83-80 with 1:10 left in the game. But Boston, which once led by 19, got the last five points on a 3-pointer by Allen and two free throws by Pierce.

James came back to the building where he lost the last game of his Cleveland career in Game 6 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, the second time in three seasons that the Celtics eliminated the Cavaliers. He then became a free agent after seven seasons with the Cavaliers and signed with the Heat, who were beaten by the Celtics in the first round of last season's playoffs.

Boston's Big Three won the championship in their first season together, 2007-08, then made it to the seventh game of the NBA finals last season before losing to the Lakers in Los Angeles.

O'Neal said the Celtics weren't making a statement that predictions of the Heat going to the finals are misguided.

"We just wanted to come out and win our first game," he said. "We let you all worry about the hoopla and all of that."

Boston held Miami to nine points in the first quarter, the first time since March 15, 2009, at the Philadelphia 76ers that the Heat scored nine points or fewer in a period. The last time James' Cavaliers scored nine or fewer points in a quarter was February 2, 2007, when they managed nine in the second against the Chicago Bulls.

Things got so bad for the Heat in the first half that O'Neal, a notoriously poor free throw shooter, made the first two he tried as a Celtic. That boosted the lead to 41-22 with 2:13 left in the second quarter.

"I think everybody was just a little bit anxious and wanting to make it work so much," Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said.

Miami then got a brief burst, scoring six straight points to make it 41-28. The last basket in that surge was a dunk by James on a backward pass from Eddie House, whose steal started their 2-on-none break.

That drew cheers from two Heat fans — one wearing a T-shirt with James' name on the back and the other with a jersey bearing Wade's name — but a fan wearing a green Celtics T-shirt, yelled, "He's supposed to do that. That is not impressive."

It was considering how poorly the Heat shot in the first half against a quick, aggressive Celtics defense.

Miami missed 30 of its 41 shots, a paltry 26.8 percent. Boston went 17 for 38 (44.7 percent).

The Celtics lost Pierce with 4:32 left in the third period when he hit the floor and hurt his back as he was charged with a blocking foul on James, who made two shots and cut the lead to 55-45. Pierce returned with 10:43 left in the game with Boston ahead 64-57.

And he finished the scoring with his two free throws with 22 seconds to go.

"It was a big game. It was a fun game," Rivers said. "They're going to be a lot better when we see them again. And, hopefully, we are as well."

Notes: James' 31 points were the most by a Heat player in his debut, passing the 25 scored by Antoine Walker and Willie Burton. ... Among the Boston athletes watching from the stands were David Ortiz of the Red Sox and Wes Welker, Vince Wilfork, Deion Branch and Brandon Meriweather of the Patriots. ... Glen Davis had 13 points on 6-for-7 shooting and five rebounds in 29 minutes off Boston's bench. ... Bosh is 2-12 in Boston, the most losses he's had as a visitor against any team.

Rumors of Cleveland Cavaliers' death have been exaggerated (they're a playoff team!): Terry Pluto

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I may be an idiot by predicting this, but the Cavaliers will win 46 games and easily make the playoffs.

byron-scott-crouching-ldj.jpgByron Scott's experience and high standards will keep the Cavaliers focused during a long season, and his ability to get the most out of the players will result in a playoff berth, says Terry Pluto.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Talking to myself about the Cavaliers:

Question: Is the rumor about you losing your mind true?

Answer: What did I write this time?

Q: That prediction about the Cavaliers winning 46 games, are you nuts?

A: That's my story, and I'm sticking to it.

Q: But Sports Illustrated's Ian Thomsen polled several NBA executives and scouts, and their consensus was the Cavs would be the second-worst team in the Eastern Conference, just ahead of Toronto.

A: They should have asked me, I could have raised them up a few spots.

Q: ESPN's Chris Broussard polled some executives, and they had the Cavs between 32 and 36 wins. Your protege and co-author Brian Windhorst has them at 37 to 40 wins and 11th in the East. What about that?

A: Could happen, if a bunch of guys get hurt. But I insist they will win more games than they lose.

Q: Let's see, Yahoo Sports has them with 12 wins...

A: That's insane.

Q: And you have them at 46-36, right?

A: First of all, they will have at least a dozen wins by the end of 2010. When you say that the Cavs will win only 12 or even 25 games, that means LeBron James alone was worth 40 to 54 victories. One guy, that many wins?

Q: I know you love ESPN's John Hollinger's stats. He as them at 29-53.

A: And John predicted them to win 61 last season, so he was right. But this time, he's wrong.

Q: Then sell me on your 46-36 prediction.

A: In the East, there are four very good/terrific teams: Orlando, Boston, Miami and Chicago. That's four playoff spots. The remaining four spots will come from this group: Atlanta, Milwaukee, New Jersey, Detroit, Washington, Charlotte, the Knicks and Cavs. I like Atlanta, Milwaukee, the Knicks and Cavs in that group.

Q: But why 46 wins?

A: The Cavs have an established coach in Byron Scott who knows how he wants his guys to play -- and will demand they play his way. That puts the Cavs immediately in the top half of this league where too many coaches are viewed as faceless, powerless people in suits who deserve no attention from the players.

That's what you get in a league where the average coach survives three years and the average player salary is $4.5 million.

Q: So you think Scott makes that much of a difference?

A: On nights when some teams aren't interested, his players will pull some upsets. If the Cavs do have a game that they take a collective nap, he will make life miserable the next day in practice. They may not like him by the end of the season, but he will insist they respect him.

Q: What about the players?

A: Scoring could be a problem, especially early in the season as they adjust to a radically different Princeton motion offense -- and life without James bailing them out as the 24-second clock ticks down. But they will play solid defense. They will struggle against elite big men, but not that many teams have strong centers.

Q: Will they run, like Scott says?

A: They'll try. I like the 4-guard group of Mo Williams, Daniel Gibson, Ramon Sessions and Anthony Parker. Anderson Varejao should thrive in this system, and J.J. Hickson will average at least 15 points. So will Antawn Jamison. They have no small forward, so they'll often use three guards.

Q: James' supporters said the Cavs didn't have much talent.

A: Williams, Jamison and Varejao would start or at least play key roles for any team in the league. Hickson will soon join that group. I have liked Sessions ever since seeing him play for Nevada against the University of Akron. Parker and Gibson's outside shooting would be valuable to any team.

Q: Aren't you saying this because you're a homer and you want them to play well without LeBron?

A: This team certainly appeals to my underdog side, but I'm telling you -- they are an above average team. And have I ever been wrong?

Wait, don't answer that.

Cleveland Browns owner Randy Lerner praises Mike Holmgren's work: 'He's eager and he's hungry'

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Lerner, who has not spoken publicly since last November, shared some of his thoughts on the state of his team.

lerner-holmgren-camp-horiz-gc.jpgView full sizeOther than infrequent appearances during training camp, Browns owner Randy Lerner is seldom seen publicly around his NFL franchise. "I still think ultimately what people expect of me in Cleveland is substance, not necessarily profile," he told The Associated Press. "And so, if I'm prepared to make changes or acknowledge that things aren't going well or go out and recruit Mike Holmgren, in the end that's what is going to drive people's impressions of the job that I'm doing and I guess I rely on that."
More on Lerner; owner hopes to resolve Jim Brown dispute

BEREA, Ohio -- Now in his eighth season as an NFL owner, Randy Lerner is excited about what he's seeing with the Cleveland Browns, who reached their bye week at 2-5 following Sunday's upset win at New Orleans.

The 48-year-old Lerner, who has not spoken publicly since last November, shared some of his thoughts on the state of his team during a 30-minute interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday. The media-shy Lerner has maintained an even lower public profile in recent months, staying out of the spotlight while new president Mike Holmgren puts his mark on the franchise.

Here are some excerpts:

AP: Some Browns fans are concerned that if this is more difficult than expected that Mike might not be as committed as you had hoped. Is he entrenched?

Lerner: I do. I think he has settled in. I think he's comfortable and he has told me that. And, he's ambitious and he's eager and he's hungry.

AP: What are your one-on-one dealings with Mike? How often do you talk?

Lerner: I'm more communicative with Mike than probably I have been with any football person or executive in my eight years. It probably means that roughly that once a week, sometimes twice, he and I take a few hours together and talk through a wide variety of subjects ranging from football matters to business matters to league matters. ...

On the league matters, for purposes of our relationship and my role, that's where I spend the most amount of my time. That involves digging in and studying more about what the league office is presenting in terms of options and ideas. To make sense of the issues we face, whether it be revenue sharing or labor-cost sharing or what have you. That's the way I would paint the picture right now.

AP: Has this been fulfilling for you?

Lerner: Absolutely. What we have now is leadership and what leadership means in this particular case is that there is one guy who sits in Berea who is responsible for the Cleveland Browns. What that means is that when I come, I am dealing with one person and being able to deal with one person makes it that we can dig in completely and effectively certainly as compared to previous setups that we had here. It's been great for me.

AP: Do you think the coaching bug has left Mike?

Lerner: I don't know. We don't talk about that. Eric [Mangini] is here. Eric's coaching. Eric had a big win this week. My mind doesn't go there. I understand the question. I get it. But I don't think about that right now.

AP: There are thousands of empty seats at the stadium this season. Obviously, the economy is still a huge factor as are the team's struggles of the past decade. Has it been tougher to win back fans, more particularly business groups who buy up bulks of tickets, than you imagined?

Lerner: When it comes to anybody who comes to a Browns game, I think if you win games, guys are going to come back. That's the win. I don't think there is anything you can say, anything you can do. I think you have to demonstrate that you know how to win in the NFL. And if you are the Cleveland Browns, you will pack that house. I believe the love and passion for this team is fully intact. It's about waking it up. Obviously, you don't want to take too long. I'm aware of that on a minute-by-minute basis.

I believe that if there are any small intangibles they are things like being conscious of your ticket-price policy, especially within the context of the NFL, having ticket prices and stadium policies that reflect the community you serve. ...

Nothing comes near the importance of winning and nothing is going to drive people to that stadium in a way we're all used to seeing it other than winning.

AP: Has the team's initiative to clean up some of the rowdiness at games and make it a more family-friendly environment on game days been successful?

Lerner: I think that we have. I think those efforts are ongoing rather than ones you measure on any given day. To some extent, football is what it is, we're seeing the issues of hitting and how to penalize. It's a game that is very physical that is at times very violent and so on. And when you go to games, you are going to get people who are animated and passionate and noisy and that's what you've got to expect.

I think our job is to try and provide areas within the stadium where people who want to have a high-energy, boisterous experience can do what they want to do. On the other hand, you want to designate areas where people can have a more low key experience, maybe they are bringing younger kids. I think it's much more being aware of a variety of expectations rather than trying to change what going to a football game is about.

AP: In terms of the NFL's labor situation, and the possibility of a lockout next season, what do you see on the horizon?

Lerner: I don't have a lot of visibility with respect to the horizon. What we do is we study two pieces of this puzzle. The first piece is what do we do in the event we're not able to resolve our labor situation and be prepared. Number 2, we deal with the relationship between teams and the extent to which making adjustments to those relationships, those financial relationships, will help us resolve whatever labor issues we face.

AP: What was your take on the league's crackdown on helmet-to-helmet hits?

Lerner: I don't think there is necessarily a low road or a high road with respect to the hits you're seeing or the league offices response to that. The league office is there to try and balance what we know the game is and also making sure guys aren't getting hurt in a way that some adjustments to rules or adjustments to the way the rules are interpreted could make the game a little safer. Other than just trying to understand and support what the league office is doing, I don't have any great insights to add. The Cleveland Browns have had players make hits and gotten fined. We've played teams that have made hits and they've gotten fined. It's going to happen.

AP: You've been more high-profile in England and with Aston Villa. Are you getting more comfortable with being more out front with the Browns? Is that your hope?

Lerner: If you are to look at profile in terms of speaking with reporters. The last couple years, I have spoken once a year in May or June -- and that's it. In terms of profile, I suppose if you're seen around town or seen at a game, you're considered to have some degree of profile. I think the role or the profile, in general, of the guy who has my job in England is generically different from the ownership role in the NFL.

I guess that is simply something I need to do a better job of, so to speak. I'm not sure 'what do a better job' means other than be more visible. I also feel that I have to be sort of straight with who I am. I am not by nature one to run to the front and jump in front of cameras, so maybe I'm just not destined to be high-profile. I still think ultimately what people expect of me in Cleveland is substance, not necessarily profile. And so, if I'm prepared to make changes or acknowledge that things aren't going well or go out and recruit Mike Holmgren, in the end that's what is going to drive people's impressions of the job that I'm doing and I guess I rely on that.

AP: Why isn't Browns Stadium used more often for other events?

Lerner: That's a good question. Anybody in their right mind in this business would like to use the stadium as much as possible because otherwise it's an empty venue and you are not driving any revenue. Probably there are very few interesting factors other than it's too big, it's an open-air stadium and there's not many events that you can put on there. The days of having big, open music shows that would fill a stadium don't seem to be with us right now. They're more in arenas. It's not the 70,000, it's the 20,000.

It's not that we haven't reached out to try and do that. In terms of our other hospitality opportunities, in this city there seems to be there's a lot of hospitality in downtown Cleveland and people aren't that inclined to come down and use the stadium for that purpose. Finally, at a much smaller level, we're conscious that we play on grass and we don't want to mess it up for games.

AP: What about the grass? Would the Browns ever switch to a synthetic field?

Lerner: Not with me around.

AP: After LeBron James left the Cavaliers as a free agent, there were stories about poor Cleveland and how the city was back to being down and out. Does that hurt you to hear a city where you've spent a good chunk of your life take a beating?

Lerner: Yes, it does hurt me to see Cleveland take the shots. More broadly, I read recently about the 86 years it took the Red Sox to get back to winning. Sometimes things take time. But if you almost refuse to accept that and you keep planning on winning and you keep believing you'll win, then that's what it takes. It takes believing.

If you work hard enough and you stay focused and get the right people it will happen rather than allowing yourself to feel somehow jinxed. It's part of what leadership is about. It's part of what Mike Holmgren's leadership is about. Mike went to two organizations that were struggling and he turned them around. Simple as that. So, we have a chance that maybe this will be his third one and he wouldn't have come here if he didn't think it could be.

Unable to match up in inches, Cleveland Cavaliers hope quick feet can help defeat Celtics

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The Cavaliers plan to fight size with speed when they face the Boston Celtics in the season-opener Wednesday.

garnett-james-vert-ap.jpgOne night after facing LeBron James and the Heat in Boston, Kevin Garnett and the Celtics arrive in Cleveland to start the Cavaliers' season on Wednesday.

INDEPENDENCE, Ohio -- Byron Scott has a plan for all 85 inches of Shaquille O'Neal. He has a plan for 6-foot-11 Kevin Garnett, too. It's the same as the one he's using against 6-9 Glen Davis and 6-11 Jermaine O'Neal, and any other enormous Boston Celtics player.

The new-look, and big-man-lacking Cavaliers will not exactly try to stop them in Wednesday's season-opener at The Q.

The plan is more to work around them. Quickly.

"The only way you counter size is with speed," Scott said. "One of my [Tuesday] messages to our guys is we do ourselves a disservice if we don't run after every miss, every turnover, every loose ball, every make. We want to see if we can get up and down the floor and put them in a running game for 48 minutes."

Welcome to the new version of the Cavaliers, the team whose only true center is 7-0 backup Ryan Hollins. Anderson Varejao will start at that position, but the 6-11 Brazilian is more naturally a power forward. Four other players check in at 6-9. Big and tall, they are not.

With Scott's Princeton offense, the Cavaliers hope to use their nimble and active centers to their advantage by drawing the Celtics' big men away from the basket and by not allowing Boston's defense to set up against their transition offense.

Defensively, the goal is to exhaust behemoths like O'Neal, and occasionally mix in some of Varejao's trademark peskiness.

"I've got to be physical," Varejao said. "I've got to try to make him catch the ball far from the basket because you know how big he is and how strong he is. If he gets the ball under the rim, it's going to be tough to guard him."

That's the problem the Cavaliers will face all season with their height-challenged lineup, so it makes sense to have the biggest test out of the way in the first game of the regular season.

"It's going to be good to find definition as far as what type of team we're going to be," forward Antawn Jamison said. "It's a pretty good measuring stick for us."

The problem is, this Cavaliers team still isn't entirely sure of its identity when it comes to player rotation, at least. Point guard Mo Williams returned to the team Tuesday after spending five days away following the death of his father-in-law. Scott said Williams is questionable, and even if he can play, isn't sure if he'll start.

"We've added some things, so we need to get him back up to speed on what we're doing," Scott said. "The good thing about Mo is that he's pretty fast at learning the things we've been doing."

The simple plan -- even with tweaks in Williams' absence -- is to run a little, and run some more.

"If we don't do that, we're facing their halfcourt defense every single time and it's going to be tough," Scott said. "They're one of the better defensive teams in this league. We've got to be smart. We've got to do what we've been doing all preseason and training camp long -- run.

"We've just got to make sure we come out and play our style of basketball, our brand of basketball," Scott continued.

Let the races begin.

Mo a no-go? Williams announced his return to Cleveland via Twitter at about 4 a.m. Tuesday.

"Home sweet home," he Tweeted. "Bout to get a lil shut eye."

The starting point guard returned to Cleveland after spending five days in Mississippi to be with family after the death of his father-in-law. He woke in time for Tuesday's 11 a.m. practice, but was not available to talk to reporters.

Williams played in just one preseason game, scoring 11 points on 3-for-9 shooting in 25 minutes. He missed the beginning of training camp with a groin injury, and Scott said he was concerned about both Williams' conditioning and injury rehab.

Varejao missed all but two games of the preseason after his grandfather died the second day of training camp. The forward said he was able to offer some comfort to Williams when he returned to the team Tuesday.

"I just told him I went through that not too long ago," he said. "You just have to be strong. It's going to take some time for him and his family and his wife's family to be OK, but I believe it's normal. It's something we've got to go through in life."

Shaq as Delonte's mentor? Former Cavaliers guard Delonte West will not be with the Celtics Wednesday, as he serves the second of a 10-game suspension after pleading guilty to a weapons charge over the summer in Maryland.

West's time in Cleveland was turbulent as he dealt with self-admitted bipolar disorder, and ended with rumors that there was a locker-room rift between him and LeBron James.

O'Neal told reporters in Boston on Tuesday that he vouched for West when the Celtics considered signing him in the off-season, and confirmed that West had locker room issues with everyone but the 7-1 center.

"He got out of control a lot of times and usually when people get out of control they shut their buttons off to somebody they respect," O'Neal said. "I know he respected me because I can get out of control too. I had to yoke (sic) him up once or twice, tell him to 'let it go, bro.'

"Last year I don't think he respected anybody but me on that team," O'Neal said. "So I was able to talk to him. Not only that, he's on the big 'p.' So if he messes up with the big 'p' he can get the 'j.' Know what I mean? Peanut butter and jelly. Probation and jail. He's going to be cool and we're going to keep him in line."

Joe Tait has pre-operative procedure: Cavaliers Hall of Fame radio announcer Joe Tait underwent a pre-operative heart catheterization Tuesday at The Cleveland Clinic, the team announced late Tuesday evening. He is slated to undergo surgery at an yet-to-be determined date next week, when he will undergo a double bypass, as well as replacing the aortic valve.

The team said there was no specific timetable for his return, but looks forward to his return to the microphone this season.

Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert: 'No regrets ... we're looking forward to the future'

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Cavs owner reflects on his reaction to LeBron James' decision, the coaching and front-office changes and his expectations for the season.

gilbert-horiz-ap.jpg"We certainly have expectations that this team will compete," said Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert prior to Wednesday's season opener. "And when I say compete, compete for a playoff spot and then you never know what can happen."

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- "The Chosen One" era is over. The Cavaliers' motto, "All for One and One for All," is a bit more pronounced on team logos, promotions and billboards.

One chapter ended as the new one begins, Wednesday night against Boston. A few days before the Cavs' opener, owner Dan Gilbert reflected on his reaction to LeBron James' decision, the coaching and front-office changes and his expectations for the season.

Q: It seems you've been kind of under the radar and invisible since the LeBron James decision. Was that intentional?

A: Well, you know, the summer we've been very busy. I've been very busy. The franchise has been busy. So a lot of that is there's no games and I'm not in Cleveland as often, either. So I wouldn't say it's too intentional.

Q: In retrospect, any regrets about your public reaction to the James decision?

A: My letter was to the fans and supporters of Cleveland. People get a little confused because they think it was a general statement to the world or even to LeBron or to whoever. It really was to the fans and supporters of Cleveland, and I wanted to make sure they knew where I stood and where the franchise stood and how we felt, which apparently was pretty similar to the way they were feeling. No, we don't have any regrets. We're looking forward to the future and we're focused on the future and all that other stuff, but I don't really think about it in that way.

Q: How about the Cavs finances? During the playoffs you said the team had to advance deep into postseason just to break even.

A: "The Cavs have been running at a -- there are various measurements of a business operation -- but on an even level or breaking even or slightly positive the past few years. Slightly loss to slightly positive I would call break-even on the EBITDA line, which is earnings before interest, taxes and all that. So I would say that our finances are strong. In fact, this year we're projecting our highest revenue that we've ever had, so nothing that's occurred has affected our finances going forward."

Q: How about for next year, because season tickets were committed in March before fans knew what the roster would look like? Any concerns for the following season?

A: You never know what's going to happen until it happens. Clearly there are some people who make decisions based on their belief of the franchise's direction and the team's performance. What was interesting was we didn't even get a lot of, I mean there was very, very little push-back or requests for -- because LeBron had made his decision -- I want my money back, I want my deposit, I'm not going to renew my tickets. That was a great sign. The support has been overwhelming, both in words and encouragement as well as renewal rates, suite holders, everything.

gilbert-vert-gc.jpg"(Dan Gilbert is) counting the minutes to Wednesday night because I'm so anxious to see how we really do in a real game situation. Just like any other fan, it's so different you're hoping it's way better or equal or whatever or it's on the right path."

Q: The deal with the Chinese partners fell apart. Is there a share, an interest that's still available and will it be marketed at all?

A: You know, you'd have to probably directly ask that shareholder (David Katzman, who owns about 15 percent.) We haven't heard from him one way or the other recently, so I haven't talked to him, I don't know. And again, it had nothing to do with anything with [James]. It just had to do with the buyer not moving forward, based on certain documentation they were requested to provide the NBA.

Q: How disappointed where you in that? Did it matter to you?

A: It's always nice to get an international partner that can be influential and putting the team up to a certain profile, but I wouldn't call it fundamental to the mission or anything. I think it would have been nice.

Q: You've never owned the team without LeBron on it. How does it feel different?

A: Well, it's like a whole completely new fresh start here. Frankly, it's a different feeling, but it's a very good feeling and we've very excited about the coach and the team and the players that we have and the chemistry and the front office.

In a way, you're just excited just because it's different, just to kind of see almost what's it going to be like and how's it all going to work together. And we've got a lot of flexibility on the basketball side with a trade exception and extra draft choices and we've got a lot of young, athletic players and we're going to compete and we're going to compete very strong.

Q: What are the plans for the trade exception?

A: Well, it's good until next July 1. So there is a little bit of a time pressure to do it before the trading deadline, but you still may have a piece after the season, as well, of time to do it. There's nothing going on right at this exact moment particularly. Those things are used as you get closer to the deadline.

Q: Do you see, depending on which way the team is headed, if it's potentially playoff bound or better than playoff bound, you might go after players?

A: A trade exception expires, so either way -- whether we're competing heavily, which we expect to be or we're not -- you never get that value back. Either way you want to hope that you can use it, but then again if the market's just simply not there and you're going to use it to use it, you probably don't want to do it. That's more of a Chris Grant, general manager decision."

Q: What are your expectations for Dec. 2 (when James and Miami visit Cleveland), besides winning?

A: We're kind of like business as usual. As a franchise, we don't have any different expectations than anyone else. Certainly the fans do. We get a lot of emails, a lot of suggestions on the kinds of ideas and things that people would like to do. There's a lot of good ones, but a lot of them are something that the franchise couldn't or wouldn't endorse, just as being not consistent with what the NBA would want or probably what we would even want, too. Fans will express themselves. We will always have the best security possible as we always do. And I hope that Cleveland and the fans, you would hope that everybody keeps it to a certain level, because anything you do that crosses the line isn't going to look bad for anybody but the franchise and Cleveland.

Q: What are your expectations for the team?

A: Expectations are strong. We won 60-something games two years in a row and although we lost obviously one of the better players in the NBA, we have a lot of talent on this team and we've got a great coaching staff, we've acquired some new talent, so you never know until you kind of get rolling exactly. But we certainly have expectations that this team will compete, and when I say compete, compete for a playoff spot and then you never know what can happen.

Q: So there's no number on it that you're hoping for, to hit a certain mark?

A: No, there's no number. We saw, obviously, large numbers in the regular season are somewhat meaningless as you get to the playoffs based on what's happened to us in the last couple of years. So for us it's certainly to make the playoffs and we feel we have a team that can make the playoffs, and that's all, in essence, we did the last five years.

Q: When you hired (former Cavs coach) Mike Brown you said he had all the tools, that he was the most impressive interview you've ever had. What changed?

A: Well, I'm not sure so much necessarily changed. I think you stick with somebody for a period of time and, ultimately, if your goal as a franchise is to get past just having the best record or winning a round or two of the playoffs -- one year obviously we went to the Finals -- but there just comes a time when you've got to change the voice and you've got to look for another direction. ... The head coach sometimes can do everything in the world and it still may not work. But from that standpoint we just felt we needed to try a different route, a different path. ... We really like Byron [Scott] and his track record. He's won three championships as a player. He went to two [Finals] as a head coach. He has not won one as a head coach. He is very motivated to do so."

Q: What about the change in GM, what prompted that and if you could do it over again would you prefer that Danny [Ferry] wouldn't have left?

A: Danny Ferry did a very good job when he was here and put the franchise up to a certain level, as did Mike Brown, and his contract had ended after five years and, ultimately, both sides decided they wanted to do other things. No hard feelings at all there. It wasn't like he was terminated or anything. Literally, the contract was over and he felt like he wanted a different direction, we felt like we wanted a different direction and a lot of it was who was going to call what shots versus replacing the head coach, during free agency and all that.

So we kind of mutually decided not to renew the contract. ... Five years in the sports business, I'm learning anyway, is a long period of time. A lot happens and you learn a lot, but it's kind of like after five years if you're not -- you've got to either feel like the next year you have a much better chance, like things are going or you feel like you're treading water or going in reverse. Maybe after three years or two years or four years, treading water's OK, but by the fifth year it's sort of like maybe it's time to try a different path.

Q: Are you more involved than you were?

A: I think the same amount. We kind of come in and out, depending on what's, you know you get both seasonality, so there's a draft, and there's a trading deadline, so there are points where you're all huddled up for various periods of time, so that drives a lot of it. And then certainly if you have to make changes, that drives a lot of it. Certainly, the summer, clearly with what was going on, there was a lot of involvement.

Q: Are you going to be at as many games this season?

A: Oh, yeah, absolutely. Can't wait till Wednesday. Counting the minutes to Wednesday night because I'm so anxious to see how we really do in a real game situation. Just like any other fan, it's so different you're hoping it's way better or equal or whatever or it's on the right path. In any case, either way, whether you're right or wrong, it's definitely different and you can't wait to see it.

Q: How important is a fast start this season?

A: It would certainly help. I don't think it's everything. Every game counts the same, but certainly for confidence, of the team, of the franchise, of the coaching staff, of the fans and supporters, it certainly would be something that you would want.

Q: The impression among some fans is that top-shelf free agents don't want to come here.

A: I think that's kind of silly. You have to believe that someone who is making a decision about where they're going to play basketball is going to want to go to a place where the ownership and the management is as committed as this one is, where they have practice facilities like this, where they're willing to not only spend but willing to kind of create a culture of winning and hire the top people and all that other stuff. Is a free agent not going to come to a place because when a certain player left under unusual circumstances, that he wrote a letter so they're afraid someone may write a letter one day if they do the same thing five years down the road? I think that's kind of crazy. I don't think it's true or accurate.

Q: Do you think fans and media are dwelling on the James saga way too much?

A: Until there's something to fill -- you had it happen in July and the season doesn't start until November -- so until there's something else to fill the hole or the gap, you can understand it. So I'm hoping once the season starts, that we've got enough exciting things to go on that it truly becomes the past, but you certainly understand it.

Q: At what point this season do you think you'll know what you have in this team?

A: That's a good question. I probably should get Chris [Grant] and the front office's opinion on that, but I think it's possible that you know early. In the first 20 games you know one way or the other. It's more likely you'll probably be not knowing like most teams won't, because you'll be somewhere in between there, so you don't know which way you're going. I can't remember the number, but something like of the 30 teams, something like 22 or 23 competed for a playoff spot until the last 10 days or two weeks, so you never know. I don't want to be too judgmental in the first, like, 10 games. I don't think that's a good way to go.

Q: Are you a patient man?

A: In general, no. But five years of what's happened here and believing you're (knocks on the wood conference table) knocking on the door and so close and you could just see how things can turn one way or the other, it kind of makes you that way a little bit.

Look, as long as the belief system is there, not only among myself but everybody in the franchise and all the players and the key people, like the coaches and the front office, and more importantly the fans and the supporters, then we're just going to keep going until it happens. And I just really believe in my heart it will. It's just a matter of when it does.

How to hit Cliff Lee is a Giants puzzle

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Former Indians ace takes on Giants' Tim Lincecum in Game 1 of the World Series tonight

World Series Rangers Giants BaseballTexas Rangers' Cliff Lee throws during practice for Game 1 of baseball's World Series against the San Francisco Giants Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2010, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
World Series Preview: Texas Rangers vs. San Francisco Giants

SAN FRANCISCO - Buster Posey, Pablo Sandoval and the rest of the San Francisco Giants can study the scouting reports and videotape all they want, trying to find the secret to getting a hit against Cliff Lee.

Or, they can just ask Cody Ross.

Because many years ago, before he blossomed into the MVP of the NL championship series, Ross was a struggling rookie with the Detroit Tigers. Who happened to hit his first major league home run off Lee. A grand slam, at that.

Of course, Lee was early in his career, too. He hardly had become Mr. Perfect in the postseason, the left-hander who will pose a giant challenge for San Francisco when it faces the Texas Rangers in Game 1 of the World Series on Wednesday night.

"Cliff Lee, superhero," summed up Sandoval.

Watch Lee from the center-field camera and it's difficult to tell exactly what makes him so dominant.

David Price brings more heat. Andy Pettitte brought more October experience. But Lee beat them in the playoffs.

Maybe it's the way he throws any of his pitches for strikes on any count. At any speed, too. A real-life version of a video game — try to duplicate that in "Major League Baseball 2K10."

"Confidence, relying on my routine," Lee said Tuesday before the Rangers worked out. "Going out there and expecting to be successful."

Lee is 7-0 with a 1.26 ERA in eight lifetime postseason starts heading into his matchup with two-time NL Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum in the opener. Lee went 3-0 this year in the AL playoffs, striking out 34 and walking just one.

Lincecum and Lee pose an intriguing matchup of opposite artisans. The Giants' lanky ace's pitches have dizzying movement, while Lee is able to adjust his pinpoint control for an umpire's strike zone.

Rangers pitching coach Mike Maddux said Lee reminds him of someone he knows well — namely his brother, four-time Cy Young winner Greg Maddux. A left-handed version, naturally.

"If you can command your fastball and change speeds, you're going to have good results," Maddux said.

Lee's severe strikeout-to-walk ratio has prompted many to suggest the best strategy is to hit the first strike he throws, rather than risk falling behind in the count.

"People love to talk about Cliff throwing strikes but it's not like he's just gunning balls down the middle of the plate," Texas third baseman Michael Young said. "There's a big difference between throwing strikes and throwing quality strike after quality strike."

A win over the Giants will tie Lee for the best start in postseason history — Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez, with all his quirky gyrations and deliveries, won his first eight decisions.

To Lee, it's all rather routine. In fact, there was a neat picture of him during the playoffs, yawning in the dugout at Yankee Stadium.

Sure doesn't look like someone pitching in huge games.

"I don't really look at it like that," Lee said a few days ago. "Some people might, I don't feel any more pressure."

Lee has been equally perfect against the Giants — three starts, three wins and a 1.13 ERA. He last faced them in 2009 in his first start after being traded from Cleveland to Philadelphia, and breezed at AT&T Park.

"Weather and clubhouse and the bullpens" are different, he said. "Once you get on the mound, it's 60 feet, 6 inches and you've still got a professional hitter in there trying to do damage off of you. To me, that doesn't really matter that much."

Call it superstition or just being comfortable, Lee doesn't like to change his hat, glove or cleats during the season. Sometimes he has to — he's been traded four times in his career, most recently from Seattle to Texas before the All-Star break.

Lee found himself with mixed emotions watching Philadelphia, where he won twice in the World Series last year, play San Francisco in the NLCS.

Sure, he was friendly with many of his former Phillies teammates. But there was the other side of the baseball business.

"I didn't mind seeing them get beat because they got rid of me," he said.

Now, the Texas pitchers are the ones who benefit from Lee's presence.

"I've become more like Cliff in my preparation since he's been here," starter C.J. Wilson said. "I watch what he does through an order, and if they don't adapt he doesn't have to. Whereas I used to get into trouble before, where I would adapt maybe before the hitters showed me an adjustment, and I would basically turn into their strengths. But Cliff trusts his strengths to the degree that he doesn't think he has to do anything different from game to game."

Several of the Giants have faced Lee many times.

Juan Uribe is 11 for 37 (.297) with two homers against him. Jose Guillen is 9 for 25 (.360) with two homers. Aaron Rowand is 7 for 25 (.280) with four doubles and a home run. Aubrey Huff is 5 for 19 (.263).

Rowand is willing to give any advice he can.

"You can watch video. You can talk to them about what his out pitches are, what he likes to do when he's ahead, and with runners on," he said.

Then there's Ross.

Ross had played a handful of games in the majors and had only two career hits when he faced Lee on Sept. 2, 2003. Ross struck out looking his first time up, but got more than even in his next at-bat, launching the first grand slam ever allowed by the young Cleveland lefty.

The game was memorable for Ross because of something else. In the late innings, he tripped over first base beating out a bunt, tore his knee, was carted off the field and done for the season.

Both Ross and Lee have come quite a way since then. They haven't faced each other since the slam, either. Ross promises his team will be ready for baseball's No. 1 postseason ace, having already solved the supposedly unbeatable Roy Halladay in the NLCS opener.

"It was the Halladay show a week ago after he threw the no-hitter against the Reds," Ross said. "We're not surprising anybody, believe me. Everybody knows how good our pitching staff is. But I think we prefer for everyone to talk about everybody else."

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AP Sports Writers Janie McCauley and Stephen Hawkins and AP freelance writer Michael Wagaman contributed to this report.


World Series Preview: Texas Rangers vs. San Francisco Giants

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Here's a look at the 2010 World Series, getting underway tonight in San Francisco.

World Series Rangers Giants BaseballWorkers paint the field at AT&T Park before practice for Game 1 of baseball's World Series between the San Francisco Giants and the Texas Rangers Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2010, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
How to hit Cliff Lee is a Giants puzzle
Here's a look at the 2010 World Series, getting underway tonight in San Francisco.

Schedule: (All times EDT) Game 1, Wednesday, at San Francisco (7:57 p.m.); Game 2, Thursday, at San Francisco (7:57 p.m.); Game 3, Saturday, at Arlington, Texas (6:57 p.m.); Game 4, Sunday, at Arlington, Texas (8:20 p.m.); x-Game 5, Monday, Nov. 1, at Arlington, Texas (6:57 p.m.); x-Game 6, Wednesday, Nov. 3, at San Francisco (7:57 p.m.); x-Game 7, Thursday, Nov. 4, at San Francisco (7:57 p.m.). (All games on FOX).

x-if necessary.

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Season Series: Did not play.

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Projected Lineups

Rangers: SS Elvis Andrus (.265, 0 HRs, 35 RBIs, 88 runs, 32/47 SBs), 3B Michael Young (.284, 21, 91, 99 runs, career-high 115 strikeouts), CF Josh Hamilton (major league-leading .359, 32, 100), RF Vladimir Guerrero (.300, 29, 115), LF Nelson Cruz (.318, 22, 78 in 108 games), 2B Ian Kinsler (.286, 9, 45), C Bengie Molina (.240, 2, 19 in 57 games since acquired from San Francisco), 1B Mitch Moreland (.255, 9, 25 in 47 games since called up from Triple-A on July 29).

Giants: CF Andres Torres (.268, 16, 63, 26 SBs), 2B Freddy Sanchez (.292, 7, 47), 1B Aubrey Huff (.290, 26, 86), C Buster Posey (.305, 18, 67 after being called up from minors May 29), LF Pat Burrell (.266, 18, 51, signed to minor league deal May 29 after release by Tampa Bay and called up from Triple-A on June 4), RF Cody Ross (.269, 14, 65 with Florida and Giants), 3B Juan Uribe (.248, 24, 85), SS Edgar Renteria (.276, 3, 22 in 72 games).

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Projected Rotations

Rangers: LH Cliff Lee (12-9, 3.18 ERA, 7 CGs in 28 starts, 185 Ks, 18 walks, 212 1-3 innings; 4-6, 3.98 in 15 starts after acquired from Seattle on July 9), LH C.J. Wilson (15-8, 3.35, 3 CGs in 33 starts), RH Colby Lewis (12-13, 3.72 in career-high 201 innings), RH Tommy Hunter (13-4, 3.73).

Giants: RH Tim Lincecum (16-10, 3.43, 231 Ks), RH Matt Cain (13-11, 3.14, 177 Ks), LH Jonathan Sanchez (13-9, 3.07, 205 Ks, career-high 193 1-3 innings), LH Madison Bumgarner (7-6, 3.00, 86 Ks in 18 starts as rookie).

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Relievers

Rangers: RH Neftali Feliz (4-3, 2.37, MLB rookie-record 40 saves in 43 chances), RH Darren O'Day (6-2, 2.03 in 72 games), RH Alexi Ogando (4-1, 1.30 in 44 games), LH Darren Oliver (1-2, 2.48 ERA in 64 games), LH Derek Holland (3-4, 4.08 in 14 games, 10 starts), LH Clay Rapada (0-0, 4.00 in 13 games after September call-up), LH Michael Kirkman (0-0, 1.65 in 14 games after Aug. 20 recall).

Giants: RH Brian Wilson (3-3, 1.81, major league-best 48/53 saves), RH Ramon Ramirez (1-0, 0.67, 1 save), LH Javier Lopez (4-2, 2.34), LH Jeremy Affeldt (4-3, 4.14, 4 saves), RH Santiago Casilla (7-2, 1.95, 2 saves), RH Sergio Romo (5-3, 2.18).

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Matchups

Rangers make it four times in six seasons that a team is playing in its first World Series. Previous three all lost in five games or fewer: Houston (2005), Colorado (2007) and Tampa Bay (2008). ... Giants haven't won World Series since upsetting Cleveland Indians in 1954, when Willie Mays and Co. played at Polo Grounds in New York. Club moved to San Francisco for 1958 season, three years before Rangers franchise began play as expansion Washington Senators. Team moved to Texas, with Ted Williams as manager, and changed name in 1972. Rangers make first World Series appearance in franchise's 50th season. ... Giants lead all-time series against Texas 15-7 and have won last seven meetings (2001-09). Rangers have lost 11 in a row in San Francisco, where they are 2-12. ... Rangers and Giants both hit 162 home runs during regular season, averaging one per game. In playoffs, Texas had 17 in 11 games and Giants hit six in 10 games. ... Lee is 3-0 with 1.13 ERA in three career starts against San Francisco while holding Giants to .159 batting average. He has 21 strikeouts and four walks in 24 innings, and threw complete game against them on July 31, 2009, his first start for Philadelphia after being traded from Cleveland. ... Molina was Giants' starting catcher for 3½ seasons until they traded him to Texas on July 1. That cleared the way in San Francisco for rookie Posey to be everyday catcher. Molina hit .276 with 58 home runs and 273 RBIs in 472 games for the Giants. ... Guerrero is .330 career hitter against Giants, with nine homers and 31 RBIs in 62 games. He was primarily DH this season, playing only 18 games in outfield. He's likely to move back to old spot in right during games in San Francisco, where NL rules prohibit DH. Bad knees from all those years on hard turf in Montreal have slowed him, and right field in San Francisco can be tricky, with some odd angles and long runs. Look for strong-armed Jeff Francoeur to play RF against left-handed starters back home in Texas. ... Giants can use switch-hitter Pablo S andoval at DH in Texas. His production dropped off dramatically this season, but "Kung Fu Panda" is still dangerous at plate. ... Oliver, 40, was a starter and the loser when Texas lost 8-3 to San Francisco on June 12, 1997, in baseball's first interleague game. He allowed four runs and eight hits in 7 2-3 innings. ... Giants have home-field advantage in World Series because NL won All-Star game in July, first victory over AL since 1996.

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Big Picture

Rangers: Texas (90-72) won its fourth AL West title and first since 1999, taking over first place for good June 8 and leading division for 154 days in all. ... Going into playoffs, Texas was only current major league franchise that hadn't won a playoff series. Rangers had never won a playoff game at home, either. Then they beat Tampa Bay, which had AL's best record during regular season, in five games in first round when road team won every game — a first in major league history. Texas blew late lead at home to wild-card Yankees in ALCS opener but won Game 2 at Rangers Ballpark to snap 10-game postseason losing streak to New York. Rangers clinched first World Series berth with Game 6 victory at home before 51,404 frenzied fans under Friday night lights. Texas was eliminated from postseason by Yankees in previous three appearances — 1996, 1998 and '99. ... After Hamilton went 2 for 18 with two singles in division series, he was ALCS MVP, hitting .350 (7 for 20) with four home runs, seven RBIs and eight walks (five intentional, three in Game 6). ... Cruz also hit .350 in ALCS, with three doubles and two homers. He hit three homers in first round. ... Guerrero's only three RBIs in ALCS came in Game 6. ... After not starting ALCS opener, Moreland went 7 for 18 (.389) with three RBIs while starting final five games. ... Season began with team for sale, a drawn-out process that included bankruptcy before Hall of Fame pitcher and team president Nolan Ryan's group finally won auction in mid-August with bid valued at $590 million to buy club from Tom Hicks. There also was manager Ron Washington's admission in spring training that he used cocaine once during 2009 season. Washington offered to resign, but Ryan and general manager Jon Daniels stuck by him last year and again when it became public. Rangers have increased win total each year under Washington, who is in fourth season. ... Despite financial constraints, Texas acquired Lee from Seattle when it looked as though he was headed to Yankees. Daniels also made midsea son deals for Molina, Francoeur and Jorge Cantu. ... Daniels and Ryan have transformed team known for power hitting and poor pitching into athletic club with quality arms. Just look at how Rangers beat Rays and Yankees. ... Team ERA of 3.93 was club's lowest since 3.83 mark in 1990. ... Rangers led majors with .276 batting average, though 162 home runs were their fewest since 1992. ... Hamilton had MVP-caliber season, though he missed 24 games in September because of two broken ribs. ... Cruz was limited to 108 regular-season games because of hamstring problems, but became only second major leaguer with five extra-inning homers. Three ended games, and his clutch hitting continued in playoffs. ... Kinsler batting .342 with three homers and team-high nine RBIs in postseason. Andrus has sparked offense, stealing seven bases in playoffs, and Molina hit .333 with two homers and seven RBIs.

Giants: San Francisco (92-70) won NL West on season's final day for first division title since 2003, then edged wild-card Braves in first round, with all four games decided by one run. Pitching-rich Giants upset two-time reigning NL champion Phillies in NLCS, clinching with Game 6 victory in Philadelphia for third one-run win of series. San Francisco was outscored 20-19 by Phillies. ... San Francisco is back in World Series for first time since Barry Bonds and Co. came within six outs of title in Game 6 in 2002 against Angels, then lost Game 7 as well. Franchise hasn't won World Series since moving West — even with Hall of Famers such as Mays, Willie McCovey, Orlando Cepeda, Juan Marichal and Gaylord Perry. ... Ross, the August pickup off waivers from Florida, emerged as surprising postseason star and won NLCS MVP honors. He had three homers, three doubles and five RBIs against Phillies, going 7 for 20 in series. ... Giants have plenty of quality arms in bullpen and most have delivered under postseason pressure. Wilson saved five games in playoffs and did not allow an earned run in nine innings. He closed out Ryan Howard and Phillies in Game 6, capping outstanding effort by entire 'pen. ... San Francisco manager Bruce Bochy had lost 10 of 11 postseason games before this run, all with San Diego. He finally got over hump in fourth year managing Giants after team stayed in wild-card race until mid-September in 2009. ... Giants made it this far in second full season of new managing partner Bill Neukom — the hands-on, bowtie-wearing, former Microsoft lawyer who replaced Peter Magowan. ... Lincecum, who came in for quick relief stint in Game 6 of NLCS on one day of rest, has been solid in his first postseason. He split two hyped-up matchups with Phillies ace Roy Halladay. ... General manager Brian Sabean boosted lineup with acquisitions all season, bringing in Burrell and Jose Guillen and giving them second chances. Guillen, left off postseason roster because of neck injury, has been noticeably absent during this ru n. Lefty-hitting infielder Mike Fontenot came over from Cubs and played in some key games in place of Freddy Sanchez. There were two new bullpen additions at the trade deadline, too: Ramirez and Lopez. ... Posey was called up in late May and initially put at first base to get his bat in lineup. Went back to his regular position at catcher after Molina was traded to Texas, and blossomed into leading contender for NL Rookie of the Year. ... Lincecum lost five straight starts in August, then returned to top form. ... Bochy had reputation for sticking with veterans in the past, but he benched CF Aaron Rowand and his $12 million salary in favor of unproven Torres, who sparked offense with speed and extra-base pop. Torres had emergency appendectomy Sept. 12 and missed 11 games.

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What To Watch For

— Mr. Lee. For starters, it's Lee again. This is the second straight year he will pitch the World Series opener, this time for Texas after winning Games 1 and 5 for Philadelphia last year against the Yankees. The free agent-to-be could easily wind up pitching for someone else next season, too. October ace is at his best under pressure, going 7-0 with a 1.26 ERA in eight postseason starts. He has 67 strikeouts and seven walks in 64 1-3 innings during those outings.

— Cody's Ride. Ross, who aspired to be a rodeo clown until switching to baseball at age 10, has been San Francisco's go-to guy in clutch situations. Can his tear at the plate continue? He's one of a handful of postseason first-timers on this roster, including Huff and Freddy Sanchez.

— Runnin' Rangers. Texas is 15 of 17 on stolen base attempts this postseason, and will run to get things going. Andrus even scored on a double steal in Game 2 of the ALCS, becoming the first player to steal home in the postseason since 2002. Hamilton had four stolen bases in the playoffs, and the Rangers should have no problem playing by NL rules — they led the AL with 53 sacrifice bunts.

— All The Right Moves. Bochy has used different combinations and substitution patterns to get the Giants this far. Whether it was starting Torres over Rowand in center field or sitting a struggling Sandoval in favor of playing Uribe at third and Renteria at shortstop, Bochy has displayed a perfect touch with this team.


Kelly Pavlik 'gets back to basics' by holing up in Pennsylvania: Boxing Insider

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The Youngstown boxer is aware he needs a dominating performance against Brian Vera on Nov. 13 to regain some of his luster.

kelly pavlik.JPGView full sizeFormer middleweight champ Kelly Pavlik receives a Colt McCoy jersey Tuesday at a news conference at the Friars Club in Manhattan on Tuesday to promote his Nov. 13 bout against Brian Vera at Dallas Cowboys Stadium. The bout will be part of the pay-per-view televised undercard for the super welterweight title bout between Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito.
You would not want to refer to Kelly Pavlik as a groundhog. But like the famous underground animal from Pennsylvania, the former middleweight champion from Youngstown has been holed up for a month in California, Pa., outside of Pittsburgh.

He emerged Tuesday in New York for a news conference to hype his Nov. 13 bout against Brian Vera at Dallas Cowboys Stadium as part of the pay-per-view undercard for the super welterweight title bout between Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito.

It has been a little more than three years since Pavlik's title-winning effort against Jermain Taylor. And it has been a rough two years while losing to Bernard Hopkins, suffering serious elbow and hand injuries, dealing with weight issues and finally losing his 160-pound titles to Sergio Martinez in April.

Harping on the past was not what Pavlik or his trainer, Jack Loew, wanted to talk about during a conference call.

"I had bad luck with some things," said Pavlik (36-2, 32 KOs), looking to become a factor in the ring once again. "I lost two fights against top guys. I was not getting away, didn't get away from things."

But both Pavlik and Loew said getting away from their usual training ground in Youngstown was about "getting back to basics." They said moving the camp two hours away from home was not like relocating to Florida or Las Vegas, which they did for a time for other bouts.

"We had to get back to basics," said Loew, the only trainer Pavlik has ever had. "We were training more for the weight, working this kid out four and five times a day, rather than training for Martinez."

Pavlik said he had to lose nearly 10 pounds three days before the Martinez bout and was sapped of energy. After drawing even through eight rounds, he lost the final four rounds on all three scorecards to drop the unanimous decision.

It's why the bout against Vera (17-5, 11 KOs) was set at the catch weight of 164 pounds.

"That four pounds make a difference," Pavlik said. "It came to a point there was nothing left to sweat."

Pavlik, 28, is aware he needs a dominating performance to regain some of his luster. He left his options open as to whether to continue as a middleweight or move up to the 168-pound super middleweight division.

"I'd definitely like to regain my middleweight titles," he said. "There are a lot of guys at 168, so anything can open up."

2011 Golden Gloves: The dates have been set for next year's annual Cleveland Golden Gloves amateur boxing tournament, with a new site for the preliminaries. The first three nights of the tournament will be held at the Brook Park Recreation Center, 17400 Holland Road, on April 1, 2 and 9. The finals will once again be staged at Cleveland Browns Stadium on April 16.

In recent years, the opening rounds of the tournament were held either at the West Side Masonic Temple or the Euclid Sportsplex.

Date in history: Rocky Marciano knocked out Joe Louis in the eighth round on Oct. 26, 1951. It was Louis' last bout.

Big chance: Promoter Don King has lined up a WBC heavyweight elimination match between Cleveland's Ray Austin (28-4-4, 18 KOs) and Cuba's Odlanier Solis (16-0, 12 KOs), the 2004 Olympic gold medalist.

The bout will be held at AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami on Dec. 17. The winner becomes the mandatory challenger for Vitali Klitschko (41-2, 38 KOs).

Austin, who turns 40 on Sunday, did not did not put up much of a challenge against IBF/WBO champ Wladimir Klitschko (55-3, 49 KOs) in March 2007. He was stopped in the second round.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: jmaxse@plaind.com, 216-999-5168


Cleveland Cavaliers will win how many games? Poll

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The Cleveland Cavaliers open the 2010-11 season tonight against the Boston Celtics. It's the first time since the 2003-04 season the Cavaliers will be without LeBron James. So now that he is gone (and so is Shaquille O'Neal, and Zydrunas Ilgauskas), how many games will the Cavaliers win? Yahoo Sports has the Cavaliers winning 12 games. Cleveland Plain Dealer...

jamisonjk.jpgAntawn Jamison

The Cleveland Cavaliers open the 2010-11 season tonight against the Boston Celtics. It's the first time since the 2003-04 season the Cavaliers will be without LeBron James. So now that he is gone (and so is Shaquille O'Neal, and Zydrunas Ilgauskas), how many games will the Cavaliers win?

Yahoo Sports has the Cavaliers winning 12 games. Cleveland Plain Dealer columnist Terry Pluto predicts the Cavaliers will win 46.

Live chat: Talk Cavaliers with Mary Schmitt Boyer at noon

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Cavaliers season is here! How will they fare in the post-LeBron area? Who will step up? And can Dan Gilbert deliver on his promise of an NBA Championship? Mary Schmitt Boyer will answer those questions and more in a live season tipoff chat today at noon.

Mary Schmitt BoyerChat with Mary Schmitt Boyer at noon.

Cavaliers season is here!

How will they fare in the post-LeBron area? Who will step up? Can Dan Gilbert deliver on his promise of an NBA Championship?

Mary Schmitt Boyer will answer those questions and more in a live season tipoff chat today at noon.

You can jump in the chat room and ask your questions as well as interact with other users and respond to Mary's remarks, or you can just listen. The chat will also be made available shortly after its completion in mp3 format.

Starting next week, Mary will be chatting live with you at her regularly scheduled day and time Thursdays at noon. Remember, you can also send her questions to Hey, Mary! Those answers will appear in the newspaper and online every Sunday.

 


Troy Smith, Cleveland native, will start for 49ers on Sunday in London

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Quarterback Troy Smith will start for the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday against the Denver Broncos in London. It will be Smith's first start since he started two games during his rookie year with the Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens released Smith, a graduate of Glenville High School, in September. Coach Mike Singletary made this move because regular starter Alex...

troy smith.jpgFormer Baltimore Ravens QB Troy Smith will start on Sunday for the 49ers.

Quarterback Troy Smith will start for the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday against the Denver Broncos in London. It will be Smith's first start since he started two games during his rookie year with the Baltimore Ravens.

The Ravens released Smith, a graduate of Glenville High School, in September. Coach Mike Singletary made this move because regular starter Alex Smith is injured. Singletary also moved Troy Smith past No. 2 starter David Carr, according to reporter Matt Barrows of The Sacramento Bee.

Singletary cited Smith's leadership, something he displayed while winning the Heisman Trophy at Ohio State and later with the Baltimore Ravens, as a prime reason for the move. He said he thought Smith knew enough of the offense but conceded that this week's practice - the first time Smith has worked with the first-team offense - will be revealing.

 

 



Where has Randy Lerner been? Browns Comment of the Day

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"Where was he a week ago when two of his players were almost "beheaded"? I would have liked to hear Randy defend his players "in public" to the powers to be in the NFL." -banks56

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In response to an article posted on cleveland.com detailing Randy Lerner's praise for Mike Holmgren, user banks56 asks:

Where was he a week ago when two of his players were almost "beheaded"? I would have liked to hear Randy defend his players "in public" to the powers to be in the NFL.



LeBron might have had a better team in Cleveland: Cavs Comment of the Day

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"It might turn out that James did have a more well-rounded team here than he'll have in Miami. Sorry, Miami, it's true. The Heat have no depth." -Zongo

lebron-heat-loss.jpg

In response to LeBron James losing his debut with the Miami Heat, cleveland.com user Zongo comments:

It might turn out that James did have a more well-rounded team here than he'll have in Miami. Sorry, Miami, it's true. The Heat have no depth. Just wait until Wade goes down for 6 weeks. That will be a disaster. James is still the best player on his team but it's not crunch time yet, either.



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