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Which remaining Browns game is most likely to be a win? (poll)

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The Browns have 11 games left. Which one is most likely to be a Browns win?

CLEVELAND, Ohio - The Browns are 0-5 for just the fourth time in franchise history. Previous 0-5 starts have led to records of 5-11 (2012), 2-14 (1999) and 3-11 (1975).

Many people try to predict which games a team will win before the season. But now that we have some data on the Browns and the rest of the NFL, which remaining game is most likely to be a win for the Browns?

Keep in mind that just one team - the 2008 Lions - has gone winless in a 16-game season. Here's the rest of the schedule and each opponent's current record:

Week 6:  at Titans (2-3)

Week 7: at Bengals (2-3)

Week 8: vs. Jets (1-4)

Week 9: vs. Cowboys (4-1)

Week 10: at Ravens (3-2)

Week 11: vs. Steelers (4-1)

Week 12: vs. Giants (2-3)

Week 13: Bye week

Week 14: vs. Bengals (2-3)

Week 15: at Bills (3-2)

Week 16: vs. Chargers (1-4)

Week 17: at Steelers (4-1)

Check out the poll below and let us know what you think. You can explain you answer in the comment section.


Who made the finals of Best High School Marching Band contest? Find out Wednesday at 10 a.m. live on Facebook (video)

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The two bands that advanced to the championship round in cleveland.com's contest to find the best high school marching band in Greater Cleveland will be announced Wednesday morning on Facebook.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Tune in for a Facebook Live video Wednesday at 10 a.m. to find out which bands advanced to the championship round in cleveland.com's contest to crown the best high school marching band in Greater Cleveland.

Voting in the two semifinals polls ended Wednesday morning at 7 a.m. Voting results were hidden for the last 24 hours to build suspense.

"Best of" reporters Brenda Cain and Hannah Drown will be on cleveland.com's Facebook page at 10 a.m. for a live video revealing the two bands that will square off in the finals. See the video here:

Voting in the finals will start Thursday at 7 a.m.

The remainder of the contest will go as follows (votes do not carry over from previous rounds):

Oct. 13-21: Voting in the final round to determine the winner of Greater Cleveland's Best High School Marching Band contest. For this last round, voting will end Friday, Oct. 21 at 7 a.m.

This Friday, cleveland.com reporters will be at the final two bands' football game performances for videos, photos and feature content for the website.

Cleveland.com's "Best of" team will also visit the winning band during its Oct. 21 game and present the band with an award.

Check back to cleveland.com/best throughout the contest for ongoing coverage.

How good is Ohio State's defense? 'A bunch' of first-round NFL talent, says Greg Schiano

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Ohio State's new co-defensive coordinator sees NFL talent on the Buckeyes defense.

Nick Bosa's advice to injured Ohio State commit Trevon Grimes: 'Take rehab as seriously as possible'

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"I told him to take rehab as seriously as possible, even when it's the early stages, because that's when it's the most important," Bosa said. Watch video

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State has had a verbal commitment from a five-star prospect from Fort Lauderdale (Fla.) St. Thomas Aquinas in each of its last two classes.

Both of them tore their ACLs. 

First, it was Nick Bosa, the top-rated player in Ohio State's 2016 recruiting class who saw his high school career premature ended because of the injury. Now a true freshman with the Buckeyes, Bosa overcame that injury and is now an important part of the team's defensive line rotation. 

So Bosa is the perfect person to reach out to five-star wide receiver Trevon Grimes, one of Ohio State's most influential commitments in its 2017 class. 

Bosa is Grimes' former teammate and suffered the same exact injury, so Bosa's message was simple: I've been there. 

"I told him to take rehab as seriously as possible, even when it's the early stages, because that's when it's the most important," Bosa said. 

Rated the No. 3 wide receiver in the 2017 recruiting class in the 247Sports composite rankings, Grimes injured his knee during the high-profile game at Las Vegas (Nev.) Bishop Gorman two weeks ago. Before the injury, Grimes caught a huge touchdown. 

The 6-foot-3, 202-pound Grimes has already had surgery and is the beginning stages of his rehab. Ohio State is hoping his recovery will go as well as Bosa's. 

"He's doing good," Bosa said of Grimes. "He seems to have high spirits, but I know it's tough. For a guy like him, he'll be back next year. I think it's easier for lighter skill players to come back from it just because there's less weight on it and you can get the rehab going.

"I called him. He seems well. I see his SnapChat every day, he seems like the same personality, as happy as can be. He'll be alright." 

Toronto Blue Jays fans snatch up downtown Cleveland hotel rooms in advance of ALCS

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By Tuesday morning, Blue Jays fans had snatched up nearly every available hotel room in downtown Cleveland for the start of the American League Championship Series this Friday.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Toronto fans moved fast.

Just after the third out in the bottom of the ninth at Boston's Fenway Park on Monday night, hotel reservations started pouring into Northeast Ohio. By Tuesday morning, Blue Jays fans had snatched up nearly every available hotel room in downtown Cleveland for the start of the American League Championship Series this Friday.

"These playoff games are amazing for what they do for Cleveland," said Bob Megazzini, general manager at the Westin Cleveland Downtown.

Laurel Keller, vice president at Cleveland's Hotel & Leisure Advisors, took a quick survey of downtown hotel occupancy early Tuesday. What she and a colleague found: Nearly every hotel in the downtown area was booked solid.

Those few hotels that had some vacancies - the Renaissance, for example, had at least a handful of rooms available on Tuesday night -- were fetching prices far above average ($425 and up at the Renaissance).

According to Megazzini, sellout baseball games are more lucrative for hotels than sellout basketball -- in part because baseball stadiums hold many more fans than basketball arenas (36,000 at Progressive Field, for example, compared to 20,500 at The Q).

"We're lucky it's not a Browns weekend this weekend," said Megazzini.

Ronnie Collins, director of sales and marketing at the new 600-room Hilton Cleveland Downtown, said the hotel booked up just after Monday night's game ended.

"I was hanging on every pitch," said Collins, fully aware that reservations would take off as soon as the game was over. The Hilton, too, tried to stimulate demand in the Toronto market, quickly sending out emailed sales pitches to Hilton Honors members in that city.

"It's an easy trip for those Blue Jays fans," he said.

Toronto, about 300 miles from Cleveland, is an easy trip for Indians fans, too, who might be considering a Canadian getaway early next week to witness the third, fourth and (potentially) fifth games in the series.

A quick check of hotel availability in Toronto for early next week showed several properties near the Rogers Centre already sold out for Monday; numerous downtown hotels, however, still had availability (check seetorontonow.com for information).

In this best-of-seven series, games six and seven (if necessary) will be back in Cleveland, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 21 and 22.

Megazzini said the hotelier in him likes these series to go their full length. The fan in him, however, prefers quick Cleveland victories.

Boston Red Sox fans, he said, nearly filled up the Westin for a couple of nights last week. Many of those same fans likely would have returned to Cleveland this week if the series had gone to a fifth game instead of ending in a three-game Indians sweep.

"From a business standpoint, it would have been nice," said Megazzini. "But I don't know if my heart could have handled that."

How Braxton Beverly came out of nowhere to be Ohio State basketball's newest commit

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Beverly is a three-star point guard in the 2017 recruiting class. Watch video

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The last time Ohio State basketball got a player out of Kentucky, things went pretty well.

So prepare yourself for one year of Braxton Beverly before he heads off to play for the Philadelphia 76ers in 2018. Just kidding. No disrespect to Beverly, but he's not D'Angelo Russell.

The good news is nobody expects him to be. That's not what Thad Matta recruited him to be. The Buckeyes recruited him to be a steady, multi-year point guard who embraces the role of leading a team and wearing different hats to help get the program back to where Matta and everyone else involved wants it to be. 

"They think I can come in and lead the team," Beverly, who committed to Ohio State's 2017 recruiting class on Monday, told cleveland.com on Tuesday night.

"Hopefully bring in a hard-working attitude, be leader on and off the court and hopefully lead them on some NCAA Tournament runs while I'm there."

His commitment came as a surprise, because he wasn't a player with the kind of public recruitment we're accustomed to seeing. He quietly officially visited over the weekend, and announced his commitment on Monday.

So how did this under-the-radar kid from Hargrave Military Academy in Virginia end up part of this recruiting class? Well, partly by way of the Mid-American Conference.

Beverly was originally signed with Miami (Ohio) in the 2016 recruiting class, but asked for his release before his freshman season began and stayed at Hargrave for a post-graduate year.

Ohio State was familiar with Beverly by way of recruiting his former Hargave teammate, Derek Funderburk, in the 2016 recruiting class. But Matta and his staff couldn't have contact with Beverly until he was officially released from his letter with Miami earlier this year. Once he was released, Ohio State started recruiting him.

"I had a good relationship with (Miami)," Beverly said. "Once I signed, once I talked to my family about it, the more I thought about it I just felt like Miami wasn't the place I needed to be. I felt like I wasn't going to be a factor there."

The Kentucky native was then recruited by Ohio State, Clemson, South Florida, Saint Louis and George Washington before committing to the Buckeyes.

"I (visited Ohio State) knowing that it was my favorite school out of any school I was talking to," Beverly said. "It seemed like a great opportunity before I even went there, but when I went there it sealed the deal."

Ohio State basketball scholarship chart

So Ohio State has its second player from Kentucky in the last four years, but Beverly's not coming to be Russell. Though they did play against each other coming up through the Kentucky AAU scene.

Beverly, in fact, is more of Kentucky high school legend than Russell. He once scored 23 points in a state tournament game as a seventh-grader on the varsity team in front of 13,000 people at the University of Kentucky's Rupp Arena.

Last year at Hargrave, Beverly averaged 20.1 points and 6.4 assists per game. He also broke Terry Rozier's school record for points in a game when he dropped 70. You can see the highlights from that game in the video above.

But Beverly doesn't fancy himself just as a scorer. He feels he's a complete point guard who can help Ohio State however Matta sees fit.

"I feel like once I prove to him that I can run the team, he's just gonna turn it over to me," Beverly said.

"Once I met Coach Matta, me and him clicked instantly. We have the same vision, same goals, same work ethic. I feel like he's definitely gonna get the best out of of me and take my game to the next level."

Wisconsin, Ohio State and the rest of Big Ten football standings all-time and in recent history

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See all-time Big Ten standings for various eras. Ohio State is No. 1 throughout. Michigan State and Wisconsin have been near the top in recent history.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Michigan is Ohio State's chief rival but in modern times Wisconsin is almost right up there in providing problems for the Buckeyes.

In fact, if the modern era is defined as since Woody Hayes last coached OSU in 1978, Wisconsin (11-21 since then) ranks second behind only Michigan (16-20-1) for wins against the Buckeyes.

The series has not been so dominating in recent history, with Ohio State winning seven of the last eight meetings with Wisconsin.

But with Saturday's meeting of nationally ranked teams approaching, it is worth a look to see how Wisconsin and the rest of the Big Ten have stacked up over time.

For that, we decided to calculate all-time Big Ten records for various time periods of interest.

Here are the overall records.

Notes: Big Ten championship games are not included in official league standings; games later vacated because of NCAA penalties were not removed.

Big Ten records since Urban Meyer - 2012 - present

SchoolWinsLossesPct.
Ohio State 33 1 .971
Michigan State 25 9 .735
Wisconsin 24 10 .706
Nebraska 22 12 .647
Iowa 21 14 .600
Michigan 21 14 .600
Penn State 18 17 .514
Northwestern 16 18 .471
Minnesota 13 21 .382
Indiana 9 25 .265
Illinois 6 28 .176
Maryland 6 12 .333
Purdue 6 28 .176
Rutgers 4 15 .211

Big Ten records since Nebraska joined in 2011

SchoolWinsLossesPct.
Ohio State 36 6 .857
Michigan State 32 10 .762
Wisconsin 30 12 .714
Michigan 27 16 .628
Nebraska 27 15 .643
Iowa 25 18 .581
Penn State 24 19 .558
Northwestern 19 23 .452
Minnesota 15 27 .357
Purdue 10 32 .238
Indiana 9 33 .214
Illinois 8 34 .190
Maryland 6 12 .333
Rutgers 4 15 .211

Big Ten records since Penn State joined in 1993

SchoolWinsLossesTiesPct.
Ohio State 149 36 1 .804
Michigan 124 63 0 .663
Wisconsin 116 67 3 .632
Penn State 114 73 0 .610
Michigan State 102 83 1 .551
Iowa 100 86 1 .537
Northwestern 81 105 0 .435
Purdue 75 108 3 .411
Minnesota 61 125 0 .328
Illinois 57 128 1 .309
Indiana 43 143 0 .231
Nebraska 27 15 0 .643
Maryland 6 12 0 .333
Rutgers 4 15 0 .211

Big Ten records since Michigan State joined in 1953

SchoolWinsLossesTiesPct.
Ohio State 374 100 9 .784
Michigan 341 140 9 .705
Michigan State 268 203 9 .568
Iowa 240 231 11 .509
Wisconsin 233 246 14 .487
Purdue 225 250 11 .474
Illinois 196 279 14 .415
Minnesota 195 290 8 .404
Northwestern 158 330 5 .326
Indiana 136 333 6 .293
Penn State 114 73 0 .610
Nebraska 27 15 0 .643
Maryland 6 12 0 .333
Rutgers 4 15 0 .211

All-time Big Ten records

SchoolWinsLossesTiesPct.
Ohio State 497 172 24 .734
Michigan 494 200 18 .706
Wisconsin 357 371 41 .491
Illinois 339 412 31 .453
Minnesota 338 384 28 .469
Purdue 322 385 31 .457
Iowa 316 367 25 .464
Northwestern 268 481 21 .362
Michigan State 268 203 9 .568
Indiana 202 483 24 .302
Chicago 120 99 14 .545
Penn State 114 73 0 .610
Nebraska 27 15 0 .643
Maryland 6 12 0 .333
Rutgers 4 15 0 .211

Search this database to find more information on each school or season.

Click here to load this Caspio Cloud Database

A dinner party for four in Cleveland sports? -- Bud vs. Doug

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Cleveland.com columnists Bud Shaw and Doug Lesmerises argue a meaty topic in today's Prepare for List Off video: Which Cleveland sports figures would you like to invite to dinner? Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio - You've won an auction item.

OK, that assumes you do charitable stuff and are a productive part of the community.

The auction item you bid on is dinner for four.

You get to invite any three Cleveland sports figures.

The "who" is what we debate today, not the "when" or the "where." Just don't pick a food court.

Also, I know you'd like to put me on your list. But, sorry, I'm busy that night.

I believe that's the night I rotate my shoe trees.

Doug, on the other hand, is always available. He stares at his cell phone all day long just hoping somebody calls. He doesn't even care if it's a wrong number.

So what's your list?

Ours are part of the hot, new, talk-of-the-town series, Prepare for List Off, a video debate between cleveland.com columnist Doug Lesmerises and myself.

I want information as my appetizer, entree and dessert. Doug has a different agenda.

Watch the video and then let us know who got it right.


Fairview football set to part ways with coach Tom Narducci

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Tom Narducci will finish the regular season before stepping down as the Fairview football coach.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Tom Narducci is preparing to resign as the Fairview football coach.

The news that Narducci plans to resign from his coaching position comes shortly before the end of the regular season. 


"The administration of Fairview Park wishes Tom the best in his future endeavors," stated athletic director and assistant principal Chris Honeck in an email.


Narducci is a teacher in the social studies department since starting in 2011.


He joined Fairview after coaching at Hudson for 18 seasons and last season recorded his 200th career win defeating Brooklyn, 28-7. Narducci's record at Fairview stands at 21-26.


The Warriors (2-5 overall) will play their next two games on the road at Columbia on Friday and Lutheran West on Oct. 28. Fairview was mathematically eliminated from the Division IV playoffs.


This story will be updated as more information becomes available.


How fitting: Cleveland Indians to face former team president Mark Shapiro with World Series berth at stake

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As the Indians implausibly stand one step away from their first World Series appearance in 19 years, they'll clash with an organization captained by Mark Shapiro, Cleveland's former head honcho. Shapiro relocated north of the border at the end of last season after 24 years with the Tribe. Watch video

BOSTON -- Eventually, the script is going to involve too many fitting story angles for Hollywood to take it seriously.

After an injury bug ravaged their roster, the Indians held strong to secure their first division title in nine years. A chaotic sequence of events during the final weekend of the regular season handed the Tribe home-field advantage for their opening postseason series against Boston. Terry Francona directed the Indians past his former franchise, the Red Sox, and forced David Ortiz from the field at Fenway Park for the final time.

Now, as the Indians implausibly stand one step away from their first World Series appearance in 19 years, they'll clash with an organization captained by Mark Shapiro, Cleveland's former head honcho. Shapiro relocated north of the border at the end of last season after 24 years with the Tribe.

Another postseason series, another juicy storyline.

Shapiro's family finally moved in to its new abode in mid-August, when the Blue Jays and Indians played a thrilling three-game set at Progressive Field. Because of that, Shapiro couldn't make the trip. He missed Tyler Naquin's game-ending inside-the-park home run and Jose Ramirez's timely two-run blast.

He'll get a chance to make another venture or two to Cleveland, though.

"How could it be any other way than that?" said Indians owner Paul Dolan. "I'm actually thrilled about that. I'm happy for Mark. It'll be fun to battle with him and spend some time with him in the process, too."

In an interview with cleveland.com earlier this year, Shapiro said he was relieved that the Indians and Blue Jays only met six times.

"They aren't guys I want to pull against," he said of his former team. "It's not a city I want to root against."

Conversation with Mark Shapiro

Well, that number might double over the next 10 days when mentor meets apprentice.

"For both of us to advance to the ALCS is really a dream come true," said Chris Antonetti, the Indians' president of baseball operations. "At a minimum, we know one of the two of us is going to end up in the World Series. Obviously, right now, I've got a strong preference on which one, but I've got an immense amount of respect for Mark and Ross [Atkins] and the leadership group there. I wouldn't be standing here if it weren't for Mark."

Shapiro hired Atkins, a longtime Indians executive, to serve as Toronto's general manager. The initial front-office reshuffling received plenty of backlash from the fan base. Former GM Alex Anthopoulos made a slew of trades last season, which helped to vault the Blue Jays to their first postseason appearance in 22 years. They bowed out against the Royals in the ALCS and, when Shapiro took the reigns, Anthopoulos exited.

Shapiro took a ton of heat.

"Listen, the situation is not what I thought it would be when I was evaluating the decision," he told cleveland.com before the season. "It's not what I imagined it would be when you think about leaving someplace after 24 years. These are not jobs you do with popularity or external validation being your motivation. Otherwise, you set yourself up for a very fragile existence.

"It was important for me to try to understand that so I could effectively communicate and manage through it. But once the situation was what it was, it was, 'This is the situation. These are the circumstances. I need to manage through it. I need to keep going.'"

Shapiro's tenure in Toronto had dramatic start

Toronto's roster -- tweaked here and there -- has proven skilled enough to at least match last season's run. The Blue Jays boast a deep, powerful lineup and a steady rotation. They supplemented their bullpen with several midseason acquisitions.

"They're a tough task," said Tribe reliever Cody Allen. "They're a tough assignment. And they're playing really good baseball right now, but so are we. We're excited for it."

The Blue Jays bounced Baltimore from the AL Wild Card Game before they dismissed the Rangers in three games in the division series. Before that, they helped the Indians obtain home-field advantage for the ALDS with a pair of victories in Boston during the final weekend.

That's just a matter of old friends lending a hand. How fitting.

"It's going to be a really good matchup," said Indians pitching coach Mickey Callaway. "Obviously, an unbelievable lineup. We're going to have to do our homework and make sure we're prepared going in. It's going to be a great challenge for us."

Two finalist marching bands revealed in Best High School Marching Band contest

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The two schools heading to the championship round of the Best High School Marching Band contest have been named.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - After one week and more than 105,000 votes, the semifinal round of the competition is complete, taking four bands down to the final two.

Voting in cleveland.com's Best High School Marching Band contest ended Wednesday morning at 7 a.m. The two finalists that will battle it out are Berea-Midpark and Cuyahoga Falls.

Voting in the championship round begins Thursday at 7 a.m. and will close Friday, Oct. 21 at 7 a.m. Remember, votes are permitted hourly and they must come from the United States.

The "Best of" team will be at both bands' football games Friday night so look out for a new feature on the bands early next week.

In the meantime, if you want to see the final two bands in action this week:

  • Berea-Midpark: The team hosts North Olmsted on Friday at 7 p.m.
  • Cuyahoga Falls: The team plays at Stow on Friday at 7 p.m.

Here is video from a Facebook Live announcing the finalists early Wednesday:

Congratulations to the two bands that moved forward and a hearty thank you to all the schools whose bands took part in the semifinal round.

Kent State quarterback Nick Holley can do it all: MAC Minute (video)

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Kent State's Nick Holley has played tailback, wide receiver and punt returner for the Golden Flashes. Now he is the starting quarterback. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Nick Holley is the jack of all trades for Kent's State's offense, and currently the master of being quarterback for the Golden Flashes.

The 5-11, 200-pound redshirt junior began his career at Kent as a tailback, then was switched to wide receiver. After early season injuries sidelined Kent's top two quarterbacks, Holley inherited the job. He has also returned punts this season when he can catch his breath.

The native of Toledo, along with twin brother Nate, a starting safety, anchor both sides of the ball for a team that stands at 2-4, 1-1 with a road game upcoming against the Miami RedHawks.

Nick Holley's two games at quarterback have given the Flashes a spark. He delivered a combined 402 yards of offense before coming up a minute short of an upset over rival Akron.

He followed that with a 224-yard rushing performance on the road at Buffalo, scoring four TDs. He was named the MAC East Offensive Player of the Week after both performances.

After two games in what is little more than an option offense, Holley has climbed among the MAC scoring leaders with seven touchdowns; five rushing and two passing.

Holley could add to his growing reputation if he can lead Kent to a victory at Miami. It would mark the first time KSU has won back-to-back MAC games since 2013, and the first time Kent has won back-to-back MAC road games since 2012.

What Canadian, national media is saying about Cleveland Indians vs. Toronto Blue Jays ALCS matchup

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Take a look at what Canadian and national writers are saying about the Indians vs. Blue Jays ALCS matchup. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- With Game 1 of the American League Championship Series between the Toronto Blue Jays and Cleveland Indians set for Friday at Progressive Field, here is what news outlets from Canada and the American national media are saying about the matchup.

TORONTO MEDIA

Toronto Star baseball columnist Richard Griffin took a moment to compare the 2015 Blue Jays squad, which also reached the ALCS, to this year's group. Griffin gives the 2015 Blue Jays the edge in defense, and bullpen, but says this year's lineup, starting rotation and a more experienced manager John Gibbons, have the edge. 

Griffin also briefly noted the unique situation Toronto and Cleveland find themselves in, facing each other in the semifinals of both the NBA and MLB postseasons in the same year. Noted Blue Jays backer (and Cavaliers foil) Kyle Lowry had a front-row seat for Toronto's Game 3 win against Texas, Griffin said. 

And then there's columnist Bruce Arthur's take on the series, a tongue-in-cheek "Oh, poor Cleveland" rant that relies heavy on the tired old river-burning jabs and ends with a wayward admission that there's "no real rivalry between us," at least not yet. 

*Note: Don't be put off by the way Toronto sportswriters spell "defence" when talking about that aspect of the game. They're Canadian. It's their way.

Meanwhile, the Toronto Sun reports that Blue Jays broadcaster Jerry Howarth will not be using the word "Indians" when he calls the ALCS, and he has not uttered the nickname on the air in 25 years. 

The Sun also reported that Blue Jays manager John Gibbons says lefty reliever Francisco Liriano could be available to pitch in the ALCS despite being injured by a line drive in Game 2 against Texas.

NATIONAL MEDIA

ESPN's Tim Kurkjian says the ALCS is a tight series to call, noting that the Tribe's lineup can hurt you one through nine, and Terry Francona has his starting rotation set to maximize his bullpen. But the Blue Jays lineup has come around in the postseason, shaking off a slow September. Kurkjian picks the Indians to win in seven games.


SBNation's Grant Brisbee says the Blue Jays are "absolutely frightening right now" and should be feared in the playoffs. Brisbee notes the Jays slumbering offense has picked up, and asks "What if J.A. Happ and Marco Estrada are really this good?"

Bleacher Report's Zach Rymer says the ALCS will go through Tribe reliever Andrew Miller, offering a statistical analysis courtesy of Baseball Reference and FanGraphs to emphasize what Toronto will need to do in order to succeed against the Indians' big lefty. 

Sports Illustrated's Jay Jaffe, previewing the matchup, gives the Indians an edge in team speed, and notes teams with home-field advantage in postseason best-of-sevens with a 2-3-2 format have won 55% of those series (83 of 151).

Ryan Craig ready to celebrate and defend AHL title: Cleveland Monsters 2016 (video)

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The Cleveland Monsters will raise their American Hockey League championship banner on Friday night at The Q. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Ryan Craig did not have to wait nearly as long as Cleveland sports fans who had not seen a championship by a professional sports team in this city since 1964.

Craig was the team captain for the Lake Erie Monsters, who won the American Hockey League Calder Cup championship in June, just weeks before the Cleveland Cavaliers won the NBA championship. The Monsters, now renamed the Cleveland Monsters, are an affiliate of the Columbus Blue Jackets of the NHL and were new to town last year after the AHL realigned.

Craig won his first title after 14 years on the ice, but he knows the glow of a championship will quickly fade after Friday night's pregame ceremony in celebration of last year's title.

"We're excited about what we accomplished last year but that's last year," said Craig. "The guys that are coming back know how hard we worked to get into that position to win a championship and they're excited to do it again. The challenge ahead is to pull the new guys along, but there's some fresh faces here that want to [win a title]."

But remembering and celebrating last year's title is a reason many fans will come out to The Q at 7 p.m. for Friday's season opener against Rockford IceHogs.

The Monsters will raise the Calder Cup Championship banner, and prior to the game, there's an outdoor Fan Fest on Gateway Plaza with the opportunity for fans to take a photo with the Calder Cup. The Cleveland Indians open the 2016 ALCS on Friday night against the Toronto Blue Jays at Progressive Field 

Monsters fans won't enjoy the celebration alone.

"I haven't gone through the title raising banner as defending champs, so it's exciting and a new challenge and a fresh start," Craig said. "We'll have a few minutes to reflect on last year when the banner is going up and share it with the great fans of Cleveland that support us. Hopefully we can go on that and keep having great crowds all year and keep winning hockey games."

Calder Cup

Craig and his teammates spent plenty of time with the Calder Cup trophy during the summer. The Calder Cup lived with Craig for two days at his lake house in Manitoba, Canada. He shared and celebrated the trophy with his friends and family.

He's certain the Calder Cup was celebrated in a variety of ways.

"Everyone that gets the Calder Cup washes it out pretty good because everything goes in it from guys' kids eating cereal and ice cream out of it to who knows what kind of booze was put in it," Craig said. " I'm sure it saw a lot of golf, was on a lot of boats, in the water and probably saw a lot of late nights. It's great to enjoy the cup and that's the fun part of it."

Browns guard Joel Bitonio will miss extended time with mid-foot injury

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Browns left guard Joel Bitonio will miss extended time with a mid-foot injury.

BEREA, Ohio -- Browns left guard Joel Bitonio with miss extended time with a mid-foot injury, the club said today.

It's another major blow for a Browns team ravaged by injuries this season.

Bitonio hurt the foot during Sunday's 33-13 loss to the Patriots, but it wasn't revealed until Wednesday.

Left tackle Joe Thomas acknowledged what a blow it is to lose Bitonio, who was having a Pro Bowl-caliber season.

"He's one of the best guards in the NFL,'' said Thomas.

The Browns claimed former first-round pick Jonathan Cooper off waivers from the Patriots Tuesday to provide depth in the wake of the injury.

Cam Erving, who's been out the past three games with a bruised lung, could be back at center this week, with the guards being John Greco and Alvin Bailey.


Briean Boddy-Calhoun made it out of one of America's most dangerous cities and hopes to inspire others to do the same

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Boddy-Calhoun came from Wilmington, Delaware, and worked his way to the NFL. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Wilmington, Delaware, is not an easy place to escape. Google the city and you won't scroll far before you find the headline "Murder Town USA." It appears on lists as one of the most dangerous cities in the country

Browns rookie cornerback Briean Boddy-Calhoun knows it. It's where he grew up. 

"My uncle says DE stands for Dead End because Delaware, it's a dead end," Boddy-Calhoun said. "No one makes it out." 

Boddy-Calhoun's mentor, Maurice "Bo" Hunter, knows how tough Wilmington is, too. He's lived there his whole life, save for when he played running back at the University of Akron in the late '90s. He's been teaching in Wilmington for 15 years. 

Hunter grew up in the Riverside projects, about six blocks from where Boddy-Calhoun grew up years later. He estimates that seven out of 100 kids made it out from his neighborhood. Things were even more bleak for Boddy-Calhoun's neighborhood, Hunter said.  

"Briean grew up in the area called Northside/Market Street," Hunter said. "I'm going to say in his area, for his age that I worked with, I'm going to say it's about four out of 100 making it out." 

"Drugs. Killing. My era was worse than his era," Boddy-Calhoun said.

Briean was determined to be one of the four, though. 

"Everyone's scared to leave," Boddy-Calhoun said. "For what reason? I don't know. But I know I wasn't scared to get out of there." 

All he needed was an opportunity.

***** 

Hunter knows a thing or two about good football players. He's sent numerous kids to college and even a few to the NFL through his 7-on-7 Stay Real Football Camp

So when he saw a 5-foot-9 kid named Briean Boddy break free during overtime of a high school basketball game and dunk in traffic, he knew he was seeing something special.  

"I looked up at my principal at the time and I said, 'If this kid plays defensive back, he's going straight to the NFL,'" Hunter said.  

Hunter saw Boddy-Calhoun again during Delaware's DFRC Blue-Gold Football All-Star game and he was even more impressed.  

Growing up, Boddy-Calhoun told his mother, Wendy Boddy, he was going to play in the NFL or NBA. He lived with his mother and stepfather -- whom Boddy-Calhoun said is "practically my real father." They've been together since Briean was about 9 months old. He also has multiple half-siblings.  

He spent weekends with his father, Dai-Shawn Calhoun, who also lived in Delaware.  

When Briean turned 5, he was supposed to go live with Dai-Shawn full-time, but that plan was put on hold when Briean says he "cried for three days straight" after he was dropped off with his father. The plan changed and Briean was going to make the move when he turned 8. 

That never happened. Dai-Shawn died in a car crash when Briean was 7. It's why his name is hyphenated now, something he changed in college.  

"I love my dad," Boddy-Calhoun said. "My dad was a great man. A lot of people tell me I'm just like him. He had a huge heart. He was all about helping other people out."  

Dealing with the death of his father was something that only got more difficult as he got older and understood more and more what he had lost.   

"It was tough. I got in trouble. Started doing stupid things. Stealing. Hanging out with the wrong crowd," he said.

It was also something that forced him to learn hard lessons and grow up quickly. 

"I learned early that you are your friends," he said. "The group you hang around, that's who you become. That's why I think I had to mature very early. I came into high school, not going to any parties. I don't do parties. I stay in the house. I watch movies. That's pretty much all I do."   

By the time he reached the summer after his senior year in high school he was planning to play football at Division III Wesley College in Dover, Delaware.

That plan changed, though, when Boddy-Calhoun showed up at Hunter's camp with a friend. It didn't take Hunter long to recognize that this is the kid he'd been seeing, thanks to a tattoo on Boddy-Calhoun's calf.  

"I said, 'Man, I think he's that dude,' " Hunter said. 

Hunter struck up a conversation with Boddy-Calhoun and learned that he had NFL aspirations. Hunter also knew Wesley College was not the way to get it done. 

For three straight days he walked up to Boddy-Calhoun in camp and told him, "You're not going to Wesley." 

Boddy-Calhoun finally bit on the third day. Hunter talked to his mom and stepdad and the wheels were in motion to get Briean into a better situation, one that could match his raw talent with a path to the game's highest level. 

Hunter knew a coach named Darian Dulin at Coffeyville Community College in Kansas. They had known each other since Dulin's days at Butler Community College, where Hunter consistently sent him players.  

Hunter sent Dulin Boddy-Calhoun's tape and told him to watch the whole thing.  

"I said, 'Dulin, I got a kid, this kid is way more talented than anybody I sent you,' " Hunter said.   

Dulin called back the next day and said he would offer him a full scholarship.  

Just like that, Boddy-Calhoun was out of Wilmington.  

Except there was a catch.  

"No one told me that you had to make the team (at Coffeyville)," Boddy-Calhoun said.  

The league in which Coffeyville played only allowed 12 out-of-state players on a roster, and Boddy-Calhoun was already late getting there.  

"All these other guys had been through spring ball. A lot of them had been through the summer workouts so we had a good feel for who our 12 were going to be," Dulin said, "and then here comes Briean Boddy-Calhoun and he just kind of changed the game."

Dulin and his staff initially thought they might use Boddy-Calhoun as a wide receiver, but quickly moved him to defensive back -- at the bottom of the depth chart. Dulin said that challenge could prove too daunting for some players to handle at the community college level.  

"None of that fazed Briean," Dulin said.  

Boddy-Calhoun was so confident in his abilities, in fact, that early in two-a-days he told Dulin that he only planned to be at Coffeyville for one season -- that he was going to get to a Division I school.  

Dulin responded by reminding him that, first, he had to make the team.  

"He's like, 'I know Coach. I'm going to make the team,' " Dulin said.  

He made the team and he didn't look back.  

"Second game I had two picks," Boddy-Calhoun said. "Third game I had another pick. Fourth game I had another pick. By the fifth game, no one threw my way again."  

Dulin was able to use his connections at the University of Minnesota to help his young star out. The Golden Gophers offered him an opportunity and Boddy-Calhoun jumped, even though there was potential that bigger offers could come.  

"I said the first school that offers me, that's where I'm going and Minnesota beat everybody to the punch," Boddy-Calhoun said.  

Briean Boddy-CalhounBriean Boddy-Calhoun helped form a dangerous defensive backfield for the University of Minnesota. 

It was there where he added the hyphenated Calhoun to his last name to honor his late father, and it's where he thrived, appearing in 38 games, intercepting 10 passes, including two he returned for touchdowns.

He had five interceptions his junior season and four his senior season after missing most of the 2013 season with a knee injury.

Boddy-Calhoun said he was 98 percent sure he would get drafted. Eric Murray, the cornerback who played on the other side at Minnesota went in the fourth round. Boddy-Calhoun went undrafted.  

"When he didn't get drafted, it was like a hurt feeling," Hunter said. "I said whoever picks this kid up, they've got a gem."  

Jacksonville thought enough of him to sign him as an undrafted free agent. He spent training camp there, but he knew enough by now that as roster cutdowns approached, nothing would come easy.  

"Hope for the best and expect the worst," he said. "The whole day, not even the last cut, but first cuts I was like, OK, you're getting cut today. Be prepared for that. Hope I don't, but let's be prepared for that."  

He survived the first round of cuts, but Jacksonville waived him Sept. 3. The Browns claimed him the next day. Three weeks later, he would return his first NFL interception for a touchdown against Miami.  

*****  

Having a nose for the football. It's something that has always stood out for Boddy-Calhoun.  

It showed during Hunter's 7-on-7 camp in high school.  

"He would say, 'I'm going to get an interception, I'm going to pick him off,'" Hunter said, "and he did it."  

It showed in college.  

"He did have a knack of getting around the ball or making an interception and you're like, 'Where did he come from? How did he get to that?' " Dulin said.  

"Against Ohio State (in 2014), he told his players, 'I'm going to get an interception. I've got to make something happen,'" Hunter said.  

He intercepted quarterback J.T. Barrett with the Gophers trailing 14-0 in the first quarter and returned the ball 56 yards. It led to Minnesota's first score. Later in the half, he forced a Buckeyes fumble that led to the game-tying score.  

Briean Boddy-Calhoun 

Boddy-Calhoun credits basketball -- the sport he played the most growing up - for developing his tenacity as a defender.  

"I think it comes down to a game at the park, one-on-one, five-on-five, don't let your guy beat you on game point," he said. "I bring that over into football and it's just man-to-man, zone, whatever it is, it's a whole bunch of one-on-ones and I just like to win my one-on-ones."  

He played late into the night at places in Wilmington like Rocky Park or the PAWL Boys & Girls Club. He played against grown men as a 14-year-old.   

"I really wanted to win, and I did everything I could to win and I think that kind of put me ahead of my age group playing basketball and football," he said.  

As for his ability with the ball in his hands, he credits players he looked up to as he came up in the game, players like Michael Vick and even a current teammate.  

"I really looked up to Terrelle Pryor," he said the day after his pick-six. "He doesn't know that. I wanted to be TP and Michael Vick."  

It turns out Boddy-Calhoun was an Ohio State fan growing up, the result of winning a basketball with the Buckeyes logo on it at a carnival when he was visiting his uncle in Columbus as a kid. After Pryor chose Ohio State, Boddy-Calhoun went on Comcast On Demand to watch his high school highlights.  

"My uncle, he said, 'You remind me of him, but you're just a whole lot shorter,' " he said.  

Now he's going against him in practice.  

"My first two weeks I went against him every day and we've done nothing but make each other better," Boddy-Calhoun said.  

*****  

Boddy-Calhoun has a degree in elementary education. He says it was inspired by Hunter, the man he still calls Coach Bo.  

"He meant everything," Boddy-Calhoun said. "Once I got down to Coffeyville, he would call me routinely. He would call me weekly just to check in on me, see how I'm doing mentally, spiritually, just to see how I'm doing. Every week he had some gem. He was giving me some gem. Make sure you're focused on this. Make sure you're in your books."  

Hunter, for his part, takes great pride in the man Boddy-Calhoun has become, even if he doesn't want to take much credit.  

"It gets me emotional because I'm happy," Hunter said. "I'm so happy for this young man."  

And even though Boddy-Calhoun has gotten out, it doesn't mean he hasn't -- or will stop -- going back to Wilmington. 

"I would like to be that bridge to show people that you can make it out and whatever it is you want to do, you can do," he said.  

He's inspired, in part, by his time at Coffeyville, where he found out teammates were getting offers from strong Division I programs, players he knew weren't better than guys he went against in Wilmington.  

"All I wanted to do at that time was run back home and tell everybody don't give up. Don't fall into this trap," he said. "You don't have to sell drugs. You need school. Stay in school."  

When he came out to train with Hunter this summer, Hunter says he tossed an NFL football to the defensive backs, local kids, who were there working out with him.  

"He says, 'Listen, I want you all to see me. See my height. See that I'm no different from you all. You've got an opportunity. You've got a chance.'"  

Even at 5-foot-9, even in Murder Town USA, getting out was never too big of a task for the man they call Boddy.

-----  

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The hot topic of the day: A fake fire in Cleveland -- Bud vs. Doug

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Cleveland.com columnists Bud Shaw and Doug Lesmerises tackle the hot topic of the day in their video debate series, Prepare for List Off. Today, appropriately enough, that topic is a fire. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio -  The river caught fire here once?

Except for the thousands of bad jokes since it happened in 1969, and the couple thousand Burning River Pale Ales I may or may not have consumed over the years, that's news to me.

So when TBS simulated a burning river in its American League Championship Series meme promoting the Indians vs. Blue Jays, we were taken aback at the network's originality and sense of humor.

TBS apologized but that didn't soothe Indians fans, some of whom already thought TBS spent too much time genuflecting in front of the Boston Red Sox and Big Papi during the American League Division Series.

There's a word for that ALCS meme. Maybe more than one. Maybe even some that can be used in public.

Cleveland.com columnist Doug Lesmerises came up with a short list of words for that graphic, as did I.

It's part of Prepare For List Off, a series of video debates in which we tackle the hot topics of the day and more.

Even hotter than a fake fire. 

You may have your own list.

Check out ours and then tell us who got it right?

Or - in this case, since there's so much agreement - who got it more right?

Kyrie Irving, Cleveland Cavaliers featured in NBA hype video titled '29' to tip off season

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To tip off the NBA's "This Is Why We Play" campaign, Kyrie Irving and the Cavaliers are featured in a brand new spot titled, "29," which takes viewers inside the mind of Irving as he prepares to start again and face 29 hungry teams, eager to claim the league's throne. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Cavaliers are back in the spotlight, with the target on them following last year's championship run. 

Are they ready to start anew and stay at the top?

To tip off the NBA's "This Is Why We Play" campaign, Kyrie Irving and the Cavaliers are featured in a brand new spot titled, "29," which addresses that question.

The 30-second video, complete with highlights and chilling music, takes viewers inside the mind of Irving as he prepares to start again and face 29 hungry teams, eager to claim the league's throne. 

"Winning was a challenge," Irving narrates during the 30-second spot. "But repeating will be too because there are 29 teams in our way again and they've all come back stronger."

The spot debuts today, ahead of the Cleveland Cavaliers' game against the Toronto Raptors. The contest, a rematch of the Eastern Conference Finals, is part of TNT's preseason doubleheader, which begins at 8 p.m. ET at Quicken Loans Arena. 

A second spot, "Zeroes," featuring Oklahoma City star Russell Westbrook premieres today as well. 

NFL 2016 Week 6: Today's game to watch, scoreboard, TV, previews (photos)

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Will the Atlanta Falcons remain as one of the surprise teams of the 2016 NFL season?

CLEVELAND, Ohio - The San Francisco 49ers are 1-4 and in desperate need of a spark and that means Colin Kaepernick will start at quarterback in place of Blaine Gabbert when the 49ers travel to the Buffalo Bills on Sunday.

Kaepernick has received most of his attention this season because of his pregame protest and his call for racial equality. Now as a starter, will the attention shift from Kaepernick's protest to his play on the field, or will his position as a starter shed more light on his social concerns?

Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton could miss his second game due to the concussion protocol. Newton saw limited action so far in practice.

The Week 6 schedule begins tonight when the Denver Broncos play at the San Diego Chargers, 8:25 on CBS.

Here's a look at some prime games to watch, along with the complete weekend schedule and TV. You can get scores and updates all weekend on our NFL Scoreboard.

PRIME MATCHUPS:

Philadelphia Eagles (3-1) at Washington (3-2)

  • When: 1 p.m. Sunday on FOX
  • Why watch: The winner of this game will take sole possession of second place in the division behind the Dallas Cowboys. Rookie QB Carson Wentz continues to lead the Eagles but will Washington QB Kirk Cousins step up after a subpar start to his season.

Dallas Cowboys (4-1) at Green Bay Packers (3-1)

  • When: 4:25 p.m. Sunday on FOX
  • Why watch: A Cowboys victory would probably secure the organization's decision on remaining with rookie QB Dak Prescott as the starter instead of Tony Romo. 

Atlanta Falcons (4-1) at Seattle (3-1)

  • When: 4:25 p.m. Sunday on FOX
  • Why watch: The Falcons continue to make noise as one of the surprise teams of the season. A victory over Seattle would solidify the Falcons as one of the top teams in the league. It's an especially big game for Falcons coach Dan Quinn, a former Seahawks defensive coordinator.

WEEK 6 SCHEDULE

(All times Eastern)

Tonight

Denver (4-1) at San Diego (1-4) 8:25 p.m., CBS

Sunday

San Francisco (1-4) at Buffalo (3-2), 1 p.m., FOX
Jacksonville (1-3) at Chicago (1-4), 1 p.m., CBS
Los Angeles (3-2) at Detroit (2-3), 1 p.m., FOX
Pittsburgh (4-1) at Miami (1-4), 1 p.m., CBS
Cleveland (0-5) at Tennessee (2-3), 1 p.m., CBS
Cincinnati (2-3) at New England (4-1), 1 p.m., CBS
Carolina (1-4) at New Orleans (1-3), 1 p.m., FOX
Baltimore (3-2) at New York Giants (2-3), 1 p.m., CBS
Philadelphia (3-1) at Washington (3-2), 1 p.m., FOX
Kansas City (2-2) at Oakland (4-1), 4:25 p.m., CBS
Dallas (4-1) at Green Bay (3-1), 4:25 p.m., FOX
Atlanta (4-1) at Seattle (3-1), 4:25 p.m., FOX
Indianapolis (2-3) at Houston (3-2), 8:30 p.m., NBC

Monday

New York Jets (1-4) at Arizona (2-3), 8:30 p.m., ESPN

Toronto Raptors vs. Cleveland Cavaliers: Tipoff time, TV, radio and streaming information

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Here's where to watch, listen and stream the Cleveland Cavaliers' preseason Game 4 vs. the Toronto Raptors tonight.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Cavaliers play Game 4 their 2016 preseason schedule tonight against the Toronto Raptors. Here's how to watch, listen and stream the action online.

What: Cleveland Cavaliers (2-1) vs. Toronto Raptors (1-2).
Where: Quicken Loans Arena.
When: 8 p.m.
TV: TNT.
Radio: WTAM 1100 AM, WMMS, 100.7 FM; 87.7 FM La Mega.
Online: NBA on TNT.

Toronto notable: This marks the 11th preseason meeting between the Raptors and Cavaliers - Toronto has an 8-2 record in these games. The Raptors defeated Cleveland 87-81 at Air Canada Centre last year in the preseason. Prior to that game
the two teams had not met in the preseason since 2008. 

Cleveland notable: Cleveland has six players averaging double figure scoring through the first three preseason games. Jordan McRae leads the squad with a 17.3 scoring average and is followed by Kyrie Irving (15.0), Channing Frye (13.0), Kay Felder (11.0), LeBron James (11.0) and Jonathan Holmes (10.7).

Catch the coverage from before the game; join in the live chat starting at tipoff; and stick around for full postgame coverage. For all Cavs information, be sure to check out cleveland.com/cavs.

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