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Tito Ortiz's withdrawal from Chuck Liddell match takes some pop out of UFC 115 - MMA Insider

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Ortiz, citing spinal surgery, drops out of the traditional fight between the coaches that ends "The Ultimate Fighter" show.

tito-ortiz.jpgTito Ortiz

Mixed martial arts fans today can choose from drama inside AND outside the octagon.

Inside, the long-awaited grudge match between Quinton "Rampage" Jackson and Rashad "Suga" Evans last Saturday resolved itself in the expected way, but with an unexpected result.

Outside, well, the drama -- featuring two of the most notable names in MMA, Chuck Liddell and Tito Ortiz -- is lasting longer than a Red Auerbach victory cigar. Minus, of course, any expected ash-kicking.

That's because Ortiz, citing spinal surgery on a disc pressing up against his spinal cord in his neck, has pulled out of the traditional fight between the two coaches that marks the end of "The Ultimate Fighter" television show. That was supposed to happen at UFC 115 in Vancouver on June 12. Rich Franklin, who took over as coach for Ortiz, will be Liddell's opponent.

Cleveland-area fight fans can watch the UFC 115 action live on the big screen at Cinemark 24 at 6001 Canal Road, Valley View; or Cinemark South Park Mall, 17450 Southpark Center, Strongsville. Fight time is 10 p.m. and tickets are $20 each.

Don't bother going to Vancouver; the event is sold out there. But it's also available on pay-per-view here, with a suggested purchase price of $44.95. Contact your local cable or satellite carrier for details.

Inside the octagon: The surprise inside the cage had to be Evans' solid victory over Jackson. Two judges gave the fight to Evans by a 30-27 margin, and the third had it at 29-28.

In the post-fight news conference, Jackson said he was surprised at how much quicker Evans is than he anticipated. And in an almost conciliatory tone, especially compared to the trash-talking that led up to the fight, he said he had nothing but respect for Evans for developing, and then keeping to a game plan that took advantage of his speed and mobility.

Jackson did manage to hurt Evans once, with an right that dropped him to the canvas in the third and final round. But Evans was able to recover. Some observers said that was partly because of a tactical error by Jackson, who apparently ignored the advice of his corner to go after the wobbly Evans. The delay allowed the eventual victor to recover.

"I was hurt for a little bit, but that's what happens sometimes," said Evans in a story on ufc.com. "I'm not gonna give up, no matter what."

"I was very surprised that he recovered from that," said Jackson. "I put all my eggs in that basket."

With the win, Evans has won the right to be the first fighter to attempt to wrest the light-heavyweight title from Mauricio "Shogun" Rua, who knocked out Lyoto "The Dragon" Machida to win the crown earlier this spring. That fight, though, has not yet been scheduled by UFC President Dana White.

It's rare for an MMA fighter to go undefeated. Rematches are common -- the Evans-Jackson fight was one. With the win over Jackson, who is playing the role made famous by Mr. T in a movie version of the TV show "The A-Team," Evans raises his record to 20-1-1. Jackson's record dips to 30-8.

Jackson said the time spent making the film definitely was a factor in his performance in the fight.

"I've got to leave tonight to go on tour for this damn movie and everything. I regret I even did the movie almost. I'm a fighter, but I tried to go into a whole new adventure and didn't even know anything about tours and stuff in a movie. I had no idea I had to do this," Jackson said in a story on ugo.com.

"I have a few movie offers on the table. They've been there for a while, but I was just focusing on this fight and I wasn't worrying about it. I got to make a decision because it looks like it would be hard to do both . . . I've just got to think about which one I want to do."

"The A-Team" movie is scheduled to debut Friday, June 11.


Division I state track: Wadsworth wins boys 4x800-meter relay

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Columbus, Ohio - Wadsworth won the boys 4x800-meter relay in record time to kick off a topsy-turvy day at the Division I state track meet Friday. Senior Jacob Sussman, senior Aaron Tipton, junior Russ McCune and senior Jake Hiltner won in 7:39.72, an all-division record. The old record was 7:41.17, set by Cleveland Heights in 2007.













Wadsworth junior Russ McCune, left, hugs senior teammate Jake Hiltner, who anchored their 4x800-meter relay to first place at the Division I state track meet in Columbus.



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(John Kuntz / The Plain Dealer )








Columbus, Ohio - Wadsworth won the boys 4x800-meter relay in record time to kick off a topsy-turvy day at the Division I state track meet Friday.

Senior Jacob Sussman, senior Aaron Tipton, junior Russ McCune and senior Jake Hiltner won in 7:39.72, an all-division record. The old record was 7:41.17, set by Cleveland Heights in 2007.

Hiltner was even with Canton GlenOak anchor Christian Jones with about 200 meters remaining when he found a new gear and pulled away in Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium.

Glenville lost senior Latwan Anderson in the 400 semifinals. His knee locked up with 100 meters remaining. He was near the lead, but faded to last place and did not advance to the finals in an event in which he has run the state's best time this season. Last week, a hamstring injury prevented Anderson from advancing out of the regional meet in the 200, an event he also was considered a contender to win.

Anderson said he hopes to feel well enough Saturday to run the 4x100, 4x200 and 4x400 relays.

Glenville also has Shane Wynn in the 100 finals and Quincy Downing in the 800.

While the injury might have hurt Glenville's chances for the team title, its competitors had their own problems. Gahanna Lincoln standout Blake Heriot suffered a hamstring injury in the 100 and failed to advance to the finals in the 100, 200 and 400. He was the defending champion in the 200 and 400.

Trotwood Madison's 4x100 relay was disqualified.

On the girls side, Magnificat's 4x800 relay of Erin Riley, Mary Whitmore, Katherine Kerr and Madeline Chambers placed second, 2.19 seconds behind North Canton Hoover. Medina, which led the first four laps, placed third.

Magnificat sophomore Rachel Hlatky advanced in the 100 and 200, but the Blue Streaks' 4x400 relay did not reach the finals. Buchtel's girls 4x400 also did not advance, but Ohio State recruit Kachay Hullum is the No. 1 qualifier in the 400 and No. 5 in the 200, and she'll be in the 4x200 Saturday.

 

 

Cleveland Indians Trevor Crowe resting his legs? -- Indians Chatter

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Clubhouse confidential: Center fielder Trevor Crowe didn't start Friday against the Chicago White Sox. His legs probably needed the rest after the Tigers spent most of Thursday's 12-6 victory hitting balls to the deepest parts of Comerica Park's center field. Detroit had 17 hits, 10 for extra-base hits. "He came up to me afterward and said, 'Was I playing...

Cleveland-Indians-Trevor-Crowe.JPGView full sizeIndians center fielder Trevor Crowe was not in the Tribe's starting lineup Friday against the White Sox, perhaps because he was restling his legs after chasing Tigers extra-base hits for nine innings Thursday. (Note: the photo above was taken in March at Indians spring training in Goodyear, Ariz.).

Clubhouse confidential: Center fielder Trevor Crowe didn't start Friday against the Chicago White Sox. His legs probably needed the rest after the Tigers spent most of Thursday's 12-6 victory hitting balls to the deepest parts of Comerica Park's center field.

Detroit had 17 hits, 10 for extra-base hits.

"He came up to me afterward and said, 'Was I playing too shallow on a couple of those ball?' " said Acta. "I told him you didn't have a chance. Even if you were playing 30 feet deeper. Those balls were really hit hard."

Testing, testing: Infielder Andy Marte, who has been on the disabled list with an infected ingrown hair on his stomach since May 15, will begin a rehab assignment today at Class A Lake County.

The infection required surgery.

Stat of the day: Travis Hafner, Austin Kearns, Lou Marson and Jhonny Peralta entered Friday's game in a combined 0-for-50 slump. Hafner was 0-for-16, Kearns 0-for-14, Marson 0-for-12 and Peralta 0-for-8.

Division III state track: Gilmour girls make up for lost time, win relay title

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Columbus -- It took 364 days to make up 16 one-hundredths of a second. For the members of Gilmour Academy's girls 4x800-relay team, it was well worth the wait. Led by seniors Rebekka Simko and Grace Brennan, part of a state runner-up quartet a year ago, the Lancers erased a frustrating memory in style in the opening event at...













Cuyahoga Heights' Brandon Eddy clears 6-4 in the high jump at the Division III state track and field championships Friday in Columbus. It was his personal record, and he finished seventh.



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(John Kuntz / The Plain Dealer)








Columbus -- It took 364 days to make up 16 one-hundredths of a second. For the members of Gilmour Academy's girls 4x800-relay team, it was well worth the wait.

Led by seniors Rebekka Simko and Grace Brennan, part of a state runner-up quartet a year ago, the Lancers erased a frustrating memory in style in the opening event at the Division III state track and field meet. With freshmen Alexis Anton and Meghan Pryatel joining in, Gilmour finished the eight-lap race in 9:31.28 to win the title by 50 meters.

A year ago, the Lancers finished second in the race by 0.16 seconds, and the feeling stuck with them.

"We were just devastated last year," said Simko, who will run today in three finals. "It was so tough. We definitely thought about it. And it's my senior year, too, and you definitely want to go out on top."

The Lancers led the race for all but the first three laps. Brennan was fourth when she got the baton second from Anton. By the time Brennan handed it to Pryatel, Gilmour was comfortably ahead. Pryatel padded the lead a bit, and Simko stretched it even further during her two laps.

Versailles, which won the event a year ago, finished second in 9:35.80. To the Tigers' credit, they returned just one runner from their state title team, yet were 10 seconds better than the remainder of the field.

Brennan, also part of the near-miss runner-up team a year ago, said the foursome was confident, even with two freshmen running legs.

"I know how good they are, and they were really prepared," she said. "They were very excited, and I think being nervous actually helped them run."

The Lancers are looking for their second consecutive team championship and fifth in sixth years. They'll compete in three finals today -- Simko in the 800 and 1,600, and the 4x400 -- but that might not be enough.

Versailles, which qualified athletes in nine events, will run in seven finals.

Gilmour's team title hopes took a shot when sprinting ace Candace Longino-Thomas was injured last week at the Navarre Regional. Longino-Thomas is a defending state champ in four events, having won the 4x100, 4x200 and open 100 and 200.

"It would be cool to win, but we're sad that she's not here," Brennan said. "But she'll be excited for us too if we win."

After cooling down from the 4x800 win, Simko, Brennan, Anton and senior Kathryn Drew won their 4x400 heat, running the third-fastest prelim time overall.

Simko also will run today in the 800 and 1,600 finals. She is seeded second and third, respectively, so it's conceivable she could follow in Thomas' footsteps as a four-time champ.

"I'm going to really try my best," Simko said. "That would be cool to go out like that."

That would make Simko a state champ in five different events. She won the 400 the past two years before moving this year to the longer distances.

Brandon Eddy fell short of his goal of a state championship, but the Cuyahoga Heights senior still had a nice day. He placed in two events, including runner-up in the pole vault.

"I was surprised that I didn't win," said Eddy, who also finished seventh in the high jump. "I was coming in expecting to win. I wasn't going to be satisfied with anything but first, but I guess I'm happy with [personal records of 15 feet] in the pole vault and [6-4] in the high jump on the same day."

Eddy's prior best outdoor vault had been 14-6, and his regional leap was 13-8. He qualified in the high jump at 6-2, so he bested that as well.

Trinity's boys 4x800 team went into the final with the fifth-fastest regional time. The Trojans dropped nearly a second off that mark but finished seventh. The all-junior squad of Eric Godbey, Nate Babb, Rob Morel and Nick Gliha finished in 8:03.10.

In other preliminary action, Trinity's girls 4x200 team of junior Jessica Glaser, junior Chelsea Nehez, sophomore Nicole Lungaro and sophomore Nicole Kontur advanced, as did Cornerstone junior Courtney Reese (400).

Others running in finals today will be Hawken freshman Alexandra Markovich and Gilmour's Pryatel in the 1,600, and Lutheran West junior Brad Watson in the 800.

Through six events, McDonald led the girls standings with 18 points. Patrick Henry and McComb each had 14. North Robinson Colonel Crawford led the boys race with 20, also through six events. Columbus Grove had 15 and Newark Catholic 14.

 

LeBron James daily rumor mill

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'Tis the time of year when summer vacations are looming and everyone is making travel plans. That includes LeBron James. Sam Amick of FanHouse.com, citing sources in the James Camp, James already has plotted a free agency tour that will take him to all the top markets vying for his services. First on the list is New York, to...

'Tis the time of year when summer vacations are looming and everyone is making travel plans.

That includes LeBron James.

Sam Amick of FanHouse.com, citing sources in the James Camp, James already has plotted a free agency tour that will take him to all the top markets vying for his services.

First on the list is New York, to visit with the Knicks. Followed by a quick skip over to New Jersey to the Nets. Then, Chicago.

And then, he'll make an evaluation of just how much attention he's swiped from any other sports story taking place in July (midseason baseball is pretty intriguing, after all) before deciding whether to continue on to Miami or Los Angeles (for the Clippers).

Somewhere in there, the source told Amick, James will even stop by Cleveland.

There are conflicting reports about whether James is going to team with Nike to create a new shoe for every visit he takes on his free agency tour. Amick says yes. Darren Rovell of CNBC says no.

Some "Free Agency Tour 2010" sneaks would be a great way for James to earn some extra cash to make up for any pay cut he'd take if he signs with a team other than the Cavaliers, no?

• According to the New York Post, James will make an appearance in New York before his official Free Agency Tour gets under way.

As in, as early as Wednesday.

The Post's Marc Berman reports Nike will hold a press conference Wednesday to announce Team USA will play an exhibition against France during the USA's training camp in August.

James has said he's leaning toward not playing for Team USA in the World Championships in Turkey, Aug. 29-Sept. 12, because of his free agency.

However, Jerry Colangelo, CEO of USA basketball, told Berman he hopes James "will be around to show support and even practice with the club" in August.

• Colangelo also commented on James' impending free agency, but is one of the first in the free world not to offer an opinion on where James should sign.

"It's an amazing opportunity for the players of consequence and the teams who have space to make something happen," Colangelo told The Post. "It's unusual for New York to have two opportunities. Chicago is a big market. Miami is a big market, even Los Angeles . . . the Clippers have a lot of space."

•Not to be outdone by New York, Chicago has stepped up its campaign to lure James to the Bulls with a website (SendLeBrontoChicago.com) and a billboard that proclaims, "Chicago wants LeBron: Unfinished Business." That one is at the corner of Grand and LaSalle in Chicago, but the group is considering placing another one in Akron.

And in a move that should make a move to the Windy City a no-brainer for James, Chicagoland Speedway President Craig Rust has offered to change the name of his track to woo James.

If James attends the LifeLock.com 400, a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race, on July 10, Rust said he will re-name the track "LeBron James Speedway" for the weekend, and have a "LeBron James Speedway" logo printed on merchandise and painted across the front stretch of the infield.

•Last word goes to the New York Daily News' Frank Isola, via Twitter: "LeBron says he had nothing to do with Ferry and Brown leaving Cavs. Will someone please hand the King a tape of Game 5 vs. Celtics?"

State track: Local champions from first day of competition

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Area champions Boys













Gilmour freshman Alexis Anton helped her team win the Division III 4x800-meter relay in 9:31.28 on Friday in Columbus.



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(John Kuntz / The Plain Dealer )








Area champions

Boys

DIVISION I

* 4x800-meter relay: Wadsworth (Jacob Sussman, Aaron Tipton, Russ McCune, Jake Hiltner) 7:39.72.

DIVISION II

4x800-meter relay: Woodridge (Vibushan Sivakumaran, Kyle Cochrun, Jimmy Charles, Drake Sulzer) 7:54.09.

Long jump: Corry Sprouse (Keystone) 22-9.

Girls

DIVISION II

4x800-meter relay: St. Vincent-St. Mary (Emily Tomei, Samantha Kirk, Tessa Weigand, Marie Arnone) 9:17.15.

DIVISION III

4x800-meter relay: Gilmour Academy (Alexis Anton, Grace Brennan, Meghan Pryatel, Rebekka Simko) 9:31.28.

* state meet record

Division I state track recap

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What happened: Wadsworth set a boys all-division record in the 4x800-meter relay, winning in 7:39.72, taking 1.45 seconds off the mark set by Cleveland Heights in 2007. Magnificat was second in the girls 4x800 and Medina placed third. Glenville standout Latwan Anderson (knee) pulled up in the 400 and failed to advance, but the Tarblooders still are in the...













Magnificat's Mary Whitmore hands the baton to Madeline Chambers in the Division I 4x800-meter relay at the state track meet. Magnificat finished second.



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(John Kuntz / The Plain Dealer )








What happened: Wadsworth set a boys all-division record in the 4x800-meter relay, winning in 7:39.72, taking 1.45 seconds off the mark set by Cleveland Heights in 2007. Magnificat was second in the girls 4x800 and Medina placed third. Glenville standout Latwan Anderson (knee) pulled up in the 400 and failed to advance, but the Tarblooders still are in the boys team race.

The stars: The Grizzlies' 4x800 record setters were senior Jacob Sussman, senior Aaron Tipton, junior Russ McCune and senior Jake Hiltner. Glenville junior Shane Wynn advanced in the 100, and he and Quincy Downing were on all three relays that advanced. St. Edward senior Seth Cunningham advanced in four events: 100, 200 and two relays. Buchtel's Kachay Hullum was the top qualifier in the girls 400, and advanced in the 200 and the 4x200.

Notable: Somehow, it didn't rain. There were rain delays at state baseball to the south of Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium and at the Memorial golf tournament in Dublin, north of Columbus, but the storms missed the state track meet.

 

 

Division III state track recap

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State track recap, Day 1 Division III













Cuyahoga Heights senior Brandon Eddy clears 6 feet, 4 inches in the Division III high jump for seventh place.



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(John Kuntz / The Plain Dealer )








State track recap, Day 1

Division III

What happened:

Gilmour Academy opened the meet by winning the girls 4x800 behind senior Rebekka Simko, senior Grace Brennan, freshman Alexis Anton and freshman Meghan Pryatel. No other area athlete won an event among the other 11 competed.

The stars:

• Outside of the Lancers' 4x800 team, the top area performer was Cuyahoga Heights senior Brandon Eddy. He finished second in the pole vault and seventh in the high jump.

Notable: The record books stayed intact as not a single state, meet, stadium or division record was set by a Division III athlete. . . . Versailles will have girls competing in nine finals as it looks to unseat Gilmour as the state champ.

 

 

 

 


Grady Sizemore has knee surgery and is done for the season: Indians insider

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Manager Manny Acta says life without injured center fielder Grady Sizemore won't be easy, but he has no other option. Sizemore was lost for the season after undergoing knee surgery Friday.

Grady SizemoreCleveland Indians' Grady Sizemore is out for the rest of the season. (Chuck Crow/The Plain Dealer)

Chicago -- It was the worst outcome possible for Grady Sizemore, and it sounded like he expected it.

Dr. Richard Steadman performed microfracture surgery on Sizemore's left knee Friday in Vail, Colo. The arthroscopic procedure took only 90 minutes, but Sizemore will miss the next six to nine months recovering.

Goodbye, 2010 regular season. Hello, spring training 2011 in Goodyear, Ariz., for the face of the franchise. The Indians think Sizemore will be able healthy enough to play some Cactus League games by then.

Steadman pioneered microfracture surgery, but he didn't know if Sizemore would need it until he started the operation. Steadman explained the operation and the options step by step to Sizemore before surgery.

In microfracture surgery, loose or damaged cartilage is removed, and tiny holes are drilled in the joint. The blood from those holes form a scab to replace the missing cartilage.

Sizemore, 27, made a couple of things clear to Steadman before the operations.

No. 1: He wanted to play at least 10 more years at a high level.

No. 2: He only wanted to undergo knee surgery once, if possible.

So it appears Sizemore received the deluxe model of microfracture surgeries. Indians head athletic trainer Lonnie Soloff said Sizemore will return to Cleveland on Thursday.

"We were hoping he wouldn't have to get the microfracture surgery," said manager Manny Acta. "But that's going to be best for him. It will give him the best chance to play longer, probably for the next 10 years, and be as healthy as he can.

"What's good for him is good for us."

In Sizemore's absence, Trevor Crowe will continue to see the majority of playing time in center field. Acta said Michael Brantley will join the team "in the near future" and play center as well. Acta said there was no timetable on Brantley's promotion, but he made it sound as if it would happen after the All-Star break.

"Life without Grady is not easy," said Acta. "We're suffering through that right now. We're going to have to be prepared for it for the rest of the season.

"It's an opportunity for some of those young kids to contribute."

Soloff said Steadman's other option would have been doing an arthroscopic procedure on the knee to evaluate the knee joint's surface. It would have taken Sizemore at least six to eight weeks to recover from that.

"But if he had left the knee alone, there was a chance that cartilage could have sheered off, and Grady would have had another issue," said Soloff. "That's why it was an intra-operative decision."

Soloff said the Indians told Dr. Steadman about how hard Sizemore plays.

"That went into the decision-making process," said Soloff. "Grady said, 'Look, I want to have one knee operation.' "

New arm in town: The Indians purchased the contract of right-hander Frank Herrmann from Class AAA Columbus. Jamey Wright was designated for assignment to make room.

Herrmann, 26, was 3-0 with a 0.31 ERA at Columbus in 19 appearances. Acta said he had no problem with Wright, but with the Indians stuck in last place in the AL Central, it was time to look at some of the organization's younger arms.

"I was really comfortable at the end of last season at Columbus, and I was just able to carry it over to this year," said Herrmann.

Herrmann, who has an economics degree from Harvard, received the call Thursday while he was window shopping at a mall in Columbus. His fianc e, Johanna Rangel, parents, Frank and Mary Ann, and other family and friends were at U.S. Cellular Field on Friday to see if he'd make his big-league debut.

His parents, along with his younger brother, made the drive from New Jersey.

"I'm happy for Frank," said Acta. "He worked hard in our farm system, and he earned it."

Baseball Division II state semifinal recap: Walsh Jesuit 4, Hebron Lakewood 1

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State baseball recap Division II semifinal













Walsh Jesuit's John Fasola went 2-for-3 and pitched four scoreless and hitless innings in relief in the semifinal victory.









State baseball recap

Division II semifinal

Walsh Jesuit 4, Hebron Lakewood 1

What happened: Walsh Jesuit broke a 1-1 tie with three runs in the top of the third inning when Marco Caponi and Greg Greve singled, John Fasola tripled and Ryan Berry drew a walk to take the lead for good. The Warriors will play Jonathan Alder at 7 p.m. Saturday for the state championship.

Key inning: Fasola, a shortstop, relieved starting pitcher Tyler Skulina with one out in the bottom of the fourth inning and runners on first and second. Fasola got out of the jam thanks to a strikeout and two fly outs.

Play of the game: Greve, the third baseman, charged a bunt laid down by Lakewood's Brandon Wesney and made a pinpoint throw to nip Wesney at first base and end the sixth inning.

Star of the game: Fasola did everything but drive the team bus. He went 2-for-3 with a triple, two RBI and a run scored. He also pitched four scoreless and hitless innings in relief, striking out five and walking one.


 

 

Division I state track: Wadsworth's boys relay team sets state record

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Columbus -- On the clock, Wadsworth demonstrated two weeks ago at the district meet its boys 4x800 was on the verge of something special. The talent was there. The times were in place.













Admiral King's Sheral Robinson, right, clears a hurdle next to Twinsburg's Emily Kazarinoff in a Division I 100-meter heat during the state track meet in Columbus on Friday.



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(John Kuntz / The Plain Dealer)








Columbus -- On the clock, Wadsworth demonstrated two weeks ago at the district meet its boys 4x800 was on the verge of something special.

The talent was there. The times were in place.

But would the heart follow, or be broken once again at the state track meet?

The relay team with a checkered past grabbed the proverbial checkered flag and ran away with it. Wadsworth set an all-division record in winning the 4x800 in 7:39.72.

No Ohio foursome has covered 3,200 meters faster.

Making history, and their hand-timed splits in order, were senior Jacob Sussman (1:53.9), senior Aaron Tipton (1:57), junior Russ McCune (1:57.9), and senior Jake Hiltner (1:50.6).

"This is very cool. We knew since districts we could get the record because we were only about a second and a half off [7:42.95]," Hiltner said.

Hiltner's leg was the most spectacular, sprinting away as he did in the final 200 meters from Canton GlenOak's Christian Jones while the crowd in Jesse Owens Stadium cheered.

"That was the game plan. I've done that to him three times this season," Hiltner said. "I drafted on him for a whole lap and then turned it on the last 200."

Tipton's leg was considered the most crucial because he did not run a good opening leg on last year's fifth-place relay. Tipton, who suffers from asthma, ignored Friday's humid conditions, ran his fastest career split and handed the baton to McCune in first place.

"I just tried to stay positive," Tipton said. "I have asthma and if I start freaking out, I can't get a lot of breath. I wanted it really bad."

Magnificat returned all four runners from last year's state champion girls 4x800 team, but an injury to Katherine Stultz at district knocked the Blue Streaks off track. Magnificat (9:11.64) was second, 2.19 seconds behind North Canton Hoover, whose anchor, Allison Peare, finished strong against Magnificat's Madeline Chambers.

Erin Riley, Mary Whitmore and Katherine Kerr also ran for Magnificat. Medina, which led the first four laps, placed third.

The other Division I events Friday were prelims, but there was plenty of drama among the boys as three team contenders suffered enormous blows.

After helping the 4x200 earn the No. 1 seed with a strong anchor, and running on the 4x100 relay that had the second-best time, Glenville senior standout Latwan Anderson's knee gave way in his best event, the open 400. Anderson was near the lead in his semifinal heat, but limped the last 100 meters to the finish line in last place.

Gahanna Lincoln's Blake Heriot, the defending champion in the 200 and 400, suffered a hamstring injury in the 100 and did not advance in any of the three events. In addition, Trotwood Madison's 4x100 relay was disqualified.

Though he had run the fastest times in Ohio this season in the 200 and 400, Anderson will run neither in the state finals. He failed to get out of the regional in the 200 when a hamstring injury flared.

"I'm kind of upset, but there's nothing I can do about it," said Anderson, who said he will try to run in the relays today.

The day wasn't a loss for Glenville. The 4x400 earned the No. 1 seed, and Shane Wynn advanced in the 100. With Quincy Downing running in the 800 today, the Tarblooders have a shot at the team title.

St. Edward senior Seth Cunningham reached the finals in the 100, 200 and two relays. Berea sophomore Donovan Robertson and Shaker Heights junior Elijha Owens advanced to the 110 and 300 hurdles finals.

Buchtel senior and Ohio State recruit Kachay Hullum is the No. 1 qualifier in the girls 400, and No. 5 in the 200. Joining her in both finals will be Brunswick sophomore Brianna Neitzel.

All Division I field events are today.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: twarsinskey@plaind.com, 216-999-4661


 

 

Jhonny Peralta's 2-run double keys 4-run 6th for 4-1 Tribe lead: Cleveland Indians briefing

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Jim Joyce, at the moment the most famous umpire in the big leagues, has deep Ohio roots.

UPDATED: 10:22 p.m.

CHICAGO, Ill. -- This is a daily review of the Indians 2010 season. They play the White Sox tonight in the first game of a three-game series at U.S. Cellular Field.
The dimensions at U.S. Cellular are 330 feet down the left field line, 400 to center field, 372 in right center and 335 down the right field line.

In-game notes:

Score: Indians 4, White Sox 1 after six innings.

Big inning: The Indians, trailing 1-0, scored four runs in the sixth inning. Jhonny Peralta hit a two-run double off the fence in left field off  John Danks for the Tribe's first two runs. Shelley Duncan's double made it 3-1. Luis Valbuena, yes the same Valbuena that entered the game hitting .149, made it 4-1 with a single. It was Valbuena's third hit of the game.

Sergio Santos relieved and the Indians loaded the bases, but Jason Donald struck out and Shin-Soo Choo, who hit a leadoff double to start the rally, grounded out.

Big blast: Alexei Ramirez gave the White Sox a 1-0 lead with a homer in the fourth. Justin Masterson worked out of trouble in the first two innings, stranding five runners.

The line: Masterson allowed one run on five hits in 5 2/3 innings despite walking six batters.  The Indians worked Danks for 113 pitches in 5 1/3 innings.

Pre-game notes:

 Game 53: Jim Joyce's 15 minutes of fame keep going. Bill Lubinger, Plain Dealer sportswriter, uncovered the Ohio roots of the umpire who cost Tiger right-hander Armando Galarraga a perfect game Wednesday against the Indians at Comerica Park.

 Check it out. It's a good read:

 Long before Jim Joyce became a Major League umpire with a stellar reputation, he was a promising college pitcher.

 "Pro-caliber curveball,'' said Don Purvis, his former coach at Bowling Green,
where Joyce earned an education degree in 1977. "A little short of that velocity-wise."

 "Actually," said Larry Owen, Joyce's college roommate who went on to catch for
Atlanta, "Jimmy was probably the star recruit of that class."

 Joyce, of course, made headlines this week for the blown call that cost  Galarraga a perfect game. Once he saw the replay, he felt awful and apologized repeatedly to the Tigers pitcher and everyone else concerned. As a sidenote, former Bowling Green pitcher and teammate Jeff Jones is Detroit's bullpen coach.

 Joyce was once such a talent on the mound himself that he was inducted into the
Toledo Central Catholic Sports Hall of Fame. The right-hander's curveball was
big-league nasty, but any future as a pitcher was snuffed by a ganglion cyst on the bottom of his left foot.

 Between his junior and senior years of college, the operation to remove it was
more extensive than expected and left Joyce with nerve damage to his lead
pitching foot that made him less effective, Owen said.

 That's when Joyce turned to umpiring. In fact, said Owen, who lived in Garfield
Heights through elementary school and now lives in suburban Columbus, he and
Joyce used to umpire youth games during the summers in Toledo. Joyce always
insisted on going behind the plate.

 "I'll tell you what,'' Owen said, "his personality was built for umpiring. Jimmy
would have called it the way he saw it no matter what."

 His former college coach and teammates weren't surprised to see Joyce field the
firestorm of his missed call with humility and class.

 "You know," said Purvis, a former Berea High School star, "that tells you who
he is."

 After reading Joyce's comments in the newspaper about how he thought the blown
call would probably be his legacy, Owen sent him an email.

 "I told him that the call's the call,'' Owen said, "but the way he's handled it
will be his legacy."

 Tribe news: Grady Sizemore's season-ending knee operation today means Trevor Crowe and Michael Brantley will play center field for the rest of the season. Crowe is already here. Manager Manny Acta said Brantley could be hear in the "near future."

 He made it sound like Brantley would get the call sometime after the All-Star.

 Right-hander Herman's contract was purchased from Class AAA Columbus. He joined the team before tonight's series against the White Sox. Jamey Wright was designated for assignment to make room.

 The Indians have 10 days to trade, waive or release Wright. Acta is hopeful another big league club picks him up.

 "He's a class act," said Acta.

 Herrmann, a Harvard grad, will not arm-wrestle Princeton grad Mark Shapiro, the Indians general manager. What he will do is pitch out of the bullpen. Herrmann was 2-0 with a 0.31 ERA at Columbus.

 "Those are good numbers for a pickup game in my backyard," said Acta.

 Omar moment: I'd just gotten off the loop (Chicago Transit Authority) on the way U.S. Cellular Field on Friday afternoon and was crossing the street. Almost made it to the other side when a black Mercedes lurched forward when I walked in front of it.

 Looked to see who the driver was and it was a laughing Omar Vizquel. By the way, Vizquel is going to be the White Sox every day third baseman with Mark Teahen on the disabled list following surgery on his right middle finger.

 Lineups: Indians (19-33): SS Jason Donald, RF Shin-Soo Choo (L), CF Austin Kearns (R), 1B Russell Branyan, 3B Jhonny Peralta (R), DH Travis Hafner (L), LF Shelley Duncan, 2B Luis Valbuena (L), C Lou Marson (R) and RHP Justin Masterson (0-5, 5.87).

 White Sox (23-30): LF Juan Pierre (L), 3B Omar Vizquel (S), CF Alex Rios (R), DH Andruw Jones (R), 1B Mark Kotsay (L), RF Carlos Quentin (R), C A.J. Pierzynski (L), SS Alexei Ramirez (R), 2B Gordon Beckham (R) and LHP John Danks (4-4, 3.34).

 Lineup notes: Trevor Crowe is getting a day off. Jason Donald will bat leadoff and Austin Kearns will play center field.

 Quote of the day: "I feel bad for the pitcher and bad for the umpire. At least we can say we were here for the 21st perfect game in history," Indians closer Kerry Wood on Galarraga's botched perfect game.

 Umpires: H Ron Kulpa, 1B Lance Barksdale, 2B Ed Rapuano, 3B Tom Hallion.

 Next: RHP Mitch Talbot (6-4, 3.78) vs. RHP Jake Peavy (4-4, 6.23) Saturday at 7:05 p.m

Danny Ferry's resignation from Cleveland Cavaliers is more fallout from loss to Boston Celtics: Terry Pluto

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Ferry was gracious and thankful to Cavaliers owner Daniel Gilbert for the chance to be a general manager. But something clearly went wrong.

Terry Pluto CLEVELAND, Ohio — The departure of General Manager Danny Ferry is another casualty of the Cavaliers being rudely booted out of the second round of the NBA playoffs.

Yes, Ferry could have signed an extension to remain with the team. His contract expires June 30. But after five years -- the best five years in franchise history -- it's obvious Ferry and team owner Dan Gilbert had a significant disagreement.

A good guess is the coaching situation.

It's no secret Ferry and former coach Mike Brown were close. Ferry believed Brown would be hard to replace.

It was difficult for him to go along with Gilbert's decision to fire Brown. Yes, the Cavs lost in six games to Boston, including their final two home games by a combined 50 points. But Ferry still is certain Brown has what it takes to be a successful NBA coach.

Gilbert stated that dumping Brown was his decision. Ferry seemed to be coming to terms with it.

The next step is hiring a new coach, and that may have led to the split. Perhaps Gilbert wanted to pick his own man, or at least have a strong say in the decision. It's possible some of the names being considered are not the type of coaches Ferry favored.

All of this is speculation.

At his news conference, Gilbert mentioned that everyone has to work together at 100 percent. He said even being in agreement on 90 percent of the approach may not be good enough.

But if the coaching question is that 10 percent dividing Ferry and Gilbert, it could be a deal breaker. It also may have indicated to Ferry that he could eventually lose influence in other areas.

Ferry didn't say this. He was gracious and thankful to Gilbert for the chance to be a general manager. But something went wrong.

Ferry has made millions in his career as a player and executive, and he has five children. He really doesn't need to compromise to keep a job. He is extremely confident in Chris Grant, his replacement.

Grant has been Ferry's assistant for all five seasons in Cleveland. Each year, Grant received more responsibility. Grant also turned down a chance to be Atlanta's general manager.

Grant has been the point man on the coaching search. LeBron James and the other players know him, so that's another plus.

James had nothing to do with Ferry's departure, but you can be sure Gilbert is confident James is willing to work for Grant. Another Cavs assistant, Lance Blanks, also will remain, and he is well-known to the players.

Nonetheless, Ferry is a known, experienced top basketball executive. Grant has to prove he can do the same.

While Ferry and Gilbert call the parting "mutual," the owner allowed it to happen.

Gilbert believes there are times when "You need to take the roast out of the oven." That's one of the sayings he uses at his company, Quicken Loans.

He obviously thought the team had peaked under Brown. Perhaps he sensed that after five years, other changes besides the coach were needed.

He thought it was time to take the roast out of the oven.

Gilbert did it in spring 2005, when he fired Paul Silas as coach, then Jim Paxson as general manager. That led to the hiring of Brown and Ferry. Gilbert made the right call, as these Cavs have been the most exciting, most successful Cleveland pro sports franchise this decade.

Fans need to appreciate that Ferry did a tremendous job putting players around James to make the Cavs a legitimate contender. In his five seasons, the Cavs reached the second round three times, the Eastern Conference finals in 2009 and the NBA Finals in 2007.

But that wasn't good enough, as having an MVP in James raises expectations to the highest level.

From the moment Ferry arrived, he was under orders to win now. The Cavs have reached the point like the Browns of the late 1980s and the Indians of the late 1990s -- a title is the final goal, the missing piece.

Can Gilbert and Grant persuade James to stay and find a championship-caliber coach? That is their challenge. It's one that will determine the future of the franchise for the next five-to-10 years.

But it seems losing Ferry doesn't make that job any easier.

This just in: Justin Masterson gets a 'W' as Cleveland Indians defeat White Sox at Chicago

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UPDATED: Masterson finally won a ballgame and the Indians put a beating on the Chicago White Sox. Masterson ended an 11-decision losing streak dating back to August of last season.

trevor crowe 2.jpgView full sizeTrevor Crowe hits a two-run triple in the eighth inning at Chicago.

Updated at 12:41 a.m. with new story, photo gallery at end

CHICAGO -- This has to be a sign. There must be a hidden meaning behind what happened Friday night at U.S. Cellular Field.

It's not as if the Cubs won the World Series or hell froze over, but Justin Masterson winning a ballgame has to echo in some corner of eternity. After losing 11 straight decisions, a victory has to mean more than one little "W" next to his name in today's box score.

justin masterson.jpgView full sizeJustin Masterson pitched only five innings on Friday, but it still was good enough to get him his first victory since last August.

If it does, we'll let the baseball philosophers dissect and discuss it. For now, let's keep things as simple as possible. Masterson pitched 5 messy innings to beat the White Sox, 10-1.

It was his first victory since Aug. 20 when he beat the Angels at Progressive Field. After that, he lost six straight decisions to close out 2009. He started this year by losing five straight decisions.

The losing streak covered 17 starts and a lot of second-guessing over whether Masterson (1-5, 5.46 ERA) really belonged in the rotation.

"I just tried to stay away from the media," said Masterson, when asked how much he thought about the streak. "They were the ones throwing it out there.

"You know there's something going on. You don't know the exact number. It's just nice to finally have this victory. It was a nice team game tonight."

If Masterson didn't know the exact number, manager Manny Acta did.

"I'm just glad it's over," he said.

Masterson said the streak had a lot to do with luck and the geometry of the game. An inch here, an inch there and many a hit could have been an out.

He kept saying that someday the streak would end when the breaks went his way. He just didn't say if it would be in this decade or the next.

Friday night, Masterson's fortunes changed. He walked six and allowed 12 baserunners, but allowed only one run. The offense and bullpen showed up as well.

In Masterson's 17 previous starts, the offense scored 39 runs. That's an average of 2.3 runs per game. Colorado's Ubaldo Jimenez would have a trouble winning with that kind of support.

The Tribe's dormant hitters scored four runs in the sixth, two in the seventh and four more in the eighth to rout Chicago with 10 unanswered runs. Of course, Chicago is the only team the Indians can beat with any regularity this year. They're 7-3 against Ozzie Guillen's club.

"Ten runs!" said Masterson. "I'll take it."

Said left fielder Shelley Duncan, who bailed Masterson out with a running catch on the line in the second, and added a run-scoring double in the sixth: "I can't tell you how happy I am for Masterson. He's pitched his butt off and deserves to have more than one win."

Jhonny Peralta hit a two-run double in the sixth off John Danks (4-5, 3.60) and hit another two-run double in the seventh off Sergio Santos. Peralta entered the game in an 0-for-8 slump, but he had four hits for a season high. The four RBI also were his best game total of the year.

Austin Kearns, who came into the game in an 0-for-14 slump, had three hits, including a two-run homer in the eighth. He scored three runs and reached base four times.

Trevor Crowe, who entered the game for defensive purposes in the seventh, hit a two-run triple in the eighth.

Then there was Luis Valbuena, chased to the bench because of a batting average that has hovered around .140 for much of the season. Valbuena had three straight hits. In the past two games, he has five hits.

It was Valbuena's run-scoring single in the sixth that knocked Danks out of the game and gave the Indians a 4-1 lead. Danks entered the sixth with a 1-0 lead thanks to Alexei Ramirez's homer in the fourth.

Acta lifted Masterson in the sixth when he walked Ramirez with two out. When Acta went to his bullpen, he finally found relief instead of torment. On this trip, Tribe relievers have been battered by the Yankees and Tigers. Friday night, it was up to a Harvard man to show them the way.

Frank Herrmann, called up from Class AAA Columbus earlier in the day, relieved and ended the sixth with one pitch. He worked his way through a 1-2-3 seventh before Jensen Lewis pitched a 1-2-3 eighth. Rafael Perez worked a scoreless ninth to end it.

"I'm sure Herrmann was nervous," said Acta, "but he's got a degree from Harvard. I'm sure they covered that."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: phoynes@plaind.com, 216-999-5158

UCLA legend John Wooden, the Wizard of Westwood, dies at age 99

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Wooden led the Bruins to 10 NCAA championships, including an unmatched streak of seven in a row from 1967 to 1973. Over 27 years, he won 620 games, including 88 straight during one historic stretch.

john wooden.jpgView full sizeUCLA Basketball Coach John Wooden, shown in 1970, built one of the greatest dynasties in all of sports at UCLA and became one of the most revered coaches ever.Beth Harris / Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -- John Wooden, college basketball's gentlemanly Wizard of Westwood who built one of the greatest dynasties in all of sports at UCLA and became one of the most revered coaches ever, has died. He was 99.

The university said Wooden died Friday night of natural causes at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, where he had been hospitalized since May 26.

Jim Wooden and Nancy Muehlhausen issued a statement shortly after their father died, saying, "He has been, and always will be, the guiding light for our family.

"The love, guidance and support he has given us will never be forgotten. Our peace of mind at this time is knowing that he has gone to be with our mother, whom he has continued to love and cherish."

Reaction to John Wooden's death

"He set quite an example. He was more like a parent than a coach. He really was a very selfless and giving human being, but he was a disciplinarian. We learned all about those aspects of life that most kids want to skip over. He wouldn't let us do that." -- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

"Coach Wooden was more than a Hall of Fame basketball player and coach; he was an incredible man whose dedication and leadership on the court inspired generations of Californians. He meant so much to Los Angeles, California and the entire basketball community around the world. Maria and I extend our thoughts and prayers to his loved ones as they remember the extraordinary life of this coaching legend." -- California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger

"My reaction is sadness yet at this point we have to celebrate maybe the most important guy in the history of the game. There has been no greater influence on college basketball not just about the game but the team. He's greatest coach in college basketball if not all basketball from the standpoint of all of us trying to emulate what he's done. He gave so much to basketball and education. In my opinion if he's not as important as Dr. Naismith, he's right next to him." -- Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun

"I have met Coach Wooden, about four years ago at the Final Four when it was here and it was a tremendous honor. He gave me one of his pyramid of success cards that I still have today and got a picture with him, and it was a tremendous honor." -- Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning

"I always sat and chatted with him before our games at UCLA and about five years ago he asked, 'Can I come out and watch one of your practices?' ... We had a jet pick him up at Van Nuys Airport, just a few minutes from where he lived, and bring him (to Tucson). We had lunch and I asked if he could say a few words to the team. He said yes and spoke for 20 or 30 minutes. He never said a word about basketball, just talked about his philosophy of life and being the best that you could be.

"He has been anxious to be reunited with Nell for a lot of years, so this is not a sad experience for him I don't believe. I don't think there is anyone who had influenced the number of people in his life than he had." -- Former Arizona coach Lute Olson

"This loss will be felt by individuals from all parts of society. He was not only the greatest coach in the history of any sport but he was an exceptional individual that transcended the sporting world. His enduring legacy as a role model is one we should all strive to emulate." -- UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero

"John Wooden was a great coach and a great man. He was a man of humility who embodied the best in character and values, and exemplified what coaching is all about. I was fortunate enough to be honored with the Wooden Award in April, an award that now takes on added significance to me personally. I found out that I was being honored on his 99th birthday. To have the opportunity to go out to Los Angeles and see firsthand how great an impact he still has is something I will always be honored and humbled to be a part of. His legacy will endure forever." -- Florida coach Billy Donovan

"I am very saddened at the passing of John Wooden. In my lifetime, I was fortunate to call him a friend. As a coach, I always admired his gentle demand for nothing but excellence and his student-athletes delivered. He created role models on and off the court, and because of him, it is something I instilled in my players from my first day as a very young coach. The takeaways we all have been blessed with from knowing John Wooden are numerous. For all of his successes, he was such a humble man. Tonight, we have lost a true American icon." -- Tennessee women's coach Pat Summitt

"I never met him. Meeting him was on the bucket list. Came close a couple times, but never did meet him. Obviously, I've read everything about him, so just being selfish and personal, I have regret that I never had an in-person meeting with him. Amazing life." -- St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa

They thanked well-wishers for their thoughts and prayers and asked for privacy.

With his signature rolled-up game program in hand, Wooden led the Bruins to 10 NCAA championships, including an unmatched streak of seven in a row from 1967 to 1973.

Over 27 years, he won 620 games, including 88 straight during one historic stretch, and coached many of the game's greatest players such as Bill Walton and Lew Alcindor -- later known as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

"It's kind of hard to talk about coach Wooden simply, because he was a complex man. But he taught in a very simple way. He just used sports as a means to teach us how to apply ourselves to any situation," Abdul-Jabbar said in a statement released through UCLA.

"He set quite an example. He was more like a parent than a coach. He really was a very selfless and giving human being, but he was a disciplinarian. We learned all about those aspects of life that most kids want to skip over. He wouldn't let us do that."

Wooden was a groundbreaking trendsetter who demanded his players be in great condition so they could play an up-tempo style not well-known on the West Coast at the time.

But Wooden's legacy extended well beyond that.

He was the master of the simple one- or two-sentence homily, instructive little messages best presented in his famous "Pyramid of Success," which remains must-read material, not only for fellow coaches but for anyone in a leadership position in American business.

He taught the team game and had only three hard-and-fast rules -- no profanity, tardiness or criticizing fellow teammates. Layered beneath that seeming simplicity, though, were a slew of life lessons -- primers on everything from how to put on your socks correctly to how to maintain poise: "Not being thrown off stride in how you behave or what you believe because of outside events."

"What you are as a person is far more important that what you are as a basketball player," was one of Wooden's key messages.

"There will never be another John Wooden," UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero said. "This loss will be felt by individuals from all parts of society. He was not only the greatest coach in the history of any sport but he was an exceptional individual that transcended the sporting world. His enduring legacy as a role model is one we should all strive to emulate."

Wooden began his career as a teacher during the Great Depression and was still teaching others long past retirement. He remained a fixture at UCLA games played on a court named after him and his late wife, Nell, and celebrated his 99th birthday with a book he co-authored on how to live life and raise children.

Asked in a 2008 interview the secret to his long life, Wooden replied: "Not being afraid of death and having peace within yourself. All of life is peaks and valleys. Don't let the peaks get too high and the valleys too low."

Asked what he would like God to say when he arrived at the pearly gates, Wooden replied, "Well done."

Even with his staggering accomplishments, he remained humble and gracious. He said he tried to live by advice from his father: "Be true to yourself, help others, make each day your masterpiece, make friendship a fine art, drink deeply from good books -- especially the Bible, build a shelter against a rainy day, give thanks for your blessings and pray for guidance every day."

While he lived his father's words, many more lived his. Those lucky enough to play for him got it first hand, but there was no shortage of Wooden sayings making the rounds far away from the basketball court.

"Learn as if you were to live forever; live as if you were to die tomorrow," was one.

"Don't give up on your dreams, or your dreams will give up on you," was another.

Born Oct. 14, 1910, near Martinsville, Ind., on a farm that didn't have electricity or indoor plumbing, Wooden's life revolved around sports from the time his father built a baseball diamond among his wheat, corn and alfalfa. Baseball was his favorite sport, but there was also a basketball hoop nailed in a hayloft. Wooden played there countless hours with his brother, Maurice, using any kind of ball they could find.

He led Martinsville High School to the Indiana state basketball championship in 1927 before heading to Purdue, where he was All-America from 1930-32. The Boilermakers were national champions his senior season, and Wooden, nicknamed "the Indiana Rubber Man" for his dives on the hardcourt, was college basketball's player of the year.

But it wasn't until he headed west to Southern California that Wooden really made his mark on the game.

Wooden guided the Bruins to seven consecutive titles from 1967 through 1973 and a record 88-game winning streak in the early 1970s. From the time of his first title following the 1963-64 season through the 10th in 1974-75, Wooden's Bruins were 330-19, including four 30-0 seasons.

The bespectacled former high school teacher ended up at UCLA almost by accident. Wooden was awaiting a call from the University of Minnesota for its head coaching job and thought he had been passed over when it didn't come. In the meantime, UCLA called, and he accepted the job in Los Angeles.

Minnesota officials called later that night, saying they couldn't get through earlier because of a snowstorm, and offered him the job. Though Wooden wanted it more than the UCLA job, he told them he already had given UCLA his word and could not break it.

The Bruins were winners right away after Wooden took over as coach at UCLA's campus in Westwood in 1949, although they were overshadowed by Bill Russell and the University of San Francisco, and later Pete Newell's teams at California.

At the time, West Coast teams tended to play a slow, plodding style. Wooden quickly exploited that with his fast-breaking, well-conditioned teams, who wore down opponents with a full-court zone press and forever changed the style of college basketball.

Still, it would be 16 seasons before Wooden won his first NCAA championship with a team featuring Walt Hazzard that went 30-0 in 1964. After that, they began arriving in bunches, with top players such as Alcindor, Walton, Sidney Wicks and Lucius Allen coming to Westwood.

john wooden purdue.jpgView full sizeWooden was nicknamed "the Indiana Rubber Man" for his dives on the hardcourt while a player at Purdue from 1930 to '32.Each would learn at the first practice how to properly put on socks and sneakers. Each would learn to keep his hair short and face clean-shaven, even though the fashions of the 1960s and '70s dictated otherwise.

And each would learn Wooden's "pyramid of success," a chart he used to both inspire players and sum up his personal code for life. Industriousness and enthusiasm were its cornerstones; faith, patience, loyalty and self-control were some of the building blocks. At the top of the pyramid was competitive greatness.

"Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are," Wooden would tell them.

Wooden never had to worry about his reputation. He didn't drink or swear or carouse with other coaches on the road, though he did have a penchant for berating referees.

"Dadburn it, you saw him double-dribble down there!" went a typical Wooden complaint to an official. "Goodness gracious sakes alive!"

Wooden would coach 27 years at UCLA, finishing with a record of 620-147. He won 47 NCAA tournament games. His overall mark as a college coach was 885-203, an .813 winning percentage that remains unequaled.

But his legacy as a coach will always be framed by two streaks -- the seven straight national titles UCLA won beginning in 1967 and the 88-game winning streak that came to an end Jan. 19, 1974, when Notre Dame beat the Bruins 71-70.

john wooden.jpgView full sizeJohn Wooden in 2005.After the loss, Wooden refused to allow his players to talk to reporters.

"Only winners talk," he said. A week later, UCLA beat the Irish at home by 19 points.

A little more than a year later, Wooden surprisingly announced his retirement after a 75-74 NCAA semifinal victory over Louisville. He then went out and coached the Bruins for the last time, winning his 10th national title with a 92-85 win over Kentucky.

After that victory, Wooden walked into the interview room at the San Diego Sports Arena to face about 200 reporters, who let their objectivity slip and applauded.

"When I think of a basketball coach the only one I ever thought of was Coach Wooden. He had a great life and helped so many coaches until well in his 90s," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim told The Associated Press. "Every time I talked to him he would give me some words of advice. He's the best of all time. There will never be another like him, and you can't say that about too many people."

The road to coaching greatness began after Wooden graduated with honors from Purdue and married Nell Riley, his high school sweetheart.

In a 2008 public appearance with Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Vin Scully, in which the men were interviewed in front of an audience, Wooden said he still wrote his late wife -- the only girl he ever dated -- a letter on the 21st of each month. "She's still there to me," he said. "I talk to her every day."

He coached two years at Dayton (Ky.) High School, and his 6-11 losing record the first season was the only one in his 40-year coaching career.

He spent the next nine years coaching basketball, baseball and tennis at South Bend (Ind.) Central High School, where he also taught English.

"I think the teaching profession contributes more to the future of our society than any other single profession," he once said. "I'm glad I was a teacher."

Wooden disliked the Wizard of Westwood nickname, preferring to be called coach.

"I'm no wizard, and I don't like being thought of in that light at all," he said in a 2006 interview with the UCLA History Project. "I think of a wizard as being some sort of magician or something, doing something on the sly or something, and I don't want to be thought of in that way."

Wooden served in the Navy as a physical education instructor during World War II, and continued teaching when he became the basketball coach at Indiana State Teachers College, where he went 47-17 in two seasons.

In his first year at Indiana State, Wooden's team won the Indiana Collegiate Conference title and received an invitation to the NAIB tournament in Kansas City. Wooden, who had a black player on his team, refused the invitation because the NAIB had a policy banning African Americans. The rule was changed the next year, and Wooden led Indiana State to another conference title.

It was then that UCLA called, though Wooden didn't take the job to get rich. He never made more than $35,000 in a season, and early in his career he worked two jobs to make ends meet.

"My first four years at UCLA, I worked in the mornings at a dairy from six to noon then I'd come into UCLA," he told The Associated Press in 1995. "Why did I do it? Because I needed the money. I was a dispatcher of trucks in the San Fernando Valley and was a troubleshooter. After all the trucks made their deliveries and came back, I would call in the next day's orders, sweep out the place and head over the hill to UCLA."

After he enjoyed great success at UCLA, the Los Angeles Lakers reportedly offered Wooden their head coaching job at a salary 10 times what he was making, but he refused.

Nell, Wooden's wife of 53 years, died in 1985. Besides his son and daughter, Wooden is survived by three grandsons, four granddaughters and 13 great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be private. A public memorial will be held later, with a reception for former players and coaches.


Akron Aeros, Lake County Captains get victories: Minor League Report

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Left-hander Eric Berger strikes out 10 in seven innings for Class AA Akron. Shortstop Casey Frawley singles in the winning run for the Class A Captains.

AAA Columbus Clippers

Indians 5, Clippers 0 Catcher Carlos Santana (.316) had a double and a walk for Columbus, but four pitchers combined on a four-hitter for host Indianapolis. Left-hander Aaron Laffey (0-1, 3.86 ERA) started for the Clippers and allowed two runs, seven hits and two walks in 4 innings. He struck out three in his first minor-league start since last July. Indianapolis' Michael Crotta (3-3, 4.22) held Columbus to three hits in 51/3 innings.

AA Akron Aeros

Aeros 3, Senators 2 (8) Left-hander Eric Berger struck out 10 in seven innings as Akron won a rain-shortened game in Harrisburg, Pa. Left fielder John Drennen (.304) tripled, singled and drove in a run for the Aeros. First baseman Beau Mills (.215) and shortstop Carlos Rivero (.230) each had an RBI for Akron.

Advanced A Kinston Indians

Dash 2, Indians 1 Right-hander Joseph Gardner (3-1, 2.14 ERA) posted another quality start for Kinston, but the K-Tribe lost in Winston-Salem, N.C. Gardner allowed two runs, four hits and three walks in six innings. Second baseman Jason Kipnis (.309) went 3-for-3 with a double and a run scored for the K-Tribe.

A Lake County Captains

Captains 6 Timber Rattlers 5 (11) Shortstop Casey Frawley (two hits, .257) singled in left fielder Bo Greenwell (two hits, .320) with the winning run in the bottom of the 11th inning for Lake County against Wisconsin. Third baseman Jeremie Tice (.276) had three hits and two runs batted in, and designated hitter Chun-Hsiu Chen (.345) had two doubles and two RBI for the Captains.

Independent Lake Erie Crushers

Grizzlies 17, Crushers 4 Gateway had five homers to beat Lake Erie in Sauget, Ill. Crushers starting pitcher Phil Rummel gave up six runs in 1/3 of an inning.

Defensive touchdowns help Cleveland Gladiators rout Utah Blaze

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Middle linebacker Tim Cheatwood and lineman Anthony Hoke return fumbles for touchdowns as part of a 75-39 rout of the Utah Blaze.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — One of the Arena Football League's best passing offenses periodically sputtered Friday night.

It did not matter because the Gladiators' defense was more than ready to compensate.

Middle linebacker Tim Cheatwood and lineman Anthony Hoke returned fumbles for touchdowns as part of a 75-39 rout of the Utah Blaze at The Q.

thonngr.jpgView full sizeGladiators coach Steve Thonn.Former Ohio State Buckeye and Benedictine grad Cheatwood, who started for Zach Ville, recovered three fumbles. The Blaze had six turnovers.

"We thought the game could go like that," Gladiators coach Steve Thonn said. "They had a lot of problems with fumbles and snaps their previous two games."

The Gladiators (4-5) snapped a two-game losing streak and generated a degree of momentum heading into a game at Milwaukee (6-2) on June 12.

Dazed and confused Utah (1-7) should turn in its AFL card immediately. It has lost four in a row by a combined 111 points. It is 0-1 under Ron James, who replaced Ernesto Purnsley as coach earlier this week. Purnsley and his entire staff were fired.

James watched his starting quarterback, Michael Affleck, underwhelm for two-plus quarters before replacing him with Mark Thorson. Thorson provided a burst, then began fumbling exchanges from center.

The Blaze's high-water mark occurred early in the first quarter. Defensive back Brandon Hampton intercepted 'John Dutton at the Utah goal line and returned it for a touchdown and 6-0 lead. Hampton stepped in front of Steve Sanders.

A 2-yard run by Russell Monk and a 15-yard reception by Ben Nelson enabled the Gladiators to build a 13-6 lead. Nelson's play capped a drive that sprung from a Blaze fumble at the Cleveland goal line.

Utah tied the score, 13-13, midway through the second quarter. It never threatened thereafter.

The Gladiators closed the half with 13 straight points and opened the third quarter with a flurry. They established a 40-13 cushion when T.J. Watkins caught an 8-yard pass from Dutton with 7:19 left in the third. Watkins, lined up at tight end, is listed at 6-5, 325.

Utah momentarily injected excitement into the proceedings by pulling within 40-27. But the Gladiators had minimal difficulty re-establishing supremacy. Cheatwood's 11-yard fumble return made it 54-27 at the end of three.

Dutton threw for 226 yards and five touchdowns.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: dmanoloff@plaind.com; 216-999-4664

Battle for No. 1 turns into fight to stay relevant at Dublin: Memorial Tournament Insider

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Both Mickelson and Woods believe they're hitting the ball well but it doesn't reflect in their scores on Friday.

phil mickelson.jpgView full sizePhil Mickelson says he thought he hit the ball well on Friday but it was not reflected in his score, a 71.

DUBLIN, Ohio -- The battle for the No. 1 ranking in golf has turned into a battle to stay within shouting distance of the weekend lead. Phil Mickelson could pass Tiger Woods for that top ranking if he wins the Memorial Tournament this week and Woods finishes fifth or worse. So far, Woods looks like he'll live up to his end of the bargain, but Mickelson has more work to do.

tiger woods.jpgView full sizeTiger Woods reacts after missing a birdie putt on the eighth hole Friday. Mickelson followed a Thursday 67 with a Friday 71 that left him at 6 under and seven shots behind leader Rickie Fowler, while Woods followed his Thursday 72 with a 69 that put him at 3 under, 10 shots back and tied for 25th.

"It was a frustrating day for me because I played very well and didn't shoot the number I thought I should," Mickelson said.

He made a 65-foot putt for eagle on the par-5 No. 7, but followed that with a bogey, one of five bogeys in his round. He nearly drove the 363-yard No. 14, yet still made only par after missing a 7-foot birdie putt. But he did finish with two birdies on 17 and 18, giving him at least a shot if he lights it up today.

"Anything mid-60s would be good," Mickelson said. "I was thinking that today, 66 or lower is going to be a good score."

Woods made bogey on his final hole but still liked his six-birdie round, though he said he lipped out five other putts. He's still feeling his way through only his fourth tournament of the year.

"Usually most guys are at this point in January. Here we are in June, and I'm at the point which most guys are beginning the year," Woods said. "It's a process. I hit more good shots today than I did yesterday."

Young money: Fowler, 21, can look at Jason Day, 22, to see what your first PGA Tour win can do for you. Day won $1.1 million by taking the Byron Nelson Championship two weeks ago. This week, he and his wife, Ellie, a Lucas, Ohio, native, showed up in a new tour bus to hang out with friends and family.

"First week out with the bus, which is really nice," Day said. "We've got a lot of friends and family

in town this week. After a long couple of weeks, it's hard to take this week off because it's Jack's event and, you know, the family's in town. So I'm glad that we have the tour bus because that kind of feels like home."

Day is right back in contention again, five shots back of Fowler and tied for fifth after following a 67 with a 69 on Friday.

Also: There were 71 players that made the cut at 1 over or better. Among those who didn't make it were Ernie Els, Angel Cabrera, Mike Weir and David Duval. . . . Woods is the youngest winner of the Memorial, taking the title at age 23 in 1999. Both Fowler and Day could beat that record. . . . Fowler is the seventh player in the 35 years of the Memorial to hold at least a three-shot lead after 36 holes. Three of those golfers won -- Tom Watson in 1979, Hale Irwin in 1985 and Kenny Perry in 1991.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: dlesmerises@plaind.com, 216-999-4479

Novice Corry Sprouse of Keystone wins long jump crown: 2010 Ohio State Track Insider

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COLUMBUS, Ohio -- With his shaved head glistening in the morning sun, and sporting some shades, Corry Sprouse looked the epitome of cool. So in keeping with that persona, it was no big deal for the Keystone senior that he had just won the Division II state long jump to finish off his lone year competing in track and...













Ryan Kochert, a senior at Chagrin Falls, clears 15 feet in the Division II pole vault on Friday at Columbus. Kochert finished second.



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(John Kuntz / PD)








COLUMBUS, Ohio -- With his shaved head glistening in the morning sun, and sporting some shades, Corry Sprouse looked the epitome of cool.

So in keeping with that persona, it was no big deal for the Keystone senior that he had just won the Division II state long jump to finish off his lone year competing in track and field.

He even let his Keystone buddy and fellow football player, Josh Jewett, wear his gold medal to keep the attention at a minimum.

"No, I really don't like talking about it," said Sprouse, who will continue his football career at Notre Dame College in South Euclid. "I tried [track] because I thought it would make me faster for football. The shock hasn't set in yet."

After playing baseball and running back for the Wildcats, he gave up the diamond this spring to run the 100 and 200. He said he tried the long jump one day in practice.

On Friday at Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium, he saved his best for last as he let go with a jump of 22 feet, 9 inches. That edged senior Brady Gelvin of Milan Edison by one-half inch. While it may not have fazed Sprouse, coach Bruce Broad didn't hide the enthusiasm at producing the school's first state champion since pole vaulter Matt Botos in 1991.

"We knew he would be in the top two or three or four, so anything could happen," said Broad. "With his football [1,400 yards, 22 touchdowns] and baseball, you knew he was an athlete. The last jump, it all came together. I don't think it's settled in for me."

Strategy session: Collinwood girls coach Lou Slapnik pulled senior Amber Smith out of the 100 and let her run in the 4x200 relay. He had senior Erin Busbee in the 100, so it paid off as the Railroaders finished second to Columbus Bishop Hartley in the race. Busbee was third in the 100 and scored five points in the morning by finishing fourth in the high jump.

"I couldn't feel any better," said Slapnik, whose team advanced in seven events. "Now we have to duplicate it. That's the hardest thing to do, but this group has been focused and on a mission."

The mission was to keep the heat on Hartley, which also had a big day that included a meet record in the 4x200.

After qualifying first in the 100 hurdles, Smith broke the Division II mark in the 300 hurdles with a clocking of 42.94. That bettered the 43.10 by Michelle Hite of Cleveland Heights. Collinwood, a winner of eight Division I titles, and Bishop Hartley go into the finals of eight events.

Tough hurdles: The Division II hurdles are a local affair. While Smith had top times in both, defending 100 champion JeRica Sanders from Lake Catholic qualified third, and Bridget Doughty of Bay was fourth. In the 300, Sanders was second and Doughty, the defending champion, was fourth.

Broom town: Cuyahoga County is in a position to become the first county to sweep the girls team titles in the 36-year history of the girls state meet. Magnificat (Division I), Collinwood (Division II) and Gilmour (Division III) all are in contention. Northeast Ohio girls domination is nothing new. The seven-county area has won all three division titles three times since 1999 and has produced at least one team champion every year since 1985.

Dreamer: Strongsville senior Colby Alexander said he is hoping the field can push him toward challenging Bob Kennedy's 1988 record in the 1,600 (4:05.13). Alexander will get another chance to go fast -- and plenty of competition -- next week in the inaugural Jim Ryun High School Dream Mile in New York City against many of the nation's top prep distance runners.

That apparently didn't earn him much respect in the eyes of Wadsworth distance coach Michelle Farr. Asked if she was worried how Alexander's blistering first leg in the 4x800 might affect Wadsworth's 4x800 team, she replied, "Colby who?"

Blocking out: Brunswick sophomore Brianna Neitzel uses a standing start instead of blocks in the 400. She qualified fourth in the 400 for today's finals. "I'm good without them," she said. "Some day, I don't know when, I'll use them.'"

Plain Dealer reporter Tim Warsinskey contributed to this report.

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

Bulldogs get a short if not a good night's sleep: 2010 Ohio State Baseball Tournament Notebook

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COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Playing its way to Friday's Division I state semifinals might have been easier than the actual trip to Huntington Park for the Olmsted Falls baseball team. Coach Dan Largent, whose team stunned St. Ignatius in the district final and third-ranked Perrysburg in the regional final, thought it would be a good idea for the team to...













Olmsted Falls head coach Dan Largent, left, disputes a call with umpire Bruce Kotlinski during a semifinal game Friday at Columbus. St.Edward beat Olmsted Falls, 10-2, to advance to today's championship game vs. Cincinnati Elder.



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(Impact Action Photos)








COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Playing its way to Friday's Division I state semifinals might have been easier than the actual trip to Huntington Park for the Olmsted Falls baseball team.

Coach Dan Largent, whose team stunned St. Ignatius in the district final and third-ranked Perrysburg in the regional final, thought it would be a good idea for the team to attend the school's commencement Thursday and then board a bus with the idea of arriving at the team's hotel around midnight.

All was well and good until the team's charter bus broke down before leaving Cleveland. It was midnight before the team left and it didn't arrive in town until 2:30 a.m. Largent let his players sleep until 9 a.m.

Alas, the Bulldogs fell to St. Edward, 10-2, and their season ended with a 16-18 record.

Proud papa: Indians assistant general manager/scouting John Mirabelli was in the stands to watch his sophomore son, Tommy, play second base for St. Edward. Son did papa proud with two hits, including a booming double to right field, and a sparkling defensive play in the bottom of the first to take a hit away from Cory Maddocks.

Family affairs: Tim Held is the head coach of Division I state semifinalist Archbishop Moeller. His cousin, Tom Held, is the head coach of Division II state semifinalist Defiance. Both played at Defiance College.

Tom Held's father, Melvin, threw a no-hitter for now-defunct Florence Edon in what was the "quarterfinals" in 1946. Melvin Held, 81, was in attendance Friday.

Moeller senior second baseman Kevin Thamann is the nephew of North Royalton baseball coach Jim Thamann, also a Moeller graduate.

Notable alums: Former professional baseball players Ken Griffey Jr., Barry Larkin, along with Buddy Bell and sons David and Mike Bell, played for Moeller.

First venture: The boy-girl twin children of Walsh Jesuit pitching coach John Ventura and his wife, Nikki, attended their first baseball game Friday. Mason and Khloe, born three weeks ago, were in the stands with mom and Ventura's parents, John Sr. and Josephine, for the Warriors' game against Plain City Jonathan Alder.

Taking blame: Moeller senior left fielder Max Belza made the final out in its 1-0 Division I state semifinal loss to Elder after being called out for leaving second base too early on Robby Sunderman's one-out fly ball to right field.

However, head coach Tim Held took the blame.

"He left early and it's my fault," said Held, who also doubles as third base coach. "I told him to leave."

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