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Cleveland Browns add Dwaine Board as DL coach -- source

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Board's experience as a player and a coach is with the traditional 4-3 defensive alignment.



CLEVELAND -- Bryan Cox is out as Browns defensive line coach. He'll be replaced by Dwaine Board, a former defensive lineman who has coached the position in the NFL since 1990, said a source.

 Board, 54, coached linemen under Mike Holmgren in Seattle for six years and also broke into the coaching ranks with San Francisco while Holmgren was the 49ers offensive coordinator.

 New Browns coach Pat Shurmur has not confirmed whether the team will switch to a 4-3 defense this year, but the addition of Board is further evidence of the change. Board has never coached in a 3-4 defense. That fits with new defensive coordinator Dick Jauron's history, also.

 Cox coached the Browns' defensive line for two years under former coach Eric Mangini.

 Earlier today, The Plain Dealer reported the Browns added Mark Whipple as quarterbacks coach and Bill Davis as linebackers coach.

 The Browns have not confirmed the hirings.

 


P.M. Cleveland Browns links: Reggie Hodges established himself as a fine punter in 2010

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Hodges became team's punter when Dave Zastudil hurt a knee in 2009. Also, draft and Pro Bowl info.

reggie-hodges.jpgBrowns punter Reggie Hodges had the best season of his career in 2010.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- When the Cleveland Browns lost their excellent punter, Dave Zastudil, to a torn patella (knee) tendon during the 2009 season, it was generally assumed that there would be a downgrade at the position with replacement Reggie Hodges.

There's no sense to compare the two punters. Hodges made a reputation for himself this past season with his strong performance.

Matt Florjancic continues his position reviews for clevelandbrowns.com. Part of what he writes about Hodges: 

Browns punter Reggie Hodges had 15 punts downed inside the opponent’s 10-yard line. He finished third in the NFL in that category, trailing only Steve Weatherford of the New York Jets (20) and Sam Koch from the Baltimore Ravens (17).

Hodges launched 78 punts for 3,424 yards, pinned opponents inside their 20-yard line 29 times and averaged 43.9 yards-per-punt, all of which were career highs.

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Browns coverage includes Mary Kay Cabot's story that the Browns have hired Mark Whipple as their quarterback coach and Bill Davis as the linebacker coach; on Starting Blocks TV, PD reporter Dennis Manoloff's opinion on whether the Browns should pursue quarterback Kevin Kolb; a Starting Blocks poll on whether the Browns should offer Kolb a contract; video of Browns center Alex Mack scoring a rather unique touchdown in Sunday's Pro Bowl.

 

DL draft depth

One of the Browns' most urgent needs is to improve their defensive line play, especially considering that they will likely switch from their familiar 3-4 defense to a 4-3 with new defensive coordinator Dick Jauron.

Richard Deitsch of Sports Illustrated's SI.com interviews NFL Network draft analyst Mike Mayock and asks him about the quality of defensive ends that will be available in April's draft.

Mayock replies that the defensive linemen, in general, from a strong group:   

It's a pass-first league now, and anyone who can get pressure on a quarterback is highly coveted. [Defensive end] Da'Quan Bowers is one of those guys who jumps off the tape when you watch him. Incredible explosion and strength, he plays hard and you don't have to worry about him off the field from what I know so far. Forget team needs and who is picking in the first five; I don't think Da'Quan Bowers gets out of the top five.

To me, Von Miller of Texas A&M is one of the most gifted pass rushers in this draft, though most of the teams look at him as a 3-4 rush linebacker, so he is not listed as a defensive end. You have Robert Quinn, and that's a kid where you have to take other considerations into play: How good a football player is he after he missed a year [because of suspension]? You have to go back to the tapes in '09.

Mayock says that for now, he ranks Quinn in the top five, but to learn more about him, "you have to do the homework with the coaches at North Carolina."

Browns stuff

Adam Schefter of ESPN.com tweets what another Pro Bowl selection means to Browns offensive tackle Joe Thomas.

Alex Mack's Pro Bowl TD, by Matt Florjancic on clevelandbrowns.com.

Opinion about the NFL draft, by Dave Kolonich on Scout.com's Orange and Brown Report.

Some players who could boost their draft hopes at the NFLPA Bowl, by Wes Bunting for the National Football Post.

 

You Pick the Game contest for week of January 31, 2011

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Vote in this week's You Pick the Game contest to decide where we send one of our reporters Friday. Voting is open until noon Thursday. The winner is announced in Friday's Sports section.

Vote in this week's You Pick the Game contest to decide where we send one of our reporters Friday. Voting is open until noon Thursday. The winner is announced in Friday's Sports section.

National Hockey League concussions on the rise; Sidney Crosby and Marc Savard's emphasize the problem

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Commissioner Gary Bettman says concussions are up this season, but notes that seems to be caused by accident, instead of by head contact from another player.

sidney-crosby.jpgPittsburgh Penguins star Sidney Crosby has been sidelined nine games with a concussion, and will miss some more.

RALEIGH, North Carolina – Thirty-one players recorded a point in the NHL All-Star game. None of them was named Sidney Crosby.

Or Marc Savard.

Crosby is dealing with the serious effects of a concussion for the first time since the Pittsburgh Penguins captain became the face of the league in 2005. For Savard, a Boston Bruins forward, the problem is all too familiar and comes back all too often — so much so that the career of the talented playmaker is very much in doubt.

So who is to blame? That depends on who you ask. And now based on new preliminary data revealed by NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman this weekend, perhaps the biggest culprit threatening the health of hockey's best players and all the rest is simply bad luck.

Bettman said Saturday that concussions are up this season, but quickly noted the increase seems to be caused by accidental or inadvertent situations, instead of by head contact from another player.

"I'm not saying that no concussions came from hits to the head, but it appears that the increase is coming from somewhere else," Bettman said.

No one benefited this weekend when the All-Stars were on display for three days without Crosby. There was a first-time fantasy draft to form the teams, a skills competition, and Sunday's 11-10 shootout won by a club captained by Detroit's Nicklas Lidstrom and named after him.

Crosby would have been featured prominently in each of those events, but the reality is he has just been cleared to begin light workouts. There is no timetable for his return. He already has missed nine Penguins game because of hits sustained in back-to-back contests against Washington and Tampa Bay in January.

"He's the best player in the league, so people are going to start talking about it," Vancouver Canucks forward Henrik Sedin said. "It shouldn't matter if it's him or if it's someone else — a fourth-liner. It's the same kind of injury. It's just a matter of taking care of it and looking over the rules."

Outside of a total ban of all contact to the head — intentional or accidental — the hit Crosby received from Washington's David Steckel in the Winter Classic on New Year's Day wouldn't have been deemed illegal. But when Crosby is involved, people notice.

"If it was (Maple Leafs forward) Mike Brown that got this concussion, do you think there would be this uproar in the media instead of 87?" Toronto general manager Brian Burke said. "So it's Sidney, and it was an inadvertent hit. I don't believe that David Steckel meant to hit him. I think he was looking past him and it was incidental contact.

"I hate seeing Sidney Crosby hurt. He's our best player. We want him on the ice. This guy sells tickets, he's a champion, he's a great kid. But he's playing hockey. If he hurt his knee, would we have the same uproar that we need to look at knee injuries? Just because it's Sidney, it's kind of created a magnifying-glass effect. That's not all bad, either, because it forces us to focus on it."

The issue has moved to the forefront of public debate because these serious injuries are affecting most notably NFL players, along with their hockey brethren.

Studies upon studies have been commissioned to determine where the biggest risk factors lie and what measures can be taken to lessen the likelihood concussions will occur. It's bad enough concussions often sideline players for long stretches of time during their career, but more is being learned about the long-term damage from such injuries.

It's a problem when anyone goes down with a head injury, but the NHL and its fans hurt even more when the biggest name in the game misses All-Star weekend — an event on the calendar simply for fun and celebration.

"You're talking about one of the best players in the world, if not the best, and clearly the best player in the league this year, and he's missing games because of a head injury. So that's a major concern," NHL Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly said. "It certainly spotlights the issue, but there's a concern about the issue generally.

"It's not a concern about the issue for superstar players, it's a concern about the issue for all our players."

As hot as discussions were about concussions before Crosby was injured, the spotlight is now shining brighter because the highest-profile player is now featured in the conversation. At least rule 48, which bans lateral blindside hits to the head, appears to be working in its first full season in effect.

"The one thing that I have said all along is when we put new rules in the league, the players are so good they adjust to it," Carolina Hurricanes general manager Jim Rutherford said. "If you look at the blindside hits now, the fact is there is still some, but there's not nearly as many as there were before and as time goes on there will be less."

Yet, the number of concussions is rising. Bettman declined to cite the specific number of concussions during the 2010-11 season or what percentage the rate of such injuries are going up.

"This is a flash news story for everybody: there's going to be concussions in the NHL," Burke said. "It's a full-contact sport and there is no out of bounds. If you have the puck or you just released the puck, you're fair game. We have to find a balance on how much hitting we want, because we want contact in the game.

"Our job is to make it as safe as we can without taking the hitting out."

So the discussion of whether rule 48 goes far enough, or if all contact to the head should be banned from the game, is center stage. If the information is correct, and head shots aren't a major cause of concussions, then why should or will the NHL feel compelled to make the rule even tougher?

"The game is getting pretty tight the way it is," Atlanta defenseman Dustin Byfuglien said. "You've got to let us play. You've got to just go out there. You know the game is going fast. I would say 99 percent of the time you're not trying to injure anybody. You're going out there and playing and doing your job and stuff happens fast.

"Sometimes you get a little out of control, but for the most part the game is all right and I don't think we need too many different rules."

That will be up to the NHL's 30 general managers, who came up with rule 48 last year. They will meet again in March and talk — and most surely argue — about what else, if anything, needs to be done.

"At any given time, we've got two, three, four, players hurt," Burke said. "Right now on our farm team we've got nine guys out: one with a concussion, the other eight guys have injuries. I don't hear anyone screaming about, 'Let's look into all the reasons the guys are hurt,' but the concussions are the flavor du jour."

So much so with Crosby's absence that the public outcry could urge the general managers to take further action to try to make the game safer.

"I expect that there will continue to be differences of opinion on that issue, and you work through the political process of trying to build a consensus," Daly said. "It clearly highlights the issue more. There are a whole host of issues why concussions are in the forefront. It certainly is a hot topic among the media and that makes it a hot topic on our major constituents."

Cleveland State, Kent State, Akron get Bracketbuster dates

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Games are officially set for mid-major showcase Feb. 18-20.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Cleveland State, Kent State and Akron all hope to boost their chances to play in a postseason tournament when they compete in ESPNU BracketBusters games later this month.

Cleveland State, 20-3 and leading the Horizon League with a 9-2 record, will play at Old Dominion (17-5, 8-3 Colonial Athletic Association) on Sunday, Feb. 20. The 1 p.m. game in Norfolk, Va., will be one of 11 BracketBusters games televised by either ESPN or ESPN2 on the weekend of Feb. 18-20, and will be the lone BracketBusters game played on Sunday.

Kent State (14-7, 5-2 Mid-American Conference) will play Drexel (14-7, 6-5 CAA) at the Daskalakis Athletic Center in Philadelphia in one of the two Feb. 18 games. ESPNU will televise the 9 p.m. contest.

There will be 54 games played on Feb. 19, including eight carried by ESPN or ESPNU. Akron (12-9, 3-4 MAC) will host Creighton (14-9, 6-5 Missouri Valley Conference) at Rhodes Arena in a 7 p.m. game that will not be televised.

This is the ninth season for the BracketBusters event, and the 114-team field is the largest yet. Teams from 15 conferences will compete.

Wins in BracketBusters games sometimes help teams that don't win their mid-major conference championships earn an invitation to the NCAA tournament. Last season, 12 BracketBusters teams -- though some earned automatic bids -- played in the NCAA tournament. They won a combined 10 games, including five by Horizon League champion Butler, which lost to Duke, 61-59, in the national championship game.

Kent State will remain one of 11 programs to play a game every season in BracketBusters history. The Golden Flashes are 6-2 in such games, and have won their last five.

Cleveland State is 3-3 and Akron 2-5 in BracketBusters contests.

Cleveland Cavaliers about to learn the cost of dismayed, disgusted fans: Bill Livingston

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A long-time Cavaliers season ticket holder explains why he is not renewing for next season, even though he has already been asked to do so.

cav-fan-lament-to.jpgView full sizeLooking for divine intervention hasn't been a winning strategy yet for Cavaliers fans dismayed by the franchise's collapse in 2010-11. How will those fans react to season-ticket renewal pitches by the team? Not well, says Bill Livingston.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- On December 2, the night of civic shame, the long-time Cavaliers season ticket holder stood at center court, holding his signs.

They were lime green, bright enough to glow in the dark. The television cameras recording LeBron James' return to Cleveland could not miss them. Neither could the Cavaliers players.

"Don't shake his hand," one read.

"No hugs," the other read.

"Instead, LeBron comes out and they're hugging and talking, and you could hear the booing from the stands growing. The players had to hear it," the season ticket holder said.

He doesn't want his name used. But if you go to a lot of Cavs games -- and judging by the number of empty seats at the sellouts they are announcing these days, chances are, you don't -- you've seen him.

The sellouts include seats purchased last spring by season ticket holders such as this one. In keeping with the practice of other teams in town and around professional sports, the Cavs asked for renewals during last season. It was a gamble for the fans, of course, because no one knew what James would do in free agency.

Still, most fans who had been through the LeBron era were willing to bet the good times would continue. Certainly this season ticket holder did so. He had been attending Cavs games since the Arena days, since Richfield, then at the Gund, renamed The Q now.

But Dec. 2 made him wonder how much of his loyalty was being returned by the players.

"The way our players acted around LeBron just took all the air out of the building," he said. "LeBron's out there during the game, jawing at our bench, and I'm standing up and saying to [Byron] Scott, 'Coach, get him away from there!' I mean, I figured he was Old School."

How long did he stay?

"I left in the third quarter. I couldn't watch it any longer," he said.

He tried to stick with the team as the post-Miami game death spiral began. He had been there through the shambles after Mike Fratello and before George Karl and Lenny Wilkens. "In some ways, the [Ted] Stepien era was the best, as far as getting tickets goes," he said. "If you bought two season tickets, they gave you two."

But now, after 20 straight losses and 30 in the last 31 games, going into tonight's rematch in Miami, he has trouble even giving away his tickets. In the 17-65 season that preceded the draft lottery that gave the Cavs the rights to James, it was not like this. No clear-cut franchise player like James is out there, for one thing. No Dec. 2 disgrace occurred, either. The losses did not mount crazily like this.

He got his invoice last week for 2011-12 season tickets. This too is a standard business practice by professional teams. But it struck a nerve this time.

"Are they kidding? This horrible season isn't even over yet. I feel like I threw thousands of dollars away," he said.

This man is probably like a lot of Cavs fans. He didn't play basketball in high school. But he picked up the love for it early in life and still plays, at recreation centers, in church leagues, with a bum knee and all. "I think I could give one of these guys an eight-minute blow and we might not lose that much," he joked.

His favorite player was Mark Price. He sees him as the opposite of James.

"Mark was a little guy who had to bust his tail every night," he said. "He never quit. He couldn't quit. I still wonder why the NBA didn't do anything about that Boston series. It was obvious LeBron quit."

He felt the players were part of the community in Price's day. "I'd go over to the Winking Lizard after games at The Q, and you would see Mark in there, eating with his family. People respected him and left him alone pretty much. But he seemed like such a regular guy."

He contrasts it to the James era.

"They have this roped-off area (at The Q) for little kids, and LeBron would walk by. The kids would come running over, holding out sheets of paper for him to sign," he said. "He wouldn't say anything, not 'How are you doing?' No kidding, like 'How's your shot?' He'd just sign five or six with a squiggle and walk on. You couldn't even tell it was his name. I can do a squiggle and say it's his signature."

This fan speaks for the unhappiness of so many others. He won't be the only one from whom the Cavs won't get another squiggle.

Follow Bill Livingston on Facebook

Fairport Harbor fire victims get a helping hand from a region of friends: Tim Warsinskey's Take

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Standing in her socks in the snow early Jan. 24, Hollie Myers watched helplessly as her grandparents' Fairport Harbor home was engulfed in flames.

fairport-clothes-horiz-cc.jpgView full sizeTabby Krall, a seventh grader at Fairport Harding Middle School, begins to fold a mountain of clothes, all donated to the Fairport Harbor citizens that lost their homes or had their homes damaged from the gas fires on January 24, 2011.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Standing in her socks in the snow early Jan. 24, Hollie Myers watched helplessly as her grandparents' Fairport Harbor home was engulfed in flames.

"It took 45 minutes for the fire department to get there, and 10 minutes later, the fire was outside the doorway," said Hollie, who called 911 and ran out of the house with her grandmother, Marie Bonczek, when the furnace blew up. "But by the time they got there, the fire was in the living room and dining room where my basketball stuff, my uniform and shoes, my school stuff and my library books were.

"I was flipping out. I was like, 'Oh my God.' Once I saw where all my stuff was going up in flames, I just broke down and started crying."

Hollie, a freshman guard on Fairport's varsity girls basketball team, sobbed again later in the day as her father retrieved Hollie's melted Nike basketball shoes, charred maroon Fairport uniform No. 14 and the fried MP3 player that was the highlight of her Christmas.

hollie-meyers-mug.jpgView full sizeFriends and family have boosted Hollie Meyers after last week's fire ... much as the community has rallied around other stricken residents.

"I had waited the whole year for it, and I was so happy to get it," she said.

Hollie hasn't been back to the destroyed, three-bedroom house on New Street other than a recent drive-by that left her in tears. Too jumpy to be by herself, she slept in her mother's bed the first couple nights after the fire. But she has been coping better each day with the help of friends and teammates.

"They're very supportive and ask me if I need anything and if I'm OK," she said.

Hollie has been warmed by the close-knit community's quick response. Friends and a former coach gave her clothes and shoes. Last week, Athletic Director Jerry Hites and Principal Thomas Fazekas quietly began collecting donations for victims of the fires that damaged or destroyed 20 buildings when a major natural gas line regulator failed. Through word of mouth and Facebook, more than 5,000 items have been donated -- everything from socks to small appliances.

Even rival basketball teams are reaching out. On Monday, Kirtland girls basketball players and coach Bob Bell presented Hollie and her family with $830 in a check to the family and gift cards from donations they collected.

Basketball has helped in additional ways.

"The more busy she stays, the less she thinks abut what happened, and she's actually coming through this really strong," said her mother, Christina (Bonczek) Gelhausen, a former three-sport standout at Fairport. "She's a strong kid, and very smart."

As a freshman on the varsity, Hollie doesn't play much. Perhaps her best moment last week came when coach Ed Reed put her in a game Saturday against Cardinal. She immediately sank a jump shot and finished with three points. Hollie was delighted.

"She told me it was a good way to end the week and, after Monday, she really appreciates everything she has," Reed said.

LeBron James shrugs off 'vindication' of move to Miami: Cavaliers Insider

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"I have nothing bad to say about the players I left and the team," James says before Monday's game.

lbj-heat-cavs-vert-mct.jpgView full sizeLeBron James can hardly recognize his old team, considering the number of unfamiliar faces when he faced Joey Graham and the Cavaliers on Monday night.

MIAMI -- LeBron James said on Monday that he does not feel vindicated about leaving when he looks at the current state of the Cavaliers.

"It didn't matter for me if the Cavs were going to have a successful season or not," James said before the Heat played the Cavs at American Airlines Arena. "I felt like I was making the right choice for me as an individual and for my career.

"I have nothing bad to say about the players I left and the team. I wish the organization the best, and I wish the fans more than anything the best. We had a lot of great years together. Their losing streak, how we're playing does not give me any indication. ... I made the right decision. I feel like I did that when I said I wanted to come here."

He hardly recognizes what's left of the Cavs. Among Monday's starters, J.J. Hickson is the only one he played with for multiple seasons.

"Most of those guys I haven't played with, so it's definitely strange first of all to see a team more banged up than we are," James said. "They're going through a lot of struggles right now. Hopefully they can get healthy and win some ballgames."

Remember when? Heat center Zydrunas Ilgauskas was a Cavalier during the franchise's 21-game losing streak from Jan. 13-April 14, 2003.

"I remember it was tough to keep your spirits up," Ilgauskas said. "A lot of games you knew you were overmatched, especially on the road. Nobody likes losing. For me it was a little different because I was just happy to be playing after all the injuries. Every time I came off the floor, even though we lost, it was a little moral victory for me because I was healthy playing.

"It's hard because it can affect everything from top to bottom in an organizations. We had no people at the games. There were a lot of empty blue seats."

Looking good: Rookie Samardo Samuels has been making a name for himself lately as he has performed well when the rash of injuries to his teammates increased his playing time.

Samuels scored a career-high 16 points in Sunday's loss at Orlando in front of the discerning eye of Magic assistant coach Patrick Ewing. Like Ewing, Samuels is a native of Jamaica who attended high school in the United States.

The two shook hands as Samuels and the Cavs came out for the second half of Sunday's game.

"I met him on a few occasions," said Samuels, an undrafted rookie from Louisville. "I'm aware of him, and he's aware of me. Actually, I didn't know he was Jamaican until I came over here. When I first met him and heard his accent, I couldn't believe it."

Their first meeting was a memorable one.

"I've known Patrick ever since I was in high school," said Samuels, who was the 2008 USA Today National High School Player of the Year at St. Benedict's Prep in Newark. "The first time I met him, I was on my visit to Georgetown, and he was trying to convince me to go to Georgetown."

How on earth did he say no to Ewing?

"It was hard, but Louisville was better for me," Samuel said with a smile.

Did you know? After Monday, the Cavs have just 13 road games left, and play nine of their 11 February games at home. ... Miami's Eddie House was fined $25,000 by the NBA for making an obscene gesture after hitting a game-deciding 3-pointer late in Sunday's 108-103 win over Oklahoma City. ... James was the Eastern Conference player of the week.


Heat burn Cavs again, 117-90: Mary Schmitt Boyer's in-game blog

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Wade dominates with 34 points as Miami blows open game in the second half.

wade-grimace-heat-cavs-vert-ap.jpgView full sizeDwyane Wade overwhelmed the Cavaliers with 34 points as the Heat pulled away after seeing their third-quarter lead shrink to three points.

MIAMI, Fla. -- Final observations from the Cavs' game against the Miami Heat at American Airlines Arena:

Is there any chance the Cavs could just forfeit the remaining game against the Heat on March 29 in Cleveland? I know all those Cavs fans want one more chance to vent at LeBron James, but, really, unless Chris Grant pulls off the trade of the century and gets, like, 10 new guys, this team has no chance of beating what the Heat has become. The Cavs know it. The Heat know it. That's why although Miami let Cleveland hang around for a while early in the second half, when the Heat decided to put the hammer down, as Austin Carr might say, the Cavs got pounded. At least the circus atmosphere that surrounded the first two meetings this season has subsided, mostly because the Cavs pose no threat. That won't be the case when James returns to Cleveland, but, frankly, it all just seems like too much trouble and too little reward _ just like eating crab legs.

Final: Heat 117, Cavs 90.

If Dwyane Wade could play like this every night, he wouldn't have needed LeBron James and Chris Bosh.

Wade scored 34 points on an amazing series of moves and shots and nearly beat the Cavs himself. He also had seven rebounds and five assists to help send the Cavs to a club-record 21st straight loss.

In falling to a league-worst 8-40, the Cavs, who have lost 31 of 32 games, including all three matchups with Miami, also extended their club-record streak for consecutive losses on the road to 24.

James had 24 points and eight assists, while Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 12 points and 14 rebounds for Miami. Antawn Jamison had 21 points and 10 rebounds, while J.J. Hickson had 14 points and nine rebounds for the Cavs.

Cleveland opened the second half on a 10-4 run and cut Miami's lead to 70-67 with 8:33 left. But the Heat scored nine straight and turned on their defense, and the Cavs hit just two of their next 16 shots.

Third quarter update: Heat 89, Cavs 72. After Cavs opened third quarter on a 10-4 run to close to 70-67, Heat turned on their defense and Cavs made just 2 of next 16 shots. Miami scored nine straight to restore lead to 79-67, and Cavs were pretty much done after that.

Halftime update: Heat 66, Cavs 57. Main reason to keep watching is to see what else Dwyane Wade can do.

He had 26 points in the first half, and most qualify for the team's highlight video at the end of the season. LeBron James added 13 points and six assists. Teams are flying up and down the court, but Cavs can't finish like Heat can.

Miami's edge in the paint is 32-20.

First quarter update: Heat 35, Cavs 20. It was about what you might expect when the worst team in the league meets one of the best.

LeBron James had 11 points, Dwyane Wade added 10 and Zydrunas Ilgauskas had eight rebounds for the Heat. The Cavs shot just 25 percent and had 5 turnovers.

Antawn Jamison had 10 points as the only Cav who seemed to have any idea what he was doing.

Cavs starters: F Christian Eyenga, F Antawn Jamison, C J.J. Hickson, G Daniel Gibson, G Ramon Sessions.

Heat starters: F LeBron James, F Chris Bosh, C Zydrunas Ilgauskas, G Dwyane Wade, G Mario Chalmers.

Injuries: Daniel Gibson (bruised left quad), Leon Powe (right knee surgery), Anderson Varejao (torn tendon, right foot) and Mo Williams (left hip flexor strain) are out for Cavs. Udonis Haslem (left foot) is out for Heat.

Inactives: Powe, Varejao and Williams for Cavs. Haslem, Jamaal Magloire, Dexter Pittman for Heat.

Officials: Ken Mauer, Bennie Adams, Kevin Fehr.

Three things to watch

1. With both teams playing the second night of back-to-backs, can the Cavs muster enough to even give the Heat a game?

2. The last time these two teams met here, Joey Graham tackled Dwyane Wade and the two fell into the stands. Graham hurt his right quad and missed 17 games, but he said if the situation occurred again, he'd do the same thing. Let's see if he does.

3. Adams and Fehr were two of the referees Byron Scott went off on in Orlando earlier this year. Wonder whether they'll see eye-to-eye tonight.

Virginia LB Curtis Grant could be a Signing Day surprise for Ohio State

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Five-star Virginia linebacker Curtis Grant on Wednesday could become Ohio State's biggest Signing Day surprise in years.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary defensive back Doran Grant is a typical Ohio State football recruit -- one of the best players in the state who announced his decision to be a Buckeye weeks ago.

Many others among the Buckeyes' 22 oral commitments made their choices known months ago. National Signing Day on Wednesday, when they'll officially become future Buckeyes, doesn't come with much intrigue.

"It's still a big deal, because Signing Day can be tricky," Grant said Monday. "You never know. I could say I'll go play here, but you never know ... Nah, I'm just kidding."

Grant laughed. The four-star defensive back knows he's coming to Columbus. Like a lot of Ohio State fans, he knows what he wants added to this Class of 2011 in the next two days -- Glenville offensive lineman Aundrey Walker and Virginia linebacker Curtis Grant.

Walker is expected to be another typical OSU recruit -- a Tarblooder who waits until late in the process to choose Ohio State. But the other Grant could be a most unusual prospect -- a five-star player who turns Signing Day into a real celebration for OSU fans with a drama-filled declaration that sends him to play for Jim Tressel.

Rivals.com national recruiting analysts Mike Farrell is one of several recruiting experts who believes Grant will pick the Buckeyes over North Carolina, Florida and Virginia when he announces his choice at a news conference Wednesday afternoon.

"This kid looks like a junior in college already and he plays like a junior in college already. He runs so fast from sideline to sideline, he closes like crazy," Farrell said. "If he goes there, he'd probably be the most athletic linebacker they've recruited over the last decade."

Rivals has the 6-3, 222-pound Grant as the overall No. 2 recruit in this class. Scout has Grant ranked as the No. 19 player. Either way, he'd become the highest-rated recruit in the Ohio State class for both services, and would be a big boost at the position, considering Trey DePriest and Jordan Hicks, the top-rated Ohio linebackers the last two years, did not choose the Buckeyes.

Rivals has Ohio State with the No. 11 overall class; Scout says it's No. 4. But adding Grant, a five-star player, and Walker, a four-star player, would lift both rankings.

"If they do that, that puts them in contention for the No. 1 class," said Scott Kennedy, a national analyst for Scout.com. "Ohio State is selecting more than recruiting the past few years."

Kennedy means that Ohio State, with Michigan, Notre Dame and Penn State falling back on the recruiting trail, is the top choice for many of the best players in the Midwest, and the Buckeyes often can choose from among many interested prospects. But this would be different.

Over the last five years, the only Buckeye to announce on Signing Day was safety Orhian Johnson, a three-star recruit, in 2008. Terrelle Pryor, as you'll remember, announced no choice on Signing Day that year but a month later signed with the Buckeyes.

Dipping into Virginia for a player that a year ago Farrell was sure would wind up at Virginia Tech or an SEC school would be a major coup. The departure of Urban Meyer at Florida certainly helped Ohio State's cause.

If it happens Wednesday, Doran Grant would be happy to add another Grant to the class.

"Hey," he said, "I'll be jumping for joy."

Cleveland Cavaliers' 21st straight loss is another blowout by the Heat, 117-90

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Manny Harris gets some post-game advice from LeBron James, but the rookie is more worried about his team after it's 21st straight loss.

Gallery preview

MIAMI, Fla. -- After Miami handled the Cavaliers, 117-90, on Monday night, Heat star LeBron James met rookie Manny Harris at center court and had a little heart-to-heart.

"He basically told me to keep getting better every day," Harris said, who had 20 points and five rebounds for the Cavs. "Coming from a player like him and his caliber it means a lot. Everything he said was right; keep playing every day and help my team get better.

"It's a good thing, but I'm just worried about the team right now -- how can we get better as a team."

That, indeed, is the question. Monday's loss was a club-record 21st straight, their 31st in 32 games, and a club-record 24th straight on the road. After dropping to a league-worst 8-40, what can the Cavs do?

"Keep fighting," coach Byron Scott said before the game. "That's all you can do. You're either going to fight or you're going to lay down. I don't think we've got guys who are going to lay down."

The Cavs fought back after Miami pulled out to a 19-point lead in the first half, thanks to some jaw-dropping plays by Dwyane Wade, who finished with 34 points, seven rebounds, five assists and three steals.

After closing to within 66-57 at halftime, the Cavs opened the third quarter on a 10-4 run to close to 70-67, forcing a Miami timeout. But in what has become an all-too-familiar refrain, getting back in the game took all the energy the short-handed visitors had. With all of its firepower, the Heat responded with a 9-0 run and the Cavs made just 2 of 16 shots the rest of the period.

Basically, when the Heat decided it wanted to win, it did.

"We played pretty good in the third quarter," Scott said. "I thought, again, they just took it to another gear. They've got the type of team that can do that.

"When they came out after that timeout, they buckled down a little bit more on the defensive end and they got it going a little bit more on the offensive end. You've got to give them a lot of credit. They just wanted to put the game away at that point in time and they just got more aggressive on both ends of the floor."

James had nine of his 24 points in the third quarter, then decided to offer Harris some support afterward. Harris has said that James was his favorite player growing up.

"I've known Manny since he was in high school," James said. "I've known him through a mutual friend all the way through college at Michigan. I think he's a very talented young player.

"I just told him no matter what's going on with the team -- I know they're struggling -- he has to continue to play well, he has continue to be aggressive and have confidence and don't let any distractions on or off the court stop him from trying to be a really good player in this league.

"I've seen him get his opportunity with the injuries they've had and he's played exceptionally well for a team that has struggled."

The string of injuries continued, too. Daniel Gibson was unable to play because of a sore left quad. He suffered the injury in New Jersey and aggravated it Sunday at Orlando. It seems unlikely he'll play Wednesday against visiting Indiana.

Cleveland Browns confirm hiring of four assistant coaches

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Head coach Pat Shurmur added four assistants to his staff, and will likely go without an offensive coordinator.

whipple-miami-horiz-ap.jpgMark Whipple, who worked with a Ben Roethlisberger at Pittsburgh, is the Browns' new quarterbacks coach.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Pat Shurmur added four assistants to his Cleveland Browns staff on Monday, and most likely will go without an offensive coordinator in 2011, a league source said.

Shurmur hired Mark Whipple (quarterbacks), Mike Wilson (receivers), Bill Davis (linebackers) and Dwaine Board (defensive line). The four have strong ties to either Shurmur, Browns President Mike Holmgren or General Manager Tom Heckert.

In addition, the Browns are retaining defensive backs coach Jerome Henderson, running backs coach Gary Brown, tight ends coach Steve Hagen and offensive line coach George Warhop.

With Whipple, Shurmur might decide to go without an offensive coordinator in 2011. He's already said he'll call his own plays this season. Only one team, Bill Belichick's Patriots, did so in 2010. The Cardinals had two, one for the passing game and one for the running game.

Whipple, who spent the 2008 season with Shurmur and Heckert as an offensive assistant in Philadelphia, was quarterbacks coach for the Steelers from 2004-06, where he helped Ben Roethlisberger to a sensational start.

In 2004, Roethlisberger went 13-0, becoming the first rookie in NFL history to win his first 13 regular season starts. He led the Steelers to the AFC Championship Game and set NFL rookie records for completion percentage (66.4) and passer rating (98.1). In 2005, he became the youngest rookie to win a Super Bowl.

Whipple spent the past two seasons with the Miami Hurricanes, where he served as assistant head coach, offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Whipple was fired along with head coach Randy Shannon after the 2010 season.

In 2008, with Whipple as an offensive assistant with the Eagles and Shurmur as quarterbacks coach, Donovan McNabb set single-season franchise records in passing yards, completions and attempts.

The hiring of Davis represents a homecoming. He was born in Youngstown, attended Berea High School and his father, Bill Davis, spent six years with the Browns (1981-86) as director and then vice president of player personnel.

Fired as defensive coordinator of the Cardinals this month, Davis was a defensive quality coach for the Browns under Chris Palmer in the 1999 expansion season. He was also a graduate assistant at Michigan State in 1990-91 when Shurmur was an assistant.

Davis has 19 years' NFL experience with eight teams. He was coordinator of the 49ers in 2005-06. In 2009, Davis' first season with the Cardinals, the unit allowed 325 points, fifth-best in the NFL. The Cardinals finished 29th in defense in 2010.

The two other assistants, Board and Wilson, played for the 49ers when Holmgren was an assistant there. Board also served as the Seahawks defensive line coach under Holmgren from 2003-08. Board's experience is in the 4-3 defense, which the Browns are expected to run under new coordinator Dick Jauron.

Board played 10 NFL seasons, winning two Super Bowls with the 49ers and earning Super Bowl XIX Defensive Player of the Game honors. During 20 years as a player and coach, his teams have made 18 playoff appearances, claimed 15 division titles, advanced to six Super Bowls and won five.

Wilson brings 13 years coaching experience at the college and pro levels. He played 10 seasons with the 49ers, where he won four Super Bowls. Wilson coached the receivers for two years with the Raiders and had three seasons as tight ends and receivers coach in Arizona.

Super Bowl title would be a great finish to an up-and-down season for Packers' A.J. Hawk

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The season wasn't always easy for former Ohio State linebacker A.J. Hawk, but with Green Bay in the Super Bowl and a new daughter, it couldn't have ended any better.

hawk-packers-vert-practice-ap.jpgView full sizeHis first child has shown family and friends a softer side to Green Bay linebacker A.J. Hawk, a former star with the Ohio State Buckeyes. But Hawk is determined to finish a challenging season with a Super Bowl ring.

Super Bowl XLV: Pittsburgh vs. Green Bay, Sunday, 6:30 p.m.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A.J. Hawk's first child arrived on a Saturday night, the day after he'd sprained his ankle in practice. The linebacker slept in the hospital in a fold-out chair, and Hawk's father, Keith, picked him up at 9 a.m. Sunday morning and drove him to Lambeau Field.

Hawk made four tackles against the San Francisco 49ers that day, Dec. 5, the Packers won, 34-16, and after the game Hawk was right back at the hospital with his wife, Laura, and his daughter, Lennon. His friend and former Ohio State teammate, Doug Datish, was there and filmed much of the hospital stay.

"It was a fun 36 hours," Keith Hawk said.

Had this been a perfect season for the former OSU All-American, the Packers would be undefeated since Lennon's birth, the daughter he dotes on serving as a good luck charm for cheeseheads around the country.

"That was probably the first time I've seen the softer side of him come out," long-time friend John Thomas said of Hawk. "He's not a real tender guy until you hit him with something like that. Man, does he love his baby girl."

But this entire season hasn't been ideal for the fifth-year pro -- though the ending might be.

So after the San Francisco win, the Packers lost their next two games, to Detroit and New England, just as Hawk had lost his place in the defense early in season, stuck on the sidelines in the season-opener while Green Bay played its nickel defense. Hawk's agent said publicly his client would be open to a trade, because no matter how much of a fit Hawk is for small-town Green Bay, his real home is wherever he can play the game.

But an injury helped pave the way for more playing time, and Hawk went on to lead the Packers with 111 tackles. His teammates voted him one of two defensive captains for the postseason and now, if the Packers beat the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, he could be changing diapers while wearing a Super Bowl ring.

"He's a grinder," said Keith Hawk. "He worked his way through it. That's how he handles everything."

One other area just short of perfection is the Packers' opponent, with the Steelers knocking off the New York Jets in the AFC Championship and preventing a Super Bowl showdown with fellow Centerville, Ohio native and three-year college roommate Nick Mangold that would have turned Doubleday's Grill and Tavern in Centerville into a Super Bowl hotbed.

That's the family restaurant where Thomas works. Hawk's friend since elementary school, Thomas lived in a three-bedroom house on West Norwich Avenue in Columbus with Hawk and Mangold for three years at Ohio State, where they'd shoot each other with soft pellet guns when someone came home from class.

"You lived in this little dinky house, and you had nothing, but it almost made you happier," Thomas said.

In many ways, that applies to Hawk, who always loves football in its simplest form and probably enjoyed the game most when he played with his older brother, Ryan, in high school.

"With A.J., I would say any change is almost literally non-existent," Ryan said Monday. "The only thing different is that he's got some new things in his life."

Yet as much as Keith Hawk appreciates the memories of his son playing at Centerville and Ohio State, he believes A.J. was born to play pro football. That includes accepting the business side of the game, and the reality that his scheduled $10 million salary for next season could mean this is Hawk's final year in Green Bay. Or it could be that his play will lead to a long-term extension.

At the moment, he has all he needs -- a wife, a daughter, a chance to play in the NFL's biggest game and the respect of his teammates.

"In our family, there's nothing better," Ryan Hawk said. "The fact his teammates said you're a guy we want to lead us, that means a lot."

Cleveland Browns fans: Should coach Pat Shurmur hire an offensive coordinator? Poll

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Should new Cleveland Browns coach Pat Shurmur hire an offensive coordinator?

pat-shurmur-michigan-state-university.JPGView full sizePat Shurmur, who played for Michigan State University, will be the center of attention as the play-calling head coach of the Cleveland Browns next season.

Cleveland, Ohio -- A handful of teams in the NFL go without offensive coordinators. Significantly, of the teams that made the playoffs this year, only New England was among them.

Oh, there was some speculation -- denied -- that Kansas City coach Todd Haley took over the play-calling duties from Charlie Weiss, who has since left the team to join Florida as offensive coordinator. And it's well known that Sean Payton calls the plays for the New Orleans Saints.

So the question is, can Cleveland's new coach, former Rams offensive coordinator Pat Shurmur, handle both the head-coaching and offensive coordinator jobs? He has hired Mark Whipple, who spent the past two seasons as the Miami Hurricanes' offensive coordinator, to be the quarterbacks coach and mentor young Colt McCoy. That's a good choice, considering that Whipple was Ben Roethlisberger's QB coach for the Steelers quarterback's first three years in the NFL. Developing McCoy into a Roethlisberger-caliber quarterback may be a task worthy of all Whipple's time and effort.

Lots of times, first-time head coaches find themselves overtaxed, and there's that danger with Shurmur. Yeah, he's been in the league, but you never really know how heavy hangs the headset till you put it on your noggin. Shakespeare apparently was quite the sportswriter, as his "Henry IV" quote "Heavy hangs the head that wears the crown" clearly fits in an NFL context.

Is he -- Shurmur, not Shakespeare -- up to the task? Or will his detractors mutter, "Forsooth, methinks thou dost protest too much"?



Talk sports with Terry Pluto Tuesday at noon

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Get your questions ready and join Terry Pluto today at noon as he talks Cleveland sports. Hear Terry's thoughts on the Cavaliers losing streak, the Browns new coaching hires and the Indians.

Terry Pluto use this new head shotTerry Pluto tackles your questions live every Tuesday at noon.

Get your questions ready and join Terry Pluto today at noon as he talks Cleveland sports.

Hear Terry's thoughts on the Cavaliers losing streak, the Browns new coaching hires and the Indians.

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




Cleveland Cavaliers A.M. Links: Columnist lifts LeBron and piles on Cleveland; Game stories

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No LeBron is not the only reason why the Cavaliers are on this losing streak.

LeBron returns, Miami Heat cooks Cleveland Cavaliers, 118-90LeBron James

SunSentinel.com columnist David Hyde writes how the Cleveland Cavaliers have not been the same since LeBron James left for Miami.

Duh!

Folks fail to realize that LeBron is not the only person that left the Cavaliers. LeBron doesn't get all of the credit for the Cavaliers being this bad.

Injuries to Mo Williams and Anderson Varejao are two reasons why the Cavaliers are on a 21-game losing streak. You can also add the departures of Shaquille O'Neal, Zydrunas Ilgauskas and Delonte West to what ails the Cavs.

But lets allow Hyde to pile on.

To understand what impact James provides, don't look at him being named the Eastern Conference Player of the Week on Monday. Don't look at snapshots such as his eight assists in just over a quarter Sunday in Oklahoma City.

Look at Cleveland.

Look what's happened without him.

 

 

 

Game stories

Cleveland.com: Another blowout loss to the Heat.

Miami Herald: Heat dominate Cavaliers.

SunSentinel.com: Miami Heat drop Cavaliers.

ESPN: Making Lemonade.

Ohio.com: Witness to winless month.

Super Bowl A.M. Links: America's team? Legacy builder; Dynasty building; Quick hits

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Are the Green Bay Packers America's Team?

babies.jpg

Despite years of success in Dallas and Pittsburgh that has produced a combined 11 Super Bowl titles, ESPN's Gene Wojciechowski writes how the Green Bay Packers are actually America's Team.

Why?

Because the Packers are a small-town team owned by fans, beloved by many, and the Packers have plenty of history on their side.

No, it's the Green Bay Packers. Has to be. And this just isn't me talking. Someone once asked the late, great NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle to name the best football city in the country. Rozelle didn't hesitate.

"Green Bay," he said. "A small town. People owning their own football team. Rabid supporters."

The Packers, writes Wojciechowski, are the only publicly owned major sports franchise in the country. No dividends are issued on the 4,750,937 shares held by the 112,158 shareholders.

Instead, these people invest in the Packers out of football love, not profit. How American is that?

They bailed the franchise out in 1923, 1935, 1950 and 1997. They pepper the team president and team general manager with questions, good ones, at the annual shareholders meeting. NFL commish Roger Goodell attended last July's event -- and got Q-and-A'd into submission by the football-savvy Packers owners.  

 

Legacy building

Greatness, especially for quarterbacks, is measured by winning a Super Bowl. Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers is fully aware of that belief, writes PackersNews.com reporter Pete Dougherty.

“Winning the Super Bowl is the optimum measuring stick for a quarterback, be it fair or not,” Rodgers said Monday night at his first press conference of Super Bowl week. “Dan Marino, one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time, did not win a Super Bowl. I think he’s still in the discussion for the greatest quarterback of all time. But as far as playing in Green Bay, you have to win Super Bowls.”

 

Dynasty builder

Kevin Colbert is the man behind the curtain when it comes to the success of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Colbert, director of player personnel, is as much responsible for the Steelers' third trip to the Super Bowl in six seasons, as anyone else.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reporter Ed Bouchette writes about Colbert's background and how he went through the ranks to become one of if not the best evaluator of talent in the buisness.

 • Many believe this is among his best rookie draft classes in his 11 years doing it with the Steelers. Colbert acknowledges that Pro Bowl center Maurkice Pouncey exceeded all expectations, and the contributions others have made, such as wide receivers Emmanuel Sanders and Antonio Brown. He'll wait for the final analysis.

"We always judge a rookie class by where we are. To this point, we're as far as we can be and if they help us win the Super Bowl, great. That's the only way to judge any class of players -- draftees or free agents or unrestricted free agents. You hope for the best results and again we've gone pretty far with this group. We hope the journey is not over."

 

 

Quick hits

Look what they're doing to these poor babies in Pittsburgh ... here's a tear jerker about the life of Donald Driver.

 

 


 

Cleveland Browns should name offensive coordinator to Pat Shurmur's staff, says Bud Shaw (SBTV)

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PD columnist says move would clarify who has what roles. Watch video


CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Welcome to today's edition of Starting Blocks TV, our Web morning show about what's happening in Cleveland sports. Today's show is hosted by Branson Wright and Chuck Yarborough.


Today's guest is Plain Dealer columnist Bud Shaw, who will be on DSN this afternoon doing sports talk from noon to 2 p.m. along with Les Levine.


Bud talks about today's Starting Blocks poll, which asks whether new Cleveland Browns coach Pat Shurmur should hire an offensive coordinator or just fill the role himself. Bud says he's like to see an offensive coordinator, maybe even advisor Gil Haskell, an advisor to team president Mike Holmgren, named as the OC, so the players know who has which roles from the front office on down.


Bud also makes his Super Bowl pick, talks about LeBron James' remarks before the Miami Heat's win over the Cavaliers last night; and whether the Cavs should trade forward/center Anderson Varejao if given the opportunity.


SBTV will return Wednesday.

Live on DSN: Talk about the Cavs, Super Bowl XLV, Browns and more

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Today's guests include Samantha Bunten, Indians beat writer for The Bleacher Report and Stephen Brotherston, a correspondent for Hoopsworld.com.

Cavs crushed by Heat, 90-117The Cavs went 0-for-January after losing to the Heat, 117-90.
The Cavaliers lost their 21st straight game, this time to LeBron's Miami Heat. Pat Shurmur's staff is coming into focus with 4 new assistants, but will he hire an offensive coordinator. It's Media Day in Dallas as the Packers and Steelers arrive for Super Bowl XLV.

Talk about those topics and more - including National Signing Day on Wednesday - all day on Digital Sports Network, cleveland.com's online sports station featuring live streaming video and audio.

Today's lineup on Digital Sports Network:

Morning Sports Page: Daryl Ruiter, 7-9 a.m.

Locked and Loaded: Greg Kozarik and Brian Fowler, 9 a.m.-noon: 

Have a Bud with Les: Les Levine and Bud Shaw, noon-2 p.m.


In the Trenches: Joe Lull, 2-5 p.m.

Moohead Radio, 5-6 p.m.: Mr. Moohead and Spinner Dave

Back in the Saddle
with Bob Karlovec and Ken Silverstein, 6-8 p.m.


News, Notes & Rumors: Will Smith, 8-10 p.m.
: Today's guests include Samantha Bunten, Indians beat writer for The Bleacher Report at 8:15 p.m. and Stephen Brotherston, a correspondent for Hoopsworld.com at 9:15 p.m.  to talk about the 2011 NBA free agent market and what the Cavs might be able to do to improve their roster.

Outside the Box: Gary the Numbers Guy, 10-11 p.m.


  



Ohio State Buckeyes P.M. Links: Hits and misses; Basketball preview, Recruiting news

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Some hits and misses when it comes to recruiting.

troy.jpgTroy Smith

The Ohio State Buckeyes have had many stars come through the ranks over the years. But a host of those stars were not rated high coming out of high school.


Columbus Dispatch reporter Tim May writes about several players the Buckeyes recruited out of high school, who were not ranked high, and  who became solid college players.


For example, Glenville quarterback Troy Smith came into OSU second fiddle to highly touted Justin Zwick. But it was Smith who became a Heisman Trophy winner.


Here are a few more examples:




2003
Tight end Louis Irizarry was going to be the next Kellen Winslow Jr., safety Donte Whitner the next big hitter, Dareus Hiley the next great cover corner, and Anthony Gonzalez could play offense or defense. Call it two out of four, with Whitner living up to his billing and Gonzalez becoming a star receiver. Irizarry eventually wound up in prison before ending up at Youngstown State, and Hiley never made it at OSU. Lineman Kirk Barton, cornerback Ashton Youboty and Air Force transfer Anthony Schlegel emerged as the backbone of a 15-player class that eventually had seven busts.

 


2005
Offensive tackle Alex Boone was going to be the next Orlando Pace, defensive back Jamario O'Neal was so good he was offered as a sophomore in high school, and running back Maurice Wells was a Florida scatback everyone wanted. Boone quickly became a regular, but never a star, and O'Neal and Wells became bit players. Meanwhile, a couple of three-star signees - linebacker James Laurinaitis and cornerback Malcolm Jenkins - became All-Americans.


 


Preview


Columbus Dispatch reporter Bob Baptist gives us his notes when it comes to OSU basketball. 


Baptist writes how the Buckeyes are so good that they have won six of their past eight games by five points or fewer.


 




The last of the other unbeatens fell last week, and yesterday Ohio State received every first-place vote in the Associated Press media and ESPN/ USA Today coaches polls.


The 22-0 start equals the second-best in school history, by the 1961-62 team. The record is 27-0, by the 1960-61 team, which didn't lose until the NCAA championship game.


  


Recruiting


Signing day is Wednesday, but here is the latest information when it comes to which players will sign with Ohio State.


 


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