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Defensive focus is keeping forward Alonzo Gee in Cleveland Cavaliers' starting lineup

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Alonzo Gee didn't exactly win the Cavaliers' starting small forward position by dominating, but coach Byron Scott has few options.

alonzo gee.JPGView full sizeCavaliers small forward Alonzo Gee has been starting the past five games more for the things he doesn't do.
CLEVELAND, Ohio — There's nothing quite like a gushing coach to give a player a boost of confidence. Which is what makes Byron Scott's appraisal of Alonzo Gee's move into the Cavaliers' starting lineup something the small forward probably doesn't want to cling to.

"I wouldn't say it's by default," Scott protested Friday. Then he paused. 

"But yeah, kinda," Scott shrugged. "Kinda right now it is, yeah." 

Gee has been the Cavaliers' starting small forward the past five games more for the things he doesn't do. For instance, he's more likely to pay attention to his weak-side defense, and less likely to lose focus than former starting small forward Christian Eyenga

With Scott's added emphasis on defense in this latter part of the season, Gee has found a place in the starting lineup ahead of athletic rookie Eyenga because of his defensive focus -- which is only slightly ahead of Eyenga's, Scott admitted. And neither one played particularly good defense in Wednesday's 110-90 loss at Milwaukee. 

"Alonzo has a little bit better feel of what we want done, I think he's a little more focused on that end," Scott said. "It's just a matter of Christian understanding that's what he has to do. I'm not saying he's had a big slide backward, but Alonzo has had a bigger jump forward." 

According to the website 82games.com, the players are fairly similar; in plus-minus ratings, Gee is -12.3 and Eyenga is -11.8. 

"I'm still learning," admitted Gee, who signed with the Cavaliers in December. "You've got to stay focused and not zone out when you're on the weak side of the floor. You've just got to stay focused and keep involved." 

Both Gee and Eyenga have a tendency to lose track of their assignments when on the weak side, which is why neither has a secure hold on the starting small forward position. 

"Both of those guys understand when the ball is not in your man's hands, that's when your job is really about to start," Scott said. "Because you have to be a good help defender. At times, both of them have shown signs of doing that. But they've got to do it on a more consistent basis."  

Player updates: Luke Harangody and Semih Erden were excused from practice Friday as they were in Boston to finalize their moves to Cleveland. Both players were traded from the Celtics to the Cavaliers on a trade-deadline deal Feb. 24. Both are expected to return for Saturday's practice. 

Both sat out games against Golden State and Milwaukee this week in an effort to recover from injuries. Harangody is closer to recovering from a hip pointer, Scott said, and is probable for Sunday's game against Oklahoma City. Erden has been limited by a groin injury, and is doubtful for the game against the Thunder. 

Meanwhile, point guard Baron Davis remains in Los Angeles after the death of his grandmother, Madea Nicholson, and his return to the Cavaliers still is uncertain -- though Scott conceded it might make the most sense for Davis to rejoin the team when the Cavaliers take a West Coast trip next week. Cleveland plays at Sacramento on Wednesday, Portland on Thursday and against the Los Angeles Clippers on March 19. 

Nicholson's memorial service is Tuesday in Los Angeles. 

"We want him to come back when he's good and ready and when he's taken care of all the business he needs to take care of in Los Angeles with his family," Scott said.  

No TV: The NBA announced that Cleveland's game at Portland on Thursday no longer will be televised on NBA TV.



Cleveland State women's basketball team falls to Butler despite Shawnita Garland's 20 points

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Garland adds nine rebounds and four steals, while Destinee Blue has 16 points and 10 rebounds, but the third-seeded Vikings still bow out.

Shawnita Garland scored 20 points, but the Cleveland State women's basketball team fell to Butler, 68-54, in the Horizon League Tournament semifinals Friday night in Green Bay, Wis.

Garland added nine rebounds and four steals, while Destinee Blue had 16 points and 10 rebounds, but the third-seeded Vikings (20-11) still bowed out.

Chloe Hamilton and Alyssa Pittman led the second-seeded Bulldogs (20-12) with 22 points each, while Hamilton added 10 boards.

Butler scored the first nine points of the game.

"You have to give Butler a lot of credit for the way they played tonight," CSU coach Kate Peterson Abiad said.

"They raced out to a quick lead, hit a lot of key shots to keep the momentum and really hustled to get second-chance points tonight."

Lake Erie Monsters tame Hamilton Bulldogs

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Cameron Gaunce, Julian Talbot, David Van der Gulik and Greg Mauldin all score for the Monsters.

Four Monsters found the net in Lake Erie's 4-2 victory over the Hamilton Bulldogs in American League Hockey play Friday at Copps Coliseum in Ontario.

Cameron Gaunce and Julian Talbot scored in the first period, David Van der Gulik had a goal in the second period and Greg Mauldin put the game out of reach with a tally in the third for Lake Erie. Talbot and Mauldin cashed in on power-play chances as Hamilton racked up 43 minutes in penalty minutes.

Gaunce also had two assists. Goaltender John Grahame had 19 saves and one assist for the Monsters.

Lake Erie also got assists from Mark Olver, Steve Oleksy, Ben Walter and Shawn Belle.

The Monsters jumped out to a 2-0 lead before J.T. Wyman scored Hamilton's first goal, on an assist from Dany Masse, near the end of the first period.

Hunter Bishop scored for Hamilton with 34 seconds remaining in the third.

Drew MacIntyre had 25 saves for the Bulldogs.

Mid-American Conference women's tournament semifinal: Eastern Michigan upsets top-seeded Toledo

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Toledo's turnovers and Eastern Michigan's success in shutting down Rockets guard Naama Shafir put the Eagles in the women's final.

eastern michigan.JPGView full sizeEastern Michigan's Cassie Schrock celebrates the Eagles' victory over Toledo in Friday's semifinal at The Q.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Speed and quickness. That was the formula fifth-seeded Eastern Michigan used to upset No. 1-seed Toledo, 61-55, Friday afternoon in a women's MAC Tournament semifinal.

The Eagles play second-seeded Bowling Green at 1 p.m. today at The Q for the MAC Tournament title and the automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

"That's the only team [until Friday] we have not defeated since I've been here," EMU fourth-year coach AnnMarie Gilbert said.

The Eagles have had problems with Toledo in the recent past, including a pair of losses to the Rockets this season. Much of that was due to Toledo's all-league guard, Naama Shafir, who scored 32 points in a win over EMU last month. So Gilbert had one simple game plan.

"Our goal was to shut down Naama Shafir and let other players beat us," Gilbert said.

It worked. Shafir finished 1-of-11 from the field, 0-of-6 on 3-pointers and committed seven of the Rockets' whopping 22 turnovers.

The Rockets outrebounded the Eagles (41-39); shot better from the field (37.9 percent-34.9 percent); and had a big edge in 3-pointers (6-0). What proved the difference was that EMU turned the ball over just 11 times and made 12 more free throws (17-5) than Toledo.

And that points directly to Shafir being held to a whimper.

Eastern Michigan's speed was a clear contrast to Toledo's power and strength throughout the first half. The Eagles forced 16 turnovers in the first half but only four of those were steals. The Rockets traveled and threw passes away trying to beat EMU's speed.

To Toledo's credit, the Rockets trailed by only 27-19 at halftime. When the Rockets were patient, they got decent shots inside. But it was clear Toledo would have to be a lot cleaner with the basketball in the second half if it was going to win.

The Rockets had no turnovers in the first five minutes of the second half but shot a dismal 2-of-8 from the field and the Eagles pushed their lead to 39-26.

The Rockets made a late charge, and with possession and 5:32 to play, trailed, 50-47. But Shafir turned the ball over and EMU scored on the break. The Eagles kept it a two-possession game until 28 seconds remained when Melissa Goodall's 3-pointer made it 59-55. But EMU guard Cassie Schrock iced it with two free throws.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: ealexander@plaind.com, 216-999-4253

Mid-American Conference men's and women's tournament notebook: Turnovers costly for Toledo

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A summary of Friday's top stars and other tidbits from the 2011 Mid-American Conference basketball tournament.

paige redditt.JPGView full sizeEastern Michigan Paige Redditt (32) fights for a loose ball against Toledo's Courtney Ingersoll and Naama Shafir (4) during Friday's semifinal at The Q. Eastern Michigan defeated Toledo, 61-55.

Stars

1. Paige Redditt: Eastern Michigan's 6-1 junior from Kansas City, Mo. She had her hands full in the post against big and physical Toledo, but the slender forward was huge in the Eagles' upset of Toledo. She finished with 18 points and a game-high 11 rebounds, including six on the offensive boards to keep EMU competitive with UT on the glass, trailing just 41-39 at the finish, albeit with an 18-16 advantage in offensive rebounds.

2. Quincy Diggs: Akron's 6-4 sophomore swingman from Wichita, Kan. He delivered a season-high 18 points in 18 minutes in the Zips' 79-68 victory over Western Michigan. He made 6-of-6 from the field, including 2-of-2 on 3-pointers and 4-of-5 free throws. Five fouls kept him from playing longer.

3. Kaihla Szunko: Senior forward, Central Michigan. She had 23 points and 19 rebounds in 40 minutes of an 80-72 loss to Bowling Green on Friday.

Quotes

"I really thought the difference in the game was turnovers [22]. I thought the 16 first-half turnovers cost us the game. We did a much better job in the second half." -- Tricia Cullup, Toledo coach, following No. 1 seed UT's 61-55 loss to Eastern Michigan.

"We're a team that likes to shoot the 3, but we don't do it well enough. What we do is run. We don't rebound well enough to shoot the 3 and survive. We've been able to [win] without it." -- AnneMarie Gilbert, Eastern Michigan coach, on pulling an upset of Toledo without making (0-for-6) a 3-pointer.

"Nobody expected us to be here, really." -- Keith Dambrot, Akron coach, after a 79-68 victory over Western Michigan put the Zips in the MAC Tournament championship game.

Notes

The 'X' factor: You would never know it, but the Akron Zips were outrebounded by Western Michigan, 52-40; outscored in the paint, 32-26; outscored off turnovers, 14-8; and outscored on second-chance points, 29-9.

Yet, Akron advanced to its fifth straight MAC Tournament title game behind another stat, 9-of-20 shooting on 3-pointers.

Senior Darryl Roberts and junior Brett McClanhan were a combined 6-of-11 on 3-pointers with McClanhan's deep corner 3 with just over a minute to play being the clincher.

"That's a balancing factor," Roberts said after the game. Whenever we make 3's, it's a plus."

Stopper: Lauren Prochaska, a senior guard/forward, scored 16 in Bowling Green's 80-72 victory over Central Michigan in a women's semifinal Friday. She shot 2-of-9 from the floor and 11-of-12 from the line.

The points were important, especially a 3-pointer that gave the Falcons a 46-45 lead early in the second half. But her major contribution came on the defensive end, where she often guarded Shonda Long.

In Central Michigan's quarterfinal victory over Buffalo on Wednesday, Long went 12-of-20 from the field and scored a program-record 40. She was 7-of-11 from 3-point range.

Long struggled against Prochaska and the Falcons, going 2-of-9 from the floor and scoring six. She missed her one 3-point attempt.

"I think Lauren's the best guard defensively in the league -- and gets no credit for it," Falcons coach Curt Miller said. "She's not flashy and she's very unassuming on the court. She doesn't play with emotion. She just goes out and gets stops.

"[Long] was ridiculously good in the quarterfinal and Lauren once again did what she does against star players. She's so long, she anticipates and she understands players' strengths and weaknesses."

Prochaska is a three-time All-MAC First Team selection.

Chippewas senior forward Kaihla Szunko did her best to pick up the slack for Long, notching game-highs in points (23) and rebounds (19). She had 14 points and 14 rebounds in the first half.

Notable: Bowling Green and Central Michigan used the same starting five as they had all season. According to the respective media relations departments, Bowling Green and Central Michigan are believed to be two of just three Division I teams to have used the same starting lineup in every game this season. The other entering Friday was Miami (Fla.).

Plain Dealer reporters Elton Alexander and Dennis Manoloff contributed to this story.

Hathaway Brown girls basketball team tops Lake Catholic to reach state final four

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BARBERTON, Ohio — Hathaway Brown is headed to its fifth straight girls basketball state final four, and while that might seem like an uninterrupted and flawless run, this season has been anything but easy. The Blazers' 70-60 victory over Lake Catholic in a Division II regional final Friday at Barberton represented a sigh of relief as much as a...

BARBERTON, Ohio — Hathaway Brown is headed to its fifth straight girls basketball state final four, and while that might seem like an uninterrupted and flawless run, this season has been anything but easy.

The Blazers' 70-60 victory over Lake Catholic in a Division II regional final Friday at Barberton represented a sigh of relief as much as a remarkable accomplishment.

In what has been an emotional and challenging winter, HB rarely has been healthy, until now. Several key players have missed extensive action. The season also presented the challenge of coping with the death of Kristina Poland, the mother of Hathaway Brown players Stephanie and Sarah Poland, two days after Thanksgiving.

But HB has a deep reservoir of character, as well as talent and size. All of that was on display as the Blazers withstood a furious Lake Catholic rally.

The Cougars, who trailed by as much as 18 points in the second quarter, launched a 15-3 run to start the fourth quarter and forged a 55-55 tie with 4:12 to play.

The adversity was nothing new for an HB team that went 11-9 in the regular season.

"We have been through a lot this season with injuries and everything emotional that has happened to us," senior Sarah Poland said. "What has helped the most is that we are all close. We are a family. We play one of the toughest schedules in the state, and it's hard. Our record isn't the greatest. That helped us prepare for right now."

The unranked Blazers (16-9), who have won the past two state championships, play Thursday in a state semifinal against Cambridge (21-4) or Plain City Jonathan Alder (19-5), which played Friday night. Both are unranked.

Seventh-ranked Lake Catholic (23-3) rattled HB with an unexpected halfcourt-zone-trap defense and stellar outside shooting by junior guard Delani Stopp, who scored a game-high 24 points.

The Cougars were down three points with three minutes remaining, but then had a turnover, a miss and two fouls by center Colette Hounshell (12 points), who fouled out with 2:12 left. Those events contributed to HB's decisive, 8-0 run. Sarah Poland (14 points) made four free throws, and Nia Marshall (16 points) and Vanessa Smith (14 points, 11 rebounds) each scored baskets.

The comeback appeared to drain Lake Catholic.

"I would have to agree," Cougars coach Frank Soria said. "We made such a great effort to get it tied up. I was just hoping we'd be able to get those last couple minutes out of our kids, but Hathaway was able to get a couple key buckets."

After a trophy presentation, the tearful Cougars walked quietly to the lockers. HB players waded into their delirious fans with hugs all around, including the Poland sisters from their father and grandfather.

"I am so happy right now," Sarah Poland said. "Words can't describe what I'm feeling. The seniors are going to state for the fourth year in a row. We've never had a final game anywhere but the Ohio State court. That's amazing. We feel really lucky."

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

Twinsburg girls basketball team is off to state after knock off Canton McKinley

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CANTON, Ohio — Reach the state semifinals in girls basketball for the first time in school history. Check.

Twinsburg's Katie Fox breaks away from Canton McKinley defenders in the fourth quarter Friday at Canton. Fox finished with nine points, eight rebounds and five assists. - (Lisa DeJong l PD)

CANTON, Ohio — Reach the state semifinals in girls basketball for the first time in school history.

Check.

Beat the team that knocked you out of the tournament the past two seasons.

Check again.

Upset the defending state champion and No. 1-ranked team in the state while snapping its 47-game winning streak at the same time.

Checkmate.

Playing an incredible all-around game, Twinsburg upended Canton McKinley, 48-39, on Friday in a Division I regional final.

The Tigers (25-0) will head to Columbus to play Pickerington North (21-5) in a state semifinal next week -- a team they beat earlier this season.

"This game is all we have thought about since last year," said Twinsburg post Malina Howard, who led the Tigers with 12 points and 10 rebounds. "It's been one game at a time all year, but this was the one we stared at. This was the one we wanted."

After a rough-and-tumble first quarter, the Tigers took over.

Whether it was Howard teaming with Nicole Carman (seven points, 12 rebounds) and controlling the paint, Twinsburg was on.

Katie Fox (nine points, eight rebounds, five assists) was all over the place as was Ashley Morrissette (eight points). But the star of the game might have been LaShawna Gatewood.

While her eight points and five boards were a welcome addition, it was the junior's defense that stood out.

Gatewood drew McKinley's Ameryst Alston and shut down the junior guard, who averages 22 points a game. Alston, seemingly frustrated, fouled out with 1:06 remaining with just nine points and her team down, 46-39.

"Because they wanted it that bad, they persevered and found a way," Tigers coach Julie Solis said. "They're a special bunch of kids. I'm fortunate to be around them and just happy for them that they came through. They showed composure when things got tight. The monkey's finally off the girls' back."

Twinsburg led at halftime, 20-18.

Morrissette and Howard opened the third with four quick points and the Tigers turned it on after that.

Twinsburg controlled the boards, 30-22, dished out 10 assists and played shutdown defense.

McKinley (25-1) came into the game having won its postseason games by an average score of 77-25. Aaliyah Dotson led the Bulldogs with 12 points.

"We knew they could get stops on defense, but we knew we had a good defense as well," Howard said. "We knew we were just as good. We had to come out and prove it."

Brad Bournival is a freelance writer in North Royalton.

Windham boys basketball team tops Warren JFK in two overtimes

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WARREN, Ohio — For more than three quarters it looked as if Warren JFK was going to be crowned Division IV district champions for the first time under coach Shawn Pompelia. But a determined effort from coach Marty Hill's Windham Bombers spoiled JFK's hot start and sent Windham to the regional semifinals with a 62-55 double-overtime victory.

WARREN, Ohio — For more than three quarters it looked as if Warren JFK was going to be crowned Division IV district champions for the first time under coach Shawn Pompelia.

But a determined effort from coach Marty Hill's Windham Bombers spoiled JFK's hot start and sent Windham to the regional semifinals with a 62-55 double-overtime victory.

Trailing, 37-30, entering the fourth quarter, the Bombers didn't take their first lead of the game until 4:22 remained. The teams went back and forth over the final four minutes before a half-court shot from the Bombers' Cameron Pozsgai clanked off the rim as time expired, sending the game to overtime.

Windham had another shot at a win in the first overtime, but again a Pozsgai 3 was off the mark with 0.4 seconds left. However, Windham dominated the second overtime, 10-3, over a depleted JFK roster that had four players foul out, including three starters.

"Looked like we were dead in the water, didn't it?" Hill joked before helping cut down the nets. "I don't know who that team in the first half was. I really screamed at them at the half, but to their credit they responded."

JFK dominated the first half and led, 29-18, at the break. Leading the Eagles offense was Brendan Cox, who scored 13 of his 16 points in the first half.

But Cox and the rest of the Eagles went cold in the second half, especially from the line, where they shot a meager 9-of-22.

"They were 21-of-33 from the line; there's the game right there," Pompelia said.

While Windham outscored JFK, 12-8, in the third quarter, that's where the game was lost, according to Pompelia.

"They only outscored us by four points, but you just felt the momentum flowing to their side," Pompelia said.

That momentum carried over as Windham outscored JFK, 32-18, in the second half.

"They started to get ahead of us and we realized we really better kick it into gear or our season is over," Windham sophomore point guard Matt Knight said. "We just worked really hard on defense and hit some key shots."

Jeremy Isler led Windham with 15 points, including going 5-of-7 from the line. Knight, who fouled out late in the second overtime, hit 10 of his 12 freebies on his way to 14 points.

"Jeremy Isler made a lot of big foul shots," Hill said. "We had other guys pick us up tonight when we needed it. Matt is only a sophomore and he does a lot for us, too. We wouldn't have won without him."

Martae Hainesworth led JFK with a game-high 17 points.


Mid-American Conference men's tournament semifinal: Kent State defeats Ball State, 79-68

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Mike Porrini has 15 points, nine rebounds and seven assists to lead the Flashes into the MAC title game against Akron.

Gallery preview CLEVELAND, Ohio — Some late second-half defense plus a second straight all-around performance from guard Mike Porrini lifted Kent State to a 79-68 victory over Ball State on Friday night in the Mid-American Conference men's tournament semifinals.

Kent State plays rival Akron 6 p.m. today in the tournament title game.

Porrini finished with 15 points, nine rebounds and seven assists. One, a pinpoint dart to a streaking Rod Sherman off the baseline, stopped a BSU charge that had brought the Cardinals within 60-59 with 9:19 to play.

"I was just trying to create," Porrini said. "His man turned his head and Rod turned back door and I found him. Give credit to Rod."

Moments later a Sherman steal and coast-to-coast layup had the Flashes up, 69-63, and fans screaming "That's the senior" in tribute to Sherman's status as one of the rare Kent players aiming for a third trip to the NCAA Tournament.

The Zips will counter today with a team playing in its fifth straight MAC title game, and six Zips have played in four of them.

"They have a lot of guys who have played in a game of this magnitude before," Kent head coach Geno Ford said.

Kent (23-10) counters with three players with MAC Tournament experience before this season, and only Sherman has played in a title game.

Sherman finished with 13 points, but once again it was MAC Player of the Year Justin Greene who led the Flashes. Greene had his fifth straight double-double with 20 points and 12 rebounds. Jarrod Jones led Ball State (19-13) with 22 points and 11 boards.

The Golden Flashes opened smoothly on offense, even getting a pair of baskets from power forward Justin Manns as they built a 17-13 lead against the No. 4 Cardinals. But defensively there were issues as the 6-9 Jones had his way around the rim, scoring eight of Ball State's early points, all relatively easily.

Then his teammates joined the offensive action and in short order the game was tied. The teams traded hoops for several possessions as neither had much of a defensive presence. With 7:57 to go, Kent's lead was a slim 32-30. The Flashes were shooting 66.7 percent from the field and Ball State was a step better at 68.8 percent.

Kent then warmed to the challenge with an 11-5 run. Key in that spurt was Porrini putting his jump shot on the shelf in place of pinpoint assists for his teammates and a 43-35 lead that became 46-36 on a Manns dunk.

Ball State, however, ended the half with a small run of its own to make it 48-43 at the break.

The second half started much like the first, only now the Cardinals used free throws to chip away at Kent's lead. The Cardinals were within 54-51 before a Porrini 3-pointer gave Kent a little edge, yet BSU stayed within striking range.

Leading, 59-53, Greene went to the bench with his third foul at the 11:21 mark. Two minutes later, Kent called a timeout while clinging to a 60-59 advantage. Guyton then started a 9-4 run with a 15-footer to get a bit more breathing room.

BSU's Jesse Berry dropped in a floater to put Kent on notice. But a pair of Greene free throws, followed by a nifty reverse layup from Sherman, gave the Flashes a 73-65 advantage and had Kent fans looking to the final.


NFL owners lock out players, starting league's first work stoppage since 1987

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The owners make the move at midnight, capping a Friday in which labor talks broke off because the league and the union couldn't decide how to divvy up $9 billion a year.

john mara.JPGView full sizeThe New York Giants' John Mara and other NFL owners have locked out the players because of a new labor-agreement could not be reached.

Howard Fendrich / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Unable to decide how to divvy up $9 billion a year, NFL owners and players put the country's most popular sport in limbo Friday by breaking off labor negotiations hours before their contract expired. The union decertified; the league imposed a lockout.

Ten players, including MVP quarterbacks Tom Brady and Peyton Manning, sued the owners in federal court in Minneapolis. Then, at midnight, the owners locked out the players -- signaling the NFL's first work stoppage since 1987.

"We are locked out," union president and former player Kevin Mawae said in a text message to the Associated Press. "We were informed today that players are no longer welcome at team facilities."

Despite two extensions to the collective bargaining agreement during 16 days of talks overseen by a federal mediator -- and previous months of stop-and-start negotiating -- the sides could not agree on a new deal. Now they will be adversaries in court: The players already requested an injunction to block a lockout, even before one was in place.

As was clear all along, the dispute came down to money. In the end, it appeared the sides were about $185 million apart on how much owners should get up front each season for certain operating expenses before splitting the rest of the revenues with players -- a far cry from the $1 billion that separated the sides for so long.

But the NFL Players Association refused to budge any further without getting detailed financial information for each team.

"I would dare any one of you to pull out any economic indicator that would suggest that the National Football League is falling on hard times," NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said. "The last 14 days, the National Football League has said, 'Trust us.' But when it came time for verification, they told us it was none of our business."

By dissolving and announcing it no longer represents the players in collective bargaining, the union cleared the way for class-action lawsuits against the NFL, which opted out of the CBA in 2008. The antitrust suit -- forever to be known as Brady et al vs. National Football League et al -- attacked the league's policies on the draft, salary cap and free-agent restrictions such as franchise-player tags.

Invoking the Sherman Act, a federal antitrust statute from 1890 that limits monopolies and restrictions on commerce, the players are seeking triple the amount of damages they've incurred. That means the stakes here could be in the hundreds of millions.

It could take a month for there to be a ruling on the union's injunction request, and antitrust judgments should take longer.

The court fights eventually could threaten the 2011 season for a league whose past two Super Bowls rank as the two most-watched programs in U.S. television history. The last time NFL games were lost to a work stoppage came when the players struck 24 years ago, leading to games with replacement players.

A lockout is a right management has to shut down a business when a CBA expires. It means there can be no communication between the teams and current NFL players; no players -- including those drafted in April -- can be signed; teams won't pay health insurance for players; players are not allowed in team facilities.

If the lockout lasts long enough, it would lead to the cancellation of games.

Even though the NFL is early in its off-season -- and the regular season is six months away -- this is hardly a complete downtime. Free agency usually begins in March, and there are hundreds of free agents now in limbo. Also this month, under a regular schedule, team-organized off-season workouts would start. The lockout grinds all such activity to a halt.

March and early April are when many sponsors and corporate partners renew their deals with the NFL, part of why the league says hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue are going to be lost now.

"This obviously is a very disappointing day for all of us. I've been here for the better part of two weeks now, and essentially ... the union's position on the core economic issues has not changed one iota," New York Giants owner John Mara said. "One thing that became painfully apparent to me during this period was that their objective was to go the litigation route."

The NFLPA also decertified in 1989. Antitrust lawsuits by players led to a new CBA in 1993 that included free agency, and the union formed again that year.

The sides met from 10 a.m. until about 4 p.m. Friday, discussing a new proposal by the owners. When the possibility of a third extension to the CBA was raised, the union said it first wanted assurances it would get 10 years of audited financial information.

"I will tell you this: Any business where two partners don't trust each other, any business where one party says, 'You need to do X, Y and Z because I told you,' is a business that is not only not run well, it is a business that can never be as successful as it can be," Smith said.

At 4:45 p.m., Smith and the union's negotiators left the mediator's office. About 15 minutes later, the union decertified.

"No one is happy where we are now," NFL lead negotiator Jeff Pash said. "I think we know where the [union's] commitment was. It was a commitment to litigate all along."

A league statement added: "The union left a very good deal on the table."

"No useful purpose would be served by requesting the parties to continue the mediation process at this time," said mediator George Cohen, who managed to keep a lid on public comments from both sides for much of the last three weeks.

But the public acrimony that arose Thursday night seeped into Friday.

After Pash spoke, outside union lawyer Jim Quinn said: "I hate to say this, but he has not told the truth to our players or our fans. He has, in a word, lied to them about what happened today and what's happened over the last two weeks and the last two years."

The NFL said its offer included splitting the difference in the dispute over how much money owners should be given off the top of the league's revenues. Under the expiring CBA, the owners immediately got about $1 billion before dividing the remainder of revenues with the players; the owners entered negotiations seeking to roughly double that.

But the owners eventually reduced that additional up-front demand to about $650 million. Then, on Friday, they offered to drop that to about $325 million. Smith said the union offered during talks to give up $550 million over the first four years of a new agreement -- or an average of $137.5 million.

"We worked hard," said NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who was joined at mediation on Thursday and Friday by nine of the 10 members of the owners' powerful labor committee. "We didn't reach an agreement, obviously. As you know, the union walked away from the mediation process."

Also in the NFL's offer, according to the league:

Maintaining the 16 regular-season games and four preseason games for at least two years, with any switch to 18 games down the road being negotiable.

Instituting a rookie wage scale through which money saved would be paid to veterans and retired players.

Creating new year-round health and safety rules.

Establishing a fund for retired players, with $82 million contributed by the owners over the next two years.

Financial disclosure of audited profitability information that is not even shared with the NFL clubs. That was proposed by the NFL this week, and rejected by the union, which began insisting in May 2009 for a complete look at the books of each of the 32 clubs.

As Pash outlined each element of the owners' last offer, he ended with the phrase: "Evidently not good enough."

When Goodell, Pash, Mara and owners Jerry Jones of the Cowboys and Jerry Richardson of the Panthers emerged from Cohen's office shortly after 5 p.m., they sounded hopeful negotiations would resume soon.

"We're discouraged, we're frustrated, we're disappointed, but we are not giving up. We know that this will be resolved in the negotiation process," Pash said. "We will be prepared to come back here any time the union is ready to come back here."

AP Sports Writer Joseph White in Washington, Associated Press Writer Amy Forliti in Minneapolis, and AP Pro Football Writer Barry Wilner in New York contributed to this report.

Terrelle Pryor, DeVier Posey the players 'protected' by Ohio State coach Jim Tressel

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Terrelle Pryor and DeVier Posey were the players Ohio State coach Jim Tressel was protecting by not revealing emails he received.

jim tressel.JPGView full sizeBuckeyes players are standing behind embattled coach Jim Tressel.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Quarterback Terrelle Pryor and receiver DeVier Posey were the two players selling memorabilia and mentioned to Ohio State coach Jim Tressel in e-mails last April, e-mails Tressel didn't reveal, thereby committing NCAA violations that have cost him at least a two-game suspension and $250,000 fine.

Lawyer and former OSU player Chris Cicero, who sent the e-mails to Tressel warning him that two of his star players were involved with selling memorabilia to a potential drug trafficker, told ESPN on Friday that Pryor and Posey were the players. Ohio State had previously blacked out the names when revealing the e-mails in a Tuesday news conference that announced Tressel's violations and sanctions.

It was obvious the two players had to come from the group of six who were hit with NCAA sanctions in December, and Pryor and Posey were two of the players suspended for the first five games of 2011.

Tressel said Tuesday that one of the reasons he didn't report the violations to his bosses, as required by his contract and NCAA rules, was because he feared for the players' safety.

"I was scared," Tressel said.

Friday, Tressel attended Ohio State's Pro Day at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center, as 17 players from Ohio State's 2010 team worked out for NFL scouts. Not surprisingly, Tressel received a lot of backing. Here's reaction from four of the Buckeyes' six captains from 2010:

• "He has all of our support," linebacker Ross Homan said. "I think every player, past and present, they wouldn't take one bullet, they would take two bullets for that man for everything he's done for us."

• "Coach Tressel is a guy lots of guys trust in," linebacker Brian Rolle said. "For me, he's a guy I highly respect. For people to say things, or accuse him of things, I don't know the whole story, but to take his name and make what they want of it, it's heartbreaking. But at the same time, guys in this program know what kind of coach he is."

• "I was surprised to hear it," running back Brandon Saine said. "But I always put my trust in this program and the people that are here. I still do."

• "It's disappointing that Ohio State is in that light again," receiver Dane Sanzenbacher said. "But it's something you have to deal with from this point. Any time we're in the media over something bad happening, everyone is affected who is involved with the program, everyone in Columbus. But what can we do about it now? Everyone accepted their punishment and said the right thing and moved on."

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


Akron men's basketball team is tough, just like its coach: Bill Livingston

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Keith Dambrot writhes, squirms, paces, and anguishes on the sideline as his Zips reach the MAC Tournament finals for a fifth straight year.

keith dambrot.JPGView full sizeCoach Keith Dambrot has the Zips in the Mid-American Conference Tournament finals for the fifth straight year after 79-68 win over Western Michigan on Friday at The Q.
CLEVELAND, Ohio — He squats like a catcher in baseball, the game he played at his alma mater, waiting for his team to bring the heat.

Any team Akron alumnus Keith Dambrot coaches is going to play hardball. His Zips test their opponents' aggressiveness and probe their will, all while Dambrot paces the sidelines in anguish.

A strange statistical achievement from his baseball career might be the quality he most wants to translate to basketball. He set the Akron school record for getting hit by pitches, crowding the plate, standing in there when the ball buzzed toward him, promising pain. Whatever it took, he would offer up in the cause of victory. He certainly expects no less of his team within the demands of basketball.

After the Zips beat Western Michigan, 79-68, Friday night in the Mid-American Conference Tournament at The Q, the Zips have reached the tournament final for a fifth straight year.

"Some will say I'm the damn guy who never wins one," said Dambrot, whose team won its only MAC Tournament title two years ago.

His teams persevere through foul trouble. Quincy Diggs, who was 6-for-6 from the field and 4-for-5 from the line fouled out, after scoring 18 points in 18 minutes.

"We foul so much, we stay fresh," joked Dambrot, referring to the stoppages in play fouls cause. He uses a nine-man rotation to compensate for all the contact.

Despite two fairly frazzling games this week at The Q and a first-round victory before that on campus, Dambrot simply does not allow his players to talk about being tired.

"We've been in a lot of [big] games," said Dambrot.

"That's why they come to Akron. We're not scared to make good plays or bad plays. They believe they can win. When the game is on the line, when push comes to shove, you better have belief structure."

His true believers are cajoled and chastened, encouraged and instructed in many ways. His dark eyebrows knit together to make his natural expression during games resemble a scowl. He stands nearly the whole game. He could probably not coach if he were required to sit on the bench with no way to suffer except stoically.

He has a variety of expressions in body language.

There are staccato claps, usually after a defensive or rebounding lapse, such as the early basket Western Michigan got on its third shot on one possession. Dambrot urged his team on to greater exertions under the boards. It didn't work. Western got 26 offensive rebounds and domi-

nated the rebounding.

There is the way he clasps the top of his head when unjust fate foils the best-laid plans.

Akron always comes out with a ferocious opening surge. But the game is not won in 20 minutes. The rest is often agony for Dambrot.

Friday, the Zips took a 15-point lead, let 11 points of it dwindle away, then made one last push to beat back the Broncos. Thursday, the Zips lost all of a 20-point cushion in the quarterfinals against Miami, then won in double overtime.

There is the coach's jubilant punch, thrown but once in the first half because so many more blows were still to be delivered and still to be withstood. Dambrot battles only the air, but for the players, more contact occurred.

This was a chippy, combative game with Diggs drawing a technical foul for cocking his arm and almost hurling a ball in anger after a foul call; with Western's Mike Douglas getting ejected after two technical fouls, starting with a head slap to the Zips' Steve McNees; and with Akron's Darryl Roberts getting T'd up during the same flap, presumably for being the third man in.

Maybe Dambrot's most distinctive sideline pose, other than the catcher's crouch, is a peek-a-boo stance, taken on the very edge of the coaching box stance, with the 5-9 coach looking around a referee's obstructive bulk at the play going on before him.

A lot of obstacles used to clog the Zips' path in the MAC Tournament. But once again, their scrappy coach has them within one step of a view from the top.

To reach Bill Livingston: blivingston@plaind.com, 216-999-4672

Former Tribe and new Seattle Mariners manager Eric Wedge surrounds himself with former Cleveland Indians

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New Seattle manager Eric Wedge has surrounding himself with former Indians players and coaches in an effort to turn the Mariners around. He knows it's not going to be easy, but he doesn't think it will be as hard as when he took over the Indians in 2003.

eric wedge.JPGView full sizeFormer Indians manager Eric Wedge is surrounding himself with familiar faces in Seattle.
GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Eric Wedge has always been an "all-in" kind of guy. When he managed the Indians from 2003 through 2009, he showed no hesitation about moving his family to Cleveland.

He did the same thing in October when he took Seattle's managerial job. Not only did he move to the great Northwest, he took a big chunk of his old Cleveland coaching staff with him.

Pitching coach Carl Willis was already in Seattle, so Wedge kept him. He lured Jeff Datz away from Baltimore to be his third base coach. He hired Robby Thompson out of the Indians' front office to be his bench coach. He even went outside his inner circle and hired Chris Chambliss, former Indians rookie of the year, to be his hitting coach.

Wedge has turned the Emerald City into Cleveland West.

On the Mariners' roster, there are former Indians Aaron Laffey, Josh Bard, Chris Gimenez, Franklin Gutierrez and Jamey Wright -- not to mention former Tribe farmhands Luis Rodriguez and Jose Flores.

Last, but certainly not least, there's Milton Bradley. The most recent time Wedge and Bradley were in the same dugout, Bradley was minutes away from a $60 cab ride from Kissimmee, Fla., to Winter Haven, Fla., after a blowup with Wedge in the spring of 2004. Several days later, Bradley was traded to Los Angeles for Gutierrez.

Wedge and Bradley have been the best of enemies ever since.

"Milton has had a great spring," said Wedge, before the Indians and Seattle played to a 5-5 tie Friday at Goodyear Ballpark. "His energy has been great. We're just trying to keep him healthy."

Bradley should open the season as Seattle's left fielder. Wedge is trying to revive an offense that scored the fewest runs (513) since the DH was introduced in 1973, and he's going to need all the help he can get.

"It's all been real good," said Wedge of his reunion with Bradley. "We've had good conversations, good talks. It's been a long time since all that stuff."

Wedge's record with the Indians was 561-573 from 2003 to '09. He ranks fifth in team history in total wins.

He won 93 games in 2005 and won the American League Central in 2007 with a 96-66 record. The 2007 Indians reached the seventh game of the AL Championship Series before losing to Boston.

"I'm proud of the way we handled our business and what we meant to the game," said Wedge of his tenure in Cleveland. "We did it the right way. We developed human beings on and off the field. We developed good young men and strong ballplayers.

"The economics didn't work out in the end, but that's the nature of the beast."

Wedge still believes "it's not the best 25 players, but the right 25 players" who make a team great. But his experiences in Cleveland have taught him one thing he may have lacked as a first-time manager: patience with young players.

"Early on, especially when you're in a situation with a young team, you've got to make sure that you work to not just see around the corner, but to see all the way around the corner," said Wedge.

"As long as they're on board with the intangibles -- being a good teammate, respecting the game, going about your business the right way and caring about what you're supposed to care about -- because those are non-negotiable things -- and you have the flexibility to be patient, then I think you should do that."

If that had been the case in 2006, Brandon Phillips might be the Indians' second baseman today instead of with the Reds.

The Mariners lost 101 games last season, but Wedge doesn't think he'll have to go through the total rebuild that he did in Cleveland in 2003.

"When you start with Felix Hernandez and Ichiro Suzuki, it's a little bit different," said Wedge. "[GM] Jack [Zduriencik has] done a great job with the draft and player development.

"It's more about me coming in and setting the tone and bridging that gap and making sure we're going about our business as an organization and a big-league club the way it should be done."


Kelly Pavlik eyeing spot on Manny Pacquiao's card: Boxing Insider

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The fighter has told reporters that his "partying days are over."

Kelly Pavlik.JPGView full sizeFormer middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik of Youngstown is working to get back into the ring after more than a year.
As far as trainer Jack Loew is concerned, it's business as usual with his fighter Kelly Pavlik. But the business is also about playing the waiting game.

The former middleweight champion is back in Loew's South Side Boxing Club in Youngstown four days a week. If things go as hoped, Pavlik (36-2, 32 KOs) will be back in the ring for the first time in more than a year on the undercard of the Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley bout in Las Vegas on May 7.

"We can't say for sure, but we are 90 percent sure," Loew said during a phone conversation Tuesday. "It's the same old Kelly. He's always given me 100 percent in the gym."

It was away from the gym that Pavlik had problems, especially with his recent stint at a rehabilitation center in California to deal with his drinking habits. The fighter told reporters last week that his "partying days are over."

So are his middleweight days. Loew said Pavlik will likely take a bout around 170 pounds before settling for the concerted effort to gain status in the super middleweight ranks at 168 pounds.

"It's time to put the past to rest and move on," Loew said.

Nothing is official, but rumor has Pavlik facing undefeated but lightly tested Alfonso Lopez (21-0, 16 KOs) of Corpus Christi, Texas.

Amateur news: Three boxers from the Lake Erie Association advanced to the USA Boxing National Championships after winning Region 5 titles in Lexington, Ky.

Featherweight Antonio Nieves, with four Cleveland Golden Gloves titles to his credit, won at 123 pounds. On the women's side, lightweight Nyteeyah Sherman won at 132 and defending 141-pound national champion Cashmere Jackson will be going for her second title.

All three qualify for the USA Boxing National Championships in Colorado Springs, Colo., June 20-25.

USA Boxing announced that the "Last Chance Qualifier" for the U.S. Olympic Trials will take place in Cincinnati, July 4-9. The Olympic Trials will consist of the top four finishers at the USA Boxing National Championships and titleists from the Police Athletic League, Golden Gloves and Armed Forces Championships.

The USA Boxing Junior National Championships for boxers ages 15-16 will be held in Mobile Ala., July 12-17.

The 83rd Cleveland Golden Gloves will begin April 1 at the Brook Park Recreation Center, 17400 Holland Road, in Brook Park. The quarterfinals April 2 and semifinals April 9 will also take place there beginning at 7 p.m.

The finals will once again take place in the North Hall at Cleveland Browns Stadium on April 16 at 6 p.m.

The entry deadline for boxers in the open (experienced), novice (less than 10 bouts) and sub-novice (no bouts) divisions is March 25. The nonprofit is seeking tournament and program sponsors.

Contact the Cleveland Amateur Golden Gloves, 4500 Lee Road, Suite 222, Cleveland, Ohio, 44128, or call 216-662-7445.

Movie time: If you want to see what won Christian Bale and Melissa Leo their best supporting Oscars in "The Fighter," you can pick up the two-disc Blu-ray/DVD package when it is released by Paramount Home Entertainment on Tuesday. The DVD's suggested cost is $19.99, the Blu-ray/DVD Combo Package $29.99.

Today: You can go two routes.

If you want to shell out $49.95 for pay-per-view television, the Miguel Cotto (35-2, 29 KOs) WBA junior middleweight title defense against Ricardo Mayorga (30-7-1, 22 KOs) from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas will air at 9 p.m. The return of Christy Martin was called off the card after she injured a rib.

If you can wait 90 minutes, HBO will have WBC middleweight champion Sergio Martinez (46-2-2, 25 KOs) defending the title he won from Pavlik against Sergiy Dzinziruk (37-0, 34 KOs), the reigning WBO champ at 154 pounds. That telecast is from Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut at 10:30 p.m.

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


HS hoops: Get coverage all day of boys district and girls regional finals

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Join our live blog as Garfield Heights takes on Warren G. Harding at 2 p.m.

trey-lewis.JPGView full sizeTrey Lewis, a Penn State recruit, leads Garfield Heights against Warren G. Harding Saturday afternoon in a district final game at Solon High School.

It's district final Saturday in high school boys basketball and regional final Saturday in girls basketball. Teams will cut down the nets in gyms all across Northeast Ohio.

The Plain Dealer and cleveland.com have it covered, beginning with a live game blog as Garfield Heights seeks revenge against Warren Harding at Solon at 2 p.m. You'll be able to keep up with the action, ask your questions and share your comments. Garfield Heights lost to Warren G. Harding in the semifinals of last season's Solon district tournament.

You can also check back at cleveland.com all day for scores, schedules and more from boys basketball, girls basketball regional finals and the state hockey semifinals.

Saturday's high school sports coverage


Manny Acta likes Jason Kipnis' style of play: Cleveland Indians spring training briefing

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Manager Manny Acta would like to use Jason Kipnis as a model to build the Indians roster around.

kipnis-cage-spring11-vert-cc.jpgJason Kipnis has impressed manager Manny Acta.

Goodyear, Ariz. -- This is a daily briefing on the Cleveland Indians in spring training as they prepare for the 2011 season.

 March 11, Day 25: Indians manager Manny Acta called Jason Kipnis a dirt bag. He meant it in the best way possible.

 When Trot Nixon played for the Indians in 2007, he had Dirt Dog tattooed on his body.

 Baseball players and dirt go together. If a player continually gets his uniform dirty, it's a sign that's he's diving, sliding and playing hard. Managers like those kind of players, especially if they can do more than get their uniform dirty. Fans like them, too.

 Dirt is a sign of hustle in baseball. Which brings us back to Acta and Kipnis. Don't jump to conclusions. Kipnis isn't going to make the big league club out of spring training, but he's made an impression.

 "He fits the description of the type of player we're trying to get on this ballclub," said Acta. "He's a blue collar, dirt bag, run-through-a-wall, relentless type of guy. We're trying to get a bunch of guys like that and put them together to create a team that makes our fans proud of them.

 "He plays like a dirt bag. I really like those kind of guys."

 Kipnis was the Indians No.2 pick in 2009. He played center field at Arizona State University, but the Indians moved him to second base last year and the move has gone well.

 "He's far ahead for a guy who has played only one year at second base," said Acta.

 Last season Kipnis hit a combined .307 (159-for-518) with 96 runs, 32 doubles, eight triples, 16 homers and 74 RBI in 133 games at Class A Kinston and Class AA Akron. When Akron's season ended, he was called up to Class AAA Columbus to help the Clippers in the postseason. He hit .455 (10-for-22) with three doubles, two triples, two homers and three RBI in five games as Columbus won the International League title and the Class AAA title. Then he hit .295 (23-for-78) with 11 doubles, three homers and 19 RBI for Peoria in the Arizona Fall League.

 That's a lot of baseball and a lot of dirty uniforms.

 Let's talk: Executive Director Michael Weiner and other members of the players association met with Indians players before today's game. The current contract expires on Dec. 11.

 The other side: Former Tribe catcher Chris Gimenez is trying to make Seattle's club as a super utility man.

 "I've got about 25 gloves in my equipment bag," joked Gimenez before the Mariners and Indians played Friday. "The thing weighs about 400 pounds."

 Gimenez said manager Eric Wedge has used him in left and right field, first and third base and behind the plate. When Wedge managed the Indians, who pushed Gimenez into the utility role.

 Last winter Gimenez became a free agent and signed with the Mariners after Wedge was hired as manager.

 Today's lineups:

 Angels: RF Reggie Willits, C Jeff Mathis, CF Peter Bourjos, 1B Mark Trumbo, DH Alberto Callaspo, 3B Brandon Wood, LF Chris Pettit, SS Andrew Romine, 2B  Gil Velazquez, RHP Dan Haren.

 Indians: CF Michael Brantley, SS Asdrubal Cabrera, DH Shin-Soo Choo, C Carlos Santana, RF Travis Buck, 2B Orlando Cabrera, 1B Matt LaPorta, LF Shelley Duncan, 3B Jason Donald, P Fausto Carmona.

 In the pen: Josh Tomlin, Tony Sipp and Rafael Perez will follow Carmona to the mound. Perez is making his Cactus League debut.

 What's ahead: The Indians play San Diego on Sunday in Peoria, Ariz. Carlos Carrasco will face Tim Stauffer at 4:05 p.m. ET. WMMS/100.7 FM will carry the game. SportsTime Ohio will televise it. Alex White will start a B game Sunday against the White Sox in Glendale, Ariz.  
 

Bowling Green defeats Eastern Michigan, 51-46, for MAC women's tourney title

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Lauren Prochaska scores 20 points and Tracy Pontius makes key plays as Falcons become 11-2 in MAC Tournament title games and advance to NCAA tourney.

chelsea-albert-paige-redditt.jpgBowling Green's Chelsea Albert (left) and Eastern Michigan's Paige Redditt (right) battle for the basketball during Saturday's Mid-American Conference women's championshup game, won by BG, 51-46.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- When Bowling Green needed a spark, senior point guard Tracy Pontius -- as usual -- delivered.

 Pontius triggered a 7-0 run with terrific plays on consecutive possessions late in the second half as the Falcons defeated Eastern Michigan, 51-46, Saturday afternoon to win the Mid-American Conference Tournament women's championship at The Q.

 Lauren Prochaska scored a game-high 20 and was named tourney MVP.

 The Falcons (27-4) received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. They have won two straight MAC tourney titles and are 11-2 overall championship games.

 The Eagles (22-12) made their second appearance in a MAC title game. They beat Bowling Green in 2004.

 Eastern Michigan was seeded fifth this year and needed to win three games to get to the final. It upset Kent in the quarterfinals and top-seeded Toledo in the semis.

 Bowling Green won despite shooting 24.1 percent (13-of-54) from the floor. Eastern Michigan shot 24.6 percent (16-of-65).
 
 With 8:53 left and the score tied, 35-35, Eastern Michigan missed a layup. Bowling Green's Chrissy Steffen grabbed the rebound and found Pontius along the right side.

 Pontius and Prochaska had a two-on-one. Pontius eschewed the layup for a spectacular behind-the-back bounce pass to Prochaska, who made the layup from the left at 8:46. The Bowling Green faithful roared.

 It was Pontius's first assist of the game.

 With 8:07 left, Pontius spotted Steffen open on the right wing and fired a pass on target. Steffen sank the 3-pointer -- her only field goal of the game.

Timeout, Eastern Michigan.

 Eastern Michigan got within three and had a chance to tie in the final 20 seconds. But a 3-point attempt was no good with 17 seconds left.

 Bowling Green sealed it at the foul line.

 The Falcons led, 24-21, at halftime.

 Both teams struggled with their shots. Bowling Green went 8-of-31 from the floor; Eastern Michigan was 9-of-33, including 0-of-8 from 3-point range.

 Every player shot lower than 50 percent in the opening 20 minutes.

 The game was scoreless from 7:40 remaining, when Eastern Michigan guard Sydney Huntley-Rogers hit a jumper, to 1:46 left, when Eagles guard Tavelyn James dropped in a layup off a run-out.

 Bowling Green ended an eight-minute dry spell when Prochaska sank two free throws with 39 seconds remaining for a 22-19 lead. Prochaska's jumper made it 24-19.

 For the Eagles, it was transition or bust. They accomplished almost nothing in halfcourt sets.

 

NFL lockout 2011: All along, NFL and players union expected what the other would do

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NFL said it was certain union would dissolve itself and players would head to court for antitrust lawsuits. The union had insisted league's owners were planning to lock out players. Both events happened.

roger-goodell-jerry-jones.jpgNFL commissioner Roger Goodell (left) and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones talk on Friday after the league's contract negotiations with the NFL Players Association broke down.

WASHINGTON, D.C.-- All along, the NFL said it was certain the union would dissolve itself and players would head to court for antitrust lawsuits.

All along, the union insisted the league's owners were planning to lock out the players.

And that's exactly what happened.

Unable to decide how to divvy up $9 billion a year, NFL owners and players put the country's most popular sport in limbo by breaking off labor negotiations hours before their contract expired. At midnight, as Friday became Saturday, the owners locked out the players — creating the NFL's first work stoppage since 1987 and putting the 2011 season in jeopardy.

The league said in a statement Saturday it was "taking the difficult but necessary step of exercising its right under federal labor low to impose a lockout of the union."

On Friday, the union decertified, meaning it declared itself out of the business of representing players. In exchange for giving up their rights under labor law, the players became able to take their chances in court under antitrust law.

That paved the way for 10 players, including MVP quarterbacks Tom Brady and Peyton Manning, to sue the owners in federal court in Minneapolis in a class-action claim. The players also sought an injunction to block a lockout — even before one had been imposed.

Despite two extensions to the collective bargaining agreement during 16 days of talks overseen by a federal mediator — following months of stop-and-start negotiating — the sides could not agree on a new deal.

The league's statement Saturday called the NFL Players Association's decertification a "sham" and said the players' court action is "built on the indisputably false premise that the NFLPA has stopped being a union and will merely delay the process of reaching an agreement."

The statement told fans: "We know that you want football. You will have football. This will be resolved."

As was clear all along, the dispute came down to money. In the end, it appeared the sides were about $185 million apart on how much owners should get up front each season for certain operating expenses before splitting the rest of the revenues with players — a far cry from the $1 billion that separated the sides for months.

But the union refused to budge any further without getting detailed financial information for each team.

"I would dare any one of you to pull out any economic indicator that would suggest that the National Football League is falling on hard times," NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith said. "The last 14 days, the National Football League has said, 'Trust us.' But when it came time for verification, they told us it was none of our business."

By dissolving and announcing it no longer represents the players in collective bargaining, the union cleared the way for class-action lawsuits against the NFL, which exercised a CBA opt-out clause in 2008. The antitrust suit — forever to be known as Brady et al vs. National Football League et al — attacked the league's policies on the draft, salary cap and free-agent restrictions such as franchise-player tags.

Invoking the Sherman Act, a federal antitrust statute from 1890 that limits monopolies and restrictions on commerce, the players are seeking triple the amount of damages they've incurred. That means the stakes could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

It could take a month for there to be a ruling on the union's injunction request, and antitrust judgments should take longer.

Depending on what happens in court — a Minnesota judge has held jurisdiction over NFL labor matters since the early 1990s — next season could be threatened. The last time NFL games were lost to a work stoppage came when the players struck 24 years ago, leading to games with replacement players.

A lockout is a right management has to shut down a business when a CBA expires. It means there can be no communication between the teams and current NFL players; no players — including those drafted in April — can be signed; teams won't pay for health insurance for players.

Even though the NFL is early in its offseason — and the regular season is six months away — this is hardly a complete downtime. Free agency usually begins in March, and there are hundreds of free agents now in limbo. Also this month, under a regular schedule, team-organized offseason workouts would start. The lockout grinds all such activity to a halt.

March and early April are when many sponsors and corporate partners renew their deals with the NFL, part of why the league says hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue are going to be lost now.

"This obviously is a very disappointing day for all of us. I've been here for the better part of two weeks now, and essentially ... the union's position on the core economic issues has not changed one iota," New York Giants owner John Mara said. "One thing that became painfully apparent to me during this period was that their objective was to go the litigation route."

The NFLPA also decertified in 1989. Antitrust lawsuits by players led to a new CBA in 1993 that included free agency, and the union formed again that year.

The sides met from 10 a.m. until about 4 p.m. Friday, discussing a new proposal by the owners. When the possibility of a third extension to the CBA was raised, the union said it first wanted assurances it would get 10 years of audited financial information.

"I will tell you this: Any business where two partners don't trust each other, any business where one party says, 'You need to do X, Y and Z because I told you,' is a business that is not only not run well, it is a business that can never be as successful as it can be," Smith said.

At 4:45 p.m., Smith and the union's negotiators left the mediator's office. About 15 minutes later, the union decertified.

"No one is happy where we are now," NFL lead negotiator Jeff Pash said. "I think we know where the (union's) commitment was. It was a commitment to litigate all along."

After Pash talked to the media outside the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, union lawyer Jim Quinn spoke at NFLPA headquarters about three blocks away and said: "I hate to say this, but he has not told the truth to our players or our fans. He has, in a word, lied to them about what happened today and what's happened over the last two weeks and the last two years."

The NFL said its offer included splitting the difference in the dispute over how much money owners should be given off the top of the league's revenues. Under the expiring CBA, the owners immediately got about $1 billion before dividing the remainder of revenues with the players; the owners entered negotiations seeking to roughly double that.

But the owners eventually reduced that additional upfront demand to about $650 million. Then, on Friday, they offered to drop that to about $325 million. Smith said the union offered during talks to give up $550 million over the first four years of a new agreement — or an average of $137.5 million.

"We worked hard," said NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, who was joined at mediation on Thursday and Friday by nine of the 10 members of the owners' powerful labor committee. "We didn't reach an agreement, obviously. As you know, the union walked away from the mediation process."

Also in the NFL's offer, according to the league:

_Maintaining the 16 regular-season games and four preseason games for at least two years, with any switch to 18 games down the road being negotiable.

_Instituting a rookie wage scale through which money saved would be paid to veterans and retired players.

_Creating new year-round health and safety rules.

_Establishing a fund for retired players, with $82 million contributed by the owners over the next two years.

_Financial disclosure of audited profitability information that is not even shared with the NFL clubs. That was proposed by the NFL this week, and rejected by the union, which began insisting in May 2009 for a complete look at the books of each of the 32 clubs.

As Pash outlined each element of the owners' last offer, he ended with the phrase: "Evidently not good enough."

When Goodell, Pash, Mara and owners Jerry Jones of the Cowboys and Jerry Richardson of the Panthers emerged from Cohen's office shortly after 5 p.m., they sounded hopeful negotiations would resume soon.

"We're discouraged, we're frustrated, we're disappointed, but we are not giving up. We know that this will be resolved in the negotiation process," Pash said. "We will be prepared to come back here any time the union is ready to come back here."

Ohio State eases past Michigan, 68-61, to Big Ten tournament final

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Buckeyes will face either Michigan State or Penn State in Sunday's championship game.

sullinger-osu-b10-umich-vert-ap.jpgView full sizeOhio State's Jared Sullinger (0) shoots over Michigan's Tim Hardaway Jr. (10) and Evan Smotrycz (23) in the first half of Saturday's Big Ten semifinal at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

INDIANAPOLIS -- Jared Sullinger had 14 points and 13 rebounds, and No. 1 Ohio State boosted its bid for the NCAA tournament's top overall seed with a 68-61 victory over rival Michigan in the Big Ten semifinals.

The regular-season league champs and defending tournament champs will play in a record-tying third straight championship game Sunday against either sixth-seeded Penn State or seventh-seeded Michigan State. Illinois also played in three consecutive title games from 2003-05.

Ohio State (31-2) has won six straight games overall and all three matchups this season with Michigan (20-13).

The Wolverines were led by Darius Morris with 16 points and Tim Hardaway Jr. with 15.

Michigan got as close as 47-45 with 9:51 left, but the Buckeyes answered with 16 straight points and held off a late charge that got the Wolverines within four in the final minute.

St. Edward defeats Gilmour Academy, 3-2, in four overtimes in the semifinals of the state hockey tournament

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COLUMBUS, Ohio -- St. Edward senior Riley Egan has a hard-nosed will for the puck. Because of it, the Eagles find themselves in Sunday's noon state hockey championship game against Toledo St. Francis deSales at Nationwide Arena.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- St. Edward senior Riley Egan has a hard-nosed will for the puck.

Because of it, the Eagles find themselves in Sunday's noon state hockey championship game against Toledo St. Francis deSales at Nationwide Arena.

Fighting off a Gilmour Academy defender in the right corner, Egan's lightning-quick pass found the stick of senior teammate Clay Jarrell and he flicked the puck to the top of the net behind Lancers' junior goaltender Oliver Flesher for a 3-2 semifinal victory in the fourth overtime on Saturday.

Coming three minutes into the fourth extra period, it set off a delirious celebration on the St. Edward side and utter disappointment for the Lancers in the longest game in state tournament final four history.

"I actually missed him a couple times earlier," said Egan, who scored twice in the first period to give his club a 2-0 lead.

Jarrell said the hustle play was one they had talked about in the first period. It took quite a while to come to fruition.

"He said he was going to throw it in front," said Jarrell. "I split the defense and got it over [the goaltender's] blocker. I've been playing for 13 years and I've never had a goal that big."

For the longest time it did not appear this one was headed for the history books.

Less than four minutes in, Egan came free when Gilmour got caught in a line change and he never hesitated in putting the puck past Flesher. On his second goal, junior Nick Crosby forced a turnover in the Gilmour end and Egan went to his backhand to beat Flesher again.

"I was surprised I came free," said Egan of his first goal. "My eyes got real big."

But the Lancers (35-9-2), who had lost to the Eagles in December, 1-0, put things right as Flesher stopped everything coming his way. Still, the Eagles (26-14-3) held their two-goal advantage with just more than five minutes remaining.

Taking advantage of two straight St. Edward penalties, Gilmour tied it up in quick order.

Junior Joey Lencewicz redirected a shot into the net past St. Edward senior goaltender Jonathan Lacoste to halve the deficit with 4:59 to play. Gilmour got the equalizer when junior Spencer Antunez put in a rebound with 1:32 remaining.

"As a goaltender, you have to have a short memory," said Lacoste, who wound up with 27 saves. "We didn't know how many OTs it would go. You just move past what happened in regulation."

The Lancers had one power-play opportunity in the extra sessions, the Eagles called for too many men on the ice in the third eight-minute overtime.

"We had our chances, so give credit to their goalie for stopping us," said a gracious Gilmour coach John Malloy, who was denied his 500th coaching victory. "To be down and not quit, not get frustrated, that's something to be proud of."

Flesher, who finished with 36 saves, came up with several beauties, but St. Edward pulled off the picture-perfect finisher.

"What can you say?" said St. Edward first-year coach Troy Gray. "We started off the season thinking we could be one of the best teams in the state. We've had our ups and downs, but the guys answered the bell."

St Edward (26-14-3) has lost to St. Francis deSales (33-4-1), the state's top-ranked team, four times this season. The title game will be telecast by Sports Time Ohio at noon.

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

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