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Canucks rally to beat Sharks in Game 1: Video

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While the Vancouver Canucks celebrated a come-from-behind 3-2 win to open their first appearance in the Western Conference finals in 17 seasons, the Sharks were lamenting another game that got away in the final period.

Cinesport video: Canucks vs. Sharks, Game 1

 

For more Cinesport video on cleveland.com, go here.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia  — The San Jose Sharks have been making a bad habit of blowing leads in the playoffs.

While the Vancouver Canucks celebrated a come-from-behind 3-2 win to open their first appearance in the Western Conference finals in 17 seasons, the Sharks were lamenting another game that got away in the final period.

Raffi Torres, Niclas WallinVancouver Canucks' Raffi Torres (13) checks San Jose Sharks' Niclas Wallin, of Sweden, into the boards during the first period in Game 1 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup Western Conference final playoff series, Sunday, May 15, 2011, in Vancouver, Canada. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Jonathan Hayward)

It was the third time in four games San Jose had failed to hold a third-period lead. The one time they did was during an emotional, draining Game 7 victory over Detroit on Thursday to advance to a second straight conference final.

Just as they did while blowing late leads in Games 5 and 6 — and a 3-0 series lead — against the Red Wings, the Sharks didn't have an answer when the Canucks' push late in the second period carried over into the third.

"You never want to protect it. When you're on your heels, bad things happen," said defenseman Marc-Edouard Vlasic. "We wanted to come out strong, keep playing the way we did, but they were the best team. I don't think it was fatigue. I just think they came out harder than we did."

Vancouver's best players led the way, with captain Henrik Sedin helping set up Kevin Bieksa's tying goal 7:02 into the third period, and scoring the winner on a power play 1:19 later. It was redemption for Henrik and twin brother Daniel, who won the last two NHL scoring titles but were criticized after combining for two goals, seven points and a minus-10 rating in the conference semifinals.

"We rarely read the newspapers or watch hockey coverage on TV," Henrik said. "We know when we are not playing well. We don't have to hear that from everyone else. There have been games we haven't been very happy with our performance."

Sunday's was not one of them.

San Jose took a 2-1 lead into the third period thanks to Patrick Marleau's goal on its only power play, and a gift goal for Joe Thornton off the stick of Canucks goalie Roberto Luongo. But after failing to finish several great chances late in the second, Vancouver finally converted in the third.

Alex Burrows skated onto Henrik Sedin's chip pass and behind Dan Boyle on a left-wing rush before feeding a pass across that Bieksa wristed past a sliding Antti Niemi.

Dany Heatley took an elbowing penalty 32 seconds later, and the Canucks' power play, which looked terrible its first three chances after leading the NHL in the regular season, also woke up. A point pass from former Sharks defenseman Christian Ehrhoff got Niemi moving right, and Sedin, whose only other goal in these playoffs was into an empty net, skated onto it the other way, waiting for Niemi to slide past before tucking a backhand shot into the empty net.

"The twins get going like that, they are almost unstoppable," Bieksa said.

Game 2 is Wednesday in Vancouver.

"I thought our team looked tired. I thought our team looked sluggish," Sharks coach Todd McLellan said. "There's nights when we lose our legs, but our minds are still pretty sharp, and I didn't think that was the case tonight. It started between the ears and it worked all the way through the body. We were like dogs chasing cars on the freeway. We just weren't catching anybody."

Maxim Lapierre scored his first goal of the playoffs, and Luongo made 27 saves.

Niemi stopped 35 shots for the Sharks, including a handful of highlight-reel stops late in the second period, robbing Ryan Kesler during a wild scramble and Hansen in alone.

"We wanted to get into the locker room and recover a little bit," McLellan said. "But we didn't have it in the third."

Notes: San Jose D Jason Demers was a surprise late scratch because of an unidentified injury, and was replaced by Kent Huskins ... Vancouver LW Mikael Samuelsson, who plays the point on the first power-play unit, hasn't skated since getting hurt in Game 5 of the conference semifinals.



2011 Rite Aid Cleveland Marathon , 10K and Half-Marathon results

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Check out results and complete coverage from Raceday 2011.

Gallery preview

Marathon

MEN TOP 10 OVERALL: 1. R.P White (Ypsilanti, Mi.) 2:26:59; 2. Cory Scheadler (Columbus) 2:28:29; 3. Jason Pyles (Charleston, W.Va.) 2:31:59; 4. Bela Hovoath (Northfield) 2:35:08; 5. Matt Young (Wadsworth) 2:36:27; 6. Bryan Straniero (Burton) 2:37:36; 7. Daniel Denman (Philadelphia, Pa.) 2:38:31; 8. Zachary Szablewski (Tiffin) 2:39:58; 9. Criag Miller (Cleveland) 2:40:14; 10. Kenneth Brooks (Portage, Mi.) 2:42:05.

14 & Under: 1. Radames Colon III (Painesville) 5:08:03; 2. James Nichols (Ravenna) 3:03:51; 15-19: 1. James Nichols (Ravenna) 3:03:51; 2. Colin Morlock (Cleveland) 3:08:51; 3. Ryan MacInroy (Aurora, Ont.) 3:09:52; 4. Adam Stiles (Hudson) 3:18:05; 5. Austin Drenski (Saline) 3:24:45; 20-24: 1. R.P. White (Ypsilanti, Mi.) 2:26:59; 2. Zachary Szablewski (Tiffin) 2:39:58; 3. Verrelle Wyatt (Akron) 2:43:47; 4. Bradley Lewis (Troy, N.Y.) 2:46:49; 5. Michael Fakler (Solon) 2:51:34; 25-29: 1. Cory Scheadler (Columbus) 2:28:29; 2. Jason Pyles (Charleston, W.Va.) 2:31:59; 3. Bryan Straniero (Burton) 2:37:36; 4. Daniel Denman (Philadelphia, Pa.) 2:38:31; 5. Justin Walters (Somerset) 2:43:07; 30-34: 1. Kenneth Brooks (Portage, Mi.) 2:42:05; 2. Matthew Blake (Dublin) 2:44:21; 3. John Kruszka (Avon) 2:44:44; 4. Matthew Jeromin (Roselle, Il.) 2:44:44; 5. Jeremy Huth (Kent) 2:50:05; 35-39: 1. Bela Hovoath (Northfield) 2:35:08; 2. Matt Young (Wadsworth) 2:36:27; 3. Criag Miller (Cleveland) 2:40:14; 4. Douglas Morton (Sebring, Fl.) 2:42:13; 5. Christopher Young (Hudson) 2:55:08; 40-44: 1. Mark Godale (Aurora) 2:50:31; 2. Eric Rzeppa (Sterling Heights, Mi.) 2:53:35; 3. David Hathaway (Elyria) 2:57:28; 4. Gilbrando Resendez (Brunswick) 2:58:08; 5. Stephen Godale (Aurora) 2:59:05; 45-49: 1. Paul Krupa (Middleburg Hts.) 2:51:31; 2. Kenny Boily (Roberts, Wi.) 2:58:35; 3. Jeffrey Hoffmann (Oconomowoc, Wi.) 3:02:12; 4. David Presar (North Richland H, Tx.) 3:02:16; 5. Rick Bechtel (Medina) 3:02:47; 50-54: 1. Brian Watson (Lucan, Ont.) 2:53:40; 2. Thomas Piazza (Troy, Mi.) 3:00:30; 3. Frank Duchossois (Solon) 3:07:19; 4. Robert Pokorny (Medina) 3:07:37; 5. Mike Boyer (Maple Hts.) 3:10:52; 55-59: 1. Daniel Horvath (Brunswick) 3:16:50; 2. Joe Sliman (Youngstown) 3:18:08; 3. Bruce Orosz (Warrenton, Va.) 3:22:50; 4. Bill Rahn (Little Rock, Ark.) 3:27:28; 5. Ralph Barnhart (Leetonia) 3:28:15; 60-64: 1. Samuel Pak (Hudson) 3:23:46; 2. David Filmer (Cleveland) 3:34:50; 3. Wing-Kwong Keung (Perrysburg) 3:37:47; 4. Tom Bauer (Moreland Hills) 3:42:12; 5. Sterling Scroggins (Washington, D.C.) 3:44:10; 65-69: 1. Tim Minnis (Cleveland Hts.) 3:58:42; 2. John Davis (Kinsman) 4:04:02; 3. Eugene Barry (Clawson, Mi.) 4:11:39; 4. Frank Lombardo (Middlefield) 4:34:08; 5. Chi Hoon Lee (Solon) 4:35:54; Over 70: 1. Albert Miclette (St-Jean-Sur-Rich, QC) 4:16:47; 2. Bud McNellie (Chagrin Falls) 4:22:45; 3. Richard Pool (South Amherst) 4:27:47; 4. Chet Doyle (Coal Valley, Ill.) 5:00:56; 5. Kenneth Thompson (Akron) 5:23:54.

WOMEN TOP 10 OVERALL: 1. Nicole Camp (Sterling) 2:43:47; 2. Jackie Pirtle-Hall (St. Charles Mo.) 2:47:05; 3. Jennifer Bigham (Rochester, N.Y.) 2:53:41; 4. Tatiana Mironova (Russia) 2:54:12; 5. Heather Backer (Crestview Hills, Ky.) 2:58:43; 6. Kir Selert (N.Y.) 3:01:16; 7. Tracy Meder (Stow) 3:03:57; 8. Joanie Washington (Sheffield) 3:07:12; 9. Christie Foster (Colorado Springs, Co.) 3:07:49; 10. Graham Varty (Greenwich, Ct.) 3:09:37.

14 & Under: 1. Grace Jenkins (Westlake) 3:41:30; 15-19: 1. Andi Cribari (Lyndhurst) 3:24:07; 2. Ana Lewison (Munroe Falls) 3:40:42; 3. Alexander Lehr (Monroe, Mi.) 3:48:38; 4. Corinne Luther (Columbus) 3:49:37; 5. Erin Sullivan (Aurora) 3:54:05; 20-24: 1. Kir Selert (N.Y.) 3:01:16; 2. Christie Foster (Colorado Springs, Co.) 3:07:49; 3. Meredith Hale (Westlake) 3:10:47; 4. Kara Scroggins (Washington, D.C.) 3:19:26; 5. Leanne Vaughn (Cleveland Hts.) 3:19:31; 25-29: 1. Nicole Camp (Sterling) 2:43:47; 2. Jackie Pirtle-Hall (St. Charles, Mo.) 2:47:05; 3. Jennifer Bigham (Rochester, N.Y.) 2:53:41; 4. Lizzie Jesko (Salem) 3:09:49; 5. Laine Sommers (Overland Park, Ks.) 3:14:45; 30-34: 1. Tracy Meder (Stow) 3:03:57; 2. Joanie Washington (Sheffield Village) 3:07:12; 3. Graham Varty (Greenwich, Ct.) 3:09:37; 4. Eva Miller (Hudson) 3:11:50; 5. Christina Vanucci (Westlake) 3:13:01; 35-39: 1. Heather Backer (Crestview Hills, Ky.) 2:58:43; 2. Kendra Sirolly (York, Pa.) 3:12:33; 3. Maricruz Ponce de Leon (Oak Park, Il.) 3:20:24; 4. Carolyn Kuhlman (Westlake) 3:23:22; 5. Sarah Blackert (Cincinnati) 3:23:59; 40-44: 1. Tatiana Mironova 2:54:12; 2. Lisa Chilcote (Oakmont, Pa.) 3:17:11; 3. Marlene Bloomfield (North Olmsted) 3:19:30; 4. Amy Mikhail (Ann Arbor, Mi.) 3:26:26; 5. Susan Louis (Silver Lake) 3:26:39; 45-49: 1. Connie Gardner (Medina) 3:17:45; 2. Tracy Christian (Wilmington, N.C.) 3:19:50; 3. Julie Collins (Atlanta, Ga.) 3:23:39; 4. Beth Darmstadter (Berea) 3:29:40; 5. Pam Chapin (Doylestown, Pa.) 3:32:24; 50-54: 1. Jocelyne Majoy (Vincent) 3:26:47; 2. Pam Tegtmeier (Wooster) 3:48:20; 3. Karen Manganaro (Erie, Pa.) 3:57:38; 4. Janet DeVeber (London, Ont.) 3:58:10; 5. Joan Inderhees 4:01:02; 55-59: 1. Nancy Smith (Ashland) 3:51:46; 2. Christine Dirks (London, Ont.) 3:55:49; 3. Elaine Schindler (Mineral City) 4:00:12; 4. Patricia Kinlow (Canton) 4:02:13; 5. Christine Anderson (Cleveland) 4:06:58; 60-64: 1. Donna Hutchinson (Blacklick) 4:25:08; 2. Cynthia Richards (Stow) 4:37:56; 3. Sandra Deke (DeWitt, Ia.) 5:50:10; 4. Libby White (Westlake) 5:56:47; 5. Helen Riordon (London, Ont.) 6:13:36; 65-69: 1. Kathleen Korosi (Painesville) 3:56:28; 2. Ximena Valdes (Shaker Hts.) 4:27:16; 3. Kay Ralston (Davenport, Ia.) 5:39:12; 4. Karen Niles (Akron) 6:32:11; 5. Janice Hickman (Lorain) 6:53:10; Over 70: 1. Jean Toth (Wickliffe) 6:07:46; 2. Adine Wittig (Sarasota, Fl.) 6:48:40; 3. Blanche Ann Knisely (Eastlake) 7:04:30.

10K

MEN Top 10 OVERALL: 1. Kumsa Adugna (Ethopia) 29:48; 2. Festus Langat (Kenya) 29:53; 3. Aron Rono (Kenya) 29:54; 4. Julius Kiptoo (Kenya) 30:00; 5. Mario Macias (Los Alomosa, Co.) :30:07; 6. Richard Kandie (Kenya) :30:15; 7. Kenneth Foster (Colorado Springs, Co.) 30:50; 8. Asnake Fekadu (Ethiopia) 31:42; 9. Brent Martin (Gambier) 32:54; 10. Jonathon Dewitt (Akron) 33:43.

14 & Under: 1. Kevin McCaffrey (Elyria) 41:22; 2. Sean Kane (Avon) 44:13; 3. Lawrence Lezuch (Harper Woods, Mi.) 47:30; 4. Dominic Cristiano (Westlake) 47:33; 5. Zacary Harley (Burbank) 49:43. 15-19: 1. Kyle Banit (Copley) 35:17; 2. Evan Patterson (Solon) 37:00; 3. Brett Nola (Streetsboro) 39:19; 4. Forrest Reed (Seven Hills) 40:00; 5. Michael Wilkinson (Fairview Park) 40:02. 20-24: 1. Kumsa Adugna 29:48; 2. Kenneth Foster (Colorado Springs, Co.) 30:50; 3. Jonathon Dewitt (Akron) 33:43; 4. Kyle Komer (Willoughby) 33:55; 5. Joseph Hengoed (Seven Hills) 35:09. 25-29: 1. Festus Langat 29:53; 2. Aron Rono 29:54; 3. Richard Kandie 30:15; 4. Brent Martin (Gambier) 32:54; 5. Tim Hamilton (Grayslake, Il.) 35:20. 30-34: 1. Julius Kiptoo 30:00; 2. Mario Macias (Los Alamosa, Co.) 30:07; 3. Asnake Fekadu 31:42; 4. Jason Altman (Knoxville, Tn.) 35:41; 5. Moses Waweru 37:58. 35-39: 1. Carlos Jones (Youngstown) 36:28; 2. Chris Latkovich (Solon) 36:49; 3. Martin Geithmann (Maumee) 40:01; 4. Richard Gent (Pepper Pike) 40:01; 5. Will Hanson (Beachwood) 40:19. 40-44: 1. Kam Lee (Cleveland) 33:59; 2. Scott Snow (Avon) 34:26; 3. John McMahon (Buffalo, N.Y.) 35:27; 4. Matt Hollapa (Ann Arbor, Mi.) 37:36; 5. Michael Ode (Hinckley) 39:28. 45-49: 1. Damon Blackford (Akron) 34:44; 2. Mike Ryan (Strongsville) 37:01; 3. Gary Brimmer (San Antonio, Tx.) 38:43; 4. Andy Harris (Willowick) 39:55; 5. Steve Doyle (Twinsburg) 41:08. 50-54: 1. Greg Cauller (York, Pa.) 36:14; 2. Lou Dregely (Garfield Heights) 38:45; 3. Pete Jendre (Medina) 40:17; 4. Paul Heyse (Parma Heights) 44:09; 5. Dave Miles (Akron) 44:20. 55-59: 1. Bill Long (Berea) 41:37; 2. Warren Elzy (Bedford) 41:46; 3. Gordon Pauls (Hamilton, Ont.) 43:48; 4. James Lucente (Gahanna) 46:30; 5. Al Lander (Lucinda, Pa.) 46:59. 60-64: 1. Bob Kuebler (Hudson) 45:50; 2. Phil Sipos (Richfield) 46:13; 3. Francis Bertolini (North Canton) 46:24; 4. Dale Ferrone (Chagrin Falls) 47:00; 5. Edward Campbell (Westlake) 48:26. 65-69: 1. Rick Labus (Cleveland Hts.) 52:07; 2. John Roos) (Strongsville) 55:35; 3. Ray Dietrich (Cuyahoga Falls) 55:52; 4. Steve Walling (Ashtabula) 57:09; 5. John Herwig Jr. (Westlake) 58:03. Over 70: 1.Colton Woodruff (Grass Lake, Mi.) 50:58; 2. James Bailey (Cedarville, WV) 51:19; 3. Bill Catanese (Cleveland) 55:30; 4. George Cerveny (Brooklyn) 59:04; 5. Daniel Zaczkowski (Mentor) 1:00:32.

WOMEN TOP 10 OVERALL: 1. Everlyne Lagat (Kenya) 34:00, 2. Risper Gesabwa (Kenya) 34:04; 3. Alison Grace-Morgan (Lexington, Ky.) 34:15; 4. Kara Storage (Beavercreek) 35:31; 5. Tara Storage (Dayton) 36:19; 6. Becki Ordway (Bellbrook) 36:39; 7. Monica Joyce (Ann Arbor, Mi.) 37:43; 8. Melissa Converse (Columbus) 37:58; 9. Kerry Lee (Cincinnati) 38:15; 10. Kristen Doning (Uniontown) 40:12.

14 & Under: 1. Kara Storage (Beavercreek) 35:31; 2. Emily Belovich (South Charleston) 42:30; 3. Robyn Hageman (Westlake) 48:08; 4. Allison Halperin (Solon) 49:16; 5. Lauren Miller (Hudson) 57:31. 15-19: 1. Marisa Seitz (Broadview Hts.) 45:00; 2. Jennifer Baum (Perrysburg) 46:30; 3. Lyndsey Bailey (Canton) 46:52; 4. Hannah Sedely (Brunswick) 47:19; 5. Chloe Fadenholz (Brookpark) 47:24. 20-24: 1. Risper Gesabwa 34:04; 2. Kristen Doning (Uniontown) 40:12; 3. Christina Antonopoulos (Cleveland Hts.) 41:23; 4. Kelly Zaleski (Cleveland) 45:33; 5. Laila Almassri (Seven Hills) 45:44. 25-29: 1. Alison Grace-Morgan (Lexington, Ky.) 34:15; 2. Tara Storage (Dayton) 36:19; 3. Becki Ordway (Bellbrook) 36:39; 4. Kristin Skrinyer (Akron) 44:38; 5. Lindsey Dodge (Lakewood) 45:05. 30-34: 1. Everlyne Lagat 34:00; 2. Melissa Converse (Columbus) 37:58; 3. Carrie Budzar (Rocky River) 46:51; 4. Christi Lalli (Wadsworth) 47:56; 5. Erin Hayes (Berea) 47:59. 35-39: 1. Kerry Lee (Cincinnati) 38:15; 2. Anne-Marie Was (Cleveland) 48:39; 3. Jennifer Dougher (Chardon) 48:59; 4. Hillarie Shapaka (Strasburg) 49:15; 5. Jeannine Harley (Strongsville) 49:18. 40-44: 1. Liz Southworth (Westlake) 47:45; 2. Rachel Kirsh (Cleveland Hts.) 49:02; 3. Anne Watkins (Massillon) 50:32; 4. Nicole Morse (Poland) 50:32; 5. Stefania Barron (Sarnia, Ont.) 50:59; 45-49: 1. Jennifer Wright (Ont.) 46:55; 2. Debbie Cerrone (Rochester, N.Y.) 48:22; 3. Ann Sparks (Parma) 49:14; 4. Bonnie Young (Chardon) 49:14; 5. Monica Lukas (Brecksville) 49:31; 50-54: 1. Monica Joyce (Ann Arbor, Mi.) 37:43; 2. Suzanne Isco (Ashtabula) 44:17; 3. Lainie Breiner (Lakewood) 48:55; 4. Peggy Zanin (Akron) 50:40; 5. Sharon Seitz (Broadview Hts.) 51:25; 55-59: 1. Marilyn Rothstein (Solon) 49:03; 2. Heidi Fatica (Cleveland) 55:26; 3. Tami Murray (Sandusky) 55:28; 4. Beth Ranally (Willoughby) 55:43; 5. Jeanne Jakubchak (Strongsville) 56:56; 60-64: 1. Mary Ann Michal (Sagamore Hills) 52:37; 2. Pat Habenicht (North Ridgeville) 57:13; 3. Linda Barrett (Hamilton, Ont.) 1:02:26; 4. Christine Roberts (Hannon, Ont.) 1:02:48; 5. Jan Jones (Cleveland Hts.) 1:05:33; 65-69: 1. Sharon Morgenstern (Malvern) 58:54; 2. Jeanne Sikorski (North Ridgeville) 1:03:42; 3. Diana Pearson (Moreland Hills) 1:11:11; 4. Mary Newcomb (Mentor) 1:11:43; 5. Nancy Koons (Chagrin Falls) 1:13:09; Over 70: 1. Marilyn Olsen (North Olmsted) 1:13:43; 2. Lois Shreves (Perry) 1:27:38; 3. Peggy Scott (Port Clinton) 1:35:39; 4. Matt Norris (Olmsted Falls) 1:38:32; 5. Clarice Prevost (Cleveland) 1:39:17; 6. Patricia Miller (Euclid) 1:50:32.

Half-Marathon

MEN TOP 10 OVERALL: 1. David Keenan (Tonawanda, N.Y.) 1:10:27; 2. Drew Fattlar (Westlake) 1:10:56; 3. Aaron Apathy (Parma) 1:11:29; 4. Chris Peverada (Cleveland) 1:11:54; 5. Kenneth Janosko (Mentor) 1:11:55; 6. Kyle Bowman (Stow) 1:12:39; 7. Jeff Wilson (Akron) 1:12:57; 8. Justin Baum (Bolivar) 1:14:48; 9. James Adams (Avon Lake) 1:14:53; 10. Michael Vaughn (Cleveland) 1:15:26.

WOMEN TOP 10 OVERALL: 1.Marian Pyles (Charleston, W.Va.) 1:21:11; 2. Jamie Hunt (North Canton) 1:21:38; 3. Amber Hanes (Belpre) 1:24:39; 4. Lindy Bison (Avon) 1:26:21; 5. Colleen Byrne (Cleveland) 1:26:50; 6. Colleen Tate (Akron) 1:27:04; 7. Laura Pizmoht (Willoughby Hills) 1:27:38; 8. Stefanie Lee (Norwalk) 1:28:35; 9. Shannon McConville (Westlake) 1:28:37; 10. Beth Woodward (Orrville) 1:28:41.

Related: Looking for a runner not listed? Get official results in all Sunday races

NBA Playoffs: What impressed you the most about Chicago's Game 1 victory? Poll

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What impressed you most about Chicago's victory over the Miami Heat?

Cinesport video: Bulls beat Heat in Game 1



 

Derrick RoseChicago Bulls guard Derrick Rose.

Certainly the series between the Chicago Bulls and the Miami Heat is not over, despite the Bulls' Game 1 victory over the Heat.

The Bulls were impressive in many ways. The Bulls play solid defense. The Bulls' bench was much more impressive than the Heat's bench. And of course, Taj Gibson's two dunks (one on Dwyane Wade) also highlighted the night.

So what impressed you the most about Game 1?

 








Mark Cuban cares, but that's not the point: Book of Norman

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With his Dallas Mavericks closing in on an NBA title, this could be Mark Cuban’s finest hour. Which is not a good thing, unless you don’t mind rewarding everything wrong with American sports vis-à-vis American culture since, oh, 1960 or so.

mark cubanMavericks owner Mark Cuban says his team’s results matter an awful lot. Too much, according to Slouch.

With his Dallas Mavericks closing in on an NBA title, this could be Mark Cuban’s finest hour. Which is not a good thing, unless you don’t mind rewarding everything wrong with American sports vis-à-vis American culture since, oh, 1960 or so.

Cuban is an astute businessman and successful team owner. The Mavericks are a model NBA franchise: Under Cuban, they have made the playoffs 11 straight seasons; players love playing in Dallas, fans love going to games there. And what’s not to love about an accessible owner who sits in a T-shirt behind the team’s bench emoting with every possession?

Actually, plenty.

Before we get to the particulars, let’s look back to last summer, when Cuban was outbid in auction for baseball’s Texas Rangers. In his blog, he talked about how commentators tried to villainize him and how they were always wrong. He wrote:

“What I have learned in 11 years in the sports business is that the dumbest guys in the room are always the media guys. Some do a decent job of reporting, most just spew opinions. And those opinions change more often than they brush their teeth. So what the media was saying was of zero impact or influence on what I was going to do.

Listening to the media only increases your odds of failing at whatever you are doing. So I ignore them.”

What I have learned in 11 years in the media business is that the most narcissistic, me-first guys in the room are always Mark-Cuban types. Some do a decent job of owning, most just spew wealth. And that wealth grows every day, whether they brush their teeth or not, and they think their wealth makes them better than everyone else. So what Cuban says should have zero impact or influence on what the rest of us do. Listening to Cuban only increases your odds of becoming a jerk. So I ignore him.

To be truthful, Cuban is spot-on about sportswriters — they’re almost always off-target.

(At the moment, I realize some of you are confused. I am not a sportswriter so much as I am a sofa savant. What, you think I’m going to land a smart babe like Toni — aka She Is The One And Then Some — based on my ability to pick NFL games? No. It’s because of my irresistibly mordant persona, my inexhaustible knowledge of cheap Bordeaux and the sexy, comfortable red sectional in my living room.)

Anyway, here is Cuban’s M.O. that moves me to madness:

He travels to many Mavericks games on his Gulfstream V jet, for which he paid $40 million — hefty sticker price, but it gets great gas mileage. At Mavericks games, road or home, he sits just off the court, endlessly fanatical. He curses opposing players and berates officials. He has picked up $1.7 mill ion in NBA fines, most ly for publicly criticizing referees. At his core, he’s a lousy loser.

At a time when we sorely need our most powerful and wealthiest voices to lead us to a better place, Cuban often acts the part of an overgrown 8-year-old boy denied ice cream after dinner.

Now, Couch Slouch believes the games should count but that they shouldn’t matter as much as they do. Cuban is the antithesis of this: Sadly, his sensibility reflects a large part of America these days. Heck, ESPN has built its entire empire on the premise that most people think the games count and matter a lot.

Your team wins, you feel good; your team loses, you don’t feel good. End of story, or so it should be. Rather, Cuban and company have constructed a culture in which all that matters is that YOUR TEAM WINS. This is reflected in attention we pay teenagers who can break tackles and make jump shots and the obsession we have with building new stadiums and arenas, and everything in between.

According to Forbes, Cuban is the 459th richest person in the world; Cuban figures this makes him, at a minimum, the 459th smartest person in the world. But from where I’m sitting — admittedly, on my laissez- faire butt on my oh-so-cozy chesterfield — he’s not even in the top 459,000 wise men, though he is forever celebrated for his passionate devotion to sporting detail.

Somehow we have lost our minds. The important things are left neglected, and Cuban walks down Main Street with a bully’s bullhorn and a bucketful of benjamins.

Ask The Slouch!

Q: You were a Heat hater—how do you feel now, Slouch? — Jason Feldman, Spokane, Wash.

A: One, I wasn’t a Heat hater, I just said they wouldn’t win the NBA title. Two, did they win it yet? Because after they beat the Boston Celtics in the conference semifinals, LeBron James (above) reacted as if he had just tunneled his way out of Shawshank.

Q: Are you looking forward to retirement when you can sit on the couch all day and watch TV?—Dan Cantwell, Albany, N.Y.

A: Somehow, I sense that you are mocking me.

Q: Since Washington Redskins management is unwilling to change their name in order to become non-offensive to Native Americans, couldn’t they simply switch their logo to a potato? — Duane Mathias, Parma.

A: Pay the man, Shirley.

You, too, can enter the $1.25 Ask The Slouch Cash Giveaway. Just email asktheslouch@aol.com and, if your question is used, you win $1.25 in cash.

Norman Chad is a freelance writer based in Los Angeles.

Major League Baseball: Why are runs down? Poll

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Why is scoring down in baseball?

Cleveland Indians beat New York Yankees, 4-1Josh Tomlin will start for the Tribe tonight at Kansas City.

Dennis Manoloff of The Plain Dealer has this story on how scoring is down in Major League Baseball.


In 553 games through May 12, the average was 8.43 combined runs per game. In 508 games through May 12 last season, the average was 9.01. In 488 games in 2009, it was 9.63.


So what is the main reason why scoring is down? Is it improved pitching? Better defense? Or baseball's crackdown on performance enchancing drugs?


 


 











Cleveland Indians A.M. Links: Trevor Crowe waits; Rain, rain, go away; Len Barker

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Trevor Crowe working on coming back.

Tribe sweeps Tigers with double wins WednesdayTrevor Crowe

Trevor Crowe is recovering from surgery on his right shoulder. The surgery was done on April 30.  He had an arthroscopic debridement on the shoulder.

News-Herald reporter Bob Finnan writes how Crowe has a visit with the doctor in two weeks. If he suffers no setbacks, he hopes to be back on the field before September.

"There's no definitive time table," he said. "I'm doing a follow-up with Dr. Altchek in a couple weeks. At that time, there will be a more detailed plan to when I can start throwing and hitting."

With a healthy Grady Sizemore, along with Shin-Soo Choo and Michael Brantley, Crowe will never be more than a fourth outfielder with the Indians.

Crow is working hard to get back on the field, Finnan writes.

 "Just to have that light at the end of the tunnel where I'm getting stronger, getting better, is great," he said.

"I know the operation made a huge difference. I'm excited to see how that turns out."

 

Another wash out

Ohio.com reporter Stephanie Storm writes how the Tribe managed to have some fun despite the rain that postponed Sunday's game between the Tribe and Seattle.

Storm writes how some lucky youngsters joined the Tribe on the field during warm ups. But that was the only action on the field Sunday.

Tribe manager Manny Acta appeared to be rather animated during the conversation, perhaps making the point that the previous day's game had already been washed out. But Hirschbeck looked around at the conditions and called for the tarp.

''It was a tough decision because the weather was so unpredictable,'' Acta said. ''I don't think anybody did anything wrong. I think our stadium operations [team] and our management here did everything we could at the time to start the ballgame. But once we were ready to start, [the rain] got a little harder. And that wasn't a good condition to start a game in.''

 

Memories of Len Barker

MLB.com has this story from 2006 on Len Barker's perfect game at Municipal Stadium on May 15, 1981.

MLB.com tracked down eight people who were, definitively, in attendance, if only for the last few outs. One being Terry Pluto of The Plain Dealer.

"I was at the Cleveland Press Association awards banquet at the Sheraton hotel downtown that night. Somebody came up to me and told me to call the office. I called the office and they said, 'Len Barker has a perfect game in the seventh inning.' They were trying to get somebody over there.

"So I ran over there. My wife's in a nice dress, and I'm wearing a suit. I saw the last three outs standing there, and after the game I did a sidebar about Barker. So I wrote a story about a perfect game I didn't even see. But at least I did see some of it. Some people write about games they haven't seen any part of."


Michael Brantley should lead off - Indians Comment of the Day

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"Brantley has been an important piece of the Indians' success this year. It begs the question as to why Sizemore is leading off in the games he plays. He is no longer the base stealing threat he once was (no stolen bases yet this year, in fact) and he still strikes out at an impressive rate. It would seem that he now fits the mold of a middle-of-the-order hitter where he will not be called upon to run but, instead, drive in runs. Brantley has shown that he can more than adequately fill the leadoff role and Choo and Santana have yet to put a good run together as middle-of-the-order hitters." - puffdamagicd

michael-brantley.jpgView full sizeMichael Brantley has a higher average when hitting 1st, but a higher OBP when hitting 7th this season.

In response to the story Terry Pluto's Talkin' ... about the Browns' West Coast fit, the Cavaliers' draft options and Tribe's emerging young Michael Brantley, cleveland.com reader puffdamagicd think Michael Brantley should be the Indians' leadoff hitter. This reader writes,

"Brantley has been an important piece of the Indians' success this year. It begs the question as to why Sizemore is leading off in the games he plays. He is no longer the base stealing threat he once was (no stolen bases yet this year, in fact) and he still strikes out at an impressive rate. It would seem that he now fits the mold of a middle-of-the-order hitter where he will not be called upon to run but, instead, drive in runs. Brantley has shown that he can more than adequately fill the leadoff role and Choo and Santana have yet to put a good run together as middle-of-the-order hitters."

To respond to puffdamagicd's comment, go here.

For more comments of the day, go to blog.cleveland.com/comments-of-the-day.

Cavaliers need to land a star in the draft - Comment of the Day

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"If the Cavs don't come out of the lottery with Kyrie Irving or Derrick Williams, it will be an unfortunate set of circumstances. The NBA, at its highest levels, is a league of stars. While you can get a good player outside of those considered "star-quality," they rarely lead you where you want to go. Irving and Williams have star-type potential." - randyosu

kyrie-irving-duke.jpgView full sizeMany fans are hoping Kyrie Irving will land in wine and gold - and develop in to the star the Cavaliers need.

In response to the story Terry Pluto's Talkin' ... about the Browns' West Coast fit, the Cavaliers' draft options and Tribe's emerging young Michael Brantley, cleveland.com reader randyosu think Michael Brantley should be the Indians' leadoff hitter. This reader writes,

"If the Cavs don't come out of the lottery with Kyrie Irving or Derrick Williams, it will be an unfortunate set of circumstances. The NBA, at its highest levels, is a league of stars. While you can get a good player outside of those considered "star-quality," they rarely lead you where you want to go. Irving and Williams have star-type potential."

To respond to randyosu's comment, go here.

For more comments of the day, go to blog.cleveland.com/comments-of-the-day.


Browns defensive coordinator Dick Jauron's role in free agency, and other tidbits -- Tony Grossi's blog

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A comparison between Phil Taylor and Shaun Rogers, experimenting with Marcus Benard at defensive end, and other defensive notes.

jauron.jpgFormer Bills head coach Dick Jauron knows he has a lot of work to do as Browns defensive coordinator, including supervising the switch from a 3-4 to a 4-3 defense, along with quickly indoctrinating the team's draft picks whenever football activities resume in the NFL.

CLEVELAND -- Leftovers from our interview last week with Browns defensive coordinator Dick Jauron:

 * The defense still has holes at left defensive end, free safety and perhaps another backup cornerback. Jauron figures to be prominent in plugging them when/if free agency starts.

 "We've done our homework," he said. "Most places are fairly similar (in giving coaches a say in free agency). You're given a number of players to look at and you write a report and when the time comes, we'll prioritize and you move forward. Until that time, I know it's not appropriate for me to remark on any of it."

 * Jauron was defensive coordinator with the Detroit Lions in 2004-05 and added the title of interim coach for the last five games in '05. Shaun Rogers was in his prime those years, making the NFC Pro Bowl squad at defensive tackle both of those seasons. Jauron was asked to compare Browns No. 1 pick Phil Taylor with Rogers.

 "Probably some similarities and some differences, also," he said. "I think Shaun was taller, size-wise. Shaun was significantly bigger at this point. Athletically, (they were) maybe comparable. Shaun was a rare athlete ... very, very rare for that big of a man. The size thing inside, with the athleticism, is something I've always believed in. I think you've got to have it, certainly in our division."

 After a season in which he hardly practiced and played, Rogers' contract was terminated by the Browns 19 days after Jauron joined them.

 * Jauron expressed some intrigue in experimenting with linebacker Marcus Benard as a full-time defensive end. As a situational pass rusher, Benard, 6-2 and 256 pounds, produced 11 sacks in 21 NFL games under former coach Eric Mangini.

 At the very least, Jauron said he expects Benard will continue in a pass rush role on obvious passing downs.

 "We definitely have to find out about a lot of (the players)," Jauron said, "but we do believe that that may be a good spot for (Benard) and we've talked about that. It's kind of what we're looking at as we eventually get him here. We'll put his hand on the ground. We'll stand him up. And then we'll make decisions. But absolutely he'll get an opportunity to play that (situational) position, too."

 * Jauron showered praise on all the assistant coaches who will be helping him on defense. The front defensive line is the key to any 4-3 defense, and that puts new defensive line coach Dwaine Board in a critical role.

 "Dwaine Board is somebody I heard about for years but never worked with," Jauron said. "He's got the experience, has played and coached. He's a good man and a smart man. I'm really lucky to have him and to be here.
 
 "Every coach is critically important. But those big guys (up front), they're critical. We felt we added to the group, now we have to move forward, coach them up and Dwaine's a great one to coach them."

Thunderstruck: Oklahoma City Shows the Way for Cavs Fans

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With the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference Finals, Cleveland can restore faith in the ability to build via the NBA Draft.

51a42fe752305059be8e013843fbb6ed-getty-113288514rm031_memphis_griz.jpgFrom "Rise Up" to "Rise Together," the Thunder show Cleveland just what it will take to get back to the conference finals

As the Boston Celtics woefully fell to the Miami Heat, a perceived "changing of the guard" was welcomed by many.  For the first time in five years, a team other than the Celtics, Los Angeles Lakers or San Antonio Spurs will win the NBA championship.  For all intents and purposes, we can stretch this statement to seven seasons as the Heat as presently constructed is a completely different team than that which won the Larry O'Brien back in 2006.  For Cleveland and fans of the 19-win Cavaliers, the fact that the Oklahoma City Thunder could represent the Western Conference means that much more.

In their final season in Seattle, the Sonics won a mere 20 games.  With a franchise in a state of flux and sequestered in a small market, free agency was a non-factor.  Instead, with their rookie small forward Kevin Durant - selected with the second-overall pick in the 2007 draft - the Thunder front office rebuilt through several seasons of sub-par records, lottery selections and trading aging veterans for potential.  Just three seasons later, the Durant-led Thunder are four wins away from hoisting the Western Conference Championship Trophy.

An ideal situation, curated mostly by a unique, franchise-changing small forward, the Thunder represent not only the abovementioned change amongst the NBA elite, but also a glimmer of hope for any small-to-mid-market franchise looking to rebuild sooner than later.  With the pending labor issues and the trend of building dynasties via back channels and free agency being all the rage, the draft and trade-focused Thunder show that, with keen scouting and development, a franchise can become the David in a land of brand and image-focused Goliaths.

The Sam Presti-led front office drafted up-and-coming point guard Russell Westbrook (fourth overall), the instant offense of James Harden (third overall) and the shot-blocking big man Serge Ibaka (24th overall).  With the ability and willingness to take on salaries, the Thunder then traded for reserve point guard Eric Maynor while paying a then-inactive Matt Harpring. 

With Dan Gilbert's wallet, the Cavaliers were quickly able (forced?) to switch their business model from that of the 2004 Detroit Pistons to that of the 07-present Thunder.  Acquiring lottery picks to go with a $15 million trade exception, the Cavaliers are in prime position to attempt replication.

Naturally, like most things related to Cleveland sports, the path will not be an easy one.  Being in the lottery is by no means a guarantee for a rebound. It is near consensus opinion that a Durant-type player is not for the having in the 2011 NBA Draft, one where the Cavaliers have four selections.  Also in Oklahoma City's corner, Durant was added to the team the summer before the team would win 20 games, allowing them to add Westbrook the very next season and essentially expediting the turnaround.  And having a future Hall of Famer fall into your lap is only half of the battle; the Thunder had to hit on subsequent selections as well as trades.

The narrative is one which has been analyzed for most of the 2010-11 season as the Cavaliers dropped game after game: teams rarely turn things around as quickly as the Thunder.  Following a franchise-changing transaction, the Utah Jazz, Orlando Magic and even the Chicago Bulls took considerable amounts of time to become perennial contenders. The Jazz lucked into Carlos Boozer after he swindled his way out of his rookie contract in Cleveland; the Bulls had similar luck getting the first-overall selection despite having a less than two percent chance at having their name called on lottery night.

In baseball, a .300 hitter is often lauded.  But the liklihood of said .300 hitter getting five hits in a row is incredibly low - just over two-hundredths of a percent.  But just like in the case of Mary Swanson in Aspen, there is certainly a chance.

The Cavaliers not only have a 22 percent chance at acquiring the first pick in the upcoming NBA Draft, they have a hungry front office and an ownership team with a chip on their collective shoulder.  They have two second-round selections, the ability to stash players overseas and a Traded Player Exception that could be considered gold by a financially-strapped franchise; Lord knows that the NBA is littered with these given the pending financial-fueled lockout.

In a comic book-style good guys/bad guys storyline, the Thunder easily represent the young and spry "good," doing things the way which they were intended as opposed to the way contrived by those who wish to tank seasons for years on end with the hopes of buying wins at some point in the future thanks to the perceived "allure" of big cities and even bright lights.  

While the Cavaliers may have played a large role in what transpired here roughly one year ago, the new chapter has a model protagonist and they hale from Oklahoma City.

Chicago Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau might be in LeBron James' head, says Dennis Manoloff (SBTV)

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But PD sports writer is still picking James and the Miami Heat to prevail in the Eastern Conference finals. Watch video


Welcome to today's edition of Starting Blocks TV, hosted by Branson Wright, who is solo today, as partner Chuck Yarborough is on assignment.


Scoring is down in Major League Baseball this season. So, what's the deal? Better pitching? The impact of drug testing? Let us know your thoughts in today's Starting Blocks poll.


Today's guest, Plain Dealer reporter Dennis Manoloff, wrote a story Sunday about the scoring slump this season. He thinks the drug testing has caused the game to not have as many big guys who can hit the long ball.


Dman also talks about what it was like to be at Friday's Tribe win over Seattle, when Travis Hafner's walk-off home run gave the Tribe the victory.


And he also talks about Sunday night's Game 1 of the NBA's Eastern Conference finals, which saw the Chicago Bulls stick it to the Miami Heat and LeBron James. Dman is still picking the Heat to win the series.


SBTV will return Tuesday.




Browns got the guy they wanted - Comment of the Day

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"It seems the Browns got exactly what they were after, and I love the pick. Taylor is the best run-stopping DT that was available - better than Fairley." - hannibal-lecter

Phil TaylorView full sizePhil Taylor may be the run-stopping defensive tackle the Browns needed for their new 4-3 scheme.

In response to the story The great NFL Draft tradedown debate keeps on rolling: Hey, Tony!, cleveland.com reader hannibal-lecter thinks the Browns did well to get Phil Taylor. This reader writes,

"It seems the Browns got exactly what they were after, and I love the pick. Taylor is the best run-stopping DT that was available - better than Fairley."

To respond to hannibal-lecter's comment, go here.

For more comments of the day, go to blog.cleveland.com/comments-of-the-day.

NBA Playoffs A.M. Links: Heat can't shake the demons; lack of team ball did Heat in; Dallas has painful history

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The NBA playoffs recap.

ChrisBosh-LeBronJames-DwyaneWade.jpgChris Bosh, LeBron James and Dwyane Wade.

The Chicago Bulls defeated the Miami Heat in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals, and Yahoo.com columnist Adrian Wojnarowski writes how the Heat may have buried the Boston Celtics demons, but another demon is alive.

James had ended the conference semifinals bowing down on one knee to honor the beating back of his ghosts against the Celtics. This time, the Bulls are threatening something else, threatening to bring him to both knees. Just one game, yes, but the truth tumbled down onto the floor of the United Center, and it had to leave the Heat wondering how they could’ve ever believed they had left demons in their postseason wake. Boston’s fading, but the Bulls are on the come. The Bulls are the Big Three’s worst nightmare.

 

Lack of team ball

Rick Telander, columnist for The Chicago Sun-Times writes what we already know: LeBron James is very athletic.

Telander also writes something else we know --  that just because you're a great athlete doesn't mean you're the best team basketball player in the world.

A man carrying his “talent’’ around like a silver chalice on a bejeweled tray should come to life when the mere mortals are trying their hardest.

He doesn’t score two points in the third quarter and three points in the fourth quarter. He doesn’t turn in modest numbers like 15 points on lousy 5-for-15 shooting, six rebounds, six assists, and four turnovers.

Telander wants to know how much did LeBron want to win Game 1? And did he even know how to want it?

He shot only four free throws, and seemed content to sluff off the ball on drives to lesser players, and then just chuck up the ball in sheer hope at other times.

James will play better. He can’t play much worse.

The question is, does his talent know how?

Painful history

The Dallas Mavericks will open the Western Conference Finals against Oklahoma on Tuesday, and despite advancing, it still makes it hard for Dallas fans to forget the team's recent pass.

Jan Hubbard of CBSSports.com writes:

In 2006, they made their only appearance in the NBA Finals. After winning Games 1 and 2, Dallas choked and lost the series.

The next season, they came back and won 67 games.

But in the playoffs, they cratered. They again became part of history, but in a negative way. The Mavericks were the first team with the best record in a conference to lose a seven-game playoff series to a team with the eighth-best record. It was a spectacular flameout that was ridiculed nationally.

"Those were really painful experiences," Mavericks general manager Donnie Nelson said. "Those scars don't leave you. Those were gut-wrenching times for the franchise, and they would have been for any franchise."

 

Cleveland Indians put OF Grady Sizemore on DL; recall Travis Buck from Columbus

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The Indians have decided to place Grady Sizemore on the disabled list while they wait for his knee contusion to heal.

Grady SizemoreAfter six days of waiting, the Indians have decided to place Grady Sizemore on the DL with his right knee contusion and recall outfielder Travis Buck.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians today announced that centerfield Grady Sizemore has been placed on the 15-day disabled list and outfielder Travis Buck has been recalled from Class AAA Columbus.

Buck is expected to join the club for tonight's game in Kansas City.

Sizemore injured his right knee while sliding during a game on May 10 against Tampa Bay. He finished that game, but has not played since. The move to the DL is retroactive to May 11.

The injury has been diagnosed as a right knee contusion. It is not the same knee that Sizemore had microfracture surgery on last year.

Sizemore started this season on the injured list because of the surgery, but in 18 games since his return he is batting .282 with 15 runs scored, 10 doubles, 6 homers and 11 RBI. This is Sizemore's fifth time on the DL in his career. He is eligible to return on May 26.

Buck, 27, made the Indians Opening Day roster after being signed to a minor league contract in December. In 10 games with the Indians he hit .241 with four runs scored, three doubles and two RBI before being optioned to Columbus on April 19. At Columbus he has hit .333 with 12 runs scored, 4 doubles, a triple, 3 homers and 21 RBI in 18 games.

Indians back in action tonight against Royals

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First things first: rain is not in the forecast tonight in Kansas City for the game between the Indians and Royals.

Cleveland Indians beat Seattle Mariners, 5-4The Indians haven't played since Travis Hafner's walk-off home run on Friday.

KANSAS CITY -- First things first: rain is not in the forecast tonight in Kansas City.

Heavy rains have postponed the Cleveland Indians' last two games, and they hope the momentum of an emotional victory hasn't worn off. The Kansas City Royals hope their extra day helps get them back on track.

Each coming off rainouts, the Indians and Royals begin a short two-game set Monday night in Kansas City.

Cleveland (24-13) trailed heading into the ninth inning Friday against Seattle, but Travis Hafner hit a game-winning two-run homer to give the Indians a 5-4 victory. They hoped to continue riding the momentum, but rainouts Saturday and Sunday prevented that from happening.

"We really wanted to use all that energy we got from that walk-off homer," manager Manny Acta said. "It's too bad. It seems like ages ago since Travis hit that home run."

The layoff may not be ideal, but Sunday's postponement allowed Acta to send Josh Tomlin (4-1, 2.70 ERA) to the mound against the Royals, who he's faced twice this season.

Tomlin, among the league leaders with a .185 opponent batting average, did not get a decision Tuesday after allowing three runs in six innings of a 5-4 win over Tampa Bay. The right-hander has given up five home runs in his last three starts after yielding three in his first four.

Tomlin has been solid against Kansas City (20-19), beating the Royals 7-2 on April 27 after not getting a decision against them April 21. He's allowed three runs in 13 1-3 innings in those outings.

Tomlin will face a Kansas City lineup which has scored one total run in two straight losses. The Royals fell 3-1 on Friday and 3-0 on Saturday against Detroit before the series finale was rained out Sunday.

The Indians will be without leadoff hitter Grady Sizemore, who was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a knee contusion.

Royals manager Ned Yost planned to hit rookie Eric Hosmer fifth rather than his usual sixth as a change of pace. Hosmer went 0 for 8 over the weekend after going 4 for 9 with two home runs and four RBIs in the two games previous.

Yost maintains he's not protecting Hosmer in the lineup and the first baseman is a capable major-league hitter.

"I think if you're a big leaguer, you're a big leaguer, and I don't try to protect guys in the big leagues," Yost said. "I throw them right into the fire and let them go. They're big league players. They've earned their way here."

Yost may hope Hosmer and the rest of the Royals begin hitting soon, especially against the Indians. Kansas City has lost five of seven meetings against Cleveland this season, including a three-game sweep April 26-28.

The Royals will look to a struggling Kyle Davies (1-5, 7.08 ERA) to help beat their AL Central rival. Davies lost the most recent meeting between the teams, allowing eight runs - including a career high-tying four homers - in 3 1-3 innings April 28 in an 8-2 loss.

"I got my butt kicked tonight," Davies said following his performance. "I'm the reason we lost the game."

Davies, who was also slated to start Sunday, is 0-4 with a 6.97 ERA in last four starts, losing 3-1 to the New York Yankees on Tuesday after allowing three runs in five innings.




NFL lockout 2011: Owners and players resume mediation talks before U.S. judge

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Little progress has been made toward a new collective bargaining agreement. Training camps, under normal circumstances, would open in barely two months.

players-attorneys.jpgAttorneys for current and retired NFL players talk before heading into a federal courthouse in Minneapolis on Monday, as court-ordered mediation between the players and the NFL resumed.

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota -- NFL owners and their locked-out players are talking again.

Commissioner Roger Goodell, executive vice president Jeff Pash and four team owners -- Mike Brown, John Mara, Jerry Richardson and Art Rooney -- arrived at the federal courthouse in Minneapolis on Monday morning along with legal counsel.

The head of the NFL Players Association, DeMaurice Smith, and three other lawyers for the players were present for their side for the closed-door session before U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur Boylan on the division and future of the ever-popular $9 billion business.

Linebacker Ben Leber, one of the players listed as a plaintiff in the still-pending federal antitrust lawsuit against the league, also attended. Hall of Famer Carl Eller and attorneys were on hand for retired players.

Boylan presided over four days of mediation last month with no signs of progress. The two sides also met for 16 days earlier this year before talks fell apart March 11 and the lockout began.

Since then, U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson ordered the lockout lifted because it's irreparably harming the players and their careers. Days later, on an appeal from the league, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals put Nelson's ruling on hold and has yet to decide whether to issue a more permanent stay.

The appeals court in St. Louis has a hearing in the case set for June 3.

Also pending is an order from U.S. District Judge David Doty on the fate of some $4 billion in broadcast revenue he previously ruled was unfairly secured by the NFL in the last round of contract extensions with the networks to use as leverage in the form of financial padding for the work stoppage. Even if a lockout prevents games from being televised, the league would still get paid.

The players have asked Doty to set that money aside in escrow and for hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, too.

The hearing in Doty's courtroom in Minneapolis last week was mostly lawyers arguing back and forth, but each side accused the other of "sandbagging" and neither sounded as if it's ready to concede any ground.

With all these potential momentum swings still unsettled in the court system, significant progress toward a new collective bargaining agreement and a full 2011 season seems unlikely.

"We'd like to make progress, but it'll be hard to do. We have to wait to see what happens June 3," Rooney said before Monday's session began.

The NFL avoided a chaotic free agency free-for-all when the 8th Circuit slapped the stay on Nelson's ruling and prevented the league year -- meaning sanctioned offseason workouts, signings and trades -- from beginning. Still, the players may have been emboldened by the earlier court victories and are even less willing to budge.

Eller helped organize a meeting of 10 retired players on Sunday, with Brent Boyd, Irv Cross, Tony Davis, Nolan Harrison, Jim McFarland, Jeff Nixon, Dave Pear, Bob Stein and Shawn Stuckey also present. Another meeting is scheduled for next week in Chicago with former Bears coach Mike Ditka.

"This galvanizes all the different groups, puts aside whatever differences there may have been and concentrates on the commonalities of the issues and shortcomings of the present system," said Michael Hausfeld, an attorney who represents the retired players.

Goodell has continually spread the league's message of desiring these face-to-face negotiations to reach a new deal as opposed to letting the process play out in court, where the players have fared better.

"We come into this mediation session with every hope and intent to make them productive," Goodell said last week. "If there aren't two parties there willing to negotiate -- they are not willing to address the issues in a negotiation and they are sitting and waiting for their litigation strategy -- it's not likely that they're going to be productive."

Appreciation for Bob Wickman - Indians Comment of the Day

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"Don't confuse Bob Wickman with Joe Borowski. Wickman worked very hard to come back from injury for the Tribe and was an All-Star reliever with us - even getting some MVP consideration (not much, but some) in 2005. In his final full-year with the Tribe, he had a 2.47 ERA and led the AL with 45 saves. He gave up four runs in his first appearance that year, and only 13 more the rest of the season." - prodigalfan

bob-wickman.JPGView full sizeBob Wickman made fans nervous, but got the job done for the Indians when he was their closer.

In response to the story Is closer Chris Perez opening some bad memories of relief worries? Hey, Hoynsie!, cleveland.com reader prodigalfan thinks fans forget how good Bob Wickman was for the Indians. This reader writes,

"Don't confuse Bob Wickman with Joe Borowski. Wickman worked very hard to come back from injury for the Tribe and was an All-Star reliever with us - even getting some MVP consideration (not much, but some) in 2005. In his final full-year with the Tribe, he had a 2.47 ERA and led the AL with 45 saves. He gave up four runs in his first appearance that year, and only 13 more the rest of the season."

To respond to prodigalfan's comment, go here.

For more comments of the day, go to blog.cleveland.com/comments-of-the-day.

Defending Jim Tressel in front of the NCAA comes at a cost to Ohio State: Bill Livingston

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As Jim Tressel prepares to fight for his job at Ohio State, the stakes are high, both for the way the football team will play and the way others will perceive the school.

tressel-gee-horiz-mf.jpgView full sizeJim Tressel's plans to defend his position may eventually result in salvaging his job. But it will come at a cost to the reputations of the university led by President E. Gordon Gee (center), says Bill Livingston.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- If Jim Tressel goes, it will not be willingly, that is for sure.

It will not be until his high-priced attorney, Gene Marsh -- an Ohio State alumnus, once the head of the NCAA's Committee on Infractions, now a counsel to those charged by it with wrongdoing -- has exhausted every recourse. He will do so technically through the loopholes that might be found by a canny lawyer and personally through his familiarity with the adjudication process.

Tressel will fight for his job despite the cover-up of the memorabilia sale scandal at Ohio State, for which he, and only he, was responsible, according to the NCAA.

This will go to the last ditch, apparently. Surely the powers that be who support him are aware of the price they will pay in perception, though.

As the face of Ohio State football, the leading program in the leading sport in the nation's most storied conference, Tressel is well connected to the political and financial big hitters in Columbus. Only the idealistic worry that Tressel might become bigger than the program.

Because he already is.

Bob Knight was bigger than the Indiana basketball program, outlasting several Woody Hayes moments. Knight was fired because of a "zero tolerance" policy for further temper tantrums, but he might still be there if he hadn't let the record on the court slip.

Joe Paterno is bigger than the Penn State program or he wouldn't have lasted a generation in the Big Ten, during which his record became a blot on one of the great coaching careers and his coaching role became more ceremonial than substantive.

Woody was bigger than the Ohio State program. But he stayed past the "Super Sophomores," past Archie, past the bowl humiliation by Bear Bryant, all the way up until he threw the punch.

Tressel has admitted violating NCAA Bylaw 10.1 by lying to the NCAA, misleading his superiors, then knowingly playing ineligible players. Violators of NCAA Rule 10.1, which deals with unethical conduct, overwhelmingly either resign or are fired.

Refusal to provide relevant information about a possible infraction is the first example of such unethical conduct in the NCAA manual.

Still, what Tressel did, while serious, is not academic fraud (another specific 10.1 violation). It is not creating a slush fund to pay athletes (still another 10.1 no-no). It is not Oklahoma's Barry Switzer complaining, "I didn't know I had to put 'No shooting, no doping, no raping' signs in the dorm."

As far as the latest flap, the investigation of cars driven (and mostly paid for) by OSU football players, it is not SMU in the "Pony Express" days, when the players' parking lot was reportedly dotted with Porsches and Trans-Ams. It is what could be found at many football and basketball powerhouses.

The closest analogy for Tressel is probably to Connecticut's Jim Calhoun, who won his third national championship in basketball last month and will serve a trivial three-game suspension at the start of next season. That is despite the NCAA's finding that Calhoun fostered an atmosphere of non-compliance with the rules. UConn survived by scapegoating two assistants.

There are no known scapegoats at Ohio State, but there are things that can be said in Tressel's defense. They are good things, true things. They also amount to character witness testimony. Marsh says they matter in determining the punishment.

Will the "angel wings" defense work? And if so, at what cost?

If Tressel leaves, recruiting takes a huge hit. If he stays, the perception will be that the tail is wagging the dog at Ohio State.

If he leaves, Ohio State will have lost its greatest coaches since Hayes, and long before the game had passed him by, as it did Hayes. If Tressel stays, he becomes the exception to the rule, as well as a rebuke to the whole concept of "Big Ten exceptionalism."

If he leaves, Michigan stops being the punching bag in the rivalry sooner rather than later, and the big games and bowl victories vanish for at least a while.

If he stays, the perception will be that "Success with Honor," a motto Paterno chose for Penn State, does not apply to Ohio State.

Follow Bill Livingston on Facebook and on Twitter @LivyPD

P.M. Cleveland Browns links: A D'Qwell Jackson comeback as an impact player?

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A Browns' key would be linebacker bouncing back from injury-riddled seasons. Links on Greg Little, Colt McCoy, Abe Elam, Jabaal Sheard, 2012 draft, etc.

dqwell-jackson.jpgD'Qwell Jackson (52), after intercepting a pass during the 2008 season, when he led the NFL in tackles.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Browns, 14-34 over the past three seasons, have had remarkably few impact players since the team returned as a franchise in 1999.

Obviously, for the team to approach contender status, the roster must be dotted with more difference-makers.

The Browns broke in a few youngsters during the 2010 season who might emerge as, if not stars, better-than-average NFL starters.

The recently completed draft provided Cleveland with several players who might, within a season or two, represent upgrades over the Browns now manning various positions.

And, there's the occasional veteran who might step forward and help lead the team to respectability and, maybe, beyond.

Zac Jackson of FoxSportsOhio.com lists the players he considers as "The five most important Cleveland Browns."

At No. 5, Jackson slots the player who led the NFL in tackles in 2008, and writes:

5. D'Qwell Jackson: The linebacker signed a one-year, incentive-laden contract before the lockout started in March and will be looking to become an impact player again. He has missed almost two full seasons because of pectoral injuries. The Browns are totally remaking their defensive front, and for that transition to yield successful results in 2011, they will need Jackson to be a playmaker. He figures to play in the middle, which means he'll be asked to make a bunch of tackles and guide first-round tackle Phil Taylor through his rookie season. Jackson has always had a knack for finding the ball, and the Browns need him to be healthy.

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Browns coverage includes Browns beat writer Tony Grossi's blog, featuring new defensive coordinator Dick Jauron.

No big deal

Chris Pokorny, writing for the Dawgs By Nature blog, makes five observations about the Browns, including this about the informal workout held by some Browns last week:

Some fans seemed a little irked to find out that rookie Greg Little was unable to attend the minicamp in Berea. While it would have been nice for him to attend, realistically, I don't see his presence or absence making much of a difference in terms of how he will contribute during the regular season. The real test for Little will come when the coaches are with him and decide how game-ready he is. He has probably been keeping up on various football skills over the past year, which is all he would've really hoped to gain in Berea. Remember, while rookies would participate in OTA's and such if there was no lockout, the "real" test for them always seems to come in July during training camp. We're still over two months away from that.

Sideline to sideline 

Video of Browns quarterback Colt McCoy throwing out the first pitch at a University of Texas baseball game, from WEWS-Channel 5 in Cleveland, via Yahoo.com.

Browns safety Abe Elam is on the "free agent watch" on DallasCowboys.com.

The Browns expect defensive end Jabaal Sheard from Pitt to start. On CBSlocal.com in Pittsburgh.

What the Browns will do with two first-round picks, projected as Nos. 8 and 27 overall, in the 2012 draft, according to nflmocks.com.

The Browns need to find an offensive playmaker in free agency, on the WaitingForNextYear blog.

Once teams are allowed to sign free agents, some of the players they will look at, position-by-position, on the 2011 all-undrafted team, by DraftSeason.com.

What the Browns were doing a year ago at this time, and other NFL observations, by Steve Doerschuk of the Canton Repository.

A Browns report by Mike Wilkening of ProFootballWeekly.com.

The AFC North Blog by James Walker on ESPN.com.

Manny Acta not happy with rain-induced vacation: Cleveland Indians daily briefing

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If the Indians stay in contention, these early-season rainouts can cause big problems down the stretch.

rain-tribe-groundscrew-horiz-ap.jpgView full sizeA washed-out weekend didn't send Manny Acta and the Indians off to Kansas City in a good mood.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Manager Manny Acta didn't think Saturday and Sunday's rainouts against Seattle helped his team, with the exception of the bullpen getting some extra rest.

"It's too early in the season to have two off days like that," said Acta.

The Indians have already been rained out three times. The games have to be replayed and the fear is that the Indians might run into a repeat of the 2000 season when they played 10 games, including three doubleheaders, in seven days from Sept. 19 through Sept. 25.

That year's ball club went 90-72, finishing second in the AL Central and just missing out on the wild card. Their hard pull through the stretch run did not help.

It's believed Saturday's rainout will be made up as a doubleheader on Aug. 22 when the Mariners return to Cleveland for a three-game series. The Indians and Mariners have an open date in September where Sunday's game could be played. The advantage of playing in September is that the rosters will be expanded.

The Tribe's April 22 rainout against the Twins will be made up as a day-night doubleheader on July 18 at Target Field.

Reinforcements: Travis Buck started in left field Monday against the Royals. He was called up from Class AAA Columbus to replace Grady Sizemore, who was placed on the disabled list with a bruised right knee.

Trainer Lonnie Soloff is expecting Sizemore to be healed when his 15 days are up. His DL stay was retroactive to Wednesday, the day after he jammed his knee and hip on an awkward slide into second base.

Acta said Buck, a left-handed hitter, will play left or right field against most right-handers. He hit .333 (20-for-60) with four doubles, three homers and 21 RBI in 18 games at Columbus after being sent down on April 19.

Do you believe in miracles? On my flight from Cleveland to Kansas City on Monday, Mike Eruzione, captain of the USA hockey team that shocked the world by beating the Russians on the way to winning the gold medal in 1980, was sitting across the aisle. If you believe in signs, that's a pretty good one for the out-of-nowhere Tribe.

Tonight's lineups:

Indians (24-13): CF Michael Brantley (L), SS Asdrubal Cabrera (S), RF Shin-Soo Choo (L), C Carlos Santana, DH Travis Hafner (L), 2B Orlando Cabrera (R), Travis Buck (L), 1B Matt LaPorta, 3B Jack Hannahan, RHP Josh Tomlin (4-1, 2.70).

Royals (20-19): 2B Mike Aviles (R), CF Melky Cabrera (S), LF Alex Gordon (L), DH Billy Butler (R), RF Jeff Francoeur (R), 1B Eric Hosman (.241, 2, 5), 3B Wilson Betemit (S), C Matt Treanor (R), SS Alcides Escobar (R), RHP Kyle Davies (1-5. 7.08).

Him vs. me: Asdrubal Cabrera is hitting .375 (9-for-24) with six RBI and Shin-Soo Choo is hitting .300 (6-for-20) with two homers and four RBI against Davies.

Betemit is hitting .462 (6-for-13) with two homers and four RBI against Tomlin.

Left vs. right: Lefties are hitting .180 (18-for-100) with five homers and righties are hitting .191 (13-for-68) with three homers against Tomlin. The Royals have five righties and two switcher hitters in their lineup.

Lefties are hitting .354 (35-for-99) with four homers and righties are hitting .310 (22-for-71) with two homers against Davies. The Indians have five lefties and two switcher hitters in the lineup.

Quote of the day: "Baseball is a game, yes. It is also a business. But what it most truly is, is disguised combat. For all its gentility, its almost leisurely pace, baseball is violence under wraps," Hall of Famer Willie Mays.

Umpires: H Mark Wegner 1B Chris Guccione, 2B Mike Winters, 3B Mike Muchlinski. Winters, crew chief.

Next: RHP Carlos Carrasco (1-2, 5.29) vs. Vin Mazzaro (0-0, 4.50) Tuesday at 7:10 p.m. STO and WTAM/1100 will carry the game.

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