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Cleveland Browns: Kickoff returns for touchdowns, poll

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The NFL has put in new rules to protect players on kickoff returns. Will touchdowns be up or down?

josh-cribbs.jpgJosh Cribbs

It's only the preseason, but balls have been sailing into the endzone during kickoffs and the league says this is good for the players.

Less kickoffs, less chances for injuries, less chances for kickoff returns for touchdowns.

That means guys like Josh Cribbs, the NFL record-holder for career kickoff-return touchdowns with eight, won't get much of a chance to get Cleveland Browns' excited on kickoff returns.

Cribbs returned three kickoffs for touchdowns in 2009. Are those days gone because of the new rules?

    











Cleveland Browns are facing Detroit Lions' Ndamukong Suh at a good time, says Tony Grossi (SBTV)

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Plain Dealer Browns reporter says NFL's fine of DL for play against Bengals may have him a bit gun-shy tonight. Watch video


CLEVELAND, Ohio - Welcome to today's edition of Starting Blocks TV, hosted by Chuck Yarborough and Branson Wright.


The NFL changed its rules this year to move kickoffs from the 30-yard line up to the 35-yard line, which means returners will be catching the ball deeper in the end zone. How many kickoffs do you think the Browns will return for TDs this season? That's the question in today's Starting Blocks poll.


It's Friday, which means the guest on SBTV is Plain Dealer Browns reporters Tony Grossi. He says the rule change may produce more 109-yard kickoff returns, as players try to take the ball out and make a play.


Tony also answers fan questions from his weekly Hey, Tony! feature. He is asked about the Browns' reduced emphasis on special teams; whether wideout Jordan Norwood will make the roster; why the Browns don't try to bring in veteran free agents now, while the market is still strong; and why teams would bother to draft Terrelle Pryor in the NFL supplemental draft instead of just signing him as a free agent.


Tony also explains why he thinks the Browns are facing the Detroit Lions and dominant defensive lineman Ndamukong Suh at a good time during tonight's 7:30 kickoff at Browns Stadium.


SBTV will return Monday with Plain Dealer reporter Dennis Manoloff recapping the important Indians-Tigers series this weekend in Detroit.


 


 



Cleveland Browns will send a representative to Terrelle Pryor's Pro Day Saturday

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The Browns will send a representative to former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor's Pro Day in Pittsburgh Saturday, a source said.

terrelle pryor.JPGThe Browns will check out Terrelle Pryor's pro day on Saturday.

CLEVELAND -- The Browns will send a representative to quarterback Terrelle Pryor's Pro  Day in Pittsburgh on Saturday, a league source told the Plain Dealer.

It's not yet known who from the Browns will attend, but when it was originally scheduled for last week, Browns President Mike Holmgren and coach Pat Shurmur  were not planning to go.

The Pro Day will help the Browns decide whether or not they want to bid on the former Ohio State quarterback in the draft, and if so, which pick they'd be willing to surrender in the 2012 draft.

The Browns are happy with their current trio of quarterbacks and might opt for developing third-teamer Jarrett Brown, who's been impressive in camp. However, they've done their homework on Pryor in anticipation of the draft.

Any team drafting Pryor will do so with the knowledge that he won't be permited to practice or play with the team for the first five games of the season, unless his lawyers appeal and win. 

Cleveland Indians P.M. Links: Showdown this weekend with the Tigers; Carlos Carrasco; Game stories

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The battle of the lakes between the Tigers and Indians starts this weekend.

carlos-carrasco.jpgPitcher Carlos Carrasco

The Cleveland Indians are 1 1/2 behind the Detroit Tigers in the Central Division, and the teams will face each other this weekend for a three-game series.

Jordan Bastian of MLB.com writes how for the past 28 days, Detroit (65-58) has resided in the Central's top position.

Though the club's lead has never exceeded four games. Part of the problem has been Cleveland (62-58), which took two out of three against the Tigers from Aug. 9-11. On the season, the Indians have gone 6-3 against the Tigers, outscoring them, 41-34, along the way.

"We're not going anywhere," Indians closer Chris Perez said. "And I'm sure that the Tigers and White Sox are waiting for us to drop out, like, 'Oh, they're not supposed to be here.' We're not going to go anywhere."

After this series, the two teams will play each other six more times. So the division may not get decided until the latter days of the season. Manager Manny Acta has stressed the importance of not getting too caught up in standings, writes Bastian.

"Every game means a lot," Acta said. "But there's so many games left that, if we're going to go day by day paying attention to that, I'm going to have a heart attack. We can't get away from it, because obviously that's a fun part of it and I know that you guys have to keep tabs on it."

 
Carlos Carrasco

Sheldon Ocker of Ohio.com writes about pitcher Carlos Carrasco, who has been on the disabled list retroactive to Aug. 4 with inflammation in his right elbow.

On Aug. 3, Carrasco threw seven strong innings against the Boston Red Sox, giving up two earned runs (three total) and showed no indication that he was hurt.

The night before the alleged injury, David Huff gave up no earned runs (one total) in five innings at Fenway Park in his third effective start after arriving from Columbus July 18 to pitch one game of a doubleheader against the Minnesota Twins.

Carrasco is eligible to be activated today, writes Ocker, but are the successful outings by Huff related to Carrasco’s trip to the disabled list?

  

Detroit on the Tigers

Freep.com columnist Michael Rosenberg writes how the series between the Tigers and the Indians is the biggest season in sports . . . Tom Gage of The Detroit News writes how this could be the biggest series ever between these two teams.

 

  

 

Game stories

MLB.com: Masterson wins 10th.

Cleveland.com: Tribe defeat the White Sox.

Ohio.com: Indians take series from White Sox.

 

Low expectations may help Indians - Comment of the Day

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"When big things are expected of Cleveland teams, they always fall short. Maybe this year, when almost everyone who follows the Tribe would have laughed you out of the room if you mentioned playoffs or contention before the season, the Indians will surprise us all with a division championship and much more. In any case, it has been a fun ride so far with this scrappy team." - rijo

carousel_manny-acta.jpgView full sizeNo one expected Manny Acta and the Indians to contend in 2011.

In response to the story Tension of a division race is impossible to avoid for Manny Acta: Cleveland Indians Insider, cleveland.com reader rijo thinks the lack of expectations on the Indians can only help. This reader writes,

"When big things are expected of Cleveland teams, they always fall short. Maybe this year, when almost everyone who follows the Tribe would have laughed you out of the room if you mentioned playoffs or contention before the season, the Indians will surprise us all with a division championship and much more. In any case, it has been a fun ride so far with this scrappy team."

To respond to rijo's comment, go here.

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

Terrelle Pryor might be worth a gamble - Browns Comment of the Day

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"I wouldn't look at him as our future, but I don't see anything wrong with throwing a 6th rounder at him simply for a valuable asset. We'll more than likely be outbid, but if not, we'll have a good athlete for the pick." - ThatGuy

Terrelle Pryor leaves OSUView full sizeTerrelle Pryor.

In response to the story Cleveland Browns will send a representative to Terrelle Pryor's Pro Day Saturday, cleveland.com reader ThatGuy thinks gambling on Pryor might not be a bad thing. This reader writes,

"I wouldn't look at him as our future, but I don't see anything wrong with throwing a 6th rounder at him simply for a valuable asset. We'll more than likely be outbid, but if not, we'll have a good athlete for the pick."

To respond to ThatGuy's comment, go here.

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

Cleveland Browns P.M. links: Browns and Detroit Lions -- the 2 longtime teams without Super Bowl berths -- play tonight amidst hope

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Browns are 0-for-42 in getting to the Super Bowl; Lions, 0-for-45. Might both teams be headed in the right direction, though? And, other Browns links. Also, links to Plain Dealer game stories on the four Browns-Lions NFL title game meetings.

browns-fans-josh-cribbs.jpgBrowns fans in the Dawg Pound celebrate with Josh Cribbs after the wide receiver caught a 27-yard touchdown pass in the Browns' 27-17 preseason win over the Packers last Saturday night.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Browns play the Detroit Lions in a preseason game tonight at Browns Stadium.

They are tradition-laden teams, but whatever trophies they haven't lost over the years may be bathed in rust.

It's been more than half of a century since the teams met in four NFL championship games in a six-year span: the Lions beating the Browns in 1952, 1953 and 1957; the Browns winning in 1954.

(The Browns History Database on cleveland.com features Plain Dealer game stories on every regular season and playoff game the Browns have played. Read about the Browns-Lions championship games: 1952; Lions 17, Browns 7; 1953, Lions 17, Browns 16; 1954, Browns 56, Lions 10; 1957, Lions 59, Browns 14.   

More recent history captures the Browns and Lions' futilities.

The first Super Bowl was played following the 1966 season. Four teams have never played in the game: the Lions, who have been in the NFL since 1930; the Browns, who joined the league in 1950, but were dormant from 1996-98 after former owner Art Modell moved the team to Baltimore: the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Houston Texans, who joined the NFL in 1995 and 2002, respectively, as expansion teams.

Don Banks writes about the Browns and Lions for Sports Illustrated's SI.com. He notes their frustrations over the years.

And, he writes that just maybe, both teams are on the same track. About both teams opening the preseason last week with encouraging wins, Banks writes:

So don't tell the long-suffering football fans in Detroit and Cleveland that it's "only preseason." August matters for these folks. Some years it's all they've got.

Banks thinks the teams have promising young quarterbacks in place -- Colt McCoy for the Browns and Matthew Stafford for the Lions. He writes:   

Summer optimism aside, this is normally right around the portion of the story where I would caution Browns and Lions fans, reminding them that their playoff dreams are still miles and miles away from coming to fruition. After all, the Steelers and Ravens still reside in the AFC North with Cleveland, and the Packers and Bears remain formidable roadblocks for Detroit in the NFC North. Those are four 2010 playoff teams, and four very good reasons for a healthy dose of realism in Cleveland and Detroit.

But I say let the Lions and Browns dream. August may not matter much in every NFL market, but it does this year in Detroit and Cleveland. There's hope for these Lions and Browns, and for a change, it doesn't feel like false hope. It may only be the preseason, but after all those long years of losing and languishing, any winning start is a start worth noticing.

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Browns coverage includes Mary Kay Cabot's report that the Browns will send a representative to Terrelle Pryor's Pro Day workout; Tony Grossi's story that the Browns' defense is making strides; Tom Breckenridge's report that road work on I-77 North and I-90 West will affect Browns game traffic tonight; an interview with Tony Grossi on Starting Blocks TV; Starting Blocks polls on the affect of the NFL's new kickoff rules and on the AFC North.

There will be live cleveland.com chats and Twitter updates from tonight's Browns-Lions game.  

Browns banter

Browns-Lions game preview by Matt Florjancic on clevelandbrowns.com.

Browns-Lions game preview by Don Delco on Scout.com's Orange and Brown Report.

Offensive tackle Joe Thomas is impressed with Colt McCoy and the new Browns offense.

New defensive coordinator Dick Jauron is molding the Browns' new 4-3 defense, writes Nate Ulrich of the Akron Beacon Journal.

Lions running back Jerome Harrison and cornerbacks Eric Wright and Brandon McDonald all left the Browns on bad terms, writes Chris McCosky for the Detroit News.

The Browns need to keep Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh away from Colt McCoy, writes Jeff Schudel for the News-Herald and Lorain Morning Journal.

The Browns offense will try to get some things done against a tough Lions' defense. By Mike McLain of the Warren Tribune Chronicle.

The Browns starting lineup seems almost set, and the Canton Repository's Steve Doerschuk wonders why.

Browns notes -- highlighting Colt McCoy's challenge tonight -- by Scott Petrak for the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram and Medina County Gazette.

Five things to watch (including the Lions running game with former Browns backs Jerome Harrison and Mike Bell) in tonight's game. By Dave Birkett for the Detroit Free Press.

ODOT changes its mind -- Interstate 90 West will remain open tonight as Cleveland Browns play

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ODOT has reconsidered and will keep Interstate 90 open this evening for the Cleveland Browns game.

traffic.jpgWork on I-77 and the Inner Belt Bridge will make for traffic headaches this weekend in downtown Cleveland.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Interstate 90 West will remain open tonight, giving Cleveland Browns fans a clear field before and after the game's 7:30 p.m. start.

ODOT originally planned to close I-90 West between Interstate 77 and Ontario Street soon after the kickoff, to finish work related to the new Inner Belt Bridge.

But ODOT changed its mind late Friday morning.

The highway agency wanted to avoid confusion and congestion that would result with the simultaneous shutdown of Interstate 77 North It will be closed between Interstates 480 and 490 at 7:30 tonight for paving. It should reopen by 10 p.m. Saturday.

ODOT officials are urging Browns fans to leave early and plan alternate routes around I-77 North this evening. The suggested detour is Interstate 480 West to Ohio 176 north to I-490 East to I-77.

The closure of Interstate 90 West was pushed back to Saturday. Crews will work from 6 a.m. until 5 p.m. to shift traffic lanes in the area, where bridge decks are being redone.

I-90 West drivers will be detoured via I-77 South to I-490 West.

 


Big Ten not looking to expand 'barring a significant shift' in the college sports landscape

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Of course, there is potential for a "shift." Texas A&M is interested in leaving Big 12 for Southeastern Conference -- a move that would likely set off another round of realignment.

nebraska-memorial-stadium.jpgMemorial Stadium, the home football field for the University of Nebraska, which is now in the Big Ten, giving the conference 12 member schools.

PARK RIDGE, Illinois -- The Big Ten Conference is not looking at another expansion -- for now.

The 12-team league said Friday that its Council of Presidents and Chancellors met recently and there is no plan to "actively" engage in expansion now "or at any time in the foreseeable future, barring a significant shift in the current intercollegiate athletic landscape."

Of course, there is that possibility. Texas A&M confirmed this week that it is interested in leaving the Big 12 for the Southeastern Conference -- a move that would almost surely set off another round of conference realignment.

The SEC, which has won the past five BCS championships in football, on Sunday reaffirmed its 12-school membership while leaving the door open to expansion.

Earlier this week, Big East commissioner John Marinatto said he has been in contact with Dan Beebe, his counterpart at the Big 12, and John Swofford of the Atlantic Coast Conference.

The Big Ten made the announcement as Nebraska prepares to play its first season since joining the league from the Big 12 in July.

The Big 12, which also lost Colorado to the Pac-12, has said it wants to keep Texas A&M, but if the Aggies leave it would "aggressively move forward to explore expansion," presumably by adding one or three schools if possible.

Last December, Big Ten Council chairman Michael McRobbie, the Indiana president, said the board "believed the expansion process had reached its natural conclusion.

"We're about as comfortable as we can be with where we are," Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany said Friday. "We've said that we will continue to monitor the landscape, but we have closed down active expansion and have no plans to seek new members."

 

 

Indians open series with Tigers tonight in Detroit

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Josh Tomlin takes the mound in a series that could leave the Indians in a good position to win the division.

Cleveland Indians lose to Angels, 4-3 View full sizeJosh Tomlin takes the mound for the Indians tonight.

(AP) -- Another difficult series in Cleveland last week didn't help the Detroit Tigers in their drive to win a division title for the first time since 1987.

Fortunately for the Tigers, their next matchup with the Indians is at Comerica Park.

Detroit will try to pad its slim AL Central lead by continuing its recent home dominance of Cleveland on Friday night.

The Tigers (65-58) haven't helped themselves in the division race by losing six of 10, including dropping two of three in Cleveland from Aug. 9-11. With ace Justin Verlander's help, Detroit salvaged the finale of that series 4-3 and snapped a 13-game skid at Progressive Field.

The Tigers had a three-game lead over Cleveland after that victory but have seen that advantage cut in half as the Indians have won four of five, including a 4-2 victory over third-place Chicago on Thursday.

"I'm sure that the Tigers and White Sox are waiting for us to drop out," closer Chris Perez told the team's website. "We're not going to go anywhere."

Detroit is hoping another successful home series against Cleveland will change its fortune. The Tigers are 17-3 in their last 20 at Comerica against the Indians (62-58), winning two of three June 14-16 in the teams' only series there this season.

Max Scherzer (12-7, 4.37 ERA) won the finale of that series and will try to set a career high in victories Friday.

The right-hander has allowed four earned runs in each of his last two outings but got a win Saturday when the Tigers rallied for a 6-5 victory in Baltimore. He gave up five runs in the second inning - on a pair of homers - but settled down to finish with a season-high 10 strikeouts in seven innings.

"You're going to get hit around, you're going to give up bombs, and it's just the way it goes," Scherzer told the team's website. "You've got to have thick skin to be able to pitch in this league."

Scherzer is 2-3 with a 5.50 ERA in six career starts against Cleveland but is 2-0 with a 2.13 ERA in his two matchups at Comerica.

Indians right-hander Josh Tomlin, meanwhile, gave up five runs over six innings in his only start at Detroit, a 5-2 loss last Aug. 21. Scherzer yielded two runs and struck out eight over seven innings to win that game.

Tomlin (12-5, 3.97), though, won his only other start against the Tigers, allowing three runs over five innings in a 4-3 victory Sept. 29.

He enters this matchup following his first win in five starts, a 3-1 victory over Minnesota on Saturday. The right-hander gave up four hits for the third time in four outings and walked one in 6 1-3 innings.

To claim another victory, he might have to be careful against Miguel Cabrera and Alex Avila. Cabrera is batting .397 with 12 RBIs during a 15-game hitting streak, and Avila has hit .426 with three homers and 11 RBIs in 14 games this month.

Cabrera has a double and two walks in three plate appearances versus Tomlin, while Avila is 0 for 3 with a strikeout.

Shin-Soo Choo is 7 for 12 in his career off Scherzer, while Asdrubal Cabrera is 3 for 6 with a home run against him this season.

Duncan, Valbuena up, Kipnis on DL, Carrera down; Cleveland Indians daily briefing

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The Indians placed Jason Kipnis on the disabled list and optioned outfielder Ezequiel Carrera to Class AAA Columbus. Shelley Duncan and Luis Valbuena replaced them.

shelley duncan.JPGShelley Duncan has nothing to be unhappy about since he was recalled by the Indians on Friday.

DETROIT, Mich. -- The Indians made two roster moves involving four players before opening a three-game series against the Tigers with first place in the AL Central at stake.

Rookie second baseman Jason Kipnis was placed on 15-day disabled list with a strained right groin and right hamstring. Outfielder Shelley Duncan, optioned to Class AAA Columbus on Aug. 14, was recalled to take his spot on the roster.

The second move saw utility man Luis Valbuena recalled from Columbus to replace outfielder Ezequiel Carrera, who was optioned. Valbuena, on his third tour with the Tribe this year, will start at second base tonight.

Players optioned to the minors must stay there at least 10 days unless the big-league club suffers an injury.

The DL move with Kipnis was retroactive to Aug. 14 even though Kipnis played his last game on Aug. 12. Since Duncan is replacing Kipnis, the process goes back to the day after his last game with the Tribe, which was Aug. 13.

The earliest Kipnis could return is Aug. 30.

"No," said Duncan, when asked if he ever tired of bouncing between Cleveland and Columbus. "I just hope I don't have to do it again."

The Indians come into the series trailing Detroit by 1 1/2 games.

"It's getting to the part of the year where the excitement is really starting to ramp up," said Duncan. "This is fun. We're playing good baseball. It was the fun the last time I was up and we played Detroit."

Duncan is hitting .246 (29-for-118) with four homers and 23 RBI for the Tribe. He's hitting .202 (22-for-109) with five homers and 19 RBI at Columbus.

Valbuena is having a great year at Columbus, hitting .299 (111-for-418) with 20 doubles, 16 homers and 71 RBI. It hasn't translated in his limited opportunities with the Tribe. He's hitting .136 (3-for-22) in the big leagues this year.

"It's different when you don't play every day," said Valbuena. "But I don't even think about that, I'm just going to play."

The last time Indians fans saw Valbuena he was pressed into service as a left fielder against the Twins on July 19-20 because the Indians wear short on outfielders. It did not go well.

"I tried my best," said Valbuena.

He was optioned to Columbus on July 21. Now he's back for another chance.

Mike Brown, owner of the Cincinnati Bengals, is a horrible boss, writes Rick Reilly

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Mike Brown is the worst owner in all of sports, writes ESPN columnist.

bengals-palmer-dejected-vert-ap.jpgCarson Palmer

There's a good argument that the worst owners in sports are Mike Brown of the Cincinnati Bengals and Donald Sterling of the Los Angeles Clippers.

ESPN's Rick Reilly decided to write about Brown. And he reminds us how the only thing great about Brown is that he is the son of former Browns coach Paul Brown.

It's so bad for Mike Brown that his best player, Carson Palmer, would rather retire and leave $46 million on the table than play for him.

Yes, Palmer has four years left on his nine-year, $118 million deal. You signed the contract, you say. Live up to it. In fact, that's what Brown has said. "He gave his word. … He's going to walk away from his commitment. We aren't going to reward him for doing it."

 But Brown is a hypocrite. He has cut hundreds of players before their contract was up and given them nothing. Why should Palmer live up to a deal that works only one way? If Palmer should suddenly go blind, would Brown still give him the money? Are you kidding? Brown is cheaper than your local Goodwill.

Reilly goes on to write, and wonder, why the taxpayers of Cincinnati aren't boycotting.

Mike Brown promised if they built him a stadium, he'd win. They built it. Brown has gone 72-103-1 since. The mayor should sue. Where's Jerry Springer when you need him?

 

Brecksville's Balog a bassin' man on Lake Erie

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Joe Balog, who is competing in a national bass competition on Lake Erie this week, is a different breed of tournament bass angler

 

Baolg Goby Lures.jpgJoe Balog grew up in Brecksville and has spent most of his life fishing for Lake Erie smallmouth bass. He is debuting his new Lake Erie smallmouth bass creation this week, the Goby Replica Lure. It is designed to mimic a round goby and weighted to swim along the lake bottom where gobies prefer to hang out, and where smallmouth bass go to hunt them down.

 KELLEYS ISLAND, OHIO

Joe Balog, who is competing in a national bass competition on Lake Erie this week, is a different breed of tournament bass angler.

For the successful tournament pros, the sport of tournament bass fishing is an all-consuming way of life. Balog, 37, who grew up in Brecksville and now lives in Harrison Twp., Mich., has far too many interests to focus entirely on bass fishing, even though he's very good at the bassin' game and fishes at least a dozen tournaments each year.

 A couple of years ago, Balog qualified for the B.A.S.S. Elite Series, a top-tier bass tournament series matching the best in the tournament business. He walked away from it. It didn't fit his lifestyle.

 "You must be dedicated to tournament fishing to compete on that level," said Balog. "I had no desire to be up on Christmas Eve, pouring lead jigs, which is the type of thing the hard-core pros will do. They're bass fanatics 365 days a year, always thinking about ways to catch bass and working on tackle and techniques.

"That isn't me. I love bass fishing, and also the business of bass fishing," Balog said on Thursday afternoon as we fished for bass around Kelleys Island. "But I love waterfowl hunting just as much. I had a great morning on Lake Erie, and it wasn't chasing bass. I was out fishing for walleye with my father, Joe Balog. He really likes walleye, but his real passion is deer hunting."

Balog owns Millennium Productions, a marketing company promoting fishing and hunting products.

A large pro-am field will be casting for cash in the Bass Pro Shops Northern Open on Lake Erie starting Thursday, and Balog has decided to compete in the Sandusky-based event. He won the Northern Open here in 2006 using deep-water bass-catching techniques he pioneered on Lake Erie. He handled the bad weather and rough waters to dominate the field\, winning the $62,000 top prize by more than seven pounds.

Joe Balog 1.jpgJoe Balog, a former Brecksville bass fishermen, shows off one of his new Goby Replica lures he'll be casting in the three-day Bass Pro Shops Northern Open on Lake Erie starting Thursday in Sandusky.

 Fortunately for the competition, Balog's long-time team tournament partner, Steve Clapper of Lima, Ohio, is now semi-retired from the tournament trails.

"Clapper is the best there is on Lake Erie," said Balog. "No one can match that guy on these big waters."

To give himself an edge, Balog also designs lures. He refined the tube jigs popular for bass, and created the small, soft plastic round goby for drop shot rigs, which will be a much-used technique this week. The invasive gobies have become a favorite snack for Lake Erie smallmouth bass since their numbers exploded over the past two decades. 

 This week, Balog is debuting a totally new round goby bait, the Goby Replica. It's a hand-poured, one-ounce soft plastic copy of a round goby in a half-dozen colors (gobyreplica.com). Bass anglers would call it a swim bait, designed to be retrieved slowly and mimic a live bait fish. 

 "For the last couple of years, I've been trying to find someone who could make what I had envisioned. Most were crude and didn't look at all like a goby. I finally found a company in California that was already making swim baits, and they hit it right on the head."

 The heavy lure is easy to swim along the bottom, where the round goby lives and smallmouth bass hunt for them. Balog has thoroughly tested the lure on Lake St. Clair, a top smallmouth bass area near his home, and on Lake Erie. He said the Goby Replica has become his top choice for catching trophy bass, and the perfect lure for working deep humps and reefs where the biggest bass hang out.

As with any good smallmouth bass lure, there is one drawback. Sheepshead, or freshwater drum, like to eat gobies, too. Balog's creation has caught some huge ones.

Cleveland Browns sit Peyton Hillis, Montario Hardesty and others tonight

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Also out are T.J. Ward, Benjamin Watson, Eric Steinbach, Scott Fujita and Chris Gocong.

 

Browns camp 2011 Day 2Browns running back Peyton Hillis won't play tonight because of a hamstring injury.

CLEVELAND -- Running back Peyton Hillis won't play tonight, but neither will Montario Hardesty. Hillis tweaked a hamstring muscle at the conclusion of Wednesday's practice and Hardesty is still being eased in after ACL surgery last year.

 That means the Browns running backs against the Detroit Lions will be Brandon Jackson, Quinn Porter and rookie Armond Smith.

 Also scratched from the game were safeties T.J. Ward (hamstring) and Usama Young (hamstring). The top backups are Ray Ventrone and Mike Adams. It's possible that rookie cornerback James Dockery also will see time at free safety.

 Other players declared out for the Browns:

 Left guard Eric Steinbach (back), wide receivers Mohamed Massaquoi (foot) and Carlton Mitchell (finger), linebackers Chris Gocong (neck) and Scott Fujita (thigh), and tight end Benjamin Watson (hamstring).

 Old home week: The Lions have a lot of former Browns on their training camp roster.

 Eric Wright is the starting right cornerback and Brandon McDonald is third at the position.

 Corey Williams is the starting right defensive tackle.

 Running backs Mike Bell and Jerome Harrison are third and fifth, respectively, on the depth chart.

 Kirk Chambers is listed third at left tackle and Isaac Sowells is fourth at right tackle.

Ohio State Buckeyes P.M. links: Another change -- Luke Fickell will have little to do with offensive play calls

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Jim Tressel, as the head coach, was the main orchestrator of offensive strategy. Will the offense not be so "vanilla?" And, other Ohio State links.

luke-fickell.jpgOhio State interim head coach Luke Fickell, with a strong defensive background, probably won't get very involved in the offensive play-calling.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Jim Tressel didn't delegate much offensive authority as Ohio State's head coach.

The former Baldwin-Wallace College quarterback was hands-on with the Buckeyes offense, often dictating the flow of the game with his play-calling.

Now, after Tressel's forced resignation due to the memorabilia for tattoos/cash scandal, someone else will make most of the offensive decisions.

Luke Fickell served as the defensive coordinator before being named the interim head coach when Tressel left. Fickell was a standout defensive lineman for Ohio State in the 1990's.

ESPN.com's Adam Rittenberg, in his Big Ten Friday mailblog, responds to "Phil from Winchester, Va.," who asked who will call OSU's plays, and whether there will be a difference in the play-calling.

Phil also comments:  

Tressel was not the most inovative playcaller. I expect the offense to rely on the running game, but the versatility of players like Jordan Hall and Jake Stoneburner could allow the offense to not be so vanilla.

Rittenberg's reply:

Phil, offensive coordinator Jim Bollman will be the primary playcaller, although I would think he'll get input from the other offensive assistants. Luke Fickell has made it clear he'll stay out of the way, unlike Tressel did. I definitely agree this will be a run-based offense, and I'm very interested to see how Ohio State will utilize its different running backs, especially a guy like Jordan Hall who can catch the ball out of the backfield. Jake Stoneburner is another good name to bring up. He looks like he could be a difference-maker, but will Ohio State truly feature a tight end in the offense? Need to see it to believe it.

Ohio State opens its season against Akron's Zips on Sept. 3 at Ohio Stadium.

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Ohio State coverage includes Doug Lesmerises' story on offensive lineman Andrew Norwell, a five-star Buckeyes' recruit in 2010.

Also, there are numerous stories on Terrelle Pryor -- Ohio State's quarterback the last three seasons -- being ruled eligible by the NFL for its supplemental draft on Monday. Among the stories is Lesmerises' account that the NFL isn't happy that Pryor and his representatives were able to twist the supplemental draft system to his benefit. Lesmerises thinks NFL commissioner Roger Goodell suspended Pryor for the first five games of this season not because of his problems at Ohio State, but because he was able to mess with the NFL system.

Buckeyes links

Rivals.com ranks Ohio State's Mike Adams as the best offensive tackle in the country.

Saturday's "jersey scrimmage" at Ohio Stadium will be important, writes Brandon Castel for the-ozone.net.

Ten reasons to be optimistic and pessimistic about the Buckeyes in 2011. A Bleacher Report slideshow.

The preseason power rankings on FoxSports.com have Ohio State around the same spot as do many other rankings.

Let's see, where are the Buckeyes? CBSSports.com's preseason power rankings.

The Big Ten says it's not looking to expand, writes Brian Bennett for ESPN.com.

Ohio State's meetings have shortened, because coach Luke Fickell thinks players learn more on the field, Tim May writes for the Columbus Dispatch.

Michael Arace of the Columbus Dispatch isn't impressed with Terrelle Pryor and how he made his way to the NFL supplemental draft.


Terry Pluto's first-quarter scribbles from Detroit Lions-Cleveland Browns

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The most impressive Brown in the first quarter was rookie Jabaal Sheard.

skrine-koreturn-pratt-lions-ap.jpgView full sizeBuster Skrine had an upsetting moment on this first-quarter kickoff return, courtesy of Detroit's Paul Pratt.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Some first-quarter scribbles in my Browns notebook...

1. The most impressive Brown in the first quarter was rookie Jabaal Sheard. The defensive end forced a fumble and also chased Matt Stafford out of the pocket twice. You notice him on the field, and he's the kind of quick, 250-pound defensive end who looks good in this defense.

2. Other than a nice tackle in the backfield by D'Qwell Jackson, no linebacker showed much. Of course, injuries meant the Browns were starting Brian Smith and Kaluka Maiava at outside linebackers with Jackson. Smith was an undrafted free agent from Notre Dame. The lack of depth at linebacker is scary.

3. Loved the Browns' first touchdown drive. Rookie Greg Little made an excellent leaping catch near the sideline for 12 yards. Joshua Cribbs caught the ball in the middle of traffic. Evan Moore caught a 2-yard touchdown pass. Brandon Jackson had a nice run for eight yards, breaking a couple of tackles.

4. Colt McCoy's accuracy and ability to quickly spot open receivers make him ideal for this offense.

5. Moore can be a big-time player if he stays healthy. He was with Green Bay in 2008 and had a major knee injury. With the Browns, he had a hip injury and a concussion last season. At 6-6, the former Stanford basketball player is a huge target with excellent hands. His blocking is suspect, but his receiving skills should work well.

6. With Eric Steinbach out, the offensive line had some shaky moments early. Some media people keep saying the Browns have one of the best offensive lines in the NFL. Yes, Joe Thomas and Alex Mack are young and Pro Bowlers. Steinbach is a solid veteran. But Shawn Lauvao has to prove he can play. Not only does right tackle Tony Pashos have to prove he can stay healthy, but he also must show he is still a good player after two years of various injuries. Rookie Jason Pinkston went to left guard late in the first quarter.

7. Detroit is showing no respect for the Browns' running game, ignoring the play-fakes. Of course, that makes sense with Peyton Hillis out. Jackson is known more for his receiving ability, which is why it would really help if they can ever get Montario Hardesty healthy.

8. You can see why Matt Stafford has a chance to be a big-time quarterback. He has a strong arm, moves well and has a good idea of what he's doing for a 23-year-old.

9. Not real thrilled to watch McCoy knocked down a few times in the first quarter, as he's only 4-of-10 with little time to throw.

10. I will be speaking about the Browns and other topics at the North Ridgeville library, Saturday at 2 p.m. It's free.

Tigers fans have perfect memory when it comes to Jason Donald: Indians Chatter

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Tigers fans have not forgotten what Jason Donald did to Armando Galarraga last year in the perfect game that wasn't.

DETROIT -- Clubhouse confidential: Tigers fans have not forgotten what Jason Donald did to Armando Galarraga last year in the perfect game that wasn't. It doesn't matter that the Tigers shipped Galarraga to Houston in the off-season or that first-base umpire Jim Joyce called Donald safe on what should have been the 27th and final out on June 2.

It was guilt by association for Donald.

"[Tigers pitcher] Daniel Schlereth and I were roommates at the University of Arizona in college," said Donald. "I was in his wedding last winter. He married a girl from Lansing, Mich. We were at the rehearsal dinner when her grandmother came up to me and said, 'How could you do that to my Armando?'

"Her whole family are huge Tiger fans and they just wore me out the whole weekend."

No go: Tribe closer Chris Perez was not available Friday night after pitching three days in a row against the White Sox.

Asked who would pitch in a save situation, manager Manny Acta said "You're going to have to wait until the ninth inning to find out."

Lefty Tony Sipp did not pitch Thursday in Chicago.

Stat of the day: The Indians' rainout against the Twins on Aug. 14 has been rescheduled for a day-night doubleheader on Sept. 24 at Progressive Field.

NBA lockout 2011: Top Chinese league will not accept NBA players under contract even if NBA season is canceled

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The Chinese Basketball Association would bar players under contract such as Kobe Bryant, Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul. It would allow free agents to play.

kobe-bryant-lebron-james.jpgThe Chinese Basketball Association says it will not accept NBA players under contract - such as the Lakers' Kobe Bryant (left) and the Heat's LeBron James (right) - during the NBA lockout. James has said he thinks the NBA and its players will reach a new labor deal.

BEIJING, China -- The Chinese Basketball Association will restrict contracted NBA players from playing for domestic teams in the event the NBA season is canceled, but still will allow free agents, state media reported Friday.

The CBA would bar players under contract such as Kobe Bryant, Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul.

They and others had expressed interest in playing in China if the NBA lockout drags on and results in the cancellation of all or part of the 2011-12 season.

The CBA said it will welcome free-agent NBA players, but will require them to play an entire season in China, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

Xinhua said more restrictions would be announced before the start of the Chinese season on Nov. 20.

It reported contracts would be designed to discourage players from ducking out for dubious reasons, such as suspect injuries or unverified family problems at home.

CBA officials could not be reached immediately for comment.

Terrelle Pryor's lawyer says that when Pryor signs NFL deal, it's 'likely' he will appeal 5-game suspension

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About the suspension, David Cornwell told ESPN Radio that he and Pryor might "give the Players' Association an opportunity to make its objections to this on the record."

terrelle-pryor3.jpgMany analysts expect Terrelle Pryor to be selected with a middle-round pick in Monday's NFL supplemental draft.

Former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor could appeal the five-game suspension levied against him by the NFL should he be chosen in next week's supplemental draft, a decision that would add another layer of complexity to an already unprecedented situation.

Pryor was part of a list distributed by the league of players who are eligible for the draft, but the NFL decided that he won't be allowed to practice for the team that selects him until Week 6.

Pryor gave up his final season with the Buckeyes following an investigation into the team's memorabilia-for-cash scandal, which ultimately landed the school on probation and cost coach Jim Tressel his job. Pryor would've had to sit out five games had he chosen to return to Ohio State.

Pryor's agent, Drew Rosenhaus, told The Associated Press on Thursday that "we accept that voluntarily." But the player's attorney, David Cornwell, told ESPN Radio on Friday that it's "likely" the five-game punishment will be appealed once Pryor signs an NFL contract.

"We have the right to appeal within three days after Terrelle signs an NFL contract," Cornwell said. "And given some of the developments — both in reaching the decision and comments out of the (NFL Players' Association) regarding the decision — I think it's likely that we will file an appeal, and give the Players' Association an opportunity to make its objections to this on the record."

Commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA executive director DeMaurice Smith worked together to craft the decision. The league is trying to dissuade future college players who run afoul of the NCAA from using the NFL as a means of escaping punishment. But the move has been staunchly opposed by current players who believe the NFL is overstepping its authority.

Some of those players have Tweeted their support for Pryor, while others asked whether the NFL is setting a dangerous precedent. For instance, could players linked to the University of Miami booster scandal be punished even though they've long since left college?

"It's a little questionable, but I guess they're really trying to not allow guys to manipulate the NCAA system and be able to take a quicker path to the NFL," said Buffalo Bills safety George Wilson, an NFLPA representative. "It's still a tough pill to take, knowing that you're being suspended for something that took place while you were at college. But we'll see what happens."

League spokesman Greg Aiello tweeted that you can't break the rules Pryor did "and get a free pass into the NFL," and added that the commissioner had spoken to NCAA President Mark Emmert about his decision. That raised questions about whether the two bodies acted in collusion.

Both sides have denied such claims.

"We've been talking with them on a number of fronts for some months now, and especially around the issue of third parties and agents and how we can cooperate and collaborate with them," Emmert told the AP on Friday. "Those have been very productive discussions.

"Roger Goodell called to let me know his general position on the Pryor case, but it wasn't a negotiation or anything like that in that sense," Emmert added. "In general, I think we'd like to have some collaboration, but the big decisions will be made on an individual basis."

Pryor's situation has drawn comparisons to one that involved another ex-Buckeyes star, Maurice Clarett. After getting into trouble at Ohio State, the running back announced his intention to leave early for the NFL, but he was blocked from entering the draft by the commissioner's office.

The difference in the Pryor case is that, unlike Clarett, the union has not rushed to support the NFL's eligibility ruling. That means there remains a potential antitrust challenge available.

"This presents a number of novel legal issues that almost fall through a number of cracks, not just one crack," said Robert Boland, a former agent who teaches sports business and antitrust law at New York University. "When the players' union and owners agree, there's no antitrust liability. The players union hasn't necessarily reached that point. They seem a little more tepid.

"What their ultimate position will be will be important to this," Boland said. "He's accepted the penalty to get in the draft. Does he have the power to appeal? "

Cornwell, who did not respond to several messages seeking comment Friday, said in an email to the AP on Thursday that he understood the NFL was merely "protecting the integrity of the draft process" by making Pryor sit out until Week 6.

"We understood their concerns," he said, "accept that they are legitimate concerns, and worked through the process to demonstrate that Terrelle's decisions regarding making himself eligible were reasonable, if not perfect. The commissioner gave serious consideration to the various issues and decided to balance those issues by allowing Terrelle into the supplemental draft with conditions."

It now seems that Pryor has not fully agreed to those conditions after all.

"The generally accepted rule of guilty pleas is that it eliminates the ability to appeal," Boland said. "But that's in the court room. There are so many things going on at weird angles in this case, it's almost impossible to assess."

 

Cleveland Browns score first on TD catch by Evan Moore -- Tony's take

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Nate Burleson destroys Browns secondary for one TD and another catch that sets up field goal and 10-7 Lions lead.

moore-tdcatch-lions-horiz-ap.jpgView full sizeEvan Moore's two-yard TD catch put the Browns on the scoreboard against Detroit in the first quarter Friday.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Notes, observations and some facts on the first quarter ...

• Tight end Alex Smith and fullback Owen Marecic drop passes on Browns first series. That's two miscues in two games for Marecic.

• Jabaal Sheard strips Jahvid Best of the ball and does a good job corralling it while on the ground at the Lions 34.

• Colt McCoy hits Greg Little for 12 and Josh Cribbs for 7. On third-and-1 from the 2, McCoy sprints to the right and fires to Evan Moore. Very decisive play and virtually unstoppable. So refreshing there not to see an inside handoff.

• The touchdown had absolutely no hint of controversy, yet it was reviewed by replay, delaying the game needlessly. This is another dumb rule change this year. Every scoring play is automatically reviewed by the official upstairs. But every play is not supposed to need the confirmation of the referee. Yet referee Mike Carey had to take two minutes or so to go under the hood and confirm the TD.

• Phil Dawson's kickoff bounces out of the end zone for a touchback. Take that, rules-makers.

• On a pitchout to Aaron Brown, D'Qwell Jackson gets in a good lick. Knocked Brown for a 1-yard loss.

• Browns D-line getting effective pressure on Matthew Stafford, forcing two scrambles and tossaways. But on the third-down stop, Dimitri Patterson is called for holding. Stafford then hits tight end Brandon Pettigrew for 27 yards, and from the 4, Nate Burleson pogo-sticks up over Mike Adams to haul in a TD just before getting both feet down in front of the end line.

• Buster Skrine is handling the kickoff returns as Cribbs concentrates on offense. Skrine gets upended head over heels by Erik Coleman at the Lions 20.

• The Browns are doubling Ndamukong Suh with Tony Pashos and Shawn Lauvao whenever possible. This backfired when tight end Alex Smith missed left end Cliff Avril coming wide, and Avril sacked McCoy.

• Richmond McGee has two bad punts. The first was helped by a favorable bounce. The second went out of bounds at the Browns' 43 -- a 29-yard effort in the dead of a summer night.

• Burleson makes another good catch down the right sideline over Joe Haden, getting both feet down nicely, good for 29 yards.

• Browns defense holds Lions to a short field goal when one Stafford pass goes off the hands of Derrick Williams and the other is defended well by Kaluka Maiava against Pettigrew.

• Jason Pinkston replaces John Greco at left guard.

• Suh chases McCoy to the right sideline. McCoy knocks over a member of the chain gang and offers a hand.

• McGee responds with a beauty on his third punt. A true 57-yarder downed at the Lions 8.

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