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Tuesday, June 19 television and radio sports listings for Cleveland and Northeast Ohio

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Highlights include the Indians at home against Cincinnati, and Game 4 of the Oklahoma City-Miami NBA Finals.

josh-tomlin3.jpgJosh Tomlin gets the start for the Indians tonight at 7:05 against the Reds. The game will be televised on SportsTime Ohio and broadcast on WTAM/1100-AM.
CLEVELAND, Ohio

Today's TV and radio sports listings

BASEBALL
 Â
7 p.m. St. Louis at Detroit, MLB Network

7:05 p.m. Binghamton at AKRON AEROS, AM/1350

7:05 p.m. Cincinnati at INDIANS, SportsTime Ohio; AM/1100

8 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Chicago White Sox, WGN 

COLLEGE BASEBALL WORLD SERIES
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8 p.m. Game 9, Florida State vs. UCLA, ESPN 

DIVING
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Midnight Olympic Trials, men’s 10m semifinal, NBCSN 

NBA FINALS
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9 p.m. Game 4, Oklahoma City at Miami, WEWS; AM/850 

SOCCER
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2:30 p.m. Euro 2012, group phase, England vs. Ukraine, ESPN

2:30 p.m. Euro 2012, group phase, Sweden vs. France, ESPN2 



Cleveland viewers helping NBA Finals to record TV ratings

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Basketball fans are eating up the NBA Finals, and the appetite in Cleveland is bigger than any other city that doesn’t have a team involved.

NBA Finals LeBron JamesThe NBA Finals is getting huge ratings in the Cleveland TV market.

Basketball fans are eating up the NBA Finals, and the appetite in Cleveland is bigger than any other city that doesn’t have a team involved.

Through three games, the 2012 NBA championship between the Miami Heat and Oklahoma City Thunder are the most-watched Finals ever on ABC, averaging 16,099,000 viewers, according to Nielsen’s Fast Nationals.

Sunday night’s Game 3 delivered 15,452,000 viewers and increased by double digits among men age 18 to 34 and all viewers 18 to 34 from the corresponding game in 2011.

Cleveland is the fifth-highest-rated market for the first three games and is 50 percent higher than the national average, said Gary Stark, director of programming and research at WEWS Channel 5.

The top four markets are Oklahoma City, Miami, Tulsa, Okla., and West Palm Beach, Fla.

For Game 3 on Sunday night, Oklahoma City had a 42 rating, Miami, 30; Tulsa, 24; West Palm Beach, 18.2; and Cleveland, 18.1.

The national average is between 11 and 12, Stark said.


Jim Tressel tops 2012 Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame inductees

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Former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel heads a list of eight local sports figures who will be inducted into the Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame for 2012.

Ohio State head football coach Jim Tressel resigns amid NCAA violation troublesJim Tressel won national championships at Ohio State in 2003 and Youngstown State in 1991.

Former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel heads a list of eight local sports figures who will be inducted into the Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame for 2012.

Established in 1976, the Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame has inducted nearly 500 sports figures, all with ties to Greater Cleveland. The induction ceremony is scheduled for Sept. 19 at Landerhaven. Ticket information is available at clevelandsportshalloffame.com or by calling 216-682-0141.

The Class of 2012 inductees are:

Larry Chernauskas: Longtime high school boys and girls basketball coach, notably at West Tech, Gilmour and Magnificat. His career record was 508-280, and he was named Coach of the Year four times.

Mary Joe Fernandez Godsick: The current Cleveland resident who was born in the Dominican Republic was a three-time finalist in women’s singles and two-time champion in doubles at Grand Slam tennis tournaments. She won a gold medal in doubles at the 1992 and 1996 Olympics and a bronze in singles in 1992.

Raymont Harris: The Lorain native finished as the eighth-leading rusher in Ohio State history with 2,649 yards. He was drafted by the Chicago Bears in 1994 and rushed for a career-best 1,033 yards in 1997.

Clinton Jones: The Cathedral Latin standout was a two-time All-American at Michigan State, then spent six seasons with the Minnesota Vikings. He ran for nine touchdowns in 1970 and gained 452 yards on kickoff returns that year.

Tim Mack: The St. Ignatius graduate won a gold medal in the pole vault at the 2004 Olympics with a jump of 19-6¼, setting an Olympic record. He won the NCAA indoor pole vault title in 1995 for Tennessee and won at the 2001 Goodwill Games and the 2002 U.S. indoor and outdoor championships.

Preston Powell: He returned 16 kickoffs and had five rush attempts for the Browns in 1961, and after time with the Cowboys and Bears, he became a softball legend in the area, being inducted in the Greater Cleveland Softball Hall of Fame in 1985.

Jim Tressel: Won national championships as head coach with Ohio State in 2003 and Youngstown State in 1991, after starring as a quarterback at Berea High School and for his father, coach Lee Tressel, at Baldwin-Wallace College.

Vonda Ward: Twice named to the Parade Magazine All-American team as a basketball player at Trinity High School. Played in the 1995 NCAA women’s basketball championship game for Tennessee and played pro basketball before turning to a pro boxing career.


Cleveland Browns P.M. links: Comparing QBs Brady Quinn and Brandon Weeden, both No. 22 overall picks, 5 years apart

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The Browns approached the 2007 and 2012 drafts coming off 4-12 seasons, and both times having the third and 22nd picks in the first round. At No. 3, they have picked, respectively, Joe Thomas and Brent Richardson, and at No. 22, Quinn and Weeden. More Browns story links.

brandon-weeden5.jpgRookie Brandon Weeden will likely be the starting quarterback for a Browns team coming off a 4-12 season.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Browns are likely to soon announce when training camp begins, the preparation leading to their 2012 season opener against the Philadelphia Eagles on Sept. 9 in Cleveland.

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Browns coverage includes Tom Reed's story that Browns linebacker Scott Fujita -- suspended for three games by the NFL for his alleged role in the Saints' bounty program when he played for New Orleans -- calls the NFL's investigation into the matter a "smear campaign;" Reed's story that, according to a report, new Browns' offensive coordinator Brad Childress, as the Minnesota Vikings' head coach, notified the NFL of possible wrongdoing by the Saints in 2010; Dennis Manoloff's radio interview on 92.3 The Fan, saying that Fujita has no reason to lie about bountygate.

The Browns had two first-round picks in April's draft. They made a trade with the Minnesota Vikings to move up one spot and acquire the third overall pick, used to draft Alabama running back Trent Richardson.

Cleveland used its other first-rounder, at No. 22 overall, to land Oklahoma State quarterback Brandon Weeden.

The Browns are coming off a 4-12 season in 2011.

As the 2007 draft approached five years ago, the Browns were also trying to better themselves after a 4-12 season.

Ironically, they also had the third and 22nd picks in the first round.

With pick No. 3, Cleveland selected Wisconsin's Joe Thomas, the left offensive tackle who has been named to the Pro Bowl in each of his five seasons and has earned first-team all-pro honors three times.

The Browns hope Trent Richardson, with the help of Thomas, can be as good a player at his position as Thomas at his.

Five years ago, with the 22nd pick in the first round, the Browns took Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn. He made 12 starts for Cleveland during his second and third seasons. The Browns were 3-9 with Quinn at quarterback in those two years; 6-10 with Derek Anderson at QB; 0-3 with Ken Dorsey and 0-1 with Bruce Gradkowski manning the position.

brady-quinn2.jpgQuarterback Brady Quinn during the lone regular season appearance of his 2007 rookie campaign. Quinn came off the bench to lead a field goal drive and complete three of eight passes during the Browns' 20-7 home win over the San Francisco 49ers on Dec. 30.
The Browns traded Quinn after the 2009 season to the Denver Broncos for running back Peyton Hillis and two late-round draft picks. Hillis signed a free agent contract with the Kansas City Chiefs in March, a few days before free agent Quinn made his own deal to join the Chiefs and coach Romeo Crennel -- the Browns' boss in the first two of Quinn's three Cleveland seasons.

Steve Doerschuk of the Canton Repository compares the circumstances for Quinn and Weeden as they joined the Browns as 22nd overall picks, five years apart.

Doerschuk writes, in part:

• Quinn’s top three targets were 2005 No. 3 overall pick Braylon Edwards, 2004 No. 6 overall pick Kellen Winslow and veteran Joe Jurevicius.

Weeden’s are 2011 No. 59 overall pick Greg Little, 2009 No. 50 overall pick Mohamed Massaquoi and veteran Ben Watson.

• Quinn’s running back was former No. 5 overall pick Jamal Lewis, 28, backed up by Jason Wright and Jerome Harrison.

Weeden’s is rookie No. 3 overall pick Trent Richardson, backed up by Montario Hardesty and Brandon Jackson.

Browns story links

Wide receiver-kick returner Josh Cribbs says he's ready for the 2012 season. (By Matt Florjancic, clevelandbrowns.com)

In his early predictions for AFC North teams, ESPN's John Clayton sees the Browns as a 4-12 team (again) in 2012. Is that too many or too few wins for Cleveland? (By Jamison Hensley, ESPN.com)

Trent Richardson, for now, looks to be the only running back the Browns can count on for sure. (By Mike Wilkening, Pro Football Weekly)

The Green Bay Packers and Philadelphia Eagles should try to acquire Browns quarterback Colt McCoy. (By Daniel Wolf, National Football Authority)

Trying to separate fact from fiction with the Browns. (By Andrea Hangst, Bleacher Report)

According to Forbes Magazine, one Browns player ranks among the world's 100 highest paid athletes. (By Jamison Hensley, ESPN.com)

Trent Richardson and Ohio State coach Urban Meyer's visit with the Cleveland Indians on Monday. (Associated Press/Canton Repository)

LeBron James made right decision, former NBA champions say

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"If you look at the team [LeBron James] left, would you want to stay with that team?" former Houston Rockets star Clyde Drexler said in an interview.

lebron-james.jpgWith the Heat leading the Thunder, 2-1, in the NBA Finals heading into tonight's Game 4, LeBron James appears to be in the best position to win his first NBA Championship.

LeBron James isn'™t the first NBA star to search for greener pastures and a better chance to win an NBA title. Wilt Chamberlain did it  twice, in fact. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar did it. So did Kevin Garnett and Shaquille O'™Neal.

Fox Sports Florida'™s Chris Tomasson spoke to two others who made similar moves, ”Bob McAdoo and Clyde Drexler. Both won championships thanks to their moves, something James can taste with his Miami Heat two wins away from an NBA title. McAdoo, now an assistant coach with the Heat, and Drexler both understand James'™ move from Cleveland.

"When he first got (to Miami), I kind of showed him our Lakers pictures and I said, 'I understand what you did,'" McAdoo told Fox Sports. "I had to get with a team of other stars and people didn't make a big deal out of it."

McAdoo didn'™t force a trade from the Nets to L.A., but won titles with the Lakers in 1982 and '™85. He had less successful stints with several other NBA teams, most notably the Buffalo Braves and New York Knicks.

"I said (to James that) those (top) teams of the '80s had a lot of stars on the team," McAdoo added. "The 76ers had Moses (Malone), Julius (Erving), Maurice Cheeks, Bobby Jones. The Celtics had (Larry) Bird, (Kevin) McHale, (Robert) Parish. You needed those types of players to win."

Drexler, meanwhile, did force a trade from the Trail Blazers to the Rockets in February 1995, when he joined Hakeem Olajuwon in Houston and went on to win a title later that season.

"I think it was a great move," Drexler told Tomasson of James' decision to go to the Heat. "Because, if you look at the team he left, would you want to stay with that team? ... If I had not gone to Houston, I would not have a ring . . . You need multiple stars (to win a championship). You always have."

Added James, "I know the history of the game. You've got to have superstars and stars to win a championship. You've got to have a great coaching staff and a great organization. But as many as (Michael) Jordan won (six), he had a great supporting cast around him. As many as Bird won (three), he had a supporting cast. As many as Magic won (five), he had a supporting cast, same with (Tim) Duncan (a San Antonio big man with four titles). I understand that you can't do it by yourself."

This story originally appeared on SportingNews.com

Video: How can Kevin Durant and the Thunder avoid foul trouble vs. LeBron James and Miami in Game 4 of the NBA Finals tonight? CineSport's Noah Coslov & Sporting News' Sean Deveney discuss this & if Oklahoma City can come back.

Which Olympic sports - if any- will you watch? - This week's Twitter Twenty

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Which Olympic sports will get your attention this summer and how much time will you spend watching the games? That's the question we're posing this week to the Twitter Twenty, a group of local Twitter users selected by The Plain Dealer and cleveland.com.

olympics.jpgView full size
Which Olympic sports will get your attention this summer and how much time will you spend watching the games?

That's the question we're posing this week to the Twitter Twenty, a group of local Twitter users selected by The Plain Dealer and cleveland.com.

Join the conversation by using the hashtag #cle20 in your tweets. Even if you’re not already on Twitter, you can follow the discussion in the live updates at cleveland.com/twitter-twenty. You’ll also find a complete list of the group and an explanation of how it works.

We’ll regularly refresh membership in the Twitter Twenty. If you’d like to sign up, send a direct message via Twitter to @denisep or @dan_labbe.

Scott Fujita situation becoming a distraction - Browns Comment of the Day

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"The whole thing with Fujita is becoming a distraction, whether the Browns want to admit it or not." - 1olrocker

scott fuj.JPGView full sizeOne cleveland.com reader says Scott Fujita should be let go from the Browns.
In response to the story Cleveland Browns assistant Brad Childress notified NFL of possible Saints' wrongdoings in 2010, according to report, cleveland.com reader 1olrocker says Scott Fujita should be cut. This reader writes,

"The whole thing with Fujita is becoming a distraction, whether the Browns want to admit it or not.

Cut him and move on. He's past his prime anyway. Not going to miss him if he's gone."

To respond to 1olrocker's comment, go here.

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

Jared Sullinger would be a good pick at No. 24, but probably won't fall that far - Cavs Comment of the Day

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"Yeah, big mistake him not coming out last year. The good news is, there's a good chance that he'll fall far enough for the Cavs to take him. I'd take him with the #24 pick if he's there, definitely with one of the 2nd round picks. I doubt if he falls that far." - timinflorida

jared.JPGView full sizeJared Sullinger would be a good pick late in the first round, says one Cleveland.com reader.
In response to the story Jared Sullinger's back is a health concern for NBA doctors who checked the former Ohio State Buckeye: report, cleveland.com reader timinflorida wouldn't mind drafting Jared Sullinger late in the first round. This reader writes,

"Yeah, big mistake him not coming out last year. The good news is, there's a good chance that he'll fall far enough for the Cavs to take him. I'd take him with the #24 pick if he's there, definitely with one of the 2nd round picks. I doubt if he falls that far.

Lebo, I can't believe I actually agree with you about something, but I also like Kidd-Gilchrist or Drummond with the #4 pick over Barnes or Beal. Both of these guys have the biggest upside in my opinion after Davis and are potential all-stars. I think Barnes and Beal are at best solid NBA players, maybe borderline all stars."

To respond to timinflorida's comment, go here.

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

Off The Green ... with Walsh Jesuit junior golfer Chase Johnson

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Nine questions with the local U.S. Junior Amateur qualifying medalist, from Walsh Jesuit.

chase-johnson-mug-golf-walshhs.jpgView full sizeA successful start to the summer season doesn't chance the high school plans of Walsh Jesuit's Chase Johnson.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Nine questions with Walsh Jesuit junior Chase Johnson, who shot rounds of 73-76-70 -- 219 at Kenwood Country Club to earn medalist honors in the U.S. Junior Amateur qualifying tournament two weeks ago. He advances to the Junior Am, July 16-21 at the Golf Club of New England in Stratham, N.H.

Age: 16.

Residence: Barberton.

1: You had six birdies, six bogeys and one double bogey during the qualifier. Sounds like you played pretty well.

A: I played well overall. I left myself in good spots. If I didn't make the birdie putt I had a tap-in for par. That's a pretty good feeling.

2: You began the second round six shots behind. What was your game plan?

A: After the first round I had played the course twice and I knew I could go low. I started the second round and I felt good. I hit the ball well.

3: Do you have a swing coach?

A: My dad, Mel, has been the only coach I've ever had. He put a club in my hand before I could talk.

4: You backed up your win in Cincinnati with a runner-up finish at last week's Hudson Junior. You are on some kind of roll.

A: The win in Cincinnati is a great confidence builder for the rest of the summer. That was really a big win, probably the biggest win I've ever had. Then, to come back and play well at Hudson was an even bigger boost.

5: What have you been doing well the last two weeks?

A: I think I've putted pretty well. I think I had seven birdie lip-outs in Cincinnati and six at Hudson.

6: You have two years of high school eligibility left. Do you plan on using them?

A: Definitely. The competition is so good it's almost like an AJGA event, minus the $320 entry fee. You have to play well in order to win.

7: Do you set goals and if you do, what are your goals for the rest of your high school career?

A: Yes, I set goals and one of them is to win state.

8: How will the Warriors be in 2012?

A: We'll be OK. Luke Liberatore and Dave Lobeck are both back and they are solid. And there are some good kids coming up.

9: Do you have a favorite professional?

A: Tiger."

Indians vs. Reds: Twitter updates and game preview

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The Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds battle tonight in the second game of their three-game set. The Indians won last night, 10-9. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m. Get game updates on Twitter from Paul Hoynes, @Hoynsie.

The Cleveland Indians and Cincinnati Reds battle tonight in the second game of their three-game set. The Indians won last night, 10-9. First pitch is scheduled for 7:05 p.m. Get game updates on Twitter from Paul Hoynes @dmansworldpd or click here for a live game box score. You can also download our Cleveland Indians app for Android to get Tribe updates on your mobile device. Read on for a game preview.

Note: Hit reload for latest Tweets


reds indians.JPGView full sizeThe Indians and Reds battle tonight. Cleveland won the first game of the series last night, 10-9.
(AP) -- No matter how well the Cincinnati Reds have played, they continue to struggle in Cleveland.

The Reds look to avoid a sixth consecutive road loss to the Indians when the interleague rivals continue their series Tuesday night.

Cincinnati (38-28) outscored Cleveland 24-9 while sweeping the Indians at home last week and had little trouble scoring runs Monday, but its six-game winning streak came to an end with a 10-9 loss at Progressive Field.

The NL Central-leading Reds have won eight of 12 on the road overall, but they are mired in a five-game skid at Cleveland. Joey Votto and Jay Bruce homered Monday, but it wasn't enough to overcome the Indians. Reds pitchers have yielded 22 runs and 26 hits in the club's last two games at Progressive Field, including a 12-4 defeat May 22, 2011.

"We couldn't stop them," Cincinnati manager Dusty Baker said of Monday's loss. "They couldn't really stop us. They just got one more run. I told somebody early, `this is going to be a 10-9 game. I just hope it's going to be us with the 10."

Lonnie Chisenhall and Casey Kotchman each homered and drove in three runs while Shin-Soo Choo hit a solo shot for the Indians, who avoided a sixth loss in seven games overall and moved within one-half game of first-place Chicago in the AL Central.

Chisenhall, who came within a double of a cycle, is 5 for 10 in his last three games.

"(It's) my best game in the major leagues so far," said Chisenhall, batting .269 in 17 games this season.

Batting .375 with five home runs and 11 RBIs in his last eight games versus Cincinnati, Choo hit a pair of homers off scheduled Reds starter Mike Leake (2-5, 5.05 ERA) during a 12-5 loss Thursday.

Leake battled a stomach virus to allow three runs over 4 1-3 innings in that contest. The right-hander is 2-0 with a 3.25 ERA in six starts since losing four straight April 21-May 11.

He is 1-0 with a 6.10 ERA in two career starts versus Cleveland.

Indians starter Josh Tomlin (3-4, 5.56) yielded six runs and 10 hits in four innings versus Leake and the Reds on Thursday to fall to 1-1 with a 5.73 ERA versus Cincinnati.

"Everybody knows everybody in this league," manager Manny Acta told the Indians' official website. "They know (Tomlin's) going to attack the strike zone. It's about him making quality pitches."

Votto, who hit a three-run homer off Tomlin last week, is 7 for 14 with three home runs and seven RBIs against the Indians (34-32) this season.

Teammate Scott Rolen (strained left shoulder) was activated in time for the series opener and went 2 for 4 with two RBIs in his first game since May 11.

"I will stay on top of (the shoulder) as far as managing workload and the number of swings," Rolen told the Reds' official website.

The veteran third baseman is 6 for 17 (.353) in his last four games versus Cleveland.

Manny Acta on Cincinnati's charges of sign-stealing: 'Who, us?' Cleveland Indians daily briefing

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Reds pitcher Mat Latos accused Cleveland of stealing signs, but Tribe manager Manny Acta says his team isn't doing it.

acta-clap-tribe-2012-cc.jpgView full sizeA little baseball subterfuge sounds like a good thing to Indians manager Manny Acta.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Manny Acta doesn't mind if his Indians begin to get a reputation as a sneaky team, the kind of group that steals the opponent's signs whenever a runner is on second base -- as Cincinnati pitcher Mat Latos implied after Tuesday's game.

"That's great that people think our young kids are so bright and so smart that they can do that," Acta joked before Wednesday's game. "It gives us some advantage. Make sure you write about it so that clubs go crazy when we go to town and they start changing signs and catchers get crossed up and we start advancing runners."

Point being, that Acta has a difficult enough time making sure his players remember their own signs. Figuring out the opponents' is not high on his priority list.

Still, after Latos was shelled for seven runs on eight hits in four innings, he implied to Cincinnati reporters that it was more than just a bad outing.

“That was kind of ironic, but we changed up the signs for the last hitter, unfortunately, and the outcome changed when we changed up the signs,” Latos told reporters.

“When you go back and look at video, a couple runners on second base, they put better swings on the ball than they did most of the time without a runner on second base," Latos continued. “(Shin-Soo) Choo hit that double (fourth inning), and then (Asdrubal) Cabrera was up. Me and (catcher Ryan) Hanigan changed the signs up and called for a slider. We were going with a certain call, and that certain call that we were going with beforehand was a curveball. And I threw a slider, and he was looking breaking ball and was jammed on a slider. That, to me, shows me a little something."

Acta, for one, scoffed at the idea that his players figured out the Reds signs so quickly.

"It's not that easy," he said. "Ninety-nine-point-nine percent of the payers don't want to know what's coming, anyway. Because you really don't want to be taking a chance of leaning out over the plate for a 78 mile-per-hour change-up and have a 95 mile-per-hour fastball in your helmet. By the time you go and complain to the runner on second base, you might be with the paramedics."

Tonight's lineups:

Reds (38-28): SS Zack Cozart (R), CF Chris Heisey (R), 1B Joey Votto (L), 2B Brandon Phillips (R), RF Jay Bruce (L), LF Ryan Ludwick (R), 3B Scott Rolen (R), DH Todd Frazier (R), C Devin Mesoraco (R), RHP Mike Leake (2-5, 5.05).

Indians (34-32): RF Shin-Soo Choo (L), SS Asdrubal Cabrera (S), 2B Jason Kipnis (L), C Carlos Santana (S), CF Michael Brantley (L), 1B Casey Kotchman (L), 3B Jack Hannahan (L), LF Shelley Duncan (R), DH Lonnie Chisenhall (L), RHP Josh Tomlin (3-4, 5.56).

Lineup news: Santana is back up to cleanup after one game batting sixth to help relieve pressure on the young hitter who is batting .232.

Umpires: H Derryl Cousins, 1B Ron Kulpa, 2B J. Reyburn, 3B Jim Wolf.

Indians vs. Leake: Choo is hitting .667 (2-for-3, two home runs and 2 RBI).

Reds vs. Tomlin: Cozart and Heisey both are hitting .667, each is 2-for-3.

Next: RHP Justin Masterson (3-6, 4.38) vs. Cincinnati's RHP Bronson Arroyo (3-4, 3.84) Wednesday at 7:05 p.m. at Progressive Field. STO/WTAM will carry the game.

Cleveland Indians P.M. links: GM Ken Williams of rival White Sox says low attendance could hamper trade chances; Casey Kotchman better than his stats?

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General manager Williams would like to improve Chicago team that leads Indians by one-half game in AL Central. Indians rank last (30th) in attendance; the White Sox, 27th. More Indians story links.

white-sox-crowds.jpgA couple fans wait out a rain delay at the Chicago White Sox' U.S. Cellular Field in a late-season game in 2010.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Indians, who have lost 14 of their last 22 games but are just one-half game behind the first-place Chicago White Sox in the American League Central Division standings, play the Cincinnati Reds in the second game of a three-game series tonight at Progressive Field.

A pair of right-handers get the pitching starts: Cleveland's Josh Tomlin (3-4, 5.56) and Cincinnati's Mike Leake (2-5, 5.05).

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Indians coverage includes Jodie Valade's Cleveland Indians daily briefing; Paul Hoynes' Cleveland Indians Insider; Dennis Manoloff's interview on Starting Blocks TV, saying the Indians need more offense; Hoynes' game story on the Indians' 10-9 win over Cincinnati on Monday night; Terry Pluto's podcast; and more.

Remember when Indians closer Chris Perez complained about Tribe fans after his save in the Indians' 2-0 win over the Miami Marlins on May 19 -- as detailed in Paul Hoynes' game story?

Perez, whose 22 saves lead the major leagues, was cheered by Cleveland fans in his next appearance, when he got another save in a 5-3 win over the Detroit Tigers, as detailed in another game story by Hoynes. Perez expressed his appreciation after the game.

Now, one of the teams the Indians are competing with for the Central title, the White Sox, are having their own fan-, or attendance-, related issues.

Scott Powers writes for ESPN.com that ChiSox general manager Ken Williams says Chicago's low attendance figures could negatively affect his chances to make moves to improve the team as the July 31 trade deadline approaches.

Powers writes:

The White Sox rank 27th in the majors with an average paid attendance of 21,330 fans. The Tampa Bay Rays (19,928), Oakland Athletics (19,392) and Cleveland Indians (18,251) rank worse than the White Sox.

The White Sox drew an average of 23,186 fans during their last nine-game home stand from June 1-June 10. They've been in first place in the American League Central since May 29.

"I don't want to expound because then I get buried because I'm crying about money and things," Williams said prior to Monday's home game with the Chicago Cubs. "I don't want to do it, but yes (it's still an issue.)"

Williams said he will be looking for ways to improve the team prior to the July 31st deadline, but he will be careful not to affect the team's current chemistry.
Indians story links

An analysis: Is first baseman Casey Kotchman a better hitter than his numbers now show? (By Lewie Pollis, Wahoo's on First)

Manager Manny Acta thinks the Indians could improve with a move made before the trade deadline....and other Indians notes. (By Justin Albers, MLB.com)

Notes on the offense, Josh Tomlin, etc. going into tonight's game. (By Jordan Garretson, MLB.com)

Indians veteran right-handed starter Derek Lowe needs to forget about his feud with Cincinnati manager Dusty Baker. (By Scott Petrak, Elyria Chronicle-Telegram and Medina County Gazette)

Right-handed starting pitcher Joe Colon of the Class A Lake County Captains has made the Midwest League all-star team, but looks to become more consistent. (By Stephanie Metzger, Indians Prospect Insider)

Third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall comes within a double of hitting for the cycle. (By Jim Ingraham, News-Herald and Lorain Morning Journal)

Indians 10, Reds 9 game story. (By Sheldon Ocker, Akron Beacon Journal)

Indians shake off their recent struggles to top the Reds. (By Chris Assenheimer, Elyria Chronicle-Telegram and Medina County Gazette)

Re-capping a slugfest in an Indians' win. (Let's Go Tribe)


Kent State keeps surpassing expectations in College World Series: Terry Pluto

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Kent State's upset of No. 1 ranked Florida is not only stunning, it's real baseball history.

ksu-pierce-cws-2012-fla-squ-ap.jpgView full sizeJosh Pierce looks like he was about to levitate following the final out of Monday's elimination-game victory over Florida. On Tuesday, the Golden Flashes and their fans are still afloat with College World Series fever, says Terry Pluto.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- "Two and a 'Que."

That's what most college baseball fans expected to happen to Kent State at the College World Series. Two and a 'Que is usually the story when a surprise team such as Kent State makes it to the final field of eight in Omaha. They lose the first two games of the double-elimination playoffs, and go home with some barbecue and great memories.

That was the Stonybrook story, whose motto was "Stun the World" arriving in Nebraska. The Long Island based team had done that by winning the Super Regional at LSU. But they were digging into the ribs and pulled pork after being spanked 9-1 by UCLA and 12-2 by Florida State.

Not so for Kent State, which stunned No. 1-ranked Florida, 5-4, Monday.

"We're the first Ohio team to win a College World Series game since Mike Schmidt played shortstop for Ohio U," Kent State coach Scott Stricklin told me Tuesday morning. Schmidt was a Bobcat shortstop playing in Omaha in 1970. Most fans know Schmidt as the Hall of Fame third baseman for the Philadelphia Phillies.

What about Ohio State? The Buckeyes haven't been to Omaha since 1967.

Kent State is the first MAC team to make it since Eastern Michigan in 1976, which lost to Arizona in the Finals. Those Hurons (now the Eagles) had future major-league pitchers Bob Welch and Bob Owchinko.

"We really wanted to show that we belonged," said Stricklin. "That was especially true after our first game."

The Flashes lost, 8-1, to Arkansas. With the No. 1 Gators lurking, it seemed time to stir up the sauce and gas up the grill. Florida entered the game with four players who were selected in the top 82 of the recent MLB draft.

Baseball America's Aaron Fitt wrote this about the Flashes' victory: "It was one of the more striking upsets in recent College World Series annals. The Gators were making their third straight trip to Omaha. They were the overwhelming choice for preseason No. 1, and they entered the postseason as the No. 1 national seed ... with a roster that includes a pair of first-round picks, eight players drafted in the top 10 rounds, and loads of Omaha experience."

Kent State is staying at the same hotel as Florida State, and Seminole fans greeted the Flashes team bus with the same enthusiasm as if their team had sent Florida back home.

"Our kids are playing with a chip on their shoulders," said Stricklin. " We don't care what anyone else thinks, we believe that David Lyon [a 34th-round draftee of Texas, 1,056th overall] is the best catcher in the country. We know a lot of our players are opening eyes here."

Florida's catcher is Mike Zunino, the No. 3 pick in the 2012 draft -- by Seattle. Obviously, Zunino is superior, but Stricklin's point is Lyon belongs on the same field as the Florida star -- as do the rest of his players.

The Gators had seven players selected before Atlanta took Kent State's David Starn (Walsh Jesuit) in the seventh round. The Flashes didn't have another draftee until Michael Clark, a 20th round (No. 609) selection by Houston.

While Kent State may have received a break from the umpires on a checked swing in the ninth inning, the fact is Florida put itself in position to lose. Or better yet, with Strongsville's Ryan Bores (27th round pick, No. 846) holding the Gators to two runs in six innings, the Flashes put themselves in position for the upset.

Next is South Carolina on Wednesday, which has no players drafted in the top three rounds and only four total in the first 10 years.

"They don't have all big-name guys like some teams," said Stricklin. "They're just the two-time defending champions. But I think by now, everyone knows we're a pretty good team, too."

Especially after sticking Florida with Two and a 'Que.

Should the Tribe take a look at Alfonso Soriano to bolster lineup? - Comment of the Day

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"Cleveland should trade for Alfonso Soriano because they could take up more of his salary and not have to give up a good prospect. His bat could really help and his defense is no worse than Damon." - TexasTribe

soriano.JPGView full sizeOne Cleveland.com reader says the Tribe should look at Alfonso Soriano.
In response to the story Front office knows Tribe could use a little help: Cleveland Indians Insider, cleveland.com reader TexasTribe says the Tribe should look at the Cubs outfielder. This reader writes,

"Cleveland should trade for Alfonso Soriano because they could take up more of his salary and not have to give up a good prospect. His bat could really help and his defense is no worse than Damon."

To respond to TexasTribe's comment, go here.

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

In mourning, a chance for celebration for Jason Bagoly and Kent State baseball

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While funeral arrangements for his mother were being finalized, backup 1B/C Jason Bagoly decided to stay in Omaha with his "second family" -- his coaches and teammates.

ksu-bagoly-highfive-ncaa-cws-2012-ap.jpgView full sizeJason Bagoly, left, was surrounded by teammates after scoring in the second inning of Monday's victory over Florida -- while still dealing with the death of his mother just four days earlier.

OMAHA, Neb. -- Jason Bagoly stood outside the Kent State locker room, with his huge duffel bag and a heavy heart.

There he was Monday evening, patiently answering media questions about perhaps the biggest game of his young life while clearly more anxious to get back to the hotel. He was getting ready for a flight that would get him home to Austintown, Ohio, to bury his mother.

Cheryl McHenry died unexpectedly last Thursday. "It was sudden. We don't know exactly what," said Bagoly, a hard-hitting backup first baseman/catcher with the Golden Flashes. While funeral arrangements were being finalized, Bagoly decided to stay in Omaha with his "second family" -- his coaches and teammates. They are wearing a "CM" sticker on their caps in honor of his mother.

So he was on hand for Kent State's opening game in the College World Series against Arkansas, which the Flashes lost, 8-1. The 6-3, 235-pound junior was still with the team for Monday night's elimination game, where he became the unexpected catalyst for a gut-twisting 5-4 victory over the No. 1 team in the nation, Florida.

Bagoly's decision to stay with the team made his solo flight home Tuesday morning from Omaha so much easier to bear. It justified the decision coach Scott Stricklin made to play him for the first time in eight postseason games.

"I wanted to be here with the people who make me happy, playing the sport that makes me happy," Bagoly said after going 2-for-3 with a single his first at-bat, a wall-banging double to left center his last, and a very satisfying sacrifice bunt that had his coach, Scott Stricklin, choked up afterward trying to describe it.

It left Bagoly at peace, believing his decision met with his late mother's approval.

"This has been a difficult few days for our program," Stricklin said. Then, after taking a few moments to compose himself. "I can't even imagine what it has been like for Jason."

Part of Stricklin's emotion was because he failed to get Bagoly into the loss to Arkansas, which would have been his first postseason action. Bagoly was in the on-deck circle when a double-play ball ended the game.

"I really wrestled with myself that I didn't get him in," Stricklin said.

With regular designated hitter Nick Hamilton struggling, Stricklin decided to go with Bagoly against the Gators. But not without some trepidation.

"You think about the ramifications if he has a bad game," Stricklin said. "He gets out there and plays and things go wrong."

But he made the call, and told Bagoly privately before he posted the lineup card.

"He gave me a hug, then went out and played the best game of his career," Stricklin said.

From the outset, nothing went wrong.

"I was pretty locked into the game," Bagoly said. "But when I got nervous I found myself saying, 'Come on Mom, I need some strength.' It helped me. It really did. I found some extra confidence, just because I knew she was here."

Nobody was more pleased than Stricklin. And nobody was less surprised than his teammates, including shortstop Jimmy Rider, who had noticed Bagoly "was putting on a show" of late during batting practice.

"His first at-bat, to battle [to a 3-2 count] like he did and get that base hit, I mean, it was unbelievable," Stricklin said.

But it was a later at-bat, in the fifth inning, that coach and player knew all decisions made were the right ones. Bagoly followed back-to-back singles from T.J. Sutton and Sawyer Polen with a sacrifice bunt.

"I kept muttering, 'Come on, Mom,'" he said. "I was at the plate, when I was bunting. I never sac bunt. I said 'Come on Mom, let me get this bunt down, please.' That was my first sac in a lot of years."

Starting to choke up again, Stricklin said much the same; "It is by far the best bunt Jason Bagoly has ever put down. He just had an unbelievable game, and that gave us a lift. I think he needed that. I think his family needed that."

When Bagoly doubled off the outfield wall in the seventh, he was lifted for a pinch-runner and greeted by a small mob in the dugout. After the game, pleased with his performance and his decision to stay, Bagoly was set to be with his family in Ohio.

"I have to go home for the services," he said. "Tuesday, 4 p.m. are calling hours, with church services on Wednesday."

Two-time defending CWS champion South Carolina, a 2-1 loser to Arkansas, awaits Kent on Wednesday at TD Ameritrade Park in another elimination game.

"Hopefully we get another 'W' on Wednesday," Bagoly said. "We get another 'W,' I'm coming back. Hopefully, that's a little extra motivation for the team.

"After the game, I brought everyone up and said 'play hard for me Wednesday. I want to get back to Omaha.'"


Mud Run's par-4 No. 2: Hole of the Week

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At Akron's Mud Run course, the par-4 second hole offers the simplest -- yet perhaps most effective -- challenge for the casual golfer. Trees.

20fgHOLEWEEK.jpgView full size

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- What's your Kryptonite?

Some golfers shudder at the prospect of water between them and the fairway or green they're trying to reach. Others shrink from the well-placed fairway bunker. Others see white out-of-bounds stakes and secretly believe there's magnets attuned to some mystery metal in their balls.

But at Akron's Mud Run course, the par-4 second hole offers the simplest -- yet perhaps most effective -- challenge for the casual golfer. Trees.

There's nothing particularly daunting about No. 2, except for a dogleg right that demands absolute accuracy -- perhaps with a fairway wood or a long iron -- off the tee. Miss the short grass, and par is nearly out of the question.

Director of golf Dante D'Andrea says some players dealing with the back tees on the 359-yard hole actually try to hit the protective mesh screen left of the tee that protects neighboring homes. The idea is a good carom takes the dogleg out of the question and provides a straight -- if lengthy -- approach to the green.

Deliberately accepting a "drive" of less than 150 yards in order to avoid the trees on either side of the fairway? That's perhaps the best reason why Mud Run's No. 2 is our Hole of the Week.

Tiger Woods officially enters August's Bridgestone Invitational, will seek seventh title: NE Ohio Golf Insider

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Rocky River's Matthew Gerard defending his Hudson Junior crown; CWGA's Browne event starts Wednesday.

tiger-bridgestone-2010-horiz-mct.jpgView full sizeTiger Woods already has a half-dozen championship trophies from the Bridgestone Invitational, but will be back in August to chase No. 7 at Firestone's South Course.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Contrary to his usual routine, six-time champion Tiger Woods has made an early commitment to play in the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone Country Club in August, tournament officials confirmed.

Players are not required by the PGA Tour to enter an event until the preceding Friday, which in the case of the Bridgestone, would be July 27. Woods' early commitment gives the tournament extra time to sell tickets.

"This is the earliest Tiger has entered since I've been here," said executive director Don Padgett III, who will oversee the event for the sixth year. "Last year he waited until the Thursday or Friday before, which is his right. But, having him commit early is a plus."

New U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson has not confirmed, but the field already contains a who's who in golf in 2012 and annually attracts the best eligible players in the world for three reasons -- the size of the purse (in excess of $8.5 million), the track (the famed South Course) and the fact that there is no cut.

Defending champion Adam Scott, 2010 champion Hunter Mahan, Masters champion Bubba Watson, Phil Mickelson, Rory McIlroy, Cleveland native Jason Dufner, Rickie Fowler and Luke Donald, the world's top-ranked player, are all expected to compete.

Going in style: Matthew Gerard is playing in the final event of his junior career and he has a chance to go out as a back-to-back winner. Gerard, of Rocky River, won last week's prestigious Hudson Junior Invitational by two shots and is one of 72 boys entered in the American Junior Golf Association's Cleveland Junior Open, which got underway Tuesday at Red Tail Golf Club in Avon.

"That would be sweet if I could pull it off," said Gerard, who graduated from St. Ignatius and will be attending Xavier. "Hopefully, I'll be able to play as well as I did at Hudson."

Gerard, a former Plain Dealer All-Star, shot rounds of 74-70-73 for a 1-over 217 to win at Hudson, edging Walsh Jesuit junior Chase Johnson by two shots.

What made Gerard's win extra special is he came from behind to do it, overtaking second-round leader Ryan Troyer, a Kent State recruit from Dover, over the final 18 holes. "I was pretty steady for the whole three days," said Gerard. "I pretty much hit fairways and greens and two-putted my way around."

Gerard's former teammate, Plain Dealer Player of the Year Beau Titsworth, is not defending the title he won in 2011. Hinckley's Jessica Porvasnik will defend on the girls side.

Westfield connection: The last two U.S. Open champions -- Simpson and McIlroy -- competed in events at Westfield Country Club during their junior golf years. Simpson shot 66-73-72-72 --283 and finished third in the 2003 Junior PGA Championship, won by Oklahoman Phillip Bryan. McIlroy was a member of the European team that defeated the U.S., 8.5 to 3.5 in the 2004 Junior Ryder Cup.

Honoring Mary: A field of about 30 is expected in the 25th annual Mary K. Browne tournament Wednesday and Thursday at Kirtland Country Club. Conducted by the Cleveland Women's Golf Association, the 36-hole event honors Browne, who was the runner-up in the 1924 U.S. Women's Amateur and was a three-time winner of the U.S. Tennis Championships, a forerunner to the U.S. Open. Elyria Country Club's Mary Lynn Sertich is the reigning champion.

Heading west: Jennah Romansky, a recent graduate of Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy and a member of the Cleveland First Tee program, has been chosen as one of 81 juniors nationwide to play in the Nature Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach next month. A junior player will be paired with a member of the PGA's Champions Tour for the event, which takes place July 6-8 and will be televised by the Golf Channel.

Not so good: Cleveland area players did not fare well in the U.S. Junior Amateur qualifying tournament, held last week at Aurora Country Club. The two qualifying spots were won by Canadians Josh Whalen and Drew Nesbitt and they will advance to the U.S. Junior Am, July 16-21 at the Golf Club of New England in Stratham, N.H. Joe Malone, a member of the St. Ignatius state qualifying team last year, will serve as the first alternate. Whalen won the event with rounds of 70-71 -- 141. Malone, from Highland Heights, shot 77-75 --152.

New junior program: TGA Premier Junior Golf, a relatively new junior program in the area, is available for youngsters in grades kindergarten through the eighth grade. The five-level program is similar to the First Tee programs currently in Cleveland and Akron, but Cleveland East director Andy Wolfe believes TGA teaches more golf than First Tee.

TGA is conducted at area schools and also has two summer camps, one at Mercer Elementary in Shaker Heights (June 25-29) and another at the Mandel Jewish Community Center on South Woodland (July 30-Aug. 3). Wolfe said approximately 500 youngsters have taken advantage of the program since 2009. Visit golfTGA.com for more information.

On Twitter: @TimRogersPD

Ohio State Buckeyes P.M. links: Johnathan Hankins a preseason All-America pick; Jared Sullinger's back issues; Urban Meyer's contract

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Defensive lineman Hankins can be an imposing run-stopper and interior pass rusher. Links to more Ohio State stories.

johnathan-hankins.jpgOhio State defensive lineman Johnathan Hankins (52) has superb quickness for his size, at about 6-4 and 317 pounds.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Ohio State Buckeyes football team opens its first season with Urban Meyer as coach 10 weeks from Saturday -- on Sept. 1 against the Miami (Ohio) RedHawks in Columbus.

Plain Dealer and cleveland.com Ohio State coverage includes Doug Lesmerises' story on the public release of Urban Meyer's Ohio State contract, with various details; a report, citing an ESPN.com report as the NBA draft approaches, that former Buckeye Jared Sullinger's back is a health concern to NBA doctors; a report on the eight new members of the Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame, including former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel.

Meyer coached numerous All-America caliber players during his six seasons (2005-10) at Florida, enough of them, in fact, that the Gators won national championships in the 2006 and 2008 seasons.

Defensive lineman Johnathan Hankins, going into his junior season, is expected to be among Ohio State's very best players.

CollegeFootballNews.com places Hankins on its first-team All-America defense.

About Hankins, CollegeFootballNews.com writes:

One of the most active and productive all-around tackles in college football, Hankins tied for third on the team with 67 tackles to go along with three sacks and 11 tackles for loss. At 6-4 and 317 pounds he has tremendous size and shocking quickness off the ball, able to both be an anchor against the run while also dominating as an interior pass rusher. Steady, he came up with a great midseason stretch and was at his best in the biggest games. The defense will work around him once again, and with John Simon taking some of the attention away, he should once again be a statistical superstar.
Buckeyes story links

Almost every year at this time, reports surface about a top prospect having a problem that could affect his NBA career -- such as Jared Sullinger now with his back issues. (By Austin Ward, Ball Don't Lie/Yahoo! Sports)

Jared Sullinger's back problems as the June 28 NBA draft approaches. (By Brandon Castel, the-ozone.net)

Seven Ohio State athletes try to make the team at the U.S. Olympic track and field trials. (By Todd Jones, Columbus Dispatch)

He hasn't yet coached a game for the Buckeyes, but Urban Meyer has the fans' support. (By Austin Ward, BuckeyeNation/ESPN.com)

Urban Meyer's Ohio State contract stresses compliance with NCAA rules. (By Bill Rabinowitz, Columbus Dispatch)

Highlights of Urban Meyer's OSU contract. (Columbus Dispatch)

The Ohio Supreme Court rules that Ohio State University acted properly in its refusal to release to ESPN some records related to the football program's memorabilia for tattoos/cash scandal. (By Randy Ludlow, Columbus Dispatch)

The Ohio Supreme Court rules in Ohio State's favor in a lawsuit filed by ESPN. (By Brandon Castel, the-ozone.net)

Some of the big stories on the horizon in Big Ten football. (By Tony Gerdeman, the-ozone.net)

Questions and answers with three Ohio State incoming freshman football players. (By Michael Chung, Bleacher Report)

Urban Meyer and Browns running back Trent Richardson visit the Cleveland Indians. (Associated Press/Canton Repository)


Cleveland Indians' Johnny Damon colliding with the realities of advancing years: Bill Livingston

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Johnny Damon says nothing was harder than playing left field at Fenway Park. It is, however, hard to tell -- given Damon's struggles so far.

damon-leap-nocatch-red-cc.jpgView full sizeThe spirit has been willing, but so far with the Indians, the bat, glove and arm of Johnny Damon have been frustratingly weak.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Johnny Damon hit the wall Monday night, which doesn't mean he's tired. The Indians' left fielder missed all of spring training while he was in the unemployment line. His body is still fresh for being 38 in the big leagues.

However, hitting the wall does mean he played Brandon Phillips' two-bagger into four bags. The play was scored as a double and two-base error, after Damon rattled off the wall in left-field foul territory, then reeled away in pursuit of the ball.

"I'm still in one piece," said Damon, who pulled up his shirt to show the beginnings of a sullen-looking bruise on his right rib-cage. "I thought [Phillips' grounder scorching past third] was going to go straight [on the carom], but it veered off to the right. I'm not a good goalie. We didn't have hockey growing up in Florida."

"Five-hole?" a questioner asked, wondering if the ball went between the legs.

"Five-hole," said Damon.

The Indians won, 10-9, in sort of a beer-league opener of the home half of the six-game interleague series with Cincinnati. The Reds swept the first three in Cincinnati. Damon was not in the starting lineup Tuesday, although that was to get Shelley Duncan some time on the carousel in left, not because Damon's body was too sore to play.

Damon is by all accounts a great teammate and a great influence on a young team in the clubhouse. He is a great quote, as media members say with gratitude. But how much does that compensate for making himself a battering ram in the field and for a bat that no longer sprays hits with the wristy flick he has always used?

Damon can still run, maybe not as he could in his best days as a leadoff man, but good enough for a team that is starved for speed.

"I can play left field better than a lot of other guys," Damon said.

"We brought Damon here for his offense," said manager Manny Acta.

Damon is hitting .190.

There are jokes that can be made here, but Damon deserves better than that. He has been a better player by far than the one with deficits in his glove, arm and bat now. He has led the league in triples, stolen bases and runs scored. He has 2,746 hits. He was with the Red Sox when they won the last four games against the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS, hitting two homers, one of them a grand slam, in the seventh game. He was a curse-breaker, as the Red Sox swept St. Louis in the World Series.

As far as current famines go, the Indians' 63 seasons and counting without a world championship is second only to the Cubs, currently with the worst record in baseball, and their 103 seasons and counting. "I think the Cubs are safe for another year," Damon said, smiling.

If Damon is part of a second curse-breaker, it might happen in spite of him. The fact is, for every Ted Williams, homering in his last home at-bat in 1960, there is a Willie Mays, falling and butchering balls in the outfield in the 1973 World Series.

Kenny Lofton was a spark in his last season with the Indians in 2007, as they almost reached the World Series. But so far, Damon has been more like Dave Winfield, who hit .191 with two homers and four RBI here in 1995. That team was good enough not to need him.

This one needs more. Yet this diminished Damon is the living proof, reaffirmed every spring, of the famous Jim Bouton comment, "You spend your life gripping a baseball, and it turns out it was the other way around all along."

Bill Bradley, future senator and former New York Knick, said physical decline was part of the arc of a player's career, so he stayed around, past his prime, to experience it as well as the champagne and the parades. Damon is still learning how to play the Progressive Field wall, although it surely can't compare to reading the pop flies that turned into homers and the line drives that became long singles off the Green Monster in Fenway Park. There were Brandon Phillips-like surprising ricochets off it all the time.

Asked if the mini-monster here was harder to play the Green Monster, Damon said, "Nothing in the world could possibly be."

Turning his season around is in the discussion, though.

On Twitter: @LivyPD

NBA Draft 2012 is nothing like 2011's point guard-palooza

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NBA teams looking for point guards in the draft are a year too late. Watch video

marshall-unc-drive-2012-ap.jpgView full sizeThe value of North Carolina point guard Kendall Marshall was established when the Tar Heels floundered in the NCAA Tournament following a broken right wrist.

(Editor's note: Second in a series of position-by-position breakdowns heading into the 2012 NBA Draft on June 28. Previously: Small forwards.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Teams looking for point guards in the 2012 NBA Draft are a year too late.

That's not to disparage any of the individuals available this year, but this draft won't be anything like 2011, when point guards Kyrie Irving, Brandon Knight, Kemba Walker and Jimmer Fredette were taken in the first 10 picks. The Cavaliers' Irving was Rookie of the Year, and Detroit's Knight and Minnesota point guard Ricky Rubio, drafted in 2009, joined him on the 2011-12 All-Rookie Team.

"I think the point guard class is weak this year," said Chris Monter, the Alliance native who is editor and publisher of College Basketball News and Monter Draft News. "Point guards actually have been pretty good the last several years. This year, probably two will be drafted in the top 14. After that, there's a big dropoff."

This year's point-guard class is headlined by Weber State's Damian Lillard and North Carolina's Kendall Marshall. Since the end of the college season, Lillard seems to have risen to the No. 1 spot, and he's clearly using his underdog status as motivation.

Shortly before the NBA combine in Chicago he Tweeted, "People cant believe Im rising, people doubtin me, ppl sayin Im projected too high, and STILL Im in my natural habitat lol #doubted."

The doubts have to do with what would seem to be his score-first mentality, as opposed his main competitor, Marshall, who is viewed as a pass-first point guard.

There are significant questions about the rest of the field. Teams like Cleveland and Detroit who locked up a point guard last year will be glad they did.

Scouting Report / Point Guards

The best

Damian Lillard, Weber State, 6-foot-2 3/4, 188.8 pounds.

As the second-leading scorer in the country, averaging 24.5 points, it's easy to see why Lillard is seen as more of a scorer than a true point guard, but he has been working hard to convince team executives and scouts that he can run the team as well as score.

Best of the rest

Kendall Marshall, North Carolina, 6-4 1/4, 198.4.

His true value to North Carolina was seen when he broke his right wrist during the NCAA tournament, which led to an early exit for the Tar Heels. He's the kind of player who makes those around him better.

Tony Wroten, Washington, 6-6, 203.2.

A good scorer who makes questionable decisions. More of a combo guard than a point. Still, scouts intrigued by his size, strength and athleticism.

Marquis Teague, Kentucky, 6-2, 179.8.

Younger brother of Atlanta's Jeff Teague, he replaced Brandon Knight as the Kentucky point guard on an NCAA championship team. Good handle and can score.

Tyshawn Taylor, Kansas, 6-4, 177.

Also viewed as a score-first guy. Has had some off the court issues, including a suspension from his team, that may raise flags for some.

Others to watch: Tu Holloway, Xavier, Scoop Jardine, Syracuse; Jordan Taylor, Wisconsin.

Will the Cavs take one? Unlikely. Irving needs a backup, but Donald Sloan likely has the inside track to that job.

On Twitter: @pdcavsinsider

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