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College football kickoff: Heisman duel, Top 25 matchups and picks

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Here's a look at the big matchups and top storylines from around the nation as we near kickoff on another Saturday of college football.

Here's a look at the big matchups and top storylines from around the nation as we near kickoff on another Saturday of college football:

The Big Buzz: Head-to-head for the Heisman

No. 4 Kansas State at No. 17 West Virginia, 7 p.m. EDT

101912_smith-klein_1000.jpgWest Virginia quarterback Geno Smith (left) and Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein (right) meet Saturday in a showcase of Heisman Trophy contenders. (AP Photos)

This week's big game between No. 9 South Carolina and No. 3 Florida may feature higher-ranked teams, but the battle between Kansas State and West Virginia has more star power. Quarterbacks Geno Smith of West Virginia and Collin Klein of K-State are running 1-2 in just about everyone's Heisman rankings right now, and this mano a mano matchup could produce a defining moment for one of these players.

There's little doubt that the Heisman race hinges on this showdown, writes ESPN.com's David Ubben:

There will still be a whole lot of football left to be played when it's over, but it's easy to see that both quarterbacks can look across the sideline at one another and know that whoever leaves with a victory will almost certainly leave as the most likely recipient of the most hallowed individual award in sports.

But this game offers more than just Smith vs. Klein. In fact, this matchup has it all, including an intriguing clash of styles, writes Sean Keeler of Fox Sports Kansas City:

Death by Maserati or death by combine?

Kansas State prefers to kill its victims slowly — run, punt, eat up clock — by the fourth quarter, you've either bled to death or combusted out of sheer frustration. West Virginia strikes quickly, surgically, a swarm of piranhas in cleats.

Speaking of the Wildcats' bludgeoning style, Dennis Dodd of CBSSports.com takes a look at the understated toughness of Klein, who during his career at K-State has played through injuries including a bruised sternum, a bruised rib and a separated shoulder:

But we do want to know how many blows Klein, this aw-shucks home-schooled kid from Loveland, Colo., can take before he collapses in a heap. Check the scars, scabs and bandages after 19 career starts. Conventional weapons do not work against him.

Klein discusses Saturday's Heisman showdown with Smith and the matchup against the Mountaineers in this Fox Sports interview:



Top games

Other than Kansas State at West Virginia, here are several other elite matchups and rivalry games on tap this weekend:

• No. 6 LSU vs. No. 20 Texas A&M, 12 p.m. EDT

• No. 22 Stanford at California, 3 p.m. EDT

• No. 9 South Carolina at No. 3 Florida, 3:30 p.m. EDT

• Michigan State at No. 23 Michigan, 3:30 p.m. EDT

• No. 18 Texas Tech at TCU, 3:30 EDT

• No. 1 Alabama at Tennessee, 7 p.m EDT

• No. 12 Florida State at Miami, 8 p.m. EDT

Headlines

• No. 2 Oregon demolished Arizona State on Thursday night, racing out to a 36-point first-half lead and coasting to a 43-21 victory over the Sun Devils. (via OregonLive.com)

• Texas head coach Mack Brown, the subject of criticism after the Longhorns' crushing defeat to Oklahoma last week, says he has no plans to retire. (via SI.com)

• The status of Notre Dame quarterback Everett Golson, who is trying to shake off concussion symptoms, won't be determined until game time of Saturday's meeting with BYU. (via Yahoo! Sports)

• Oregon State quarterback Sean Mannion, who only just underwent knee surgery on October 10, will dress and be available to play Saturday against Utah, if needed. (via OregonLive.com)

• South Carolina has suspended defensive tackle Kelcy Quarles for Saturday's game against Florida after the sophomore threw a punch at an LSU player in last week's loss to the Tigers. (via CBSSports.com)

• Former LSU All-American Tyrann Mathieu, declared ineligible to play this season after reportedly failing multiple drug tests, is denying a Sports Illustrated report which claims he may not be able to return next season due to NCAA violations. (via NOLA.com)

Who they're picking

• Week 8 predictions over at NBCSports.com include wins for Florida over South Carolina, Kansas State over West Virginia, and LSU over Texas A&M.

Six of eight panelists at USA Today take West Virginia to beat Kansas State, but the experts are deadlocked on the outcome of Florida-South Carolina. Upset picks include one vote each for Virginia Tech over Clemson and Utah over Oregon State, and two votes for Cal over Stanford and Temple over Rutgers.

At ESPN.com, Big 12 blogger David Ubben picks Kansas State to beat West Virginia, 37-34. Big Ten bloggers Adam Rittenberg and Brian Bennett agree that Michigan will handle Michigan State, while SEC bloggers Edward Aschoff and Chris Low both expect Florida to deal South Carolina its second consecutive loss.

Stewart Mendel of SI.com predicts wins for South Carolina and West Virginia, while he likes Texas A&M to beat LSU in his upset special.

Members of CBSSports.com's panel of eight all choose LSU to beat Texas A&M, aside from one dissenting vote from Jerry Hinnen. Stanford gets the nod over Cal by a 5-3 vote, while West Virginia is the majority choice by the same margin to beat Kansas State.

What they're saying

Marcus MariotaOregon quarterback Marcus Mariota throws against Arizona State during the first half of an NCAA college football game, Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012, in Tempe, Ariz. (AP Photo/Matt York)

• The Oregonian's John Canzano has Oregon on a collision course with Alabama for the national title after the Ducks' dismantling of Arizona State:

This was a masterpiece by Oregon. The defense was incredible. The offense was electric. At the height of the back-alley whipping, the Ducks defense was taking the ball away and the offense returning it to Arizona State seven points heavier at a pace that turned all of Tempe dizzy.

• Former Tennessee quarterback Arik Ainge has some questionable advice for the Volunteers heading into their matchup against No. 1 Alabama. It involves Crimson Tide quarterback AJ McCarrron and knee-stomping, according to AL.com:

"I say it all the time. Nasty, attitude, get after it. Do something crazy," Ainge said. "The first time AJ McCarron drops back, tell one of your boys you've got fifteen on this one. He's got a sore knee, go step on it."

• Michigan coaches spent the week getting their players psyched up for Saturday's big in-state rivalry game against Michigan State, hoping to make up for last year's 28-14 loss in which they were physically dominated by the Spartans: (via MLive.com)

"You have to have a mindset that’s ready to play in a figurative fist fight," Michigan offensive coordinator Al Borges said Tuesday. "And if you don’t think that way, don’t come to this game."

• Pat Forde of Yahoo! Sports writes about Oregon State coach Mike Riley and his surprising Beavers, who come in at No. 8 in the initial BCS standings:

It's hard not to be happy right now. A year after a dismal 3-9 season, the Beavers are a shocking 5-0 and eighth in the first BCS Rankings. Take care of business as a solid home favorite Saturday night against Utah and they'll head into the second half of their schedule as the most unlikely national championship contender still standing.

• Ohio State head coach Urban Meyer is upset about his underperforming defense. But Meyer may have no one to blame but himself and the very offensive philosophy he helped introduce to college football, writes Bill Livingston of the Cleveland Plain Dealer:

Urban Meyer is the mad scientist, attacked by his own monster. He is the guru of the spread offense whose Ohio State defense can't win the matchups the formation is built to exploit.

• On a weekend that features several traditional rivalries which have lost some luster, Kevin Scarbinsky of AL.com writes that the recent dominance of Alabama has effectively sucked the juice out of the Crimson Tide's annual contest with Tennessee:

The Alabama-Tennessee series has become a joke with no punch line, a corpse in search of a coffin, a rumble strip masquerading as a speed bump on Alabama’s annual run toward national championship contention.

Johnny ManzielTexas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel got LSU's attention when the Aggies put up 59 points last weekend. (AP File Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

• SI.com's Brian Hamilton pens a great profile of Texas A&M rookie quarterback Johnny Manziel, whose "Johnny Football" legend is quickly growing. The first-year signal caller is apparently keeping his receivers on their toes with his gunslinging mentality:

"It's funny," tight ends coach Brian Polian said. "You watch a play in practice or a game and the kid is running around making something happen, and they're going, 'Johnny Football. Keep your eyes up. Keep running. You never know.'"


Ohio State vs. Purdue: Game updates

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The No. 7 Ohio State Buckeyes look to stay undefeated and avenge last season's loss to Purdue today at the Horseshoe in Columbus. Kickoff is set for noon. Stay on this page for in-game notes, Tweets and observations from Doug Lesmerises (@PDBuckeyes) and Bill Livingston (@LivyPD)

The No. 7 Ohio State Buckeyes look to stay undefeated and avenge last season's loss to Purdue today at the Horseshoe in Columbus. Kickoff is set for noon. Stay on this page for in-game notes, Tweets and observations from Doug Lesmerises (@PDBuckeyes) and Bill Livingston (@LivyPD). You can also find a live box score here. Refresh often for the latest updates.

Third quarter: Purdue 20, OSU 13

A very nice 19-yarder to Philly Brown on 3rd-10, on which Miller actually had time to pause and set his feet, led to a blown-coverage 35-yarder on the next play to Chris Fields, of whom you have not particularly heard much shining and inspiring. Hyde's 3-yard run on the play after that and the PAT gives Buckeyes a 14-13 lead, midway through third.

Purdue took the lead right back, finishing it with an untouched 31-yard TD screen to Dolapo McCarthy. On all three TDs, not a Buckeye cuticle has niced, tipped, or otherwise mussed a Purdue jersey. 20-14, Boilermakers.

Miller's third TO (2 fumbles and a pick of end of half Hail Mary) sets up Purdue for a field goal which Johnathan Hankins blocks.

Miller's best play of the day, a 37-yard keep, the last 5 yards gained with a stiff-arm, results in his being knocked out of the game on the tackle. Could be a shoulder or a heads injury. Suspect he is done for the game.

Second quarter: Purdue 13, OSU 7

Purdue's 19 play, 10 minute, 32-second, 85-yard drive into the second quarter nets nothing when Ryan Shazier deflects Caleb TerBush's pass at goal-line to C.J. Barnett in end zone.

Boilermakers' half is a curiosity shop of oddities: 83-yard and 100-yard scores, 19-play 10 1/2 minute drive without scoring, 3-and-outs, 4-and-1 fake punt at own 18.

Miller has been missing his receivers and making some reads that are not exactly Evelyn Wood caliber. So beleagured Buckeyes' defense not the sole culprit Offense just seems unable to develop anything. Only a couple of what-if's can be discussed.

-- Bill Livingston

First quarter: Purdue 13, OSU 7

The old long bomb to a guy (Akeem Shavers) lined up at fullback burns Storm Klein, one of Buckeyes' big holes at LB, for 83 and TD in first 17 seconds.

Buckeyes in their usual state of bewilderment in opening quarter on offense. On defense, nothing surprises observers anymore. Buckeyes did have a 67-yard scoring drive, featuring a 20-yard run by Carlos Hyde on fourth-1 1/2 and a nice checkdown to Philly Brown for 17 on third-and-10 by Miller, who finished it with an 8-yard wiggle/squiggle. But that was it.

Purdue, 12 seconds after falling behind, 7-6, took the lead on a 100-yard kickoff return by Akeem Hunt, who showed some serious moves. That's 2 TDs of 83 and 100 y in 29 seconds.

The Boilermakers rugby-style kicker gained 4 y on fourth-and-1 at his own 18. Serious, serious audacity there. 13-7, Boilermakers after 1st.

Akeem Shavers, Akeem Hunt. What's next, Akeem the Dream?

-- Bill Livingston

Game preview: No. 7 Ohio State vs. Purdue

Kickoff: Noon at Ohio Stadium, Columbus.

TV/radio: WEWS Channel 5; WKNR AM/850.

Notable: OSU (7-0, 3-0 Big Ten) hasn't had much trouble putting up points the last two weeks, beating then-No. 21 Nebraska, 63-38, on Oct. 6 before a 52-49 win at Indiana last Saturday. It's the defense, though, that has coach Urban Meyer concerned. In allowing Indiana to rack up its most points in the series, the Buckeyes nearly blew an 18-point lead in the final two minutes. They are giving up an average of 400 yards -- 10th in the conference-- and their 277.7 passing yards allowed rank 107th in the nation entering Week 8. Purdue (3-3, 0-2) has seen its offense sputter in consecutive blowout defeats. After averaging 463.5 yards while going 3-1 in nonconference play, the Boilermakers managed 213 in a 44-13 loss to Michigan on Oct. 6; and 252 while falling 38-14 to Wisconsin last Saturday.

Pre-game reading material

Preview capsules for this weekend's college football games

For Ohio State Buckeyes, defensive problems might start in the middle

Ohio State vs. Purdue: Doug Lesmerises' key to the game

Ohio State vs. Purdue: Doug Lesmerises' Big Picture

Ohio State Buckeyes' defense a victim of the spread-offense machine Urban Meyer created: Bill Livingston

Terrelle Pryor brought promise, but Braxton Miller fulfills it for Ohio State Buckeyes

Ohio State online preview: Purdue Boilermakers

Browns Town: A graphic look ahead to the Colts game on Sunday

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Here's Game 7 in the Browns 2012 season. Watch video

Plain Dealer artist Chris Morris and the Plain Dealer sports staff present "Browns Town, an Illustrated Journal of the 2012 Cleveland Browns season" every weekend with the preview section for that Sunday's game. (This week we have added video of the fan Chris Morris interviewed. Look for the camera symbols near his picture.)

For a closer look at the cartoon, Click here. For previous weeks' entries, click here  and follow the links at bottom to previous Browns Towns graphics.




Dog.Week1.jpg
Sept. 9:
Philadelphia Eagles

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Sept. 16:
Cincinnati Bengals

Dog.Week3.jpg
Sept. 23:
Buffalo Bills

Dog.Week4.jpg
Sept. 27:
Baltimore Ravens

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Oct. 7:
New York Giants
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Oct. 14:
Cincinnati Bengals
Oct. 21:
Indianapolis Colts
Oct. 28:
San Diego
Nov. 4:
Baltimore Ravens
Nov. 18:
Dallas Cowboys
Nov. 25:
Pittsburgh Steelers
Dec. 2:
Oakland Raiders
Dec. 9:
Kansas City Chiefs
Dec. 16:
Washington
Dec. 23:
Denver Broncos
Dec. 30:
Pittsburgh Steelers
 

Backup QB Kenny Guiton leads Ohio State in stunning rally to beat Purdue in overtime

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The Buckeyes took over with 47 seconds left in regulation and scored a touchdown and 2-point conversion to force the overtime.

miller-td-osu-purdue-2012-mf.jpg Braxton Miller beats Purdue's Landon Feichter to the end zone for a first-quarter touchdown Saturday in Columbus. Miller left the game late in the third quarter with an undetermined injury, but backup Kenny Guiton was the hero in a 29-22 overtime victory for Ohio State.

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio State's undefeated season nearly came crashing down Saturday before backup quarterback Kenny Guiton led a stunning really to lead the Buckeyes to a 29-22 overtime win against Purdue. The rally came after starting quarterback Braxton Miller left the game in third quarter and later went to the hospital in an ambulance.

Down, 22-14, the Buckeyes rallied to tie the score, getting a 4-yard touchdown pass from Guiton to Chris Fields with three seconds to play, after taking over at their own 39 with 47 seconds left and no timeouts. Guiton hit tight end Jeff Heuerman with a pass on the two-point conversion to tie the game, forcing overtime in this series for the second straight year.

Purdue-Ohio State boxscore

Carlos Hyde scored on a 1-yard TD run as Ohio State got the ball first. The Ohio State defense then held Purdue and the Buckeyes' undefeated season somehow marched on.

But the Buckeyes still suffered a loss. Miller was tackled from behind at the end of a 37-yard run and appeared to hit his head against the Ohio Stadium turf. He was helped off the field and sat on the bench surrounded by medical staff with his head down and his elbows on his knees. He eventually was helped onto a cart that took him to the locker room, still not lifting his head. An OSU staffer supported Miller's back from behind as the cart took him away.

At that point, the Buckeyes (8-0, 4-0 Big Ten) trailed, 20-14, in a game that saw them again hurt by big plays and special teams errors. Purdue (3-4, 0-3) scored on the first play of the game on an 83-yard pass to running back Akeem Shavers, and Ohio State later gave up a touchdown on a 100-yard kickoff return by Akeem Hunt.

Ohio State did block the extra point on Purdue's first touchdown, and held a 14-13 lead early in the third quarter on an 8-yard Miller run and 2-yard Carlos Hyde run. The OSU defense also intercepted Purdue in the end zone after a Boilermaker drive of more than 10 minutes.

But Purdue came back and cashed in a long drive, going 82 yards in eight plays to take a 20-14 lead with 3:49 left in the third. Ohio State seemed to be ready to come back again when Miller broke his run, but then the Heisman Trophy candidate who has served as the Buckeyes' primary offensive weapon went down.

Guiton relieved Miller, but the OSU drive stalled and Drew Basil's 50-yard field goal try banged off the left upright.

In the fourth quarter, Purdue punted Ohio State down to the 1, and the Buckeyes gave up a safety when they were called for a blocking penalty in the end zone.

Ohio State mounted another drive, but Guiton was intercepted with 2:40 to play when trying to go deep to Jake Stoneburner on third-and-13. The game looked over.

But it wasn't.

Cleveland Browns' Brandon Weeden faces Colts Andrew Luck (video)

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Cleveland Browns' Brandon Weeden, the No. 22 pick in the 2012 NFL Draft, goes up against Andrew Luck, the top pick overall, when they play the Indianapolis Colts Sunday at Lucus Oil Stadium. Watch video


BEREA, Ohio -- Cleveland Browns' Brandon Weeden, the No. 22 pick in the 2012 NFL Draft, goes up against Andrew Luck, the top pick overall, when they play the Indianapolis Colts Sunday at Lucus Oil Stadium.

It will be the second meeting between the two rookie quarterbacks.  They faced each other in the 2012 Fiesta Bowl when Weeden's Oklahoma State beat Luck's Stanford in overtime 41-38.

Click here to watch this video on a mobile device


To reach this Plain Dealer videographer: dandersen@plaind.com

On Twitter: @CLEvideos

Benching Trent Richardson was the wrong move, Sandy Alomar, and Cavaliers' open spots: Blog Roundup

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Here are what blogs from Cleveland and around the country are saying about the Browns, Cavaliers and Indians. Featured today are Bleacher Report, Cavs: The Blog and Wahoo's On First.

Here are what blogs from Cleveland and around the country are saying about the Browns, Cavaliers and Indians.


Cleveland Browns


Brandon Alisoglu over at Bleacher Report says benching Trent Richardson was the wrong move by the Browns.
"The Browns took Richardson with the third-overall selection last year. He's a young, strong bull who needs to be given as much time to grow as possible.


And if Shurmur is going to pull someone as uber-talented as the Alabama product because he felt a backup gave his team the best chance to win, why is Colt McCoy so firmly planted on the bench?


I know that Brandon Weeden has shown some progress, but so has Richardson at times.


Against the New York Giants, he averaged 4.8 yards per carry. If he'd been given more time, there would have been a tremendous possibility that he could have busted through the soft Colts defense.


Besides, how is Richardson supposed to get any better sitting on the bench?


We've seen Montario Hardesty's ceiling. He's a second- or third-string player and possible special-teams contributor. "

Cleveland Indians


Lewie Pollis at Wahoo's On First wants to know why Sandy Alomar Jr. isn't being hired anywhere for a manager spot.
"The Farrell deal left Toronto in need of a manager, and it was reported that the favorite for the job was—you guessed it!—Alomar. But, according to Bastian, either the Blue Jays aren’t in any hurry to bring in a new skipper or they don’t want to bring him aboard. The kicker: The Blue Jays had interviewed Alomar two years ago before hiring Farrell.


Everyone in baseball seems agrees that Alomar has a bright future as a manager—the fact that he’s gotten so many interviews has to count for something. But for some reason no one wants to actually hire him. That’s good for the Indians as they’ll continue to benefit from his presence in the clubhouse, but you can’t help feel bad for Alomar’s being stuck in managerial limbo."

AX188_7FF5_9.JPGSamardo Samuels
Cleveland Cavaliers


Nate Smith at Cavs: The Blog takes at some of the roster decisions the Cavs will have to make.
"Jon Leuer: A low risk waiver pickup from this offseason. He came to Cleveland when Houston traded Milwaukee for him and then waived him when they tried to either get Howard or get awful. Leuer’s had flashes, but is shooting 33% and 25% from the field and 3 this preseason, and is struggling to score and rebound against stronger, more athletic players in the last couple games. Still the praise was effusive early on, J-Leu has a high basketball IQ, and had a good rookie year. He seems like a solid prospect. Odds of making the Cavs: 85%


Samardo Samuels: The big bodied Jamaican purportedly got in shape this offseason, and dropped his body fat to 8%. He definitely looks more cut, and his preseason play, when he gets minutes, has been decent, scoring 23 points on 60% shooting and grabbing 11 boards points in 59 minutes. His preseason minutes beg the question though: is Scott not playing him because he knows what he has, or because Samardo has used up all his chances? I would not mind seeing him go, because I believe the Samardo we’re seeing now represents his ceiling. He’s still not a great rebounder, still takes dumb shots, but at least he’s hit some this preseason. On a minimum contract he costs the Cavs only a roster spot, but the news that he trained this offseason with Antawn in an attempt to emulate ‘Twan’s pick and pop game scares me a little lot. Odds of making the Cavs: 65%."

Have a post that you think should be featured in our daily Blog Roundup? Email the link here. You can also follow Glenn on Twitter.

Cavs Gibson, Harangody out with injuries

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Daniel Gibson is out with a concussion, and Luke Harangody is out with a sprained right knee for the Cavs against the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday night at The Q.

daniel gibson.JPGCavaliers guard Daniel Gibson is not celebrating after a mild concussion kept him out of the game against Indiana on Tuesday at The Q.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Cavaliers guard Daniel Gibson is out with a mild concussion, and forward Luke Harangody is out with a sprained right knee for tonight’s preseason game against the Indiana Pacers at The Q.

Gibson reported concussion symptoms on Monday and was placed in the NBA’s concussion protocol process. His status will be updated as appropriate, and he will be cleared to resume contact and game action once he is symptom free and successfully completes the concussion protocol process, the Cavs announced in a press release.

Harangody's knee injury came to light during practice on Monday.

San Diego Chargers consistent only in their inconsistency: Dennis Manoloff's scouting report

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Chargers' Norv Turner and Philip Rivers continue to find ways to frustrate fans.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Some NFL head coach/quarterback tandems specialize in significant victories. Bill Belichick and Tom Brady of New England and Tom Coughlin and Eli Manning of the Giants have been atop the list in recent years, combining for five Super Bowls rings since 2001.

Then there is the Chargers' tandem of Norv Turner and Philip Rivers. Turner and Rivers, together since 2007, continue to find creative ways to disappoint. Their regular-season successes are overshadowed by regular-season and postseason flameouts, some of which defy description.

Turner and Rivers lead San Diego into Cleveland Browns Stadium on Sunday. The Chargers' collective resume is considerably more impressive, and they are favored, but the Browns can draw strength from this reality: No matter how bleak it might look for a Chargers opponent, the game is not over until the Chargers finish making mistakes.

San Diego is 3-3. It easily could be 5-1, but for come-from-ahead defeats in the past two games.

On Oct. 7 at heretofore winless New Orleans, the Chargers held a 10-point lead and had the ball in Saints territory midway through the third quarter. They lost, 31-24. With less than 30 seconds left, Rivers was sacked and fumbled at the Saints 42.

As painful as that night was for Chargers fans, their team was just getting warmed up. On Oct. 15 against the Broncos at home, the Chargers led by 24 at halftime. They lost, 35-24. Rivers threw four interceptions, including three in the fourth quarter, and lost two fumbles. The four picks and six turnovers are career-worsts.

The Chargers had a bye week to stew, and to hear, for the umpteenth time, how hot the seat is under Turner.

Those expecting San Diego to fold, though, after the back-to-back back-breakers likely will be disappointed. Turner did not get this far by regularly compounding frustration. His teams rebound enough to give him wiggle room, even as those around him seemingly have lost patience.

From 2007-09, the Chargers went 11-5, 8-8 and 13-3, securing AFC West titles each time. They were a combined 3-3 in the playoffs and failed to reach the Super Bowl. From 2010-11, the Chargers went 9-7 and 8-8, finishing second in the West each time. They did not qualify for the playoffs.

The Chargers under Turner and Rivers have faced the Browns once. On Dec. 6, 2009, at Cleveland, they prevailed, 30-23. San Diego improved to 9-3; the Browns fell to 1-11. Rivers was terrific, going 18-of-25 for 373 yards and two touchdowns. Tight end Antonio Gates, a former Kent State basketball standout, caught eight passes for 167 yards.

The Chargers travel to Cleveland with a sticky situation on their hands -- er, towels. Perhaps.

The NFL is investigating whether they used a banned substance on hand towels during the loss to the Broncos. San Diego, which issued a statement saying it is cooperating with the NFL, happens to feature a receiving corps that ranks among league leaders in fewest drops and fewest drops per pass. Turner told ESPN's Ed Werder that the towels, not any substance applied to them, are at issue and that the towels are commonly used around the league.

Offensive overview

rivers-hit-saints-2012-ap.jpg San Diego QB Philip Rivers completes two-thirds of his passes, but has just a 10-9 ratio of touchdowns to interceptions this season.

Turner and Rivers are in charge of a vertical-power scheme. Rivers does not possess textbook throwing mechanics, but he has made them work. His career numbers certainly pass the eye test: 25,777 yards, 173 touchdowns and 94.9 rating since entering the NFL in 2004. He is the most accomplished active full-time quarterback to not own a ring.

This season, he is 139-of-209 (66.5 percent) for 1,492 yards, 10 touchdowns and nine interceptions. His rating is 85.3. The picks also were an issue last year. He threw a career-high 20, which helped dropped his rating below 100.0 (88.7) for the first time in four seasons.

Rivers has been prone to forcing the ball because he believes he can make any throw, especially over the middle. Rivers is fun to watch because he is high-risk, high-reward -- the Brett Favre of the West Coast, preferring to wait until the last possible instant for a play to develop, leaving him vulnerable to the sack (18 this season). Rivers has been better in his three road games -- a combined 69-of-98 for 794 yards, five touchdowns and two interceptions.

Rivers' favorite target is receiver Malcolm Floyd (25 receptions, 418 yards, one touchdown). Gates has caught 19 for 224 yards and two TDs.

When the Chargers need to run, they have a good one in Ryan Mathews, who has rushed for 259 yards on 58 carries and scored once in four games. Jackie Battle has carried 38 times for 176 yards and three TDs. San Diego likes screens and dump-offs, which bring Mathews (17 catches, 131 yards) and Ronnie Brown (20 catches, 172 yards) into play.

Defensive overview

The Chargers use an attacking 3-4 that features three veteran linebackers: LOLB Shaun Phillips (ninth year, all with San Diego), LILB Takeo Spikes (15th year, second with San Diego) and ROLB Jarret Johnson (10th year, first with San Diego). Spikes broke in with Cincinnati and played five years there; Johnson played the previous nine with Baltimore. If there were a precise measurement for football IQ, Spikes would rank among league leaders.

San Diego has limited opposing rushers to a 3.5-yard average on 121 carries. Stopping the pass has been another matter: Opposing quarterbacks are 154-of-233 (66.1 percent) for 1,676 yards, 14 touchdowns and seven picks. In fairness to the secondary, the three QBs who have won are Matt Ryan of Atlanta, Drew Brees of New Orleans and Peyton Manning of Denver. Manning was 13-of-14 for 167 yards in the second half of the monster comeback Oct. 15.

Special teams overview

Kicker Nick Novak replaced injured Nate Kaeding and is 5-of-6 on field goals, with a long of 47. Kaeding was placed on injured reserve. Punter Mike Scifres is averaging 49.9 yards gross and 42.7 net on 24 punts. Scifres ranks fourth in the NFL in gross and net.

Richard Goodman has returned the vast majority of the kicks (17 for 28.0 average) and Eddie Royal the vast majority of the punts (10 for 5.2 average).

On Twitter: @dmansworldpd


Cleveland Browns' Mike Holmgren era analyzed by Mary Kay Cabot and Terry Pluto (video)

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Plain Dealer's Cleveland Browns beat writer Mary Kay Cabot and columnist Terry Pluto look back on Mike Holmgren's three years as president of the Browns. Watch video

BEREA, Ohio -- Plain Dealer's Cleveland Browns beat writer Mary Kay Cabot and columnist Terry Pluto look back on Mike Holmgren's three years as president of the Browns.

Holmgren is retiring after new owner Jimmy Haslam introduced Joe Banner as the new CEO last week.  Holmgren will help with the transition and hopes to aid with the football side for the remainder of the season.

Click here to watch this video on a mobile device

To reach this Plain Dealer videographer: dandersen@plaind.com

On Twitter: @CLEvideos

Rookies move into Cleveland Cavaliers' starting lineup against Pacers

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Cavs coach Byron Scott is still searching for a starting lineup and opted to take a look at this bigger group against the big Pacers.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Rookies Dion Waiters and Tyler Zeller moved into the Cavaliers starting lineup on Tuesday night against Indiana at The Q, joining Kyrie Irving, Alonzo Gee and Anderson Varejao, who moves to power forward.

Cavs coach Byron Scott is still searching for a starting lineup and opted to take a look at this bigger group against the big Pacers. The move leaves rookie center Zeller paired up against All-Star Roy Hibbert.

Scott said regardless of Tuesday's outcome, he still is undecided on his starters. He could retain this group, return to the group that included C.J. Miles instead of Gee and Tristan Thompson instead of Zeller, with Thompson at power forward and Varejao at center. Or he could use another group altogether.

The coach is trying to balance his starters and his second unit.

"I'm trying to play around with it and see what works best for our first unit and our second unit,'' Scott said. "The one thing we want to have is, no matter who's starting, when they come out we want to have that second unit be pretty efficient. If we can get the balance between the two, we feel we can be pretty good.

GolfTEC's Paez gets national honor: NE Ohio Golf Insider

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Nick Paez, 36, was the only area pro named to the Golf Digest list, which is for instructors under the age of 40.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Nick Paez, director of instruction and owner of the GolfTEC Improvement Centers, has been named one of "America's Best Young Teachers" by Golf Digest Magazine.

Paez, 36, was the only area pro named to the list, which is for instructors under the age of 40. Earlier, Paez was named the Northern Ohio PGA teacher of the year. Golf Digest also selected him as one of the top 100 club fitters in the country.

paez-mug-2012-spec.jpgView full sizeGolfTEC Improvement Centers owner Nick Paez.

Paez, whose improvement centers are in North Olmsted, Beachwood and Canton with a fourth to open before the end of the year in Brecksville, has worked with Highland's Jessica Porvasnik, Avon Lake's Niki Schroeder and Magnificat's Cara Kelley, as well as other players of note in the area.

Porvasnik was the Division I state champion, and Schroeder was the runner-up in last week's high school state tournament. Kent State's Kyle Kmiecik and Cleveland State's Andrew Bailey, who was named player of the year in the Horizon League in April, have been Paez pupils.

Never gets old: Bob Miller, who will soon celebrate his 85th birthday and has been one of the area's top amateurs for years, recently astounded several of his playing partners during a round at Westwood. Miller, a two-time Northern Ohio Golf Association senior player of the year and a member of several winning Shaw Cup teams, shot 75, highlighted by a hole-in-one on the 170-yard fourth hole. His partners said Miller hit 12 greens in regulation while playing from the blue tees. It was the eighth hole-in-one of his career.

"We all agreed it was one of the most remarkable performances we've ever seen on a golf course," playing partner Bill Reidy wrote in an email to The Plain Dealer. Mike Crider and Bill Tupa rounded out the foursome.

Last call: Tickets remain for tonight's Northern Ohio Golf Association Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Firestone Country Club. Former British Open champion and NCAA All-American Ben Curtis, Kent State coach Herb Page and long-time amateur and pro Gary Trivisonno will be inducted, and Brian Smith and Norton Brick will be recognized as the NOGA players of the year. It is the second time in the past three years that Smith has earned the award, and the second straight year Brick has been named senior player. Both are members of Oberlin Golf Club, marking the first time in 17 years players from the same club have swept the awards.

Smith, 39, won the individual match play championship and the Tournament of Champions, while earning top-five finishes in nine events. Brick, 59, had eight top-five finishes and won the Northeast Ohio Am champion for the second time in three years and was the medalist in the U.S. Senior Amateur qualifier.

The event begins at 4:30 p.m. Call the NOGA office at 440-686-1070 before 2 p.m. for reservations.

Cleveland Browns president Mike Holmgren's press conference: A transcript

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Mike Holmgren was sitting on his deck in California when he heard the team was being sold. .

BEREA, Ohio ----

Browns President Mike Holmgren Press Conference 10-23-12

(Opening statement) – "I'd like to start off by thanking Randy Lerner, first of all, for giving me the opportunity to come to Cleveland. My year off when he came to visit me in Arizona, he made a very compelling case to come in and try and help the organization. After talking with my wife Kathy, we decided to do that and I referred to it as my last great adventure. During the process, during these three years, I have to say I couldn't have asked any more from an owner than what Randy gave to me. He hired me to do a specific job and in some instances be his surrogate at league meetings and different things, and he was very clear about that. Some of the things that most people didn't get to see I saw firsthand, if not at our weekly lunches, our many, many talks. The passion he had for this city and this team, but as you all know, he was uncomfortable being out front and that's why he asked me to come. I'll be forever grateful about having the opportunity. He forced me to challenge myself in areas of football that I had not been in before, certainly the business side of this organization and the league meetings where I represented him with the other owners in privileged session. It was a tremendous learning experience for me and I think we did a lot of great things here. The tough part and the part that I'll feel bad about is for Randy, I wasn't able to help put a winning product on the field, at least enough yet. He certainly deserved that and that's really what I wanted. While we fixed up a number of things, that was one thing that we haven't been able to fix yet. Now, I think there's light at the end of the tunnel and I'll go into that a little bit later, but thanks again to Randy Lerner. A special guy and I wish him nothing but the best moving forward after this time.

Secondly, I would like to congratulate Jimmy Haslam and his family, and Joe Banner. Jimmy is a special person as well. I knew when he purchased the team that my role was going to change dramatically because Jimmy wants to be more of a hands on owner and do a lot of the things that I was asked to do by Randy. I've known Joe Banner for a long time. When he and Jeffrey Lurie came, and Jeffrey bought the Philadelphia Eagles and Joe became the president there, my good friend Andy Reid became the coach. We've been very close over the years. Jimmy will bring a great enthusiasm. Those of you who have had a chance to talk with him, I'm sure most of you have if not all and right away you see what type of a person he is. He's out front, he's enthusiastic and he has a lot of energy. He wants this to be right, he wants this to go well and he's committed to do that. I don't think there have been many things in his life where he has committed to it that hasn't happened. I think it's a wonderful thing for the city of Cleveland and a great thing for the Browns organization. So congratulations to Jimmy Haslam and Joe Banner.

In the past there have been a few instances where people weren't sure if I was going to honor my contract or the things we've talked about in the past and the rumors that would crop up on occasion. I really want you to know, if you didn't believe me before, I want you to believe me now. Kathy and I, our time in Cleveland has been special. She has been very involved with Catholic Charities and MedWish and the things that she does at our own church, any number of things in the community, that are kind of behind the scenes. We made great friendships here and I could say the same thing. It was always my intention to honor my contract if not more, but this business, at times, things happen and the sale of a football team certainly changes the dynamic and it changed the dynamic for me. My time was shorter than I had hoped, but I understand what happened. I just wish the people that are going to be here well and I will always care about this place and how we've been treated since we've been here. It has been good.

Lastly, before we get into questions, I just want to give a thank you to the people in the organization. Change took place three years ago; we had to make some changes in the organization. This is a tremendous workforce here with the Cleveland Browns. There are people, if you're talking about sales, if you're talking about marketing, if you're talking about guest services, if you're talking about community resources, community relations, any department you're talking about in this building, you have people that care and are very good at their jobs and have been through some tough stuff. There have been a lot of changes in this organization and the veterans who have been through all those changes, they come to work every day with a smile on their face and they're going hard to do their jobs well. I always appreciated that about the people here. It's a good workforce and my hope is that they will all be able to experience the joy of winning. I really think that's going to happen and they deserve it. Our time in Cleveland has been special and we'll have great memories of this place."

(On if he is going to stay until the end of the season) – "Well, when Jimmy and I have talked about this, we talked about a transition period. How that actually sorts itself out moving forward I can't define it so much Tom (Withers) right now. I want to feel like I'm contributing. My emphasis is going to be in the football side of it. I don't have to do the business stuff anymore. If I can help one player be a little better this season or one coach be a little better with some of the things that I know how to do and I feel like I'm contributing, then that could happen. We're just going to take it a day at a time and see how it goes."

(On if he leaves here unfulfilled or disappointed that he couldn't get done what he wanted to get done) – "I think so. I think that's the one thing that, as I said earlier, I so much wanted to put a product on the field and win some games for Randy Lerner. I feel there will be moments down the road where I'll look back and say, 'Shoot, that's the one thing.' I feel real good about a lot of the other things we did, but I wish we had won a few more games. Like I said, I believe now, you've seen the team play this year, you've seen the quarterback play, you know we're young, all those things. If we can keep that together, if they can stay together, there's going to be good times ahead."

(On if he ever went to Randy Lerner and said that using him on the business side of things was somewhat of a detriment to the team because of his extensive football knowledge) – "Early on, I had a lot of thoughts about those types of meetings, the budget all that kind of stuff. I was hired to do a job and I was going to do it, I'm stubborn that way. That's the first thing. The second thing is, my philosophy coming in, and I've talked to you about it before. As far as the head coach was concerned, is that I'm going to help him and support him, but I'm not going to be overbearing. He's coaching the team, I'm not. I tried to balance that the best way I could. To answer your question specifically, no I never did go to Randy and say those things that you mentioned. I'm stubborn enough to say, 'No, I'm going to get this all done and do it this way,' and I tried to do it that way."

(On his initial reaction to Randy Lerner selling the team) – "I remember distinctly. I was sitting on my deck in California about ready to come back here. In fact, it was about a week before that, and he phoned me, and said you might have to come back sooner, or I might have to come out there. We should talk about this. To be honest with you, the initial thing was surprise. Not many of these transactions take place historically just before the start of the season. It has been my experience that they take place in March or something like that. No, I can honestly say I didn't think about where I fit into this whole thing in the beginning, because it was just a phone call. That deserves a chance to sit down and hash through a bunch of stuff before I jump to any conclusions. My initial reaction was just surprise."

(On if at any point he thought there was a job for him here with Jimmy Haslam as owner) – "I don't think so Pat (McManamon), I don't think so. Quite honestly, it hasn't been talked about and I understand that."

(On if he would have accepted the position if he knew the team possibly would be sold within three years) – "You know what? If it's okay with you guys during this thing, I'm not going to get into hypotheticals. I wanted the job. It was an attractive job. I thought it'd be a wonderful challenge for me and it was. I can't answer the question."

(On if he would have accomplished what he set out to do if he had finished his contract) – "I think we're close, I really do. We've been in every ball game this year really, you could say. I think it's going to be okay. No one has a crystal ball with this. The way I looked at it, and the way I've talked to you about it, Eric (Mangini) was here the one year and this is really Pat's (Shurmur) second year. Given the change that we've had and how young we are and stuff, and you throw in the lockout a little bit, which probably skewed things just a little bit. It's still very early in some sort of development program, but I think we've had good drafts and Tom's (Heckert) done a great job in the draft. The question was have we found our quarterback? If you feel okay about that, any of us, then you say, 'Okay, now you got a chance to do this.' I think we have."

(On if he thinks he will be in the way staying here) – "I've thought about that Tom (Withers), honestly. I've talked to Jimmy a lot about this. He has my assurance that I'm not going to rock the boat. I'm not going to get in anyone's way, that way. I still have my office. I got my lunch ticket, my parking space still. The way I presented it to Jimmy and he has been great about it. Joe and I have talked a little bit when he was in here, but not about this. We'll talk when he comes in this week. I think I can help a little bit, but if it gets cumbersome or uncomfortable for anybody, then heck, I don't want that to happen."

(On if he'll give a pitch to Joe Banner about keeping Shurmur and Heckert after the season) – "I haven't talked to Joe about it. I've talked to Jimmy about it a fair amount. Not so much keeping them, just trying to talk to him about it. He's very open. Jimmy, as you might know, he asks a million questions, he wants to learn. We have talked about both those men, but we talk about a lot of stuff. Then it's up to him, it's up to them now to decide what they're going to do. I think he has been very clear, from as much as I can tell, how he plans to handle this. He's going to wait until the end of the season, and then decide on a bunch of stuff. Both Pat and Tom, Jimmy knows what I feel about them. I don't think you can get a better general manager, in my own opinion, than Tom Heckert. I think he's tremendous. (A) Hard working guy, great personality, knows the college players, knows how to put a winning team together. He's very good. Pat is a bright young coach. He hates it when I call him young, a bright new coach, who has had to go through some stuff that not many of us had to go through when we were starting out. I believe in him as well. I talk about that type of thing with Jimmy all the time."

(On how he'd handle it personally if Heckert and Shurmur are let go after season) – "This is a business for adults and grownups. If you're too sensitive about stuff that goes on, then you probably should be doing something else, because change does take place. When there is change, particularly new ownership, there are a lot of things going through people's mind on how to set up a team. I think the value or the advantage that we have now is Joe knows those guys. They worked together. Joe and Tom worked together a long time. Joe and Pat, who was at Philadelphia, they know one another. I believe Joe said last week, he likes them all. He respects them all and likes them all. They'll be judged. The judgment comes after the seasons over, and they sit down and decide how they want to do it."

(On how he will be recognized for his time with the Browns record being 10-29) – "That's not very good. I know what we tried to do, and I know how we foundationally were trying to build the team. That I know. Philosophically, I wouldn't change that. I wouldn't. I think that's the way you build a team, if you have time to do it. The record speaks for itself, and I think ultimately people are judged on how many games you win. There's a lot more that goes into, as I learned, a lot more that goes into an organization than that, although that's the thing that people look at. There are some things I feel very good about what we did here. We didn't win enough games though. We did not win enough games. I'm hoping that table is set. I'm hoping that table is set for the future."

(On if he wasted a year keeping Eric Mangini) – "You know what? I don't think so. I've been asked that before. I don't think so. I think when I made the decision to keep Eric, I thought a lot about that. I just felt it wasn't fair to give a guy only one year. I don't think that's fair. Hopefully, I'll always make my decisions, any decisions I make, whether it's as president of the Browns or disciplining my children, or whatever, with a sense of fairness mixed in there. It was a big decision, but Eric's a good man. He is a good man. I just didn't think it was right to just to have him have one year. That's why I did it."

(On if he had more of a say on the quarterbacks drafted) – "I think that's a very good question and it's fair. I don't think my imprint was any heavier. Tom Heckert is our general manager and he along with the head coach and then I have some input. Really, those two guys, they're going to make football decisions, personnel decisions for the most part. I'd gone through that before. You experiment, you take chances, you hope, (and) then you find the guy. Then you go. In our case here, when I first got here, I was fairly certain of the quarterbacks here. I wasn't the lone ranger, but the quarterbacks who were here probably couldn't get it done for you. That's what the feeling was. Then we were without a quarterback. We had no quarterback. We thought it was important that we get a veteran, Jake Delhomme, we signed him. (We) started off; remember in the preseason, everyone was happy with how Jake was doing. Unfortunately, he got hurt in the first game or second game, whenever he got hurt. Seneca Wallace, I thought we did that, because he had been with me, he was familiar. I was familiar with him, more familiar. As a backup quarterback, I thought he was as good as you could get in the league because of his running ability; he throws the ball very well. That's what went into that. We were going to draft a quarterback every year as long as I was here, and Tom was here, where on the draft, we weren't sure. That's how we did it with Colt (McCoy), if you remember. We had him there, he was third round, wasn't a first round pick, but a third round pick. We said let's go. Colt had some really nice moments on the field and now, we're here with (Brandon) Weeden. Every one of those quarterbacks had a story. Yeah, I contributed to the selection, but I was just probably a smaller part of that."

(On Shurmur having awkward moments with media and how he's doing overall) – "Well fortunately, I never made a bad call, and I never had awkward moments with the media (jokingly). I think it's part of being a new coach, a new head coach, Pat, I do. I think every head coach has to come to grips with this at some point. Otherwise it's too hard. I have to recognize, or the coach has to recognize, that you guys have a job to do. I'm asking you to recognize that I have a job to do and let's work together. I think that's the best way to do it. You cannot (be) condescending to you guys. At the same time, the coach is asking for reliability and certain honesty from you guys. Once you get there, when you get there, then it's good. When you're winning, it's kind of easier and stuff like that. That has to happen. I'm not in the press conferences, I rarely see them. I don't do that. I know that Pat is an honest guy. He has a little bit of an Irish temper, but he wants to do the right stuff, he really does. There's a learning curve there I think for everybody, I think. I think both sides are learning about each other. As far as the calls and stuff like that, you cannot be a head coach in this league or a head coach anywhere, and be too sensitive to that. You just can't be, because it's going to happen. It happens. Close games and we've played a bunch of close games. It's going to come up, it happens. Saying you're not going to be sensitive about it and not being sensitive about it are two different things. It's easier to say than do, but that's also something you have to learn. He and I talked about it a fair amount. I know he cares a lot. He is absolutely attempting to do the right thing. I believe in him."

(On if he believes in Shurmur as much now as when he was hired) – "Yes."

(On if he's leaving the team with the quarterback of the future with Weeden) – "I think so Mary (Kay Cabot), I really do. I think Brandon's off to a good start in my opinion. He's an excellent passer. I like how he leads. People don't cut him quite as much slack because he's 29, but he's still a rookie. This is his first crack at playing against NFL teams and it's different than college. I think he has done very well and I just think there's a bright future. I think we've, the organization has found their quarterback."

(On what he plans to do next) – "Depending on where I am and the weather, I'm going to ride my motorcycle a lot. Perhaps go to the beach a little bit, go to Hawaii. I don't know. I'm leaving it open, I'm leaving it open. I said this was my last great adventure. I thought it was going to be longer, so we'll see what happens."

(On if he would work in football) – "Yeah, I would think so. Right now, I want to take one step at a time, one day at a time. My first goal is to, if I can, is to help this team and these coaches this season. Then, I'm going to sit back and catch my breath and look around a little bit and see what happens."

(On if he would coach again) – "I don't know. I know this; I've learned a lot of things in the last three years. One of the things that I thought I knew, but now I'm sure, I do miss the coaching part of it. I really do."

(On if he thought about coming back to coach the team after firing Mangini) – "I thought about it, I did. I think I had mentioned at the time, I asked when we were compiling the list of candidates I asked the selection committee, the guys that were involved in that, Heckert and those guys. I said, 'You don't have to say yes, but tell me tomorrow should I be on the list?' I asked them that. I don't know if they were afraid to come in and say, 'Are you kidding? An old guy like you, you shouldn't be on that list.' Then it also gave me a chance that evening to think about it a little bit more. I did what I did."

(On why the team can't win close games) – "I think you have to learn how to win those. You have to learn how to win those. Until you do, win a couple of them, it's hard. Whatever's in the mind of a player, whatever's in the mind of a coach, you're human. You start to go, here we are again. You want to say we're going to win this close one. Until you start doing that a little bit, it's not as easy as you think. When you do, if you have the talent, and you get to do that a little bit, that's when the momentum changes, and that's when you start winning close games, and that's when it takes off. I think we are like that close. We are that close. I know it's hard. I know it's frustrating when you lose a close game. When you win a couple, when you start winning a couple, then you go into the huddle at the end of the game, and you go 'We're going to do this.' Everybody on the sideline, everybody in the huddle, you might not always do it, but you believe you're going to do it. The classic example to me was the Super Bowl in 1988 when we beat Cincinnati. (Joe) Montana, the (San Francisco) 49ers we got the ball on the eight-yard line, with something, a minute to go, and there wasn't anybody in that huddle that didn't think 'Okay, we're just going to do this.' They had won a lot. That'll happen, that will happen. It's hard right now. My heart breaks for those guys, because I know how hard they're working, and it's so close. Heck, we were a catch away or a yard away from winning a couple ball games this year."

 

(On if he has changed his position on the playoff tickets) – "Pat (McManamon), I'm glad you brought that up. Neal (Gulkis) and I were talking, doing a little bit of prep for this and he goes, 'You know someone is going to ask you about that.' You didn't tell me it was going to be him (McManamon). I choose most often not to look back in this business. I think it's a healthy thing to decide not to do that. On that particular issue, I will say I broke Holmgren's rule #5 that day, because I came into the press conference and I was mad, I was angry. I wasn't angry at you guys, I was just angry at the situation we were in. I (had) just met with the league attorneys, doctors and all that stuff and I kind of saw where that whole thing was going. I came in here and it wasn't my proudest moment and when I said that I apologized to you. I shouldn't have said it. I pride myself in having more poise than that and I didn't, I snapped. So, because I have confessed this to you, may I phone you for tickets when the time comes? May I do that?"

(On if his time here has hurt his Hall of Fame chances) – "I think there are a lot of things out of your control. I'll analyze, not necessarily that specifically, but I'll analyze the excitement. I was excited too. This is a great opportunity for me and in talking with a lot of folks and at times with some of you. There was some feeling that I'd coach. I think some of the excitement; I could be wrong, some of the excitement of people that I talked to was that I was going to coach, name myself Head Coach and off you go. I didn't do that. Then, what I learned is as the President what happens on the field on Sunday, you have no control over really. You're just watching. I'm watching like you're watching. Whereas when I was coaching I always thought there was some way I could fix this, I could get this going the right way. That's just the nature of the job. I'm glad people were excited, I was excited, and I feel badly we weren't able to deliver more on the field while I was here. I also honest to goodness feel there are good times ahead soon and I'll be rooting hard for this group from wherever I am in the next couple of years because I think it will happen."

(On if he felt the criticism about him during his tenure as President was fair and where does he think it came from) – "I don't know where it came from. I don't think it's fair. The only thing that I have changed about my workday is when, and she's going to get mad at me for saying this, but when Kathy had cancer, I changed. I was coaching at the time and even then, I changed my workday. Instead of coming in early, we have a routine. We work out together, we have a cup of coffee, we have little devotional in the morning, talk about it and then I come to work. I'll stay later, but in the morning that was my routine. There are a lot of coaches that come in; I have good friends that come in at 5:00 a.m. That's just how I chose to do it. I always thought if you have really capable people that you've hired, that anything between 5:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m., if they want to get up at 5:00 a.m. they can handle it and talk to me about it at 9:00 a.m. My effort, I don't know where that came from. I don't think it's particularly fair. I have never slept at the office as a coach. I always try to get home for dinner at least later in the week. Now early in the week, you're working late, but later in the week I try to get home. I have four daughters and I try to get home for dinner with them and check out how they were doing. That's how I chose to do it. When I was here, 100% of me was here. Every part of me was here, so I don't feel I have to apologize for anything that way."

(On if he regrets not naming himself head coach after firing Mangini) – "You make a decision. I thought about it. If I just carelessly did one thing or another without thinking about it, then you might be able to say well maybe, but I thought a lot about it. What I was willing to do, what I wasn't willing to do, who I thought I could hire. At that particular time, I wasn't ready to do it again. I didn't want to do it. I thought I'd be short-changing the organization. It's not that I didn't think about it, I did, but I made the decision and full speed ahead."

(On if he was able to define his own job) – "I think so, that's fair."

(On if he wishes his job was a little more defined for him) – "I don't know. If I were to change anything, it would be one of our last press conferences together. I told you I got the feeling people wanted me to be more out front and visible and talk about stuff even though I wasn't the coach. I had reasons, we've talked about his before, I had reasons why I didn't want to do it, but I was going to do it. I heard, I listened finally and I was going to do it. That might have been one thing that I maybe would have done differently early, but I didn't know, I really didn't know that's what was wanted, one. Two, I didn't want to; in any way overshadow the coach. That still makes no sense to me at all. He's the coach, it's his football team really, let me help him. I thought I was doing the right thing. In retrospect, maybe if I could have been out there a little bit more without getting anybody real sensitive about anything maybe I would have done that."

(On if there will be a setback because new people are being brought into the organization) – "I think anytime you have change, dramatic change, all of a sudden any momentum you had moving forward probably stalls a little bit. Probably, I think it's natural. How fast you can get rolling again and moving, but ultimately, it's about the players we have. I think we have some good young players. I believe we have a good core; we're getting a bigger core. If they can deal with the change and if they can deal with whatever, then we can continue moving. I think from a player's perspective, you see it all the time in the league, and you've written it, some of you have written it I'm sure. You talk about a quarterback you think is pretty good, whomever, then you say, 'But now he has his third coordinator in four years,' or words to that effect. You go, it's not quite working the way we thought, but that's kind of a reason, but that's real. The teams that are most successful have continuity to them on their coaching staff and in their organization. I heard Joe Banner say this the other day and I've heard Jimmy say it and they agree with that too. It's kind of like when do you start that. I think yeah, the more continuity you can have, the more chance you have of moving forward with the people you have."

(On how he would define his tenure with the Browns) – "I think I was asked to and I think we've fixed a number of problems in the organization. If we wanted to list some things I could do that and feel good about it. Our won-loss record, which is what football teams exist for, hasn't been good. Say what you want and I think there have been some unusual circumstances, but it hasn't been very good. I would hope that if the current team and what we've built so far now has some success moving forward, I hope people will feel a little bit better about our time. I think it has been a three-year period fixing things. Unfortunately, some of those close games that were mentioned earlier, if we could have won half a dozen of some of those close games it would be a little painful right now."

(On if it is frustrating because things are starting to come together for the team and he will not be a part of it) – "Yeah, but if and when the teams does well, like I said I will be its biggest fan. I won a lot of games in this league as a coach and I feel good about those. (I) lost some that were tough. I will feel good and be happy for whoever's here. I will be happy for you guys. Some of you are really crabby all the time. I'll be really happy for you and then I'll be happy for the new ownership, I'll be happy for the players, the coaches. I'll feel good about that and I'll think maybe we all had a little something to do with that. I'll feel good about that"

(On if not ending this on his own terms will make him more compelled to find something where he can) – "You certainly hope so. I'm not sure who gets to do that. I think that's everyone's wish, but I'm not sure how many people get to do. I'm going to just catch my breath a little bit at the end of the season. Like I said, I think Kathy and I are going to go someplace where it's warm, with those little drinks with the umbrellas in it and then kind of think about what the future is all about. I think that's fair to her, certainly, and I want to make good decisions moving forward."

Byron Scott happy with another week to prepare: Cleveland Cavaliers Insider

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Cavs coach, player differ on whether having another week to prepare for the regular season is a good thing.

byron scott.jpgCavaliers coach Byron Scott is happy he has another week to prepare his team for the regular season.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cavaliers have an entire week before opening the regular season at home against Washington on Oct. 30.

Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing depends on whom you ask.

"I love the way it's set up this year," coach Byron Scott said. "After [Tuesday], we've got seven more days to work. We can try to get all the little things we need to get down pat. It's not like we only get a couple days then, boom, we're right back playing.

"The schedule we have when we start playing is going to be a monster anyway, so the more practice time we have right now the better for us, especially with how young we are. Now if we were a veteran team, then I would hate this schedule because you want to play. Guys already know the system and know everything that's going on. But our young team right now, we need as much practice time as we can get right now."

Count C.J. Miles as one of those veterans who's ready to go -- even though he is still learning the system.

"For a player, it's too long, but for a coach it's great," Miles said with a smile. "If you're a player, you're anxious to play. Coaches are happy, because after taking that real-game approach in the last preseason game, they can see what we really need to buckle in on. As a player, you're ready to get started. You've been waiting all summer, then a month, then you're ready to play."

Social studies: Rookie Dion Waiters watched the debate between President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney on Monday night, and engaged his followers on Twitter throughout the evening.

"I think it's just important to watch to learn things," Waiters said. "I never watched a debate before. I thought it was good to do, see how they went at it and voiced their opinions."

Waiters asked his followers who they thought won.

"A lot of people said Obama," said Waiters, who did admit to sneaking an occasional peek at the Monday Night Football game between the Lions and Bears. "It was up in the air. It was intriguing to me to talk to the fans and ask them what they think."

Scott watched a bit of the debate, then went to the movies to see "Looper."

"It wasn't a bad movie," the coach said. "I've seen better."

He's also seen worse recently -- Paranormal Activity 4. "It was terrible," he said with a smile.

On the clock: Guard Daniel Gibson, who missed Monday's game with a mild concussion, said the Cavs are aware they have to speed up their convoluted pre-game routine, since the NBA has now put all teams on a 90-second clock pre-game. The Cavs received a delay of game penalty last week against Washington for taking to long to report for the opening tip.

"We do a lot pregame," Gibson said with a smile. "We are a squad over here. We have handshakes we do. We have to shorten them up."

On Twitter: @pdcavsinsider

Cleveland Browns' 100 best all-time players: No. 64, John Morrow (video)

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Morrow, at center, was part of the great offensive line that helped the Browns win the 1964 title.

ryan-morrow-wooten.jpg Browns quarterback Frank Ryan, protected by the blocking of center John Morrow (56) and guard John Wooten (60), delivers a pass during Cleveland's 52-20 rout of the Giants on Dec. 12, 1964 at New York's Yankee Stadium.


CLEVELAND, Ohio -- A countdown of the top 100 players in Cleveland
Browns history. Players must have spent at least four seasons with the
Browns. The ranking is based only on players' careers with the Browns.



No. 64, John Morrow, center, 1960-66



Center John Morrow was a superb pass blocker, who could open holes up the middle for the Browns' running game and had the speed to get outside and downfield to help spring Cleveland's backs.



Art Hunter made the Pro Bowl as the Browns' center in 1959, but prior to the 1960 campaign, Cleveland traded him to Los Angeles for Morrow, who had played three seasons for the Rams -- the last two as a starter. Art Hunter, by the way, was born in Fairport Harbor, east of Cleveland in Lake County, and attended St. Vincent (now St. Vincent-St. Mary) High School in Akron.



Morrow didn't miss a game for the Browns until he suffered a leg injury in the eighth game of the 1966 season. At age 33, he didn't play again.



Morrow made the Pro Bowl in the 1961 and 1963 seasons. He was just as good a player in 1964 -- when the Browns won their last championship with a 27-0 rout of the Baltimore Colts -- and in 1965 -- when Cleveland again got to the title game but lost, 23-12, to the Green Bay Packers.



The Browns' great running back, Jim Brown, led the NFL in rushing in eight (1957-61, 1963-65) of his nine seasons, playing his last six campaigns with Morrow at center.



(The Browns' all-time top 100 players so far)



Video: From the 1961 Browns' highlights film, introduced by Jim Graner, the analyst for the team's radio broadcasts, and announced by Browns' television play-by-play voice Ken Coleman. John Morrow (56) is at center for Cleveland, in wins over the Cardinals and Redskins and a loss to the Packers. Also, a visit to Cleveland Stadium by Browns' greats from the 1940s and 50's:



Cleveland men's tennis team finishes second at USTA national league championships

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The men's 4.5 team from Cleveland, which plays at the University School Upper Campus, falls to Southern California team after advancing through the national tournament.

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. – The men’s tennis team from Cleveland, representing the USTA Midwest Section, finished second at the USTA League 4.5 Senior National Championships held at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden here.

The Cleveland team lost to a team from Fountain Valley, Calif., 3-0, in the championship match. Earlier, the Cleveland team had defeated a team from Danville, Calif., 2-1, in the semifinals. They had reached that point by winning their round-robin flight contested Friday and Saturday.

The team is captained by Robert Flacks and features Steve Mazak, James Littman, Eric Schott, John Lilly, Michael Sandercock, Mark Mollison, Greg Aten, Lawrence Dister, Steve Baggett, Rich Frey. The team plays at the University School Upper Campus.

This year’s USTA League 4.5 Senior National Championship has drawn the top 32 teams (16 men’s and 16 women’s) from throughout the nation. The league groups players by using six National Tennis Rating Program levels, ranging from 2.5 (entry) to 5.0 (advanced). This year marks the 32nd anniversary of USTA League.

Since its inception in 1980, it has grown from 13,000 participants in its first year, to over 835,000 players across the nation today, making it the world’s largest recreational tennis league.


Penn State shares Ohio State's no-huddle offense, but without the big plays

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Both Ohio State and Penn State use no-huddle offenses, but in very different ways.

mcgloin-psu-pass-iowa-2012-ap.jpg Penn State quarterback Matt McGloin has led an efficient Lions offense this season -- often from the no-huddle but without the big-play threats that Ohio State possesses.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Think the Ohio State offense can move quickly? Get a look at Penn State's NASCAR offense, the name the Nittany Lions call their no-huddle.

Saturday's showdown in State College between the No. 9 Buckeyes (8-0, 4-0 Big Ten) and the Nittany Lions (5-2, 3-0) will feature two no-huddle offenses that can be similar in tempo but share few other commonalities.

"At the end of the day, the no-huddle offense has really been around since the beginning of time," Penn State coach Bill O'Brien said. "No one invented this."

But both O'Brien and Urban Meyer, with the help of offensive coordinator Tom Herman, have refined their offensive styles in their own way. O'Brien did it as an assistant at Georgia Tech, Maryland with the New England Patriots, while Meyer developed his through head jobs at Bowling Green, Utah and Florida before pushing the tempo more than ever in Columbus.

O'Brien commands a pro-style offense that works the middle of the field with an efficient, veteran quarterback in Matt McGloin who offers almost no run threat. But he does what O'Brien wants.

"Number one is he's smart," O'Brien said. "He has a really good brain and he understands things. Number two is he's very, very competitive and tough."

Meyer runs his spread offense through the arms and legs of sophomore Braxton Miller, the most dynamic athlete Meyer has ever coached. Miller was hurt Saturday, and Meyer said before practice Tuesday that Miller's neck was still sore. But the plan is still for Miller to play. So how do the offenses compare?

Volume: Penn State averages 79 plays per game, tied for the most in the Big Ten, and ran 99 against Northwestern two weeks ago and 90 against Iowa last week. Ohio State averages just under 70 per game, seventh in the Big Ten, with a high of 86 in the opener against Miami (Ohio). Penn State gets more done.

Big plays: This isn't close. Ohio State has seven offensive plays of 50 yards or more this season. Penn State has none. Ohio State has 22 plays of 30 yards or move, while Penn State has seven.

With their 41 plays of 20 yards or more, the Buckeyes average 5.1 big plays per game, and that yardage accounts for 39.2 percent of the total offense. With 30 plays of 20 yards or more, the Nittany Lions average 3.3 big plays, accounting for 22.5 percent of their offense.

Overall, Ohio State averages 6.3 yards per play, third in the Big Ten, while Penn State averages 5.1, which is ninth.

Consistency: So the Buckeyes are much more likely to hit a defense with a big play. The Nittany Lions can grind out more methodical drives. Penn State converts a little more on third down, 45.7 percent to 43.9, and McGloin has a slightly higher completion percentage that Miller, 62.6 percent to 58.7. McGloin has thrown 14 touchdowns and two interceptions, compared to 11 and five for Miller, and overall Penn State is plus-8 in turnover margin, best in the conference, while Ohio State is plus-1.

Penn State has 30 scoring drives this season, which average 56.7 yards, 8.4 plays and 3:16. Ohio State has 41 scoring drives in regulation (not counting the untimed overtime touchdown against Purdue), and average 62.7 yards, 6.7 plays and 2:38.

Balance: Penn State is throwing for 257 yards per game and running for 149. Ohio State is throwing for 189 and running for 250. The Buckeyes are a little closer to balanced.

Overall: Penn State is putting up 406 yards and 29 points per game. Ohio State is averaging 439 yards and 39 points.

Also: While Miller did practice Tuesday, Meyer said the Buckeyes will prepare backup Kenny Guiton to play as a precaution. ... Defensive lineman John Simon was named one of 20 national semifinalists for the Lott Award, a defensive award won in 2008 by James Laurinaitis. ... If the Buckeyes were eligible for the BCS standings, they would probably be ninth in the current standings, down from No. 7 a week ago, according to a Plain Dealer approximation using the real BCS computer ratings and the AP poll.

Cleveland Cavaliers' new starters can't keep pace with Indiana, 100-82

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Rookie center Tyler Zeller plays well against against All-Star Roy Hibbert in Cavaliers' exhibition finale.

thompson-cavs-horiz-pacers-ldj.jpgView full sizeCavaliers forward Tristan Thompson struggles to find some room between two Indiana defenders during Tuesday night's exhibition game at The Q.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Tyler Zeller sensed he might be starting on Tuesday night against Indiana when the Cavaliers' rookie center started practicing with the first unit this week. Then he went out and looked as if he belonged there, finishing with 13 points and seven rebounds against All-Star Roy Hibbert in a 100-82 loss to the Indiana Pacers in the Cavs preseason finale Tuesday night at The Q.

Kyrie Irving scored 20 points, and Alonzo Gee added 18 as the Cavs finished the preseason 3-4. David West had 15 points and eight rebounds for the Pacers, 4-2. They will play one more preseason game against the Chicago Bulls on Friday at Notre Dame.

Cavs coach Byron Scott, still searching for a starting group he likes, went way outside the box on Tuesday, starting Zeller and fellow rookie Dion Waiters, along with Irving, Gee and Anderson Varejao, who moved back to his natural power forward spot with Zeller at center. It was an effort to counter the Pacers' size, Scott said, but also an attempt to try different combinations and even out his starting lineup and his first unit off the bench.

Perhaps the fact that nobody's spot seems to be safe -- well, except for Irving and Varejao -- spurred some spirited play from the bench as well as the new starters. But with the Cavs shooting just 36.8 percent in the first half, they trailed the Pacers, 51-45.

Though Indiana pulled out to a 59-47 lead in the third quarter, the new starters got Cleveland back within 59-55 on a basket by Zeller with 7:42 left. Shortly thereafter he drew a charge from Hibbert, got fouled on the other end by West and made two free throws to keep the Cavs within 63-61. By the end of the third quarter, the Pacers led, 78-71, and they just continued to pull away in the fourth.

Strongsville snaps Magnificat's volleyball district dominance

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STRONGSVILLE, Ohio -- There's been a large shadow looming over Northeast Ohio volleyball for a long time. How long? Try 25 years, which is how long it's been since Magnificat has not won a district championship. But the streak came to an end Tuesday, as top-seeded Strongsville used inspired team play and great leadership from its lone senior to...

STRONGSVILLE, Ohio -- There's been a large shadow looming over Northeast Ohio volleyball for a long time. How long? Try 25 years, which is how long it's been since Magnificat has not won a district championship.

But the streak came to an end Tuesday, as top-seeded Strongsville used inspired team play and great leadership from its lone senior to topple the Blue Streaks in a thrilling five-set match. The district semifinal at Strongsville High School ended with scores of 24-26, 25-16, 25-23, 24-26, 15-5.

"This is amazing," said senior Marissa Hicar, who led the Mustangs to their 20th victory of the season. "I can't think of a better high. The record that they had ... the presence that they had over all the other teams. It was time to break it and we did."

The teams have met four times since 2006 in the district final, but this has been a difficult season for the young Blue Streaks, who ended up 12-12. Coach Mike Cannon said the winning streak is not a topic of conversation within the team, but his charges played as if they knew something significant was on the line.

"We really don't talk about it," said Cannon, who has been Magnificat's coach for about half of the streak. "I try to keep my kids kind of grounded. Every year we start over."

Hicar, whom coach Erick Sopata called the team's rock, had 9.5 blocks, six kills and three aces and was a presence at the net all night. The 6-footer more than doubled her season's average of blocks and served three of the final four points of the match, including two aces.

"I was on fire," she admitted. "I think I was just so zoned in. We all were because we really wanted to win."

The only set that involved any separation of the teams was the second, which saw Hicar record six blocks as the Mustangs jumped to a 17-9 lead and then upped it to 23-12. As was the case the entire match, Strongsville scored many of its points when Rachael Dohar was serving. Overall the junior scored 24 points on serve and recorded one ace.

The fifth set was anticlimactic, with Dohar serving the Mustangs to a 4-0 lead. Soon it was 8-1, and for all intents and purposes, the streak was over.

"We've played them so many times in districts and they've always gotten the upper hand," Sopata said. "We just had to trust and believe in ourselves. In the past we've had to convince the girls that they could play with Magnificat, but not this year. Really, this whole season has been an unexpected surprise for us. The girls play without fear."

Strongsville faces Northeast Ohio Conference rival North Royalton Thursday in the district championship. The teams shared the conference title with Solon and split their two matches both last year and this year.

Joe Magill is a freelance writer based in Parma Heights.

 

Ex-Indian Jhonny Peralta on the World Series spotlight: 'I've never worried about pressure'

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Jhonny Peralta, two and a half years after being traded to Detroit by the Indians, is in the World Series. His lone desire? Turn up the volume, because he likes it loud.

peralta-hrreax-yanks-2012-alcs-mct.jpgView full size"In the postseason a lot of guys feel pressure," says ex-Indian Jhonny Peralta, who hit .389 in the AL Championship Series against New York, with two homers. "I've never worried about pressure."

SAN FRANCISCO -- Jhonny Peralta is church-mouse quiet, but when it comes to baseball he likes it loud.

He grew up that way.

"I'm from the Dominican Republic and I've played a lot of baseball there," said Peralta on Tuesday. "The baseball there is always loud. I like it loud."

In baseball, loud is another way of saying pressure, which is another way of saying postseason. Peralta likes all three.

The Tigers and Giants play Game 1 of the 108th World Series on Wednesday night at AT&T Park with Justin Verlander facing San Francisco left-hander Barry Zito. Peralta is one of the reasons the Tigers, after a dull regular season, beat Oakland in five games in the ALDS and swept the Yankees in the ALCS.

Peralta hit .294 (5-for-17) in the ALDS and .389 (7-for-18) with two homers and three RBI in the ALCS. Defensively, he's played a smooth shortstop all season, but was especially good in Game 2 against the Yankees.

This is the same Peralta that Indians fans grew bored with over his 7 1/2 years at Progressive Field. Many still don't think he has the range to play shortstop and that he can't get a hit when it counts. Yet here he is in the World Series for the first time in his career.

"This is a fantastic feeling," he said.

Peralta's fondness for the postseason started in 2007 with the Indians. He hit .467 (7-for-15) with two RBI as the Indians upset the Yankees in the ALDS. In the ALCS vs. Boston, a series the Indians lost in seven games, Peralta hit .259 (7-for-27) with two homers and eight RBI.

"In the postseason a lot of guys feel pressure," said Peralta, who struggled in the regular season. "I've never worried about pressure."

The Indians traded Peralta to the Tigers on July 28, 2010 for minor-league pitcher Giovanni Soto because they had no intention of exercising his $7 million club option for 2011. By that time, they'd already moved him to third base to make room for Asdrubal Cabrera. Shortly after Peralta went to the Tigers, manager Jim Leyland moved him back to shortstop.

"I've played shortstop forever," said Peralta. "I feel comfortable there. When the Tigers moved me back to shortstop, I felt good.

"When I started in Cleveland, I was a rookie. Now I know how to play the position. You don't have to be quick. A lot of people talk about range. Range is important, but you need to know the hitters and pitchers and where to play."

Peralta, 30, had the second-best fielding percentage (.988) among AL shortstops this year. He went 75 straight games without an error (June 21-Sept. 18) during the regular season. It was the longest single-season errorless streak by a Tiger since at least 1957.

"The more I play, the more I learn," he said.

Jhonny Peralta talks after Tigers sweep the Yankees


The Tigers enter the World Series on five days rest following their sweep of the Yankees. The Giants needed a seven-game series against the Cardinals to clinch the NL pennant with a 9-0 victory Monday. Detroit's sweep allowed Leyland to set his rotation with Verlander, Doug Fister, Anibal Sanchez and Max Scherzer. Verlander, 3-0 this postseason, is scheduled to make two starts in the first five games of the best-of-seven series.

"When Verlander pitches, he usually makes it an easy day on the infielders," said Peralta. "He strikes a lot of guys out. The best thing about him is that he has a chance to win every game he starts."

Verlander, 17-8 in the regular season, has 25 strikeouts in 24 1/3 innings in the postseason. He led the big leagues with 239 strikeouts in 238 1/3 innings.

Giants manager Bruce Bochy can't pitch his top two starters, Ryan Vogelsong and Matt Cain, until Games 3 and 4 because he needed them to complete their rally from a 3-1 deficit against St. Louis. Zito, 15-8 in the regular season, beat St. Louis in Game 5 on Friday.

On Twitter: @hoynsie

Giants put Lincecum in bullpen; Tigers ponder Valverde's role: World Series Insider

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Pitching decisions ruled the day Tuesday in preparation for the World Series.

lincecum-2012-nlcs-horiz-ap.jpgView full sizeLargely ineffective in the latter part of the season, former Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum will be working out of the bullpen for the Giants in the World Series.

SAN FRANCISCO -- Tim Lincecum didn't make the World Series rotation for the Giants. Then again the two-time Cy Young winner hasn't been himself this season.

On the Tigers' end of the pitching spectrum, manager Jim Leyland said Tuesday he still doesn't know who his closer is going to be with the 108th World Series opening Wednesday night at AT&T Park.

Lincecum went 10-15 with a 5.18 ERA in 33 starts during the regular season. He's 1-1 with a 3.46 ERA this postseason, but has made only one start. Manager Bruce Bochy made the call to skip Lincecum in favor of Madison Bumgarner, who has not pitched since Game 1 of the NLCS. Bumgarner will start Game 2 on Thursday night against Doug Fister. Pitching coach Dave Righetti and Bumgarner have been working on his delivery.

Bochy said the conversation with Lincecum was not easy.

"It's one of the most difficult things you have to do as a manager, particularly when you're talking to a star player ... someone who has won a Cy Young for you and has been out there all year for you. Then you have to tell him you're going to go another way as far as the postseason."

Bochy says Lincecum helps the bullpen because he can pitch two or three innings at a time. "He can be a long guy if you're forced to pinch hit for your starter or even a short guy if you need a big out," he said.

The Tigers have been working without a regular closer since Jose Valverde allowed a pair of two-run homers to Ichiro Suzuki and Raul Ibanez in the ninth inning of Game 1 of the ALCS. Leyland used lefty Phil Coke for saves in Game 2 and 3. He even used him to finish Game 4 despite a big lead over the Yankees.

"I'm just going to play it by ear and see what happens," said Leyland.

Valverde, perfect in 49 save situations in 2011, saved 35 games during the regular season this year. He has one save in the postseason and a 27.00 ERA (seven earned runs in 2 1/3 innings). The opposition is hitting .500 against him.

"We'll just see how the game plays out and who's coming up," said Leyland. "Like I always say, I hope we have that to worry about. If we do, we'll come up with somebody."

Coke matched up well against the Yankees because they have so many left-handed hitters. The Giants don't lean that heavily toward the right.

"I haven't heard anything," said Valverde. "I'm just going to be ready to pitch every day."

Coke, not counting the postseason, has six career saves. He remembered his first as being a painful experience.

"I was with the Yankees in 2009 and they sent me out there for a second inning against the Twins," he said. "I pitch on adrenaline and that only lasts so long. I felt like the wheels were coming off, but I finally got Mike Redmond out.

"I was exhausted. I walked over to Mariano Rivera after the game and told him, 'You're a lot better at this than I am.'"

Coke says he's tried hard to control his intensity in his new role.

"The harder I try, the more I stink," he said. "When I allow myself to just let it happen, I allow myself to succeed."

Coke said he's looking forward to the off-season to watch some game tape of his performance in the ALCS.

"I want to see it so I can remember what happened," he said. "There are at-bats that I don't remember."

Second time around: Detroit's Justin Verlander will be appearing in his second World Series on Wednesday when he starts Game 1. He went 0-2 with a 5.73 ERA for the Tigers against St. Louis in 2006.

"It was my rookie year and everything was kind of a whirlwind," said Verlander. "I don't think I really appreciated how hard it is to get there.

"I think I had a rude awakening in the years after that and it allows me to appreciate this opportunity all the more."

Finally: During the Tigers' five-day wait following their sweep in the ALCS, their hitters faced their own pitchers to stay sharp. The Tigers also played a couple of games against their Florida Instructional League team at Comerica Park.

Leyland said they even talked about going to their spring training site in Lakeland, Fla., to play some games if the weather turned bad. In 2006, the Tigers went through the same kind of wait, but bad weather in Detroit hurt their ability to stay sharp.

On Twitter: @hoynsie

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