Quantcast
Channel: Cleveland Sports News
Viewing all 53367 articles
Browse latest View live

Manti Te'o story links: What they're saying about his story of the deceased girlfriend being revealed as a hoax

$
0
0

Links to stories in reaction to the bizarre situation involving Note Dame's star linebacker.


CLEVELAND, Ohio -- News broke on Thursday night that Notre Dame linebacker Manti Teo's story that he had a girlfriend die in September was a hoax.

The bizarre story continues to make headlines.

Cleveland.com features several stories and commentaries on the Te'o story, and a poll asking fans if they would want Te'o to play for the Browns if they could acquire him. The Browns are scheduled to have the sixth pick in the first round of April's draft. Barring a trade, they won't select again until the sixth pick in the third round. Prior to Teo's subpar performance in Notre Dame's 42-14 loss to Alabama in the national championship game, some analysts felt he would be among the first 10 picks in the first round. His showing against Alabama hurt his draft status, however, and the current controversy might damage it more.

Deadspin.com on Thursday carried the report by Timothy Burke and Jack Dickey that revealed Te'o's story to be a hoax.

ESPN.com reports on what a former teammate, who wishes to remain anonymous, says about the Te'o story:

While not saying that Manti Te'o participated in or knew about the hoax that his girlfriend did not exist, a former teammate told ESPN's Bob Holtzman on Wednesday that players knew the woman wasn't really his girlfriend even though Te'o played that up as his tragic story was being told.

In September, the grandmother of Te'o died, and it was widely reported that his girlfriend died hours later. Media outlets pounced on the story as Notre Dame began its march to the title game. After Deadspin.com broke the hoax story, however, multiple media reports have said players thought that Te'o had only met Lennay Kekua once and that it wasn't really accurate to call her his girlfriend. But as condolences poured in, Te'o "played along," according to the teammate, who wished to remain anonymous.

The teammate portrayed the move as part of the All-American's personality, telling ESPN that Te'o liked attention so much that he would sometimes point himself out to friends when he was on television.
Manti Te'o story links

An account of a reporter's interviews, with a transcript, with Manti Te'o. (By Pete Thamel, Sports Illustrated)

Following the national championship game, there was internal debate at Notre Dame about when to go public with the news that the Manti Te'o "girlfriend" story was a hoax. (By Pat Forde, Yahoo! Sports)

The whole story is incredulous, including Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick's understanding for Manti Te'o. (By Gregg Doyel, CBSSports.com)

Is Manti Te'o a liar or is he a victim? (By Gene Wojciechowski, ESPN.com)

Whatever the full story turns out to be, another sports hero loses his reputation. (By Greg Couch, FoxSports.com)

ESPN's Mike Golic, from Cleveland, thinks that Manti Te'o might be the victim. (By Paul Myerberg, USAToday.com)

NFL teams preparing for the draft will have extra work to do in their background checks on Manti Te'o. (By Jason Cole, Yahoo! Sports)

Some questions Manti Te'o needs to answer in the hoax story about a girlfriend. (By Rachel George, USAToday.com)

The hoax story about a girlfriend of Manti Te'o's sparks more questions than answers. (By Michael Rosenberg, Sports Illustrated)

A hoax story could cost Manti Te'o millions of dollars. (By Jason Belzer, Forbes.com)



Dennis Manoloff says Norv Turner is good news for Brandon Weeden (video)

$
0
0

Does Chip Kelly going to the Philadelphia Eagles make the Cleveland Browns look bad? Will Norv Turner help Brandon Weeden? CineSport's Brian Clark asks The Plain Dealer's Dennis Manoloff.

Does Chip Kelly going to the Philadelphia Eagles make the Cleveland Browns look bad? Will Norv Turner help Brandon Weeden? CineSport's Brian Clark asks The Plain Dealer's Dennis Manoloff.


Cleveland Cavaliers chill out -- literally -- on West Coast trip

$
0
0

Cleveland Cavalier players and training staff vist the U.S. Cryotherapy center outside Sacramento, Calif., to get "fresh legs."


PORTLAND, ORE. -- The weather on the Cavaliers West Coast trip has been unseasonably cold every step of the way so far -- first Denver, then Los Angeles and Sacramento and now here.

But on Tuesday, half a dozen Cavs players and several athletic training staff members including head athletic trainer Max Benton, took that to a whole new level by visiting the U.S. Cryotherapy center outside Sacramento. According to the www.uscryotherapy.com website, cryotherapy is localized or whole-body exposure to subzero temperatures to decrease inflammation, increase cellular survival, decrease pain and spasms, and promote overall health.

Subjecting themselves -- on purpose -- to temperatures that reached 166 degrees below zero, Tristan Thompson, C.J. Miles, Luke Walton, Dion Waiters, Tyler Zeller and Kevin Jones found the process shocking, but worthwhile.

"It's crazy how fresh you feel afterwards," said Walton, who experienced the cryotherapy for the second time after his initial visit with the Lakers. Kobe Bryant is a big proponent of the therapy, as is Pau Gasol and now, Miles.

"I was definitely better," he said before the Cavs victory over Portland on Wednesday night. "It definitely helped. I felt a big difference. I was a lot fresher, the legs, everything."

That being said, Miles admitted the process was a shock.

"When it first hits you, it takes your breath away," he said.

The players were divided into groups of three -- Miles, Zeller and Jones in one group and Walton, Thompson and Waiters in the other. They wear hats that cover their ears, socks, gloves, shorts and surgical masks. They first enter a chamber that's about 76 degrees below zero to get their bodies acclimated and then spend three minutes in a small room where the temperature is minus 166.

"The first time is the worst," Walton said after practice at the Nike headquarters on Thursday afternoon. "They're putting you in a room that's, like, minus 180. So your mind is telling you, 'I might die.'

"The second time you know you're going to make it though."

Although Thompson attempted to dance his way through the three minutes, typically players walk around the small room while listening to music -- all the players listened to rap music, the trainers chose heavy metal -- and letting out the occasional scream.

"You can feel the saliva freezing in your mouth," Walton said. "When you need to yell, you yell. They had the music going for us. They tell you one minute, two minutes ... the last minute feels like eight minutes."

Cavs coach Byron Scott was thrilled his players took advantage of the therapy, but even more thrilled that he didn't have to.

"The good thing about that is they went, and they went together, that's the biggest thing," Scott said. "As long as guys are doing things together as a basketball team, it brings that unity that we've been talking about all season long. That's what I want these guys to do is get together and learn each other and know each other and get familiar with one another outside of basketball because I think it helps on the court as well. I've always said I want real good basketball talent, but I want great chemistry. I think activities like that can help with that type of chemistry.

"(But) that did not intrigue me at all. It was cold enough in L.A. and cold enough in Sacramento that I didn't want to go into an area that was going to be even colder. More power to them. I appreciate them going and spending some time together."

Walton said the effects don't last long.

"I notice it a lot that day and the next day and then it's gone," he said. "It's like icing but way more intense. Once you go out and play or practice and all the inflammation comes back, then you've got to do it again."

Thompson said he'd love it if the Cavs got a cryotherapy chamber at their Cleveland Clinic Courts practice facility.

"It was a great experience, first and foremost," he said. "I wish we were able to have that at our facility. ... It's a great invention. Who knows? Maybe one day we'll have one at our facility. I think it would be helpful."

The therapy is not just for professional athletes. Sessions cost as little as $25, but right now Sacramento has the only facility open to the public.


As Akron, Kent State renew basketball rivalry, winning may be tall order for Flashes

$
0
0

Akron's tall, physical front line poses a challenge for Kent State.

AKRON_CREIGHTON_BASKETBALL_2012.JPG Akron's Zeke Marshall (44) goes for a rebound over Creighton's Grant Gibbs (10) in the first half of their NCAA college basketball game, Dec. 9, in Omaha, Neb.  

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- For the first time in many years there is very little buzz over the first basketball meeting of the season between Akron and Kent State (3 p.m. today in Kent's MAC Center), primarily because, for the first time in many years, there is a clear separation between the two teams.

While current records indicate a competitive matchup between the Zips (12-4, 3-0) and the Golden Flashes (11-6, 2-1), Akron has won the last four games in this rivalry. And with its clear advantage inside, the Zips show no sign of ending that run. One has to go back to 1997 and 1998 to find a similar streak for the Zips, when they won three straight over Kent by scores of 71-51, 93-68 and 68-51.

The four-game Akron roll covering 2011 and 2012 has been relatively competitive -- 66-65 in OT, 84-75, 61-55 and 78-74 -- but if Akron is fully engaged Kent will have its hands full going for an upset.

Nine Zips, including all five starters, have played in this rivalry before. Only five for Kent have played in this rivalry and just two of those players, Randal Holt and Mark Henniger, have ever defeated Akron.

The Zips have pounded the ball inside to 7-0 Zeke Marshall (12.3 points per game), 6-9 Demetrius Treadwell (10.1 ppg), and 6-8 Nick Harney (10.8 ppg) this season. Kent, a team which has prided itself on stellar inside play for years, has little to counter that trio.

With 6-9 Melvin Tabb (5.5 ppg), 6-5 Darren Goodson (4.3 ppg), and 6-9 Henniger (4.7 ppg), the Golden Flashes front line can barely measure up to Marshall, Treadwell, or Harney offensively. Defensively, Tabb, Goodson and Henniger are coming off a Buffalo game where each fouled out against a collection of MAC baseline players clearly second to the Zips. 

Cleveland State continues road trip

The Vikings (10-9, 2-3) are in the midst of playing four of five games on the road. This stretch could define their season as a winning one or a losing one. To get a winning season, CSU has to start winning Horizon League games on the road. To date, the Vikings are winless (0-2) on the road in league play, coming off a 69-57 loss at Milwaukee, and are 1-8 on the road overall.

Point guard Charlie Lee snapped out of his scoring slump with 15 points. Before that, he had gone five straight games, and six of the last seven, without scoring in double figures. But, once again, CSU's production inside left a lot to be desired against Milwaukee. Starting center Devon Long and backup Luda Ndaye scored just one point between them on the night, while CSU's third inside player, Aaron Scales, missed his second straight game with a concussion. Power forward Tim Kamczyc only scored eight and missed five 3-pointers.

The Vikings next travel to play 2 p.m. today at Green Bay (9-9, 3-2) before returning home Wednesday for a game against Loyola. Then it is back on the road again for two straight at Youngstown and Illinois Chicago.

Mary Kay Cabot and Tom Reed discuss the Cleveland Browns hires of Mike Lombardi and Norv Turner (video)

$
0
0

Plain Dealer Cleveland Browns beat writers Mary Kay Cabot and Tom Reed talk about the naming of Mike Lombardi as Vice President, Player Personnel and Norv Turner as offensive coordinator. Watch video

 

BEREA, Ohio -- Plain Dealer Cleveland Browns beat writers Mary Kay Cabot and Tom Reed talk about the naming of Mike Lombardi as Vice President, Player Personnel and Norv Turner as offensive coordinator.

Click here to watch this video on a mobile device

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

On Twitter: @CLEvideos

Manager Terry Francona likes what he hears from Carlos Carrasco: Cleveland Indians Insider

$
0
0

The new Tribe skipper heard the catcher's glove popping when Carrasco was throwing, a good sign for a pitcher coming back from elbow surgery. Watch video

 

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Indians manager Terry Francona did not need to see right-hander Carlos Carrasco to be enthused about him Friday morning at Progressive Field.

Francona simply needed to listen.

The more audible the pop from Carrasco's pitches to a catcher's glove in an indoor cage, the wider Francona's smile.

"Granted, he was in the cage," Francona said. "But that ball was making a loud noise. It was exciting. If he's not healthy, nobody is."

Carrasco did not pitch in the majors last season after elbow trouble limited him to 21 starts in 2011 (8-9, 4.62 ERA). He underwent reconstructive surgery in September 2011.

Carrasco was among Indians players in the clubhouse Friday in advance of TribeFest this weekend at Progressive Field. Spring training can't come fast enough for Carrasco.

"You have no idea how excited I am," he said. "Oh, my goodness. I'm 100 percent, the arm feels great, and I'm ready."

Carrasco said his rehabilitation, though long and arduous, went as well as can be expected. He said he did not suffer any significant setbacks and will arrive at Goodyear, Ariz., with no restrictions. The Indians, of course, will monitor his workload.

"A lot of times when guys get their elbow fixed, they come back better," Francona said. "It might take them a while, but once they get back and have the feel of competing instead of rehabbing, you see more success."

Carrasco, who turns 26 on March 21, acknowledged that his extended time on the sidelines probably has made him somewhat of a forgotten man. He is 10-15 with a 4.93 ERA in 33 career major-league starts, all with Cleveland.

"I hope I can surprise some people," he said.

The Indians acquired Carrasco from Philadelphia in the Cliff Lee trade in July 2009. They desperately need Carrasco to be productive, if for no other reason than to make the trade less lopsided. Others who came to Cleveland for Lee and Ben Francisco were infielder Jason Donald, minor-league pitcher Jason Knapp and catcher Lou Marson.

Whenever Carrasco is ready to pitch in the majors, he almost certainly will need to wait again. On July 29, 2011, he buzzed Kansas City's Billy Butler during a blowout loss. Major League Baseball suspended him for six games for intentionally throwing near the head.

Carrasco appealed, giving him the opportunity to make his next start, Aug. 3 in Boston. It ended up being his final start before being shut down, meaning the suspension has not been served.

Here are other items from the media-access period in the Tribe clubhouse Friday, as well as from Francona's town-hall chat with fans inside Playhouse Square:

• Lefty reliever Nick Hagadone said his surgically repaired left wrist has healed and that he is full-go for spring training.

Hagadone suffered a self-inflicted fracture after an appearance against Tampa Bay on July 6, 2012. The Indians placed him on the minor-league disqualified list, thereby costing him pay and service time. Hagadone and his agent filed a grievance through the Major League Baseball Players Association.

"The grievance is still going on, so I don't want to go into specifics about the situation," he said.

Hagadone is confident that, regardless of the outcome, the Indians will not hold the grievance against him.

"We're all just focused on the future," he said. "I want to be the best pitcher I can be for the Cleveland Indians."

• Third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall is noticeably thicker. He said he has gained 15 pounds since the end of last season -- most, if not all, appears to be muscle.

"I've been eating everything in sight," he said. "Lots of chicken and steak. No junk food."

Chisenhall said he expects to begin spring training at 215-216 pounds. At the beginning of last season, he was listed at 6-2, 190.

"I didn't set out to gain a certain amount of weight, but I definitely wanted to get stronger," he said. "I've done that without losing flexibility or agility."

A fractured right ulna was part of the reason Chisenhall played just 43 games for the Tribe in 2012 (.268 average, five homers, 16 RBI). He said the right arm is as strong as it has ever been.

• Francona said that, as of Friday, the Indians are leaning toward a designated hitter by committee.

• Francona said that he wants Carlos Santana to catch as many games as possible because of how important it is to have offense at the position. Scouts and others criticized Santana last season for game-calling and defense.

Mike Lombardi's criticism of Browns players follows him to Cleveland

$
0
0

The candid NFL Network analyst who criticized, among others, Brandon Weeden and Josh Gordon, displayed much more restraint on Friday when asked about those players.

reed-lombardi.jpg View full size Mike Lombardi, the Cleveland Browns' new vice president of player personnel, says receiver Josh Gordon should not be concerned about his status with the team. Lombardi last year called Gordon's selection in the supplemental draft a "waste'' of a pick.  

BEREA, Ohio -- If Michael Lombardi wondered whether anyone in the Browns' organization had paid attention to his work at the NFL Network the past five years he got his answer quickly Friday morning.

Moments after news broke that Lombardi had been hired as the team's vice president of player personnel, rookie receiver Josh Gordon tweeted: "Uh oh. Am I in trouble??"

Gordon, once labeled a "waste" of a supplemental draft choice by Lombardi, was only one of the analysts' targets in recent years.

Even before the 53-year-old former league network commentator took a seat on stage Friday for his introductory news conference, local radio stations were playing sound bites of critical comments Lombardi had made about the organization, its draft choices and quarterback Brandon Weeden.

It made for an unusual question-and-answer session because the media had ready-made material from its subject on key organizational topics.

The candor that helped Lombardi enjoy a five-year run with the NFL Network might have to be tempered in his new role and perhaps explained to some players in the Browns locker room.

"I think you do different things in the media," said Lombardi, who also appeared on a weekly radio spot for the Cleveland sports station 92.3 FM, The FAN, this season. "Certainly, you need to get involved in terms of their personalities here. I don't know Josh Gordon or Brandon Weeden, in terms of watching them play from the outside, so it's a different evaluation from a media perspective from inside the house. It's going to be different that way.

"I think when you do media you certainly have commentary of games, but I think for my part it's a different set of circumstances. I'm looking more towards as an organization building a team and how it relates to that."

A news conference that included 40 questions Friday featured five about Lombardi's past critiques of the team, particularly Weeden, who struggled through an uneven rookie season.

He had called the drafting of the 29-year-old quarterback with the No. 22 overall pick a year ago, a "panicked disaster," even as he admitted Friday of having no memory of making that statement. Lombardi has said the Browns would have been better served conducting a competition instead of anointing Weeden the starter.

On Friday, Lombardi said he must watch practice film of Weeden before drawing his final conclusions.

"I think it's going to take some time to study him," he said.

Lombardi laughed about the Tweet from Gordon, who had a solid rookie season, ranking eight among NFL receivers with an average of 16.1 yards per catch.

"That's a really good tweet right there," Lombardi said smiling. "I'll take that one. Josh Gordon, trust me, he has nothing to worry about. In fact, he can have my twitter account if he'd like because I'm about to close that thing down."

Lombardi's transition from analyst's armchair to a position he once occupied in the sport is hardly unprecedented. Indians manager Terry Francona spent a season working for ESPN after getting fired by the Boston Red Sox. Former Cavaliers coach Mike Fratello has toggled between the broadcast booth and bench on several occasions.

Fratello, who works for TNT and the YES Network, said he heard no grief from players after accepting the Memphis Grizzlies' job for three seasons starting in 2004 following a long stint at NBC.

"I was able to get my points across without killing guys on the air," Fratello said. "I think as long as you're fair and you have facts to back up your arguments players will understand it.

"As a coach, I used to always tell my players they have to learn to understand to accept criticism when it's warranted. When you're shooting 25 percent from the field, it's fair to say you're not playing well. As long as someone is not taking unfair shots, players have to understand it comes with the territory."

Fratello knows Lombardi from their days together in Cleveland (1993-95). He believes the Browns executive won't be afraid to address players he's criticized on air.

Haslam and Browns CEO Joe Banner are not worried that Lombardi's pointed remarks will create problems within the locker room.

"We were aware of it," Banner said. "The main thing I'm evaluating though is, how good an evaluator do I think he is? I think Jimmy was making a similar assessment. . . . You say something in that forum it's different and he'll have to deal with that. We weren't not going to hire who we thought was the best person because of that."

Cleveland Cavaliers' C.J. Miles downplays return to Utah

$
0
0

Saturday's game will mark Miles' first game back in Utah, where he played seven seasons, since leaving the Jazz after last year.

cavs-miles.jpg View full size C.J. Miles of the Cleveland Cavaliers spent the first seven seasons of his career in Utah.  

SALT LAKE CITY -- The Cavaliers' reunion tour continues today when C.J. Miles returns to Utah for the first time since leaving the Jazz to sign as a free agent with the Cavs last summer.

Miles spent the first seven years of his career in Utah. His return follows Luke Walton's return to play the Los Angeles Lakers last Sunday, as well as Omri Casspi's return to Sacramento on Monday. For all three players, it was their first time back to play against the teams on which they started their careers.

But like Walton and Casspi before him, Miles said it's a business trip, not a homecoming.

"Of course, I spent a long time there, but at the end of the day, it's not about me going home, it's about us trying to get better as a team and us trying to win a basketball game," Miles said Friday.

Miles knows he'll see a lot of old friends and teammates, though he hasn't made any special plans to do so. He wants to make clear that he loved his time in Utah and that there was no animosity upon his departure.

"I can't say I outgrew it, it was just time for a change," he said. "It was kind of mutual. It was made to seem there was this bad ending, but it really wasn't. I spoke to coach [Tyrone] Corbin at the exit meeting and spoke to him again a couple weeks later. I know that's going to be asked when I get there. There's no beef, there's no nothing.

"Coach Corbin was great to me. My first three or four years, he's the guy I was with every day -- working out before the game, after practice, before practice -- he's who I was with. He was my guy. He was pretty much my player-development guy at the time. I've got nothing but love for him. I'm even close to his family, his daughter and son. Nothing but love with that.

"Of course, I can't leave out [former Utah coach] Jerry Sloan. He's the reason I was in the league and I'm still in the league is because of things he taught me and the way I approach the game. It was a great experience. I'm happy where I'm at now, but it played a big part in my life. I can't even just say basketball. I pretty much just grew up there."

Cavs coach Byron Scott said he didn't think he had to address the return with Miles.

"I think C.J. has been around long enough," Scott said. "He's a veteran. I don't think you have to say anything to these guys. I think he's going to go in there and, obviously, want to play well, like most guys do when they go back to a place they played. I don't say anything. I just want him to go out there and play the way he's capable of playing and see if we can get a 'W.' "

Scott clarification: As soon as Scott met with the media Friday, he said he wanted to clarify some comments from Wednesday about the Cavs' record hurting Kyrie Irving's chances of making the All-Star team. At the time, he said he thought Irving's odds of making the team were 40-60.

"My answer was based on what I think other coaches in the Eastern Conference are going to think because of our record and things like that," Scott said. "Do I think he should make it? I look at every guard in the Eastern Conference, and I don't think there's one that's better.

"Does he deserve to make it? You're damn straight. Is he good enough? Are his stats good enough? Without a doubt. But I think our record hurts him. That's what I was trying to say. My personally getting to see him on a day-to-day basis, going against the other point guards, without a doubt, he should definitely be in the coaches' thoughts. I know that for sure. And, in my opinion, he should make the All-Star team."

More support: TNT analyst Chris Webber was the only one of the four TNT analysts, including Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Shaquille O'Neal, to name Irving to his list of All-Star reserves during Thursday's "NBA Tipoff" show on which the All-Star starters were announced. NBA.com's Steve Aschburner also selected Irving as a reserve and wrote, "Irving has been good enough to break through that bogus prohibition about 'no All Stars from teams with losing records.' " Unfortunately for Irving, the media doesn't select the reserves, the coaches do. The All-Star reserves will be announced on TNT on Thursday.


Highlight-reel dunks come naturally to Ohio State's Sam Thompson

$
0
0

The sophomore is becoming a staple on television and online for his soaring, spectacular dunks for the No. 11 Buckeyes.

Gallery preview

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Marcus Jordan, a high school teammate in Chicago, sometimes called him “Air Thompson,” which wasn't all that original, but the nickname carried some weight because that's what others had called Jordan's father.

And Michael Jordan saw Ohio State sophomore Sam Thompson dunk.

Hubert Thompson said he was sitting behind the elder Jordan during a Whitney Young Magnet High School game when his son was called for a technical for hanging on the rim after a dunk.

“I remember Michael saying, 'Don't worry Sam, that (official) probably never had a dunk in his life,'” Hubert Thompson said, “'he doesn't know what he's talking about.'”

Mike Irvin, Thompson's AAU coach in Chicago, said he'd joke with Air Jordan that Air Thompson could outdunk him. Dunkers might understand each other in a way the rest of us don't, but that was a bit much.

“He'd say, 'Sam's very good, and he can jump now,'” Irvin said, “'but he can't outdunk me.'”

But in a city where basketball talent is piled as deep as the winter's snowdrifts, Thompson flies to the top of the heap, reporting a 46-inch vertical jump, confirmed by Ohio State strength and conditioning coach Dave Richardson, that leaves him in rare company. Check the multi-step jump numbers at the yearly NBA draft combine, and you don't find a lot of 46's.

“Out of Chicago, Sam's probably the No. 1 jumper,” Irvin said, “unless we're going to bring Michael Jordan back out of retirement.”

As No. 11 Ohio State (13-3, 3-1 Big Ten) prepares to play at No. 18 Michigan State (15-3, 4-1) Saturday, it's fair to expect at least one moment of airborne excellence from Thompson, who doesn't understand exactly how he learned to fly but realizes that what he does is outside the norm of even the elite athletes in major college basketball.

“If he was 6-10, he'd be looking like Blake Griffin out there with dunks,” OSU teammate Deshaun Thomas said, comparing Thompson to the 2011 NBA dunk champ. “I wish I had his athleticism. With my skills and his athleticism? Man, it would be crazy.”

Thad Matta said he's never coached someone who jumps like Thompson, and Richardson hasn't recorded a comparable vertical. Thompson wowed teammates in practice last year while averaging just two points and 11 minutes off the bench. He jumped over CBS analyst Seth Davis during a preseason practice, a photo of which Davis has put on Twitter more than once.

“There's an asterisk with that,” Thompson said. “Seth's a good dude, and he's my guy. But he's about 5-5. I don't think I'm the only guy who could jump over Seth Davis.”

At 6-foot-7 and 195 pounds, Thompson's jersey slides off him like his upper body is no more than a hanger. He has trouble keeping up his weight, with Richardson reminding him to continue eating.

“He's thin. He's always been thin,” Irvin said.

So he's a finesse dunker, pulled upward like a marionette operated by strings from above.

“Guys have told me that I just glide,” Thompson said.

It takes those who saw it develop to bring some sense to Thompson's flights. There were there gutters he tore down, the windows he broke trying to throw alley-oops to himself. He jumped to touch everything in his Chicago home, where he grew up with parents, his older brother, Franklin, and twin sister, Vicky. His mother, Kennise, is a psychologist and his father Hubert an attorney, the purveyors of the Air Thompson DNA.

“He chose his parents well,” Richardson said with a laugh, acknowledging the genetic combination that has led to these leaps.

That makes Hubert Thompson laugh more, his athletic accomplishments limited to some later-year triathlons to stay in shape.

“I would have been called a nerd,” Thompson said. “It must have skipped a generation.”

When jumping to touch the ceiling grew too easy, Thompson started jumping up onto things. The front porch. The trunk of his father's car.

He swam and played soccer, better than he was in basketball. But when Franklin quit soccer to focus on basketball in high school, fifth-grade Sam “blindly followed,” as he usually did when it came to Franklin. He and Vicky, the older twin by five minutes, would play basketball in the driveway, and at some point she noticed she couldn't keep up any more, her brother now faster and stronger. And she remembered a fourth-grade game when the tallest guy on the team wasn't there and Sam had to jump center, giving up about six inches.

“He won the tip, and I was like 'Wow, where he did he learn to jump like that?” said Vicky, a sophomore at Xavier University of Louisiana.

Now that's what everyone says.

After his one-hand alley-oop against Nebraska on Jan. 3, teammates Thomas and Aaron Craft debated during the postgame whether it was the best dunk of Thompson's career. Then he dunked over Purdue 7-footer A.J. Hammons on Jan. 8. And he threw down a one-handed, fastbreak alley-oop from Shannon Scott when Michigan had swung the momentum and was making its second-half run on the Buckeyes last Sunday. Ohio State was up by only one point with just over six minutes to play when that one went down. The context made it Thompson's favorite yet.

And that's what's different now. Never have the dunks meant more.

In eighth grade, Vicky threw him the alley-oop pass as he won his first dunk contest. In high school, Irvin and his AAU coaches had to ask Thompson to dunk in warmups.

“He was real low-key. But we told him, 'The way you jump, the whole world wants to see you,'” Irvin said. “There were people who would come from all over to see our layup line.”

He played AAU ball with the current No. 1 recruit in the nation, Jabari Parker, and when asked Thompson says he's a better athlete than Parker, mentioning it just in passing. But as the Big Ten Network's website has built basically its own online shrine to Thompson, he likes to talk about how his leaping ability helps his defense.

Now a starter, he's averaging 24 minutes and 7 points per game. He's so close with his family, he texts and emails with his siblings from the moment he wakes up to the moment he goes to bed. It's rare that a day goes by without Thompson speaking to his parents on the phone. Thompson said his brother and sister watch as much film as he does, and though Franklin, 24, said he screamed sitting in his Chicago apartment after the Michigan dunk, when the family talks, the dunks don't come up much.

So while maybe his first true dunk can't explain why Thompson can do what he does, it can explain why he is who he is.

In the driveway, Thompson raised and lowered the family's adjustable rim - 7 ½ feet, then 8, 8 ½ feet, 9, 9 ½ feet, tempting the fates at a full 10 feet at times. He figured whenever and wherever it finally happened, when he dunked for real, he'd go crazy.

“I thought I'd be excited and running around the gym and stuff,” Thompson said.

And he remembers when it happened. He was 13, and it was the spring of his seventh grade year. He was playing in a tournament in Muncie, Ind., with his AAU team, called “Ferrari.”

“A teammate threw me an alley-oop in the layup line, and I caught it with two hands and put it down,” Thompson said.

And he was excited. But he didn't scream. He didn't yell. Within three months, he'd have his dunk tricks down. But after that first one, Thompson just ran and touched halfcourt, like he was supposed to.

San Thompson had dunked.

And, he said, “It just kind of felt natural.”


Sam Thompson's best dunk so far, against Michigan on Sunday


Lance Armstrong gets emotional in part 2 of interview with Oprah Winfrey

$
0
0

Lance Armstrong was near tears in the interview when he talked about his son defending him.

Lance Armstrong A video screen at a hotel restaurant in Grapevine, Texas, on Friday shows a replay telecast of a segment of Lance Armstrong being interviewed by Oprah Winfrey.

 CHICAGO — Lance Armstrong finally cracked.

Not while expressing deep remorse or regrets, though there was plenty of that in Friday night's second part of Armstrong's interview with Oprah Winfrey.

It wasn't over the $75 million in lost sponsorship deals, nor when Armstrong was forced to walk away from the Livestrong cancer charity he founded and called his "sixth child." It wasn't even about his lifetime ban from competition.

It was another bit of collateral damage that Armstrong said he wasn't prepared to deal with.

"I saw my son defending me and saying, 'That's not true. What you're saying about my dad is not true,'" Armstrong recalled. That's when I knew I had to tell him."

Armstrong was near tears at that point, referring to 13-year-old Luke, the oldest of his five children. He blinked, looked away from Winfrey, and with his lip trembling, struggled to compose himself.

It came just past the midpoint of the hourlong program on Winfrey's OWN network. In the first part, broadcast Thursday, the disgraced cycling champion admitted using performance-enhancing drugs when he won seven straight Tour de France titles.

Critics said he hadn't been contrite enough in the first half of the interview, which was taped Monday in Austin, but Armstrong seemed to lose his composure when Winfrey zeroed in on the emotional drama involving his personal life.

"What did you say?" Winfrey asked.

"I said, 'Listen, there's been a lot of questions about your dad. My career. Whether I doped or did not dope. I've always denied that and I've always been ruthless and defiant about that. You guys have seen that. That's probably why you trusted me on it.' Which makes it even sicker," Armstrong said.

"And uh, I told Luke, I said," and here Armstrong paused for a long time to collect himself, "I said, 'Don't defend me anymore. Don't.'

"He said OK. He just said, 'Look, I love you. You're my dad. This won't change that."

Winfrey also drew Armstrong out on his ex-wife, Kristin, whom he claimed knew just enough about both the doping and lying to ask him to stop. He credited her with making him promise that his comeback in 2009 would be drug-free.

"She said to me, 'You can do it under one condition: That you never cross that line again,'" Armstrong recalled.

"The line of drugs?" Winfrey asked.

"Yes. And I said, 'You've got a deal,'" he replied. "And I never would have betrayed that with her."

Armstrong said in the first part of the interview that he had stayed clean in the comeback, a claim that runs counter to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency report. And that wasn't the only portion of the interview likely to rile anti-doping officials.

Winfrey asked Armstrong about an interview in which USADA chief executive Travis Tygart said a representative of the cyclist had offered a donation that the agency turned down.

"Were you trying to pay off USADA?" she asked.

"No, that's not true," he replied, repeating, "That is not true."

Winfrey asks the question three more times, in different forms.

"That is not true," he insisted.


Rocky River beats defending champ Sylvania Northview in ice hockey

$
0
0

KENT, Ohio -- The Rocky River hockey team has plenty of bumps and bruises this morning. The Pirates are also wearing the smiles of satisfaction after knocking off defending state champion Sylvania Northview, 4-3, on Friday night in the Walsh Jesuit Invitational tournament at the Kent State Ice Arena. With the game winding down to its rough conclusion, senior...

Rocky River players celebrate a second-period goal. - (Joshua Gunter, The Plain Dealer)

KENT, Ohio -- The Rocky River hockey team has plenty of bumps and bruises this morning. The Pirates are also wearing the smiles of satisfaction after knocking off defending state champion Sylvania Northview, 4-3, on Friday night in the Walsh Jesuit Invitational tournament at the Kent State Ice Arena.

With the game winding down to its rough conclusion, senior Bobby Perez sent home a rebound with 2:05 to play for the winner during a power play.

"It bounced my way," said Perez, who had two scores on the night. "It was all a little bit of luck. You hear about them being defending champs, but that was last year. It's a new season."

It's a season that has the Pirates at 16-3-1 and looking for better things as the postseason approaches.

"We had a good week of practice and we battled back," said Rocky River coach Chris Cogan. "They are all big this time of season. I hope the guys take this and roll into the next few weeks"

Check out a photo gallery from this game

It was 1-1 after one period and 3-3 entering the third.

Twice the Pirates came back to tie the game in the second period on goals by Perez and senior Eric Sperli, the latter during a power play. Sperli opened the scoring with a nice wrap-around back-hander to give his club a 1-0 lead with 3:39 left in the opening period.

The Wildcats (14-5), ranked third in the state, hurt themselves with some late penalties. There were six penalties called over the final five minutes, with four going against the Wildcats as both teams got physical.

Rocky River senior goaltender Jake Nicholson did his part with 23 saves, 11 in the third periond when the Wildcats mounted their most intense pressure.

"You have to prepare like it's another game," said Nicholson. "We keep fighting. We're never out of it. This one is definitely up there."

The Pirates will play Prairie Ridge (Ill.) Saturday at 8:30 a.m.

 

Prairie Ridge (Ill.) 7, Holy Name 3: Too many slap shots.

That's what got the better of the Green Wave as the visitors from Crystal Lake, Ill., kept slamming shots at Green Wave freshman goaltender Ryan Madden. Three of them got past him, two in the second period, to help the Wolves prevail in the opener at the Kent State Ice Arena.

Holy Name (15-7-2) went into that period with a 2-1 lead thanks to a pair of goals by junior forward Joe Meehan in the final 58 seconds of the first period. But the Wolves (22-17-5) scored three times in a six-minute span to take control.

Check out a photo gallery from this game

"It's not getting out there, not moving our feet," said Holy Name coach Tim Sullivan, referring to his club's failure to stop some of the hard shots. "It's disappointing. That's a good team we faced."

Meehan got the hat trick on a well-executed two-on-one break with teammate Jamie Bucell to cut the deficit to 4-3 with 2:53 left in the second period. It was Bucell's third assist.

But the Wolves put it away with three goals in the final period. Seven players scored for the visitors.

The Green Wave will face Sylvania Northview today at 10 a.m.

Garfield Heights upsets No. 1 Shaker Heights in boys basketball on dramatic basket in overtime

$
0
0

SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio - When the going gets tough it’s not a bad idea to try a little togetherness. Or toughness down the stretch. But, when in doubt, always go to Old Reliable. That’s the plan Garfield Heights went to on Friday and it came away with its biggest victory of the season. Richard Parker’s 3-point basket from the...

Richard Parker, center, celebrates with his Garfield Heights teammates after Parker converted a 3-point basket with 1.2 seconds remaining in overtime for a 62-60 victory over host Shaker Heights. - (Gus Chan, The Plain Dealer)
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio - When the going gets tough it’s not a bad idea to try a little togetherness. Or toughness down the stretch. But, when in doubt, always go to Old Reliable. That’s the plan Garfield Heights went to on Friday and it came away with its biggest victory of the season. Richard Parker’s 3-point basket from the top of the key off an inbounds play with 1.2 seconds remaining in overtime gave the Bulldogs a much-needed 62-60 victory over host Shaker Heights in front of a packed house of about 1,300 fans. Parker’s shot, protected by a screen set by 6-10 junior David Bell handed the Raiders, the top-ranked team in The Plain Dealer Top 25, a rare loss at home and threw the Northeast Ohio Conference Valley Division race into a three-way tie. Garfield, ranked seventh, Shaker and third-ranked Mentor are all 4-1 in the league race, with Shaker (10-3 overall) owning a victory over Mentor and Mentor owning a victory over Garfield Heights (10-2). Junior guard Rosel Hurley, who shared team scoring honors with sophomore Esa Ahmad with 18 points, gave the Raiders a 60-59 lead when he made one free throw with 36 seconds to play. Bulldogs coach Sonny Johnson called a timeout with 13.6 seconds left and junior Al Burge had the ball knocked out of his hands as he tried to drive the lane with four seconds to go. Parker, who broke the school record for 3-pointers in a single game set by Trey Lewis three years ago with 11, peeled from his position on the block to begin the inbounds play and wide open when he took the pass from Burge, who lofted a high pass over everyone. Parker had plenty of time to shoot and his game-winner was perfect. “The play unfolded just like it was supposed to,” said Parker, who scored 12 of his 13 points in the second half. “I had plenty of time and when that happens I usually make it.” This was not th first time Parker hit a late-night, 3-pointer for a game-winner. But, it was the first time since he was in middle school. “This one was a little different because we were behind when I shot it,” he said. “The middle school game was tied. This one’s a little bigger.” The Bulldogs had run the same play twice earlier and Parker nailed the three each time. “That’s our bread and butter play for Richard,” said Johnson, whose team bounced back from a disappointing loss to Mentor last week and will play state-ranked Dayton Dunbar Sunday in the Flyin’ to the Hoop event in Dayton. “He nailed it every time.”

Cleveland Heights uses quick start after halftime to put away Shaw

$
0
0

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio -- Shaw hung around for the first half of Friday night's Lake Erie League boys basketball game at Cleveland Heights. But the second half was all Tigers.

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio -- Shaw hung around for the first half of Friday night's Lake Erie League boys basketball game at Cleveland Heights.

But the second half was all Tigers.

Marcus Bagley came up with three steals in the opening minutes of the third quarter, helping Cleveland Heights go on a 9-0 run to blow the game open.

"They just got careless with the ball, and we had to take advantage of it," said Bagley, who led all scorers with 20 points.

A jump shot by Bagley with 5:38 left gave the Tigers a 41-27 lead. It was never close after that, as Cleveland Heights went on to a 69-54 victory in front of a sellout crowd of about 1,700. The Tigers snapped an eight-game winning streak by Shaw.

"I thought we settled a lot for some jumpers in the first half," said Cleveland Heights coach Andy Suttell. "We talked and said if we really attacked, we could get the ball to the rim, and we really did a nice job of that in the third quarter."

Cleveland Heights improved to 8-3 overall and 7-1 in the LEL. The victory avenged a three-point loss at Shaw earlier in the season. Shaw slipped to 7-6, 4-4.

A key for the Tigers was holding high-scoring guard Cordell Smith to eight points. He was scoreless in the second half.

"I've told a lot of people that Cordell Smith is as good a guard as there is in the area," Suttell said. "Credit D.D. [Delaunte Davis] for doing a job on him tonight. He did a really nice job of not giving him much space and really making things difficult on him for 32 minutes."

Smith hit two 3-point goals and two foul shots in the first half. His last foul shot cut the deficit to 32-27 at halftime. That was as close as the Cardinals would get.

"Last time, [Smith] had, like, 19 points in the first half," Bagley said. "We weren't going to let him do that again."

Thomas Austin led Shaw with 11 points, and Zachary Whiteside had 10. Antonio Harper had 12 points, 12 rebounds, two steals and three blocked shots for Cleveland Heights.

"Even with us not playing our best basketball, we were only down five at halftime," said Shaw coach Steve Chandler. "But we came out [in the second half] with way too many turnovers. We got good looks, but the ball just was not dropping for us. Cordell had an off night. Thomas Austin had an off night. Those are the guys we rely on."

Shaw didn't score at the start until sixth man Marcus Parks hit a short jump shot with 4:18 left in the first quarter. Parks had nine points but quickly got into foul trouble, and his playing time was limited.

Bob Migra is a freelance writer in Westlake.

Walsh Jesuit escapes with a thrilling win at Hoban

$
0
0

AKRON -- It's a short trip up the road from Walsh to Hoban, but for the Warriors, their 48-47 win is one they'll long remember. With a hostile crowd, a jam-packed house, two rowdy student sections and the noise level off the charts, it was an environment set for an upset.

AKRON -- It's a short trip up the road from Walsh to Hoban, but for the Warriors, their 48-47 win is one they'll long remember.

With a hostile crowd, a jam-packed house, two rowdy student sections and the noise level off the charts, it was an environment set for an upset.

For three quarters, that's exactly what was in No. 10 Archbishop Hoban's mind, as it had yet to give up a lead in the game.

Then came the final minute.

First, there was a tussle for the ball, then a full scrum, which brought on a whistle and began the drama. DeAllen Jackson went to the line for Hoban (8-3, 3-2 North Coast League Blue Division) with 16 seconds left. He missed, but the Knights recovered the ball.

Walsh coach John Norris called a timeout. Christian Waite had a shot, but it was blocked by David Croft (16 points) and went out of bounds.

Another timeout, this time with a little more than five seconds left.

Waite had one more chance, with three seconds left, but his shot just missed, and No. 24 Walsh (10-2, 5-0) was able to take home the win.

"It's a huge win, we like to play this way," said Walsh's Mark Mittiga, who finished with 16 points. "The first half, we didn't rebound as well, but the second half, we came out and boxed out. It's our identity, its what we do."

What set up the final minutes occurred with 4:33 left in the fourth quarter. Walsh's Doug Lewis drove the basket and was able to weave through traffic, cutting Hoban's lead to three. After Hoban missed two opportunities under the basket, things got tight. Croft was also able to find a way to get inside, and it was a one-point Walsh lead.

"I thought we played a great game, but we are in a rut the middle of the season," said Hoban coach T.K Griffith. "There were about four loose balls they got to, and I think that was the difference. We just have to keep trying to build on the positives. The basketball gods were kind of with them tonight."

Waite, who led Hoban with 15 points, all from 3-point land, put Hoban on the board first to start the game, and by the end of the first period he had helped the Knights to a 16-11 lead.

Walsh picked away at Hoban's lead in the second quarter, but the Knights held on to the ball longer, showed some poise and did a nice job under the net. The problem was, Hoban wasn't able to convert when it did have a shot.

Hoban extended its lead to seven with 5:39 left in the third quarter, but again, Walsh found a way to keep things close and by the end of the quarter, it was 40-37.

Matt Pawlikowski is a freelance writer in Cleveland.

Bedford beats Warren Harding in boys basketball: Sports Roundup

$
0
0

When Bedford (7-5, 4-4) visited Warren Harding for a Lake Erie League boys basketball game two weeks ago, senior Aaron Beidleman hit a 3-pointer to send the game into overtime, and then eventually double overtime, which led to a Bearcats victory. Friday night, it was Harding which trailed by three points with 13 seconds left and looking to send...

When Bedford (7-5, 4-4) visited Warren Harding for a Lake Erie League boys basketball game two weeks ago, senior Aaron Beidleman hit a 3-pointer to send the game into overtime, and then eventually double overtime, which led to a Bearcats victory.

Friday night, it was Harding which trailed by three points with 13 seconds left and looking to send the game into the extra session and avenge the loss.

However, Bedford's defense stepped up and denied the Raiders for a 57-53 victory.

Chris Carter led the Bearcats with a game-high 24 points. Harding was paced by Anthony Bell's 16 points that spearheaded a 30-point third quarter in which the Raiders erased a 23-14 halftime deficit and turned it into a 44-40 fourth-quarter lead.

No. 3 Mentor 69, Brunswick 63: The Blue Devils gave the Cardinals (12-2, 5-1) all they could handle in the Northeast Ohio Conference Valley Division game. Michael Gallagher had 22 points for Mentor. Kyle Wheeler scored 22 for Brunswick.

No. 4 Villa Angela-St. Joseph 86, Holy Name 38: The Vikings (11-2, 5-0), ranked third in the Division IV state poll, were led by Carlton Bragg, a 6-9 sophomore center who scored a game-high 27 in the North Coast League White Division win.

No. 11 Richmond Heights 69, Cardinal 58: Frank Barber and Arthur Christian combined for 35 points for the Spartans (7-2, 4-0), ranked ninth in the Division IV state poll. The Huskies cut their deficit to four points late in the fourth quarter behind Jake DiBlasio, who had 16 points and nine rebounds.

No. 14 North Royalton 87, Mayfield 46: The Bears (12-1, 5-0) remained unbeaten in the Northeast Ohio Conference Lake Division by grabbing a 42-20 halftime lead and finishing with 15 players scoring, led by Nick Krempasky (14 points) and Evan Wypasek (13 points).

No. 18 Brecksville-Broadview Heights 51, Westlake 45: The Bees (10-1, 7-0) stayed atop the Southwestern Conference thanks to 14 points by Mark Chrzanowski and 13 points by Tim Tupa.

No. 22 Twinsburg 43, Stow 33: The Tigers (10-2, 4-1) held Stow to 12 second-half points en route to the Northeast Ohio Conference River Division victory. Sean Marable had 16 points and four rebounds for Twinsburg.

Akron East 70, Firestone 63: East (6-5, 4-2) gave the Falcons their first loss in the City Series as the Dragons went 8-for-8 from the free-throw line in the final quarter. Derik Lewis led East with a game-high 29 points and seven assists, and Kenyon Philpott had 10 points and nine rebounds.

Firestone got 23 points each from Kevin Gladney and Jerome Lane Jr., who also had a game-high 11 rebounds.

East Tech 80, Collinwood 48: The Golden Scarabs (10-4, 8-1) got 29 points from Kyauta Taylor in the Senate Athletic League rout.

Hudson 61, Solon 43: The Explorers (8-4, 3-2) won the NOC River Division game, earning coach Jeff Brink his 200th career victory.

 

Girls basketball

Glenville 81, Max Hayes 35: The Tarblooders (11-32, 8-0) kept a firm grasp on first place in the Senate Athletic League as Latrice Legion and Keesha Henderson had 36 and 22 points, respectively.

 

Hockey

St. Ignatius 5, Bethel Park (Pa.) 3: The Wildcats let a 3-0 lead slip away before regrouping and getting the win at the Meadville (Pa.) Tournament. Jack Weigandt had the winning goal off one of Miles McQuinn's two assists.

St. Edward 4, Upper St. Clair (Pa.) 3: Freshman Jordan Hoy scored his first varsity goal and had an assist, and senior Connor King had a goal and an assist as the Eagles won at Meadville.

 

Boys swimming

Madison 114, Cleveland Heights 65: The Blue Streaks cruised behind Owen Sill, who won the 50 freestyle (23.97) and 100 butterfly (1:03.55). He also joined Nick Karayianpoulo, Robbie Armstrong and Mark Miller in winning the 200 medley relay (1:51.89), and teamed with Miller, Armstrong and Dan Nelson on the victorious 200 free relay (1:39.29).

Girls swimming

Madison 112, Cleveland Heights 71: Sisters Amanda and Meghan Sill, Alison Smith and Erin Hord won the 200 medley relay (2:03.42), and the Sills won in the 200 free relay (1:50.10) with Hord and Maddie Headings to lead Madison. The 400 free relay of Emma Balish, Becca Turk, Headings and Amanda Sill also won (4:16.32). Meghan Sill won the 50 free (26.96) and 100 free (58.73), Amanda Sill won the 100 butterfly (1:09.27), Smith won the 200 individual medley (2:29.28) and 100 breaststroke (1:14.15) and Armstrong won the 500 free (6:28.77).

Copley 85, North Canton Hoover 85: Brenda Prifti, Emma Round, Sydney Bailey and Madison Myers won the meet's final event -- the 400 freestyle relay in 3:53.02 -- to earn Copley the tie.

 

Boys bowling

Green 2624, Akron North 1932: The Bulldogs improved to 13-0 as David Mramor, Tommy Lowry and Nate Ripley had series of 456, 433 and 423, respectively, at Turkeyfoot Lanes.

 

Gymnastics

Stow 129.65, Twinsburg 117.95: Catherine Suchy won the beam (8.45), floor (9.15) and all-around (32.9) to lead the Bulldogs past Twinsburg.


Lake Erie Monsters beat Hershey Bears, 3-2

$
0
0

Bill Thomas and Mike Sgarbossa each had a goal and two assists.

lake erie monsters logo  

HERSHEY, Pa. -- Bill Thomas and Mike Sgarbossa each had a goal and two assists, and Sami Aittokallio made 24 saves to lead the visiting Lake Erie Monsters to a 3-2 win Friday over the Hershey Bears.

Hershey took a 1-0 lead with a power-play goal at 12:39 of the first period, but the Monsters (21-16-2-1) tied the game 15 seconds later when Thomas beat Bears goalie Philipp Grubauer (20 saves).

Andrew Agozzino put the Monsters ahead, 2-1, with a power-play goal at 14:05 of the second period, and Sgarbossa made it 3-1 with a power-play goal early in third period.

The Bears (20-18-1-1) used a power play and an extra skater to score the game's final goal with 1:36 left.

The Monsters are 4-1 on a stretch of six straight road games, which ends tonight in Syracuse, N.Y., with a game against the Crunch.

Manti Te'o tells ESPN he wasn't involved in creating fake girlfriend hoax

$
0
0

Friday night, the Notre Dame linebacker insisted he was never involved in creating the dead girlfriend hoax, but that he lied to his father about meeting the woman called Lennay Kekua face-to-face.

NEW YORK — Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o insisted he had no role in the bizarre hoax involving his "dead" girlfriend and told ESPN on Friday night that he was duped by a person who has since apologized to him.

Notre Dame Teo Footba_Boot.jpg In a photo provided by ESPN, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o listens during an interview with ESPN's Jeremy Schaap, right, on Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, in Bradenton, Fla. ESPN says Te'o maintains he was never involved in creating the dead girlfriend hoax. He said in the off-camera interview: "When they hear the facts they'll know. They'll know there is no way I could be a part of this."  
In an off-camera interview with ESPN, Te'o said Ronaiah Tuiasosopo, a 22-year-old acquaintance who lives in California, contacted him two days ago and confessed to the prank. Deadspin.com first exposed the hoax on Wednesday and indicated Tuiasosopo was involved in it.

"I wasn't faking it," ESPN quoted Te'o as saying during the 2-1/2 hour interview. "I wasn't part of this. When they hear the facts they'll know. They'll know there is no way I could be a part of this."

Te'o said he first met Tuiasosopo in person after the Southern California game in November. Te'o told ESPN that Tuiasosopo told him he was the cousin of Lennay Kekua, the woman who Te'o believed he had fallen for through Internet chats and long phone conversations.

Te'o said he never met Kekua face-to-face and when he tried to speak with her via Skype and video phone calls, the picture was blocked.

He also told ESPN that he lied to his father about how he met the woman. To cover that up, he apparently lied to everyone else.

After he was told Kekua had died of leukemia in early September, he said he misled the public about the nature of the "relationship" because he was uncomfortable saying he had never met her in person.

"That goes back to what I did with my dad. I knew that. I even knew that it was crazy that I was with somebody that I didn't meet," he said. "So I kind of tailored my stories to have people think that, yeah, he met her before she passed away."

Earlier Friday, athletic director Jack Swarbrick urged Te'o and his family to speak publicly about the hoax.

Te'o was interviewed at the IMG Training Academy in Bradenton, Fla., where he is preparing for the NFL draft. ESPN said a public relations consultant was with him.

The Heisman Trophy finalist and his family had planned to go public with the story Monday, but Deadspin.com broke the news first on Wednesday.

Te'o led the Fighting Irish to a 12-0 regular season and the BCS title game, where they were routed 42-14 by Alabama and Te'o played poorly.

Saturday, Jan. 19 television sports listings for Cleveland and Northeast Ohio

$
0
0

Highlights include Cleveland State at Green Bay, Akron at Kent State and Ohio State at Michigan State college basketball, and the Cavaliers at Portland.

CLEVELAND, Ohio

Today's TV sports listings

AHL

7:30 p.m. LAKE ERIE MONSTERS at Syracuse, AM/1220 radio

AUTO RACING

2 a.m. (Sunday morning) Dakar Rally, stage 14 (tape), NBCSN

BOXING

9 p.m. Elvin Ayalavs. Curtis Stevens;

Gabriel Campillo vs. Sergey Kovalev, NBCSN

9:45 p.m. Roman Martinez vs. Juan Carlos Burgos;

Gennady Golovkin vs. Gabriel Rosado;

Orlando Salido vs. Mikey Garcia, HBO

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

3 p.m. All-Star Classic, CBSSN

GOLF

3 p.m. Humana Challenge, Golf Channel

7:30 p.m. Champions Tour, Mitsubishi Electric Championship, Golf Channel

4 a.m. (Sunday morning) Abu Dhabi Championship, Golf Channel

HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL

9:30 p.m. Tournament of Champions final, CBSSN

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

11 a.m. VMI at Coastal Carolina, ESPNU

Noon Maryland at North Carolina, ESPN

Noon UConn at Pittsburgh, ESPN2

12:30 p.m. Harvard at Memphis, Fox Sports Ohio

1 p.m. Nebraska at Penn State, ESPNU

1 p.m. Saint Bonaventure at Temple, CBSSN

2 p.m. CLEVELAND STATE at Green Bay, SportsTime Ohio

2 p.m. La Salle at Xavier, TWCS-311

2 p.m. Missouri at Florida, ESPN

2 p.m. Texas Tech at Oklahoma State, ESPN2

2 p.m. West Virginia at Purdue or Kansas at Texas, WOIO

2:30 p.m. Arizona at Arizona State, Fox Sports Ohio

3 p.m. AKRON at KENT STATE,  ESPNU;  AM/640, AM/1350 

3 p.m. Columbia at Cornell, NBCSN

4 p.m. Creighton at Wichita State, ESPN2

4 p.m. Oregon at UCLA, WOIO

4 p.m. Syracuse at Louisville, ESPN

4:30 p.m. California at Stanford, Fox Sports Ohio

5 p.m. Hofstra at George Mason, NBCSN

5 p.m. Penn at Saint Joseph's, ESPNU

6 p.m. OHIO STATE at Michigan State, ESPN

6 p.m. Toledo at Ohio, SportsTime Ohio

7 p.m. Marquette at Cincinnati, ESPNU

7 p.m. UNLV at Colorado State, NBCSN

8 p.m. Wisconsin at Iowa, Big Ten Network

8 p.m. Youngstown State at UW-Milwaukee, TWCS-311

9 p.m. Gonzaga at Butler, ESPN

9 p.m. Kentucky at Auburn, ESPNU

11 p.m. Utah at Washington, ESPNU

MEN'S COLLEGE HOCKEY

7 p.m. Alaska at Notre Dame, CBSSN

NBA

8 p.m. Memphis at Chicago, WGN

9 p.m. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS at Utah,  Fox Sports Ohio;  AM/1100

SOCCER

9:55 a.m. Premier League, Fulham at Man City, ESPN2

TENNIS

7 a.m. Australian Open, third round (tape), ESPN2

9 p.m. Australian Open, fourth round, ESPN2

3 a.m. (Sunday morning) Australian Open, fourth round, ESPN2

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Noon KENT STATE at Ball State, SportsTime Ohio

WOMEN'S COLLEGE GYMNASTICS

4 p.m. Illinois at Michigan, Big Ten Network


Ray Horton hired as defensive coordinator: Cleveland Browns Insider

$
0
0

The former coordinator for the Arizona Cardinals, who interviewed with three teams for head-coaching positions, says he's excited by the talent on the Browns' roster. Watch video

inbrowns-horton.jpg View full size Ray Horton was the defensive coordinator for the Arizona Cardinals in 2011 and 2012.  

BEREA, Ohio -- In Cleveland, Browns new defensive coordinator Ray Horton will be reunited with offensive coordinator Norv Turner, the man who gave him his first coaching job in the NFL 19 years ago.

"I played in Dallas when Norv was the offensive coordinator, and Norv gave me my first job with the Washington Redskins," Horton told The Plain Dealer in a phone interview shortly after he was named Browns coordinator Friday. "It was one of my last years playing (defensive back) in Dallas, and he came up to me and said, 'Hey Ray, when I get my (head coaching) job, I want you to come with me.' I laughed and said, 'What? You haven't even coached me. What do you know about me?' He said, 'I love the way your coaches talk about you. I want you to coach for me.' It just blew me away. He was the first guy that ever hired me."

Horton, who played 10 years in the NFL, joined Turner in Washington as assistant defensive backs coach in 1994 and remained there three years. He then coached defensive backs for the Bengals and Lions before beginning a seven-year stint with the Steelers from 2004 to 2010. He spent the past two years as defensive coordinator for the Cardinals.

The opportunity to work alongside Turner again was a huge draw for him.

"It's awesome," said Horton. "Norv is one of the pre-eminent callers of the game of football. Great, great, great offensive mind. We're going to put up points and we're going to stop 'em from scoring points and we're going to have a fantastic team."

Horton is also looking forward to opposing Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau, whom he worked under in Pittsburgh.

"I was just playing golf with him (Friday) and I told him we're going to have some great turnpike battles," Horton said.

Horton, 52, interviewed for the Browns head coaching vacancy on Jan. 1, and was hoping to land the top job.

"I was ecstatic about the opportunity to try to coach that team," he said. "I don't know (why I didn't get it) but it doesn't matter now. I'm on a team that's loaded with talented young players, with great ownership. There are young players on both sides of the ball, the team is on the upswing and it looks like they're ready to take charge of that division. Just point them in the right direction and go."

Horton acknowledged that he was "very" disappointed to be passed over by three teams for their head coaching vacancies. He interviewed with his Cardinals twice and the Bills once. He was reportedly miffed when Bruce Arians was named Cardinals coach. "(Disappointed) is as honest as I can be to my core. But I'm excited about the opportunity to show people what I did in Arizona on the defensive side was no fluke and we're going to do it in Cleveland and we're going to be a top 10 defense and we'll see what happens after that."

He said he's never worked with Rob Chudzinski, but knows how good he is from coaching against him.

"We played them last year and Cam Newton threw for a lot of yards and gave us fits and it foreshadowed how good that guy was," said Horton. "Rob's got a fantastic reputation through the league."

He said his defense will be: "Aggressive. I don't know if anybody pressured more than I did last year and that's the kind of stuff we'll do here."

He's also excited about coaching the likes of Joe Haden, T.J. Ward, Phil Taylor, D'Qwell Jackson, Jabaal Sheard and the rest. "I'm excited about the talent we have and they're going to love this system," he said.

He ran a 3-4 in Arizona and with the Steelers, but "I'm a coach of men, whether it's 3-4, 4-3, 5-5, I don't care. I'm going to coach men."

Chudzinski now has three strong coordinators in Horton, Turner and Chris Tabor on special teams.

"We're truly excited that we were able to get someone of Ray's caliber as our defensive coordinator," said Chudzinski. "He possesses a great deal of experience as a player, position coach and coordinator in the NFL and has been part of some of the top defenses in the league throughout his career. He is an extremely talented coach and I know that he will work very well with the young nucleus of players we have on defense."

In 2012, Horton guided a defensive unit that led the NFL in passer rating allowed (71.2) and interception percentage (4.4). His defense also ranked second in the NFL in interceptions (22) and third-down efficiency (32.9 percent), third in red zone defense (44.4 percent) and fourth in takeaways (33). The defense also ranked fifth in passing defense (200.8 ypg), first downs allowed (288) and points allowed per drive (1.42).

  Who will call plays? Chudzinski said he's still working through who will call the plays -- him or master playcaller Turner. "As I mentioned before, obviously I have a lot of confidence in Norv. There's a lot of things we have to get together on and we'll work through that and make that determination."

He said it will be fun to be reunited with Turner and share what they've learned since they were last together in 2010.

"I think that will be fun to go through and combine some of the things we've been doing," said Chudzinski, who worked with Cam Newton the past two years in Carolina. "I've done some different things and he's been doing some different things the last couple years, so I think it'll be a real dynamic environment for the next few weeks putting that all together."

How many players has he been able to talk to? "Probably 10 to 15 or so. Some have been able to stop by. Some are in town. It's been pretty busy and the process of doing interviews and trying to do those things as well as get coaches together and call. Now that we have some guys here on the staff. That's really helped take some of the workload off and more and more, I'll be getting together with some of the players."

Chud and Weeden: Chudzinski said quarterback Brandon Weeden is one of the 10 or 15 players he's talked to so far. "He called me a couple days ago and we had a good conversation, talked a little bit about what my vision is for the team, some of the things I shared here in the press conference last week and it was good. It sounds like he's excited and all the guys that I've come across, D'Qwell (Jackson) stopped by, there's a feel of energy in the air and I think these guys are excited about getting going. And I can't wait till they all report."

With friends like these: Browns CEO Joe Banner denied he was the source of anonymous comments sharply critical of Philadelphia GM Howie Roseman during the competition for Oregon coach Chip Kelly, who was hired by the Eagles.

In a story written Monday by CBSsports.com's Jason La Canfora, a source was quoted as saying Roseman was "drunk with power" and "woefully out of his depth" and a detriment to the Eagles' search for a head coach. Banner worked in the Eagles' front office for two decades before moving on to pursue a larger role with a team.

"It's just unfortunate and untrue," Banner said "Beyond that, like Jimmy (Haslam) just said, we've got a big job to do here. It's taking every minute of every day and every piece of energy I have and that's what I'm focused on."

Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie, a boyhood friend of Banner, seemed to make no secret of who he thought was behind the remarks.

"I'm very supportive of Howie, and if there's any criticism coming from afar about Howie, it's just off-base, and so I will support Howie completely, because that's not right," Lurie told CSNPhilly.com. "And, you know, if there are league sources that are really based in Cleveland, that's not right. We see through it all."

The Eagles landed Kelly, who was reportedly the No. 1 target of the Browns. Banner admitted he was blindsided by CSNPhilly.com report.

Quotable: Banner on the Browns' approach to free agency: "I need to cautiously manage expectations. I would expect us to be players in free agency, but we'll never be building the team around that. We won't care about splash. . . . We don't want people to say, "Well who's the biggest name in free agency?" We are not precluding that, either. But it could be that we are picking up two, three, four incremental players that are making us better or help our rotation as opposed to being a splash. But I'd be surprised if we are not participants in free agency."

Plain Dealer reporter Tom Reed contributed to this report.

Cardinals Hall of Famer Stan 'The Man' Musial dies at 92

$
0
0

Musial won seven National League batting titles, was a three-time MVP and helped the Cardinals capture three World Series championships in the 1940s.

ST. LOUIS -- Stan Musial, the St. Louis Cardinals star with the corkscrew stance and too many batting records to fit on his Hall of Fame plaque, died Saturday. He was 92.

Stan the Man was so revered in St. Louis that he has two statues outside Busch Stadium -- one just wouldn't do him justice. He was one of baseball's greatest hitters, shining in the mold of Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio even without the bright lights of the big city.

Musial won seven National League batting titles, was a three-time MVP and helped the Cardinals capture three World Series championships in the 1940s.

The Cardinals announced Musial's death in a news release. They said he died Saturday evening at his home in Ladue surrounded by family. The team said Musial's son-in-law, Dave Edmonds, informed the club of Musial's death.

"We have lost the most beloved member of the Cardinals family," team chairman William DeWitt Jr. said. "Stan Musial was the greatest player in Cardinals history and one of the best players in the history of baseball."

Musial was the second baseball Hall of Famer who died Saturday. Longtime Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver also passed away, at age 82.

Musial spent his entire 22-year career with the Cardinals and made the All-Star team 24 times -- baseball held two All-Star games each summer for a few seasons.

A pitcher in the low minors until he injured his arm, Musial turned to playing the outfield and first base. It was a stroke of luck for him, as he went on to hit .331 with 475 home runs before retiring in 1963.

Widely considered the greatest Cardinals player ever, the outfielder and first baseman was the first person in team history to have his number retired. Ol' 6 probably was the most popular, too, especially after Albert Pujols skipped town.

At the suggestion of a pal, actor John Wayne, he carried around autographed cards of himself to give away. He enjoyed doing magic tricks for kids and was fond of pulling out a harmonica to entertain crowds with a favorite, "The Wabash Cannonball."

musial-color-bats-64-ap.jpg View full size A great hitter who had exactly the same amount of hits -- 1,815 -- at home or on the road, Stan Musial carried a .331 batting average over his 22-year major-league career.  

Humble, scandal-free, and eager to play every day, Musial struck a chord with fans throughout the Midwest and beyond. For much of his career, St. Louis was the most western outpost in the majors, and the Cardinals' vast radio network spread word about him in all directions.

Farmers in the field and families on the porch would tune in, as did a future president -- Bill Clinton recalled doing his homework listening to Musial's exploits.

Musial's public appearances dwindled in recent years, though he took part in the pregame festivities at Busch during the 2011 postseason as the Cardinals won the World Series. And he was at the White House in February 2011 when President Barack Obama presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America's highest civilian honor for contributions to society.

At the ceremony, President Obama said: "Stan remains to this day an icon untarnished, a beloved pillar of the community, a gentleman you'd want your kids to emulate."

He certainly delivered at the plate.

Musial never struck out 50 times in a season. He led the NL in most every hitting category for at least one year, except homers. He hit a career-high 39 home runs in 1948, falling one short of winning the Triple Crown.

In all, Musial held 55 records when he retired in 1963. Fittingly, the accolades on his his bronze Hall plaque start off with this fact, rather than flowery prose: "Holds many National League records ..."

He played nearly until 43rd birthday, adding to his totals. He got a hit with his final swing, sending an RBI single past Cincinnati's rookie second baseman -- that was Pete Rose, who would break Musial's league hit record of 3,630 some 18 years later.

Of those hits, Musial got exactly 1,815 at home and exactly 1,815 on the road. He also finished with 1,951 RBIs and scored 1,949 runs.

All that balance despite a most unorthodox left-handed stance. Legs and knees close together, he would cock the bat near his ear and twist his body away from the pitcher. When the ball came, he uncoiled.

Unusual, that aspect of Musial.

Asked to describe the habits that kept him in baseball for so long, Musial once said: "Get eight hours of sleep regularly. Keep your weight down, run a mile a day. If you must smoke, try light cigars. They cut down on inhaling."

One last thing, he said: "Make it a point to bat .300."

As for how he did that, Musial offered a secret.

"I consciously memorized the speed at which every pitcher in the league threw his fastball, curve, and slider," he said. "Then, I'd pick up the speed of the ball in the first 30 feet of its flight and knew how it would move once it has crossed the plate."

It worked pretty well, considering Musial began his baseball career as a pitcher in the low minors. And by his account, as he said during his induction speech in Cooperstown, an injury had left him as a "dead, left-handed pitcher just out of Class D."

Hoping to still reach the majors, he turned toward another position. It was just what he needed.

Musial made his major league debut late in 1941, the season that Williams batted .406 for the Boston Red Sox and DiMaggio hit in a record 56 straight games for the New York Yankees.

Musial never expressed regret or remorse that he didn't attract more attention than the cool DiMaggio or prickly Williams. Fact is, Musial was plenty familiar in every place he played.

Few could bring themselves to boo baseball's nicest superstar, not even the Brooklyn Dodgers crowds that helped give him his nickname, a sign of weary respect for his .359 batting average at Ebbets Field.

Many, many years before any sports fans yelled "You're the man!" at their favorite athletes, Stan was indeed the Man.

Dodgers pitcher Preacher Roe once joked about how to handle Musial: "I throw him four wide ones and then I try to pick him off first base."

Brooklynites had another reason to think well of Musial: Unlike Enos Slaughter and other Cardinal teammates, he was supportive when the Dodgers' Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier in 1947. Bob Gibson, who started out with the Cardinals in the late 1950s, would recall how Musial had helped established a warm atmosphere between blacks and whites on the team.

Like DiMaggio and Williams, Musial embodied a time when the greats stayed with one team. He joined the Cardinals during the last remnants of the Gas House Gang and stayed in St. Louis until Gibson and Curt Flood ushered in a new era of greatness.

The only year Musial missed with the Cardinals was 1945, when he was in the U.S. Navy during World War II. He was based in Pearl Harbor, assigned to a unit that helped with ship repair.

Before and after his military service, he was a star hitter.

Musial was the NL MVP in 1943, 1946 and 1948, and was runner-up four other years. He enjoyed a career remarkably free of slumps, controversies or rivalries.

The Cardinals were dominant early in Musial's career. They beat DiMaggio and the Yankees in the 1942 World Series, lost to the Yankees the next year and defeated the St. Louis Browns in 1944. In 1946, the Cardinals beat Williams and the visiting Red Sox in Game 7 at Sportsman's Park.

Musial, mostly a left fielder then, starred with Terry Moore in center and Slaughter, another future Hall of Famer, in right, making up one of baseball's greatest outfields. Later on, Musial would switch between the outfield and first base.

Musial never played on another pennant winner after 1946. Yet even after the likes of Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays and Hank Aaron came to the majors, Musial remained among baseball's best.

The original Musial statue outside the new Busch Stadium is a popular meeting place before games and carries this inscription: "Here stands baseball's perfect warrior. Here stands baseball's perfect knight."

"Everybody's a Musial fan," former Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog once said.

Musial gave the press little to write about beyond his grace and greatness on the field. He didn't date movie stars, spike opponents or chew out reporters or umpires.

In 1958, he reached the 3,000-hit level and became the NL's first $100,000-a-year player. Years earlier, he had turned down a huge offer to join the short-lived Mexican League. He never showed resentment over the multimillion dollar salaries of modern players. He thought they had more fun in his days.

"I enjoyed coming to the ballpark every day and I think we enjoyed the game," Musial said in a 1991 Associated Press interview. "We had a lot of train travel, so we had more time together. We socialized quite a bit and we'd go out after ball games."

He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1969, his first year of eligibility.

"It was, you know, a dream come true," Musial once said. "I always wanted to be a ballplayer."

After retiring as a player, Musial served for years in the Cardinals' front office, including as general manager in 1967, when the Cardinals won the World Series.

In the 1970s, Musial occasionally played in Old-Timers' Day games and could still line the ball to the wall. He was a fixture for decades at the Cooperstown induction ceremonies and also was a member of the Hall's Veterans Committee. Often, after the Vets panel had voted, he'd pull out a harmonica conveniently located in his jacket pocket and lead the other members in a rendition of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game."

Into the 2000s, Musial would spend time with the Cardinals at spring training, thrilling veterans and rookies alike with his stories.

Ever ready, he performed the national anthem on his harmonica at least one opening day at Busch Stadium. Musial learned his music during overnight train trips in the 1940s and in the 1990s was a member of a trio known as "Geriatric Jazz" and collaborated on a harmonica instructional book.

Stanley Frank Musial was born in Donora, Pa., on Nov. 21, 1920, son of a Polish immigrant steelworker. He began his minor league career straight out of high school, in June 1938, and soon after married high school sweetheart Lillian Labash, with whom he had four children.

Musial fell in 1940 while trying to make a tough catch and hurt his left arm, damaging his pitching prospects. Encouraged by minor league manager Dickie Kerr to try playing outfield, he did so well in 1941 that the Cardinals moved him up to the majors in mid-September -- and he racked up a .426 average during the final weeks of the season.

In his best year, 1948, he had four five-hit games, hit 39 home runs and batted .376, best in the National League. He also led his league that year in runs scored (135), hits (230), total bases (429), doubles (46), and triples (18).

In 1954, he set a major league record with five home runs in a doubleheader against the New York Giants. He hit .300 or better in 16 consecutive seasons and hit a record home runs in All-Star play, including a 12th-inning, game-winning shot in 1955.

In 1962, at age 41, he batted .330 and hit 19 home runs. In his final game, on Sept. 29, 1963, he had two hits at Busch Stadium against the Reds and the Cardinals retired his uniform number.

He was active in business, too. He served as a director of the St. Louis-based Southwest Bank. He was co-owner of a popular St. Louis steakhouse, "Stan Musial and Biggie's," and a bowling alley with former teammate Joe Garagiola (leading to a bitter fallout that eventually got resolved). He later ran Stan the Man Inc., specializing in merchandise he autographed. Musial was known for handing out folded $1 bills.

A prominent Polish-American, he was a charter member of the National Polish-American Sports Hall of Fame and was warmly regarded by his ancestral country, which in 2000 dedicated Stan Musial Stadium in Kutno, Poland. Musial also was involved politically, campaigning for John F. Kennedy in 1960 and serving as Lyndon Johnson's director of the President's Council on Physical Fitness.

Musial's versatility was immortalized in verse, by popular poet of the times Ogden Nash, who in "The Tycoon" wrote of the Cardinals star and entrepreneur:

"And, between the slugging and the greeting,

To the bank for a directors' meeting.

Yet no one grudges success to Stan,

Good citizen and family man,

Though I would love to have his job

One half tycoon, one half Ty Cobb."

The Cardinals said Musial is survived by his four children, Richard, Gerry, Janet and Jean, as well as 11 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.

Musial's wife died in May 2012.

Funeral arrangements had not yet been finalized, the Cardinals said. The team set up a memorial site around one of Musial statue's at Busch Stadium.

Viewing all 53367 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images