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Indians Comment of the Day: LaPorta should have had job from Day 1

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"A prospect you are counting on as being a foundation player for the foreseeable future shouldn't be wasting time competing with a Kearns or Branyan. I am a believer in letting guys take their lumps, especially in a season where we would suprise people if we finished second to last in our division." - Run2Daylight

matt-laporta2.jpgView full sizeMatt LaPorta will finally be installed as the Indians' everyday first baseman.

In response to the story Cleveland Indians trade Russell Branyan to Seattle for prospects; Matt LaPorta to take over first base, cleveland.com reader Run2Daylight doesn't think LaPorta should have needed to compete for a position in the first place. This reader writes,

"A prospect you are counting on as being a foundation player for the foreseeable future shouldn't be wasting time competing with a Kearns or Branyan. I am a believer in letting guys take their lumps, especially in a season where we would suprise people if we finished second to last in our division."

To respond to Run2Daylight's comment, go here.

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

The New Yorker's 'The Only Game in Town' sports anthology sports some excellent writing

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The best passage by far springs from the typewriter of Updike, with his famous farewell to Ted Williams in his last game at Fenway Park in 1960.

game.jpgEdited By David Remnick, Random House, 498 pp., $30

As you're stuffing vacation reading material into your beach bag, you're probably not thinking the New Yorker.

But the magazine has a terrific new sports anthology to go with your snacks and sunscreen. "The Only Game in Town" is a collection of 32 articles spanning eight decades by a splendid array of writers, including Ring Lardner, Don DeLillo, Lillian Ross, Calvin Trillin, Susan Orlean, Haruki Murakami and the Johns: Updike, McPhee and Cheever.

We sit in the bleachers with Smokey Joe Wood, pedal over a mountain with Lance Armstrong, line up a putt with Tiger Woods. And though boxing and baseball are often deemed the most literary, scribe-friendly sports, this anthology veritably teems with basketball.

Extra-large assessments of Yao Ming and Shaquille O'Neal are joined by McPhee's elegantly written, masterpiece of a profile from 1965 on college phenom Bill Bradley -- future Knick and U.S. Senator -- who "glides through the air with his back to the basket, looks for a teammate he can pass to, and, finding none, tosses the ball into the basket over one shoulder, like a pinch of salt."

Bradley, who played "Climb Every Mountain" from "The Sound of Music" to get psyched up for games, was an only child seduced by the sound of the swish who found solace in endless afternoons on a playground "where the fundamental narcotic of basketball entered his system."

Henry Louis Gates Jr. contributes a smart and revealing portrait of the marketing machinery swirling around Michael Jordan in his prime. Both the Bradley and Jordan pieces read like spot-on preamble to LeBron James. What was is again.

There is also a wickedly well-written story by Cheever from 1953 about fathers, sons, death and baseball.

Other stories blew me away with the power of their reporting and prose and humor -- Nancy Franklin hilariously speaks to our universal fear of dark, dank basements, then explains the joys of pingpong -- but editor David Remnick picked a few clunkers.

Anthony Lane, William Finnegan, Herbert Warren Wind and Malcolm Gladwell offer rather drab takes on the Olympics, surfing, golf courses and choking in sports. Perhaps Remnick, who edits the New Yorker, felt he owed it to some staffers, past and present, to include them regardless.

Luckily, the winners well outnumber the duds.

ted.jpgTed Williams bids farewell to Fenway Park on Sept. 28, 1960. Fortunately, one of the 10,454 fans was John Updike.

The best passage by far springs from the typewriter of Updike, with his famous farewell to Ted Williams in his last game at Fenway Park in 1960. Williams, the eternal loner and probably the greatest hitter who ever lived, loathed the press and barely tolerated the people in the stands. "His basic offense against the fans," chirps Updike, "has been to wish that they weren't there."

Williams' bitter and awkward farewell speech mercifully ends, and the nervous crowd, "like an immense sail going limp in a change of wind, sighed with relief."

In 14 concise and poetic pages, Updike, both snarky skeptic and star-struck fan, weighs Williams' career, which concluded with the perfect punctuation mark: a glorious home run in his final at bat.

Williams subsequently skipped the last road trip of the Red Sox season, not wishing to sully his exquisite exit. Likewise, Updike knew when to get off the stage with the crowd still cheering. Although he went on to write hundreds of stories and reviews for the New Yorker, he never wrote about baseball again.

 

Clint O'Connor is the film critic of The Plain Dealer. 

Browns, Ohio State Comment of the Day: High hopes for Robiskie

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"Robiskie struggled his first year at OSU but blossomed his second. I always liked him at Ohio State. Not great, but a very reliable, solid receiver. I also beleive it has much to do with the QB position. I wouldn't be surprised if Robo ends up having more catches/yards than all the other Browns' receivers this year." - moscow44

Browns lose to Chargers, 30-23View full sizeBrian Robiskie contributed little to the Browns' 2009 campaign. Some fans have high hopes for him in 2010.

In response to the story Terry Pluto's Talkin' ... about an emerging young Brown, the clear No. 1 QB and why the Tribe had to deal Russell Branyan, cleveland.com reader moscow44 has high hopes for Brian Robiskie. This reader writes,

"Robiskie struggled his first year at OSU but blossomed his second. I always liked him at Ohio State. Not great, but a very reliable, solid receiver. I also beleive it has much to do with the QB position. I wouldn't be surprised if Robo ends up having more catches/yards than all the other Browns' receivers this year."

To respond to moscow44's comment, go here.

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

LeBron to the Bulls; Brian Robiskie's importance to the Browns; and Carmona's trade value

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Cleveland sports bloggers discuss the recent reports of LeBron headed to Chicago, why Brian Robiskie is important to the Browns' offensive success in 2010 and why the Indians shouldn't trade Fausto Carmona.

Derrick RoseView full sizeWill LeBron James and Derrick Rose be running mates next season in Chicago?

Cavaliers

Cavs: the blog: "Regardless of how the rest of this summer plays out, there's no doubt that the Bulls have done absolutely everything right up to this point. Thanks to patience, a series of savvy moves and picks, and more than a little bit of luck, the Bulls are in position to add LeBron James and Chris Bosh to an already-solid young core. Instead of tanking for draft picks/cap space or mortgaging their future, Chicago consistently put a quality team on the floor while leaving room for the team to improve." » Read more

Cleveland Frowns: "It appears that LeBron and his team may listen a little more closely to the Bulls. Because LeBron is going to make a basketball decision, and the Bulls can offer the most formidable core of players to join him. We needed the New York Times to tell us this. And anonymous NBA exec needed to 'gather' this from conversations with other anonymous NBA execs. Just incredible. An incredible piece of work by Abrams and the New York Times. Also incredible how much has been made of the notion that LeBron will make 'a basketball decision,' as if we were talking about fantasy hoops here." » Read more

Browns

Cleveland Reboot: "Let's hope all the positive buzz surrounding Robiskie actually does carry over into the regular season. For lack of a better sentiment, the Browns' offense is desperately relying on a player who played in parts of five games last season. For the team's offense – particularly in the passing game – Robiskie needs to make an Olympic-sized jump in order for the Browns to reach even some basic compentency. Otherwise, Mohammed Massaquoi will be double-teamed on every third down, following a series of eight-man fronts on every other play." » Read more

Indians

LeBrowns Town: "He's under the team's control through 2013, and even though his current trade value might be higher than ever, the Indians need an anchor in that weak pitching staff. The team has three years to deal Carmona, and if they expect to contend in that time period, then it makes sense to hang on to him rather than swap him for prospects that might not be ready to help the team by 2013." » Read more

LeBron James will stay with the Cavaliers, Bud Shaw believes (Starting Blocks TV)

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Also, Matt LaPorta needs to produce for the Tribe, or the C.C. Sabathia trade starts to look like a bust, Bud says.

lebron-james-bulls.jpgLeBron to Chicago a done deal? Bud Shaw doesn't think so.

Welcome to today's edition of Starting Blocks TV, our Web video show about what's going on in Cleveland sports. Today's show is hosted by Bill Lubinger and Branson Wright. Today's highlights:

• An unnamed NBA source has said that it's a 'done deal' that LeBron James will end up going to the Chicago Bulls, along with Toronto's Chris Bosh. Do you think the die has been cast, even though the official free agency period doesn't begin until Thursday? Cast your vote in the poll now posted on the Starting Blocks blog.

• Plain Dealer columnist Bud Shaw, today's guest, says why he doesn't think the Bulls deal is done, and that he believes LeBron will end up re-signing with the Cavaliers, as he wrote in today's column.

• Speaking of changing places, Bud says it's time that Matt LaPorta was given an opportunity to play every day with the Indians. He adds that if LaPorta doesn't show have a productive season the rest of the way, it will call into question whether the Tribe's deal that sent C.C. Sabathia to Milwaukee a couple of years ago was a bust.

• Bud talks about Manny Acta's comments after Friday's loss that he has told the team not to worry about wins and losses, just to worry about getting better.

SBTV will return Tuesday.



World Cup 2010: Netherlands beats Slovakia 2-1 at World Cup

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Like clockwork, the Oranje are into the World Cup quarterfinals. The Netherlands reached the final eight Monday when standouts Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder scored in each half of a 2-1 victory over Slovakia.

netherlands062810.jpgView full sizeNetherlands' Arjen Robben, foreground, celebrates after scoring the opening goal as Slovakia's Marek Hamsik reacts during the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between the Netherlands and Slovakia at the stadium in Durban, South Africa.

DURBAN, South Africa (AP) — Like clockwork, the Oranje are into the World Cup quarterfinals.

The Netherlands reached the final eight Monday when standouts Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder scored in each half of a 2-1 victory over Slovakia.

The Oranje, who have never won soccer's biggest prize, went ahead in the 18th minute when Robben cut inside from the right wing and found the net with a low, precise shot from 20 yards. Robben sat out the first two group matches with a hamstring injury, but his return has rekindled the crafty Dutch offense.

Sneijder doubled the lead into an empty net in the 84th after a gamble by Slovak goalkeeper Jan Mucha backfired.

Netherlands goalkeeper Maarten Stekelenburg preserved the win with two key saves in the 67th and the Dutch extended their team-record unbeaten streak to 23 games. Robert Vittek scored on a last-second penalty kick for Slovakia, then rushed to the net to retrieve the ball, only to hear the final whistle.

In the quarterfinals, the Netherlands will face either five-time champion Brazil or Chile, who play later.

The LeBron-O-Meter: Bull hockey!

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Less than three days to Free Agency. Our nerves are stretched to the breaking point Hold us.

Running with the bullsIs that what the Bulls will do to Cleveland Cavaliers fans?
One thing we can say for sure about LeBron's impending free agency: the closer we come to the Big Day, the dumber the things being said about him. So many pundits,  prognosticators and pinheads have declared him definitely headed to one team or another that one writer finally declared not that they're all wrong, but that they're all right:

"Breaking News: LeBron James to play for six NBA teams next year."

But for everyone who recognizes the absurdity of this situation, there are two that turn away in disgust like Christina de Nicola on bleacherreport.com, handing out "shame-on-yous" to ESPN and everyone else in sight:

"But mainly shame on you, LeBron.  Shame on you for toying with basketball, and making yourself bigger than the sport you grew up loving."

We here at 'Meter Central have no use for scolds like that. Half the fun of following the LeBron speculation -- heck, half the fun of watching sports in general  -- is talking about what is and speculating about what could be. Yes, it's out of hand in this case, but so what? No one's getting hurt by it.

So if people want to say LeBron to the Bulls is a done deal, based on the musings of one unidentified NBA executive, then we say "HA!" And our "HA! " is just as good as your shame-on-you.

Except we're getting more nervous by the day as July 1 nears, and in true Cleveland fashion, expect the worst.

Today's Meter Reading: Uh-oh

uh-oh.gif

Like everyone else in Cleveland, we wonder what LeBron James will do when his contract is up this summer. Will he stay home, or follow the bright lights to Broadway? Until he decides to talk, we have to rely on hunches, instincts and educated guesswork. We'll report our findings, more or less daily, using the LeBron-O-Meter.












Brian Shaw is in Cleveland to discuss Cavaliers job

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Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Brian Shaw left LA this morning headed to Cleveland for a meeting with Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert and General Manager Chris Grant about the head coaching position. Los Angeles Times reporter Brad Turner writes Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak did "grant permission" for Cleveland to speak with Shaw, who had a telephone interview with Cavaliers representatives last...

bshaw.jpgJimmy Jackson, left, listens to Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Brian Shaw during game in 2006.

Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Brian Shaw left LA this morning headed to Cleveland for a meeting with Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert and General Manager Chris Grant about the head coaching position.

Los Angeles Times reporter Brad Turner writes Lakers General Manager Mitch Kupchak did "grant permission" for Cleveland to speak with Shaw, who had a telephone interview with Cavaliers representatives last week.

Shaw, 43, a Lakers assistant coach the last five seasons, probably also would be a candidate to replace Lakers Coach Phil Jackson if he retires.

It has been reported that LeBron James has a strong interest in the triangle offense, something in which Shaw is well-versed because of his four years as a player who won three titles with the Lakers from 2000-2002. James is expected to become a free agent July 1, and there is no guarantee he'll return to the Cavaliers next season, even if Shaw lands the job.



Also, former Cavaliers guard Shannon Brown, now with the Lakers will opt out of the final year of his two-year, $4.139-million contract by the June 30 deadline, writes Turner.

 


Twinsburg's Malina Howard leads USA national basketball team to FIBA Americas championship: High School Newswatch

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Twinsburg's Howard helps USA prevail: The USA women's 18-U national basketball team won the FIBA Americas championship Sunday, defeating Brazil, 81-38, at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. Twinsburg incoming junior Malina Howard played a big role for the champs, who finished the tournament with a 5-0 record. Howard, 16 and the second-youngest member of the...













Twinsburg's Malina Howard, pictured during a March game against Brush, helped USA women's 18-U national basketball team win the FIBA Americas title.



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(Joshua Gunter/The Plain Dealer)








Twinsburg's Howard helps USA prevail: The USA women's 18-U national basketball team won the FIBA Americas championship Sunday, defeating Brazil, 81-38, at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Twinsburg incoming junior Malina Howard played a big role for the champs, who finished the tournament with a 5-0 record. Howard, 16 and the second-youngest member of the team, had a tournament-leading .625 field goal average including a team-leading, 12-point effort in the title game.

Football broadcast schedule released: Fox Sports Ohio released its Thursday football game of the week broadcast schedule for the 2010 season.

Each game will be televised live. The pregame show starts at 6:30 with kickoff at 7.

The schedule: Aug. 26, Strongsville at Euclid; Sept. 2, Massillon at Canton GlenOak; Sept. 9, Elyria Catholic at Elyria; Sept. 16, Maple Heights at Cleveland Heights; Sept. 23, Kirtland at Cuyahoga Heights; Sept. 30, Solon at Mayfield; Oct. 7, Copley at Wadsworth; Oct. 14, Willoughby South at Eastlake North; Oct. 21, Canton McKinley at Youngstown Boardman; and Oct. 28, Youngstown Ursuline at St. Vincent-St. Mary.

Hoban's Wagner resigns: Mitch Wagner has resigned as softball coach at Archbishop Hoban after nine seasons.

"I've been coaching high school sports for more than 30 years and there's other things I want to do," said Wagner, who exits with a 160-47 record, five North Coast League Blue Division titles, two Division II district championships and a regional crown.

"My two children are all grown up, I want to go back to school and complete work towards my master's degree, and my wife and I want to do some traveling."

Wagner, 49 and an Akron resident, will continue to teach physical education at the high school. The Knights posted a 16-13 record this past season, including a 10-3 mark in the NCL.

-- Bob Fortuna

West Geauga's Emans leaves: Danielle Emans' ultimate dream is to coach at the college level, so she's decided to resign as West Geauga's softball coach after one season.

Emans was an assistant basketball coach at Hiram College last year and recently added to her duties at the college, agreeing to become an assistant golf coach.

Emans, a Willoughby resident, will continue as a business teacher at the high school. She led the Wolverines to a 15-13 overall record and 8-2 mark in the Chagrin Valley Conference Chagrin Division last season.

-- Bob Fortuna

Indians Comment of the Day: Patience with prospects is important

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"It's too early to judge [some of the team's prospects]. We made that mistake with Phillips, no doubt about it. Why are the fans so quick to make the same 'quick judgment' mistake that the organization has clearly learned from? Just because all of our prospects aren't instant studs like Carlos Santana doesn't mean they won't develop into solid players." - truetribefan

Cleveland Indians beat Reds, 4-3View full sizeLuis Valbuena is back in Columbus after struggling as the Indians' starting second baseman this season.

In response to the story Cleveland gets ready to deal with another season sinking quickly: Indians Insider, cleveland.com reader truetribefan thinks fans shouldn't rush to judge the team's prospects. This reader writes,

"It's too early to judge [some of the team's prospects]. We made that mistake with Phillips, no doubt about it. Why are the fans so quick to make the same 'quick judgment' mistake that the organization has clearly learned from? Just because all of our prospects aren't instant studs like Carlos Santana doesn't mean they won't develop into solid players."

To respond to truetribefan's comment, go here.

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

LeBron James should stay in Cleveland: Chuck D of Public Enemy weighs in

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"A championship in Cleveland would be much sweeter than anywhere else LeBron would play," rapper says.

chuckd2.jpgChuck D

 
Public Enemy performed to a rousing crowd at Cleveland's House of Blues on Sunday night. Lead rapper, Chuck D, displayed skills during various songs that confirms his ranking as one of the top lyricists of all time.

Following the nearly two-hour performance, Chuck D (Carlton Douglas Ridenhour), spent time talking about one of his loves --- NBA basketball. Chuck D is a New York Knicks fan, but he refuses to base his favorite team's future on the hope of signing LeBron James.

Because James should remain in Cleveland, Chuck D says.

"LeBron James is the greatest dude to come to basketball," Chuck D says. "Minneapolis fans aren't mad at Kevin Garnett when he (was traded) left. They were like, 'He gave his all for 12 years.' He did his thing and they still root for him. That's how LeBron should leave Cleveland. He hasn't given his all. He's only 25. He's got to keep working at it."
 

He also doesn't understand why James would want to join the Knicks, a team that hasn't been to the playoffs since 2001. And if it's not basketball-related, Chuck D says LeBron can get the so-called marketing opportunities no matter where he plays.
 
"What more is LeBron James going to get coming to New York?" Chuck D. "This isn't 1983. New York isn't the media center of the world like it used to be before the Internet. Once Cleveland wins, the center of the (basketball) universe is here. How long was the center of the (basketball) universe in Chicago with Michael Jordan?"

What Chuck D hates most is that LeBron James in New York would become a spectacle similar to games at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Who's who in the crowd at Lakers games is about as important as who is on the court.

"LeBron in New York would be fake, just like the Yankees," Chuck D said. "All of those fake celebrities would sit at courtside. I'd rather watch the game on TV than sit with those fake celebrities."

If LeBron's decision is about winning, than it all comes down to adding another big-time player, says Chuck D.

"LeBron just needs another dude," Chuck D says. "If LeBron stays, another guy would want to come. For example, the Lakers would have never won if they didn't get Pau Gasol from Memphis for a fish sandwich. David Stern should have outlawed that trade."

The free agency period begins Thursday. The Chicago Bulls, New Jersey Nets, Miami Heat, Los Angeles Clippers and the Knicks will all meet with LeBron and state their case on why he should join them.

But Chuck D says an NBA title would mean more here.

"A championship in Cleveland would be much sweeter than anywhere else LeBron would play," Chuck D says.

Maple Heights football player Shaq Washington's blog: College decision expected next week

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Standout incoming senior is planning a July 7 news conference to announce his college selection.

washington.jpgView full sizeWashington

MAPLE HEIGHTS, Ohio - The Raw Talent bus tour began on June 10. Our first stop was at the University of North Carolina.

Other stops were North Carolina Central University, a historical black college, and East Carolina, West Virginia and Cincinnati. Than we flew to the West Coast to go to Cal, UCLA and USC. We finished the tour at the University of Michigan.

On the tour several scholarship offers were handed out. I received offers from UCLA and NCCU. Frank Clark of Glenville received offers from North Carolina and Cal.

A rising junior at Garfield Heights named Jeremy Graves, whom I helped groom into one of the top receivers in his class, received his first offer from Cincinnati.

Next for me is my news conference that I will be having July 7 to announce my college decision. I feel I am sure of my future college and it is time to announce so I can move to my next step, which is making a run at a state championship.

Brian Shaw begins coaching interview with Cavaliers; sources say team wants to name a coach by Thursday

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The Cavaliers are in the homestretch of their coaching search. At least, they hope so.

UPDATED: 8:28 p.m.

brian shaw.jpgLos Angeles Lakers assistant coach Brian Shaw, right, is beginning what is expected to be a two-day interview with the Cavaliers for their vacant coaching position.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cavaliers are in the homestretch of their coaching search. Or, at least they hope so.

After being granted permission last week and then setting up the plans over the weekend, the Cavs welcomed Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Brian Shaw to town for what is expected to be a two-day interview on Monday. According to a source, Shaw is planned to be the final candidate to interview in person.

Sources also indicate the Cavs want to have a coach hired by Thursday, when LeBron James will officially enter free agency.

A source close to James has confirmed he plans to meet with as many as six teams in the first two days of free agency after officially passing on his $17.1 million option for next season. While James has met with the Cavs several times since the end of the regular season, including a sit down with owner Dan Gilbert less than two weeks ago, the team would likely want the new coach to meet with James.

In sticking with his plan on staying out of the coaching search, James does not plan on talking to Shaw -- just as he's not talked to candidates Tom Izzo and Byron Scott.

The Cavs have held in-person interviews with a handful of candidates during their month-long search -- including with Izzo, who turned the job down, and Scott. The fact that the Cavs have continued their search illustrates the care in which they are taking in the process.

Because Shaw is the last person in doesn't necessarily mean he's emerged as the top candidate. There is no doubt the team is intrigued by Shaw and have already done a fair amount of background research before setting up his visit.

But with no previous head coaching experience at any level, Shaw's interview with General Manager Chris Grant and owner Dan Gilbert will likely hold extra importance. Shaw has been an assistant with the Lakers for five seasons after a 14-year playing career with the Lakers, Celtics, Heat, Magic, Warriors and 76ers.

Especially interesting to the Cavs' front office will likely be Shaw's views on how the complex triangle offense, which Shaw learned playing for and then coaching with Phil Jackson over the last decade, might work for the Cavs and James. Or how it might not.

However, there's another Jackson element in play. The Lakers' legend is considering retirement and may not give the team an answer until the end of the week. If Jackson steps down, Shaw will be an immediate candidate to take over. So will Scott, who the Cavs have spoken with in depth on at least three occasions.

Balancing the potential of coaching the two-time defending champs or taking over the Cavs may become a tough choice for Scott or Shaw. It could mean the Cavs still won't be able to move at their desired timetable.

In an interview with Yahoo! Sports on Monday, Scott said he's interested in the Cavs job and not waiting on Jackson or James.

"I'm not sitting and waiting on Phil Jackson," Scott told Yahoo. "That ain't me. I'm not waiting on anybody. I would coach [in Cleveland] without LeBron. But they got a good shot at getting him back."

The Plain Dealer's 2010 high school track and field Player of the Year: Wadworth's Jake Hiltner

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CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Wadsworth senior Jake Hiltner was on the radar as a top 800-meter runner all season, but whether he was a mild disturbance or an oncoming storm was never certain until late May. Hiltner thundered his way to a winning time of 1:50.63 at the Division I North Canton district meet, a four-second improvement on his previous...













Jake Hiltner surged as the season wore on and was at his best in the Division I state meet, winning the 800 and helping his team take fourth place.



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(Joshua Gunter / The Plain Dealer)








CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Wadsworth senior Jake Hiltner was on the radar as a top 800-meter runner all season, but whether he was a mild disturbance or an oncoming storm was never certain until late May.

Hiltner thundered his way to a winning time of 1:50.63 at the Division I North Canton district meet, a four-second improvement on his previous best and an effort that would stand as the best in Ohio this season. He went on to win the regional and state meets, and is The Plain Dealer's Boys Track Athlete of the Year.

At the state meet, Hiltner had a hand in nearly all of fourth-place Wadsworth's 28 team points. He displayed stunning closing speed, anchoring Wadsworth's winning 4x800 relay. His 1:50.6 split brought the Grizzlies across the line in 7:39.72, the fastest time in Ohio history. After winning the 800 in 1:51.15, Hiltner anchored the third-place 4x400 relay.

Prior to the district meet, Hiltner busied himself running every distance from the 100 to the 3,200, adding speed and endurance but never running a fresh, competitive 800. The week before districts, he had four firsts and broke four records at the Suburban League meet, including a 48.39 in the 400 and a 1:54.27 just 30 minutes later in the 800.

The brother of former Wadsworth distance runners Zach and Max Hiltner, who was a 1,600 state champ in 2006, Jake set himself apart as an all-around athlete. Though he heard late in the season from track coaches at Oklahoma State and Virginia, Hiltner said he is leaning toward Ashland to play soccer and run track. Up until the state meet, he considered himself a soccer player who ran.

Now, he considers himself a half-miler first and foremost. The late-season gathering storm unleashed a newfound appreciation for the event.

"It's all about the first lap," he said. "Until you run fresh, you don't know what you can go out at, and then come back with. I like the last 200 because I usually sit on my opponents until then and I just out-kick them the last 200."

 

World Cup 2010: Brazil beats Chile, 3-0, to reach quarterfinals

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While its fans paraded around the stadium with two huge replicas of the World Cup trophy, Brazil clinically beat South American rival Chile 3-0 to advance to the quarterfinals Monday.

brazil-kaka.jpgView full sizeBrazil's Kaka, foreground left, celebrates after his teammate Juan, right, scored the opening goal during the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Brazil and Chile at Ellis Park Stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa.

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — While its fans paraded around the stadium with two huge replicas of the World Cup trophy, Brazil clinically beat South American rival Chile 3-0 to advance to the quarterfinals Monday.

The players were almost nonchalant about yet another victory over a personal patsy — Chile hasn't beaten Brazil in a decade — as they shook hands and exchanged hugs. They let the folks in the stands do the same samba and the singing as they moved closer to holding the real prize.

Five-time champion Brazil will face the Netherlands, which earlier Monday defeated Slovakia 2-1, on Friday.

Juan opened the scoring in the 35th minute at Ellis Park Stadium with a firm header from near the penalty spot off a corner kick. Luis Fabiano added to the lead in the 38th, receiving a one-touch pass from Kaka and dribbling past goalkeeper Claudio Bravo inside the area before hitting the open net.

Robinho scored his first goal in the tournament with a shot from the top of the area in the 59th minute, a one-timer into the far corner. It was Robinho's seventh goal in Brazil's last six matches against the Chileans.

Chile is the first South American team eliminated. Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay are in the final eight, and Paraguay plays Japan on Tuesday.

The victory in front of nearly 55,000 fans at Ellis Park extended Brazil's dominance over Chile. It was the eighth consecutive win; the last loss to Chile was 3-0 in a 2000 qualifier for the 2002 World Cup.

Brazil has now reached the quarterfinals of the World Cup every time since the 1990 tournament in Italy, when it fell 1-0 to Diego Maradona's Argentina in the second round. Brazil coach Dunga and assistant coach Jorginho were starters in that Brazilian team.

The Brazilians won the 1994 and 2002 World Cups in that span.

Led by Argentine coach Marcelo Bielsa, Chile kept pace with the Brazilians in the beginning, threatening with some quick ball movement on offense.

But Brazil quickly gained control of the match and created some of the most dangerous opportunities. After Juan's first goal, the Brazilians took advantage of their speedy strikers to keep the pressure on the Chileans.

Bravo already had to work hard on a long-range shot by Gilberto Silva, diving to his left and barely tipping the ball wide. A minute later, Kaka's low shot from the top of the area also missed.

Humberto Suazo, back in Chile's starting lineup after missing the loss to Spain, gave the Chileans their first opportunity in the 13th, but his shot from just outside the box was easily saved by goalkeeper Julio Cesar.

Chile was trying to advance past the second round for the first time since its home tournament in 1962, when it lost to eventual champion Brazil in the semifinals. Chile also lost to Brazil the last time it reached the round of 16, 4-1 in 1998 in France.

Brazil again was without regular Elano because of a right ankle injury, and coach Dunga also could not count on defensive midfielder Felipe Melo because of a left ankle problem. It didn't matter.

Kaka did not play against Portugal because of a red card in the previous match, while Robinho was rested because of a minor left thigh ailment. They certainly were ready Monday night.

Chile was without several starters, including central defenders Gary Medel and Waldo Ponce because of yellow card suspensions, while Marco Estrada was suspended for being ejected against Spain.


The Plain Dealer's 2010 high school boys track all-star team

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BOYS TRACK ALL-STAR TEAM  ATHLETE OF THE YEAR













Strongsville's Colby Alexander



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(Lynn Ischay / The Plain Dealer)












BOYS TRACK ALL-STAR TEAM 

ATHLETE OF THE YEAR

Jake Hiltner

Wadsworth senior / 800 meters

College: Undecided.

Notable: Hiltner was the Division I 800 meters state champion with a time of 1:51.15, the fourth-fastest ever at the state meet. He anchored the winning 4x800 to a state-record 7:39.72 with a 1:50.6 split. The relay time was second-fastest in the nation. Hiltner capped off Wadsworth's fourth-place team finish at state by running a 48.3 anchor leg on the 4x400.

OTHER ALL-STARS

Colby Alexander

Strongsville senior / 1,600

College: Oregon recruit.

Notable: Alexander was the Division I state champion in 4:09.44, the fastest in Ohio this year, the seventh-fastest in state meet history and 12th best nationally this year. Ran a 1:51.2 leadoff split on 10th-place 4x800 relay.

Latwan Anderson

Glenville senior / relays

College: Miami (Fla.) football and track recruit.

Notable: Anderson anchored the Division I state champion 4x200 relay (1:26.72), and ran on the second-place 4x400 (3:13.90) and the third-place 4x100 (42.38). The 4x200 team ran a season state-best time of 1:25.79 in the prelims, and the 4x400 final was a top-10 time nationally.

Marty Coolidge

Elyria Catholic senior / 3,200

College: Iowa State recruit.

Notable: Coolidge won the Division II state championship with a time of 9:03.11, the fourth-fastest time in state meet history and the best in Ohio this season.

Seth Cunningham

St. Edward senior / 100

College: Akron football recruit.

Notable: Cunningham placed third at Division I state in 10.82. Also placed third in the 200 and won medals in the 4x100 and 4x200.

Doran Grant

St. Vincent-St. Mary junior / 110 hurdles

College: Undecided.

Notable: Grant was the Division II state champion in 14.38. Ran on seventh-place 4x200.

Nathaniel Harris

Buchtel sophomore / 200

College: Undecided.

Notable: Harris was the Division II state champion in 21.93. He also won the 100 and anchored the winning 4x200 relay.

A.J. Hicks

Solon junior / discus

College: Undecided.

Notable: Hicks placed third at Division I state with a throw of 180 feet, 1 inch. Also placed fifth in the shot put.

Ryan Kochert

Chagrin Falls senior / pole vault

College: Navy recruit.

Notable: Kochert placed second at the Division II state meet with a vault of 15-4.

Robert McNair

Solon senior / 400

College: Purdue recruit.

Notable: McNair placed fourth at the Division I state meet in 49.12.


Deverin Muff

Strongsville senior / high jump

College: Eastern Kentucky basketball recruit.

Notable: Muff was the Division I state champion with a leap of 6-8.

Christian Nogueras

Southview sophomore / long jump

College: Undecided.

Notable: Nogueras placed third at the Division I state meet with a jump of 22-93/4.

Adam Patterson

Benedictine senior / shot put

College: South Alabama recruit.

Notable: Patterson placed third at the Division II state meet with an effort of 61-63/4 . Also placed third in the discus.

Donovan Robertson

Berea sophomore / 300 hurdles

College: Undecided.

Notable: Robertson was the Division I state champion in 37.19, the second-fastest time in Ohio this season. Ran on eighth-place 4x400.

COACH OF THE YEAR

Jim Swetter

Woodridge

Notable: Woodridge was the Division II state runner-up, equaling the best finish in school history (1986). The Bulldogs proved to be more than a distance-running school by scoring 32 points in seven events. They finished six points behind champion Eastwood. Woodridge also won the Lexington regional and Orrville district meets. The Bulldogs were undefeated in the regular season, going 8-0 in dual and tri-meets and 6-0 in the Portage Trail Conference. They were PTC County Division meet and overall champions. Woodridge won every invitational it entered, including those at Lakeside, Chardon, Kenston, Triway and the Woodridge Wrapup. Swetter was the head coach for three years and resigned after the season. He and his family moved to Arizona.

 

Cleveland Browns sign rookie Clifton Geathers to multi-year contract

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Geathers was the Browns' second choice in the sixth round, the 186th selection overall in the draft.

UPDATED: 7:53 p.m.

geathers-horiz-stretch-jk.jpgClifton Geathers has family connections to the NFL, and is the first of the Browns' 2010 draft picks to sign a contract.

BEREA, Ohio -- The Browns signed their last draft pick first. Or maybe they're going in order from biggest to smallest.

They signed massive defensive lineman Clifton Geathers, their sixth-round pick, to a multi-year deal, the team announced on Monday. He's the first of their eight draft picks to sign.

On draft day, Browns General Manager Tom Heckert called the 6-7, 300-pound Geathers "a monster" and referred to his untapped potential. Head coach Eric Mangini said during minicamp that Geathers will need to learn to use his size to his advantage.

"He is a giant man ... a big, big man and he has got long arms," Mangini said. "What he has to focus on is when you are that tall and have arms like that, how to use them effectively. Your height naturally brings you up above the offensive lineman. You have to get used to and really train your body to stay low because whoever has the leverage is going to win.

"You love the size, you love the length, those things are really positive things. Understanding how he has to play, which is different than some other guys. You add a couple of inches either way, it changes things. That's what we are trying to do with him."

On draft day, Geathers was refreshingly candid, saying "they tell me I could be the next Julius [Peppers] or Jumpy Geathers [his uncle]." He also said that with enough hard work and determination, "I'll be the best player, probably in the league, if I'm able to do that."

Geathers, who's working at end, toned it down by the time he got to Berea, but still flashed his competitive streak. During rookie camp, he pancaked a free-agent punter on a kickoff drill, and during minicamp, he threw punches at an offensive lineman -- for which he was admonished.

"I'm taking one day at a time," Geathers said. "Just trying to get better each day. I mean, coming from college is a big step. So it's really hard."

The LeBron rumor mill: He's off to Miami; no, Chicago; no, New York?

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The predictions are coming in fast and furious -- although a consensus is not exactly at hand.

lebron-wade-hug-jg.jpgWill LeBron James and Dwyane Wade embrace as teammates in Miami? The predictions are ... not exactly surprisingly ... mixed.

(Chasing down rumors about LeBron James' basketball future could be a full-time job. Now it's my full-time job. Just call me The Rumor Monger. Every day we'll compile a list of the rumors we're hearing about James and his next contract. Just remember these are just rumors, not necessarily facts. It's going to be a long and rough ride, Cavs fans. Buckle up. -- Mary Schmitt Boyer)

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Sorry, Chicago Bulls. It appears you are no longer the front-runner to sign James.

Fox Sports Radio host Stephen A. Smith insists James is heading to Miami.

"You're only as good as your sources, as a journalist, and from what I'm being told, after hearing what everybody has to say, LeBron James will agree to team with Dwyane Wade, he's going to South Beach," Smith said Monday. "LeBron James and Chris Bosh are going to South Beach. They are going to play for the Miami Heat."

• Just in case that doesn't happen, The New York Post is reporting that Knicks owner James Dolan has decided to join the recruiting team in northeast Ohio on Thursday as the club makes its pitch. Writes Marc Berman, "The King of Cablevision apparently wants to look King James in the eye to assure him of the financial commitment he has always made to the franchise, and that he has never spared any expense in trying to restore the Knicks back to greatness."

• Meanwhile, in an interview on the Fox Business Network, former Knick Allan Houston, now an assistant to team president Donnie Walsh, said, "There is playing in New York -- and winning in New York. And when you win in New York it's like nothing you can ever compare in your career. All these wonderful guys that have built themselves at this point -- they want to win. Whoever it is, you're stepping into a tremendous opportunity for the next 5-10 years. Anybody that comes into the Garden, they know how special it is. They know what it would be like."

• ESPN.com's Marc Stein on the fact that the owners and organizations may have a greater impact on James' decision than his potential teammates.

Writes Stein, "Does LeBron have faith [Dan] Gilbert can quickly manufacture an extraordinary No. 2 when so many LeBron suitors can do that so easily this summer? Or has he lost faith in Gilbert, as was routinely whispered during Cleveland's unsuccessful bid to pry Tom Izzo away from Michigan State?

"The reality is that he's not going to win anything that gets him to the Global Icon zip code unless he's flanked by the right teammates, so all of the above is only one clue to help us forecast the outcome of this Summer of LeBron. But know this: It's a biggie.

"The prediction here is that ownership will be cited as one of the major reasons James cites when he has that historic news conference to explain why he chose what he chose.

"The O factor.

"The Big O, if you will."

• More from Stein, and ESPN.com colleague Chris Sheridan, on the fact that Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf always has been -- shall we say -- frugal in running his team, although Bulls beat writer K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune tweeted on Monday: "Bulls' Reinsdorf in July 2009: 'I wouldn't mind paying the tax if it's an intelligent expenditure.'"

Says Stein, "The O factor is also what the Bulls presumably can blame if the impressive complementary core they've assembled (Derrick Rose and Joakim Noah) and all the cap space they've cleared (to go after Bosh or Joe Johnson in addition to James) ultimately fail -- amid all this 'done deal' talk -- to lure James to the Cavs' most hated rival.

"The Bulls were routinely bashed from an organizational standpoint even when they were winning championships, thanks to Michael Jordan's openly dim view of then-GM Jerry Krause. This season, though, criticism of Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf and his front-office tag team of John Paxson and Gar Forman reached new levels, prompted by Chicago's mistreatment of since-fired coach Vinny Del Negro and most recently disseminated in a well-publicized critique from Wade about how Chicago treats ex-Bulls.

"Even if Wade's criticism was a thinly veiled attempt to enhance the Heat's case in free agency, Chicago knows it has some image issues. Reinsdorf's reputation as a reluctant spender? Another issue. Maybe none of that will matter in the end, because the Bulls are otherwise set up so well. It's also true that Wesley has maintained a good working relationship with Reinsdorf for years and is believed to be lobbying hardest for the Bulls, which is where much of LeBron-and-Bosh-to-Chicago chatter originates.

"Yet you still hear well-connected folks around the league asking -- louder than the many questions Jordan's longtime agent David Falk has raised about James going to the Bulls in recent interviews with Sports Illustrated and CBS Sports -- whether LeBron is indeed prepared to commit to Reinsdorf."

Adds Sheridan, "Let's not forget that Reinsdorf has a well-earned reputation as being one of the more frugal owners in the league (he broke up a dynasty following the 1998 three-peat because in large part because he did not want to commit long-term dollars to Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen for what would be the downsides of their careers). Noah becomes a restricted free agent in 2011, and Rose in 2012. Is Reinsdorf willing to commit $150 million or more in long-term dollars (plus luxury tax money) to those two players on top of what he'll be paying James and another top-tier free agent?

"James will have no such qualms when it comes to the wallet-opening tendencies of Jim Dolan, who has shelled out luxury tax payments from Cablevision's deep coffers to pay for horrible teams over the better part of the past decade."

World Cup keeps replaying mistakes, so why not go to the videotape? Bill Livingston

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How many bad calls will it take before the World Cup adopts instant replay?

england-nogoal-series-ap.jpgView full sizeThis sequence of six photos shows Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer looking at the ball that hit the bar and bounced over the line during the World Cup match between Germany and England on Sunday in Bloemfontein, South Africa. The goal was disallowed by the game's referee, but Bill Livingston believes is just more evidence that a worldwide event should allow replay to help overmatched officials.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- England lost to Germany in the World Cup on Sunday, a lot (4) to a little (1). One of the big talking points afterward was another missed goal by the officials.

Frank Lampard's drive slammed off the crossbar of the German goal, then rocketed down, landing clearly behind the goal line. That is a goal, as a worldwide television audience saw on the replay the rules denied the referee and his assistants.

Rather than being tied, 2-2, late in the first half, England went in trailing, 2-1, Forced to press the attack in the second half, the English overextended like consumers with a maxed-out credit card. Germany scored twice more on counter-attacks. Germany was the better side, but the disallowed goal changed the entire dynamic of the game. Goals are so big in soccer that they have to be credited when fairly scored, pure and simple.

Later the same day, Argentina's Carlos Tevez, offside from Buenos Aires to Cape Horn, flicked in a header off a scrum in the penalty box for the first goal against Mexico. The first goal in soccer, a low-scoring sport, often dictates play for the remainder of the game. Yet the goal stood, despite a conference between the referee and the linesman.

Both the Lampard and Tevez rulings reinforced the argument for replay review even more.

When Lampard cranked his bullet off his Gatling gun foot, the referee was behind him, at the top of the semicircle of the 18-yard box. His view was unobstructed, but his perspective was not the best. The closest linesman was level with the 18-yard line.

How much better would have been the chances to get the call right with a goal judge behind the net? Common sense says much better...

It was a bang-bang-bang-bang play. Off the bar, off the ground ("Gooooal!" to all but the blind mice officials), off the bar again, and off the goalkeeper -- who, by playing on, executed a bit of unsportsman-like gamesmanship that helped fool the officials.

It would not have happened with the aid of video replay, which should be used for goals and for handballs and offside in the box.

The World Cup refs have now incorrectly disallowed goals against the U.S. twice and England once. They have given mighty Argentina an undeserved goal. These Magoos are making baseball's perfect-game spoiler Jim Joyce look like an eagle eye.

The Lampard play recalled the overtime goal Geoff Hurst scored to give Engand a 3-2 lead over West Germany in the 1966 World Cup final. England eventually won, 4-2. The Germans protested that the ball never crossed the line, an argument which has seemingly been confirmed by recent digital enhancement of the game film.

The traditional soccer audience argues that controversy increases the sport's appeal because more people are talking about it. But outrage and disgust are not enviable selling points.

Traditionalists also say replay is not used at the grass roots, so why use it at the sport's highest level?

Basketball, to invoke one American example, does not use replay in CYO games, but it does in NCAA Tournament and NBA games because the stakes are so high that the premium is on getting the calls right.

The traditionalists say replay will disrupt the free-flowing pace. They oppose a reasonable time limit on getting calls right in favor of a speedy accumulation of errors,

No camera angle, however, would have quickly resolved the debate over Hurst's goal in 1966. So the NFL rule should be used, in which only "overwhelming evidence" on replay can overturn an on-field call.

Overwhelming evidence existed on Lampard's carom and Tevez's header.

When NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell convinced owners to change the overtime rule in the coming season's playoffs, he admitted no overtime system is perfect. But he also said, "Don't let perfect get in the way of better."

FIFA, the world governing body for soccer, should heed those words. Perfect is an impossible dream, but better is attainable.

Quit acting like error is a good thing. Quit making injustice and intransigence the focal points of the championship of the world's most popular sport.

Browns Comment of the Day: Optimistic about the Browns

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"I think the vast majority of us can agree that, for the first time in a long time, the Browns are moving in the right direction. We probably won't be that good next year, but it is exciting to see a 'light' at the end of the tunnel." - Scott_in_SC

Mike Holmgren speaks to the mediaView full sizeMike Holmgren has brought something to some Browns fans that they didn't think they'd have for a while: hope.

In response to the story How do you rate the Cleveland Browns' off-season? Answer our poll, cleveland.com reader Scott_in_SC is optimistic about the direction of the Browns. This reader writes,

"I think the vast majority of us can agree that, for the first time in a long time, the Browns are moving in the right direction. We probably won't be that good next year, but it is exciting to see a 'light' at the end of the tunnel."

To respond to Scott_in_SC's comment, go here.

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