Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Forget the facts: Can Jim Tressel convince the NCAA it can still trust Jim Tressel?

I'm a fake doctor, not a lawyer, and odds are most readers haven't passed the bar exam, either. Maybe a few of you have served on a jury. But if you've been keeping even one eye on the cover-up scandal slowly engulfing Ohio State coach Jim Tressel over the last two-and-a-months, you don't need a J.D. to put together a straightforward case based on the evidence: No one disputes that Tressel learned about possible NCAA violations involving multiple players from an e-mail tipster last spring, failed to notify anyone in the school's administration or compliance department, signed a form in September affirming he had no knowledge of possible violations, allowed the potentially ineligible players to play the entire 2010 regular season, lobbied to keep them on the field for the Sugar Bowl after news of the violations broke last December and still concealed his prior knowledge until the e-mails were discovered on the coach's computer earlier this year. That's Ohio State's version of events (not to mention the NCAA's), and even OSU didn't see any choice but to levy a fine and suspension against its head coach in response.

Case closed? Maybe. If you're the kind of person who makes judgments solely based on, like, evidence, then yeah. But facts and stuff aren't the only factors the NCAA is interested in, according to Tressel's new attorney, former NCAA Committee on Infractions chair turned NCAA consultant-for-hire Gene Marsh, who's seen these kinds of cases from every angle and told the Columbus Dispatch that the school's all-important appearance in front of the committee on Aug. 12 will more likely come down to Tressel convincing members that his heart was in the right place:

"The exchanges that matter most when it comes to coaches who are the subject of a serious inquiry like this are the ones that come directly between the committee and the coach, not the exchanges from the committee to the coach's lawyer," Marsh said.
[…]
Marsh said the real value in such hearings is when committee members look into a coach's eyes when he answers questions that cut to the heart. Tressel, he added, can be expected to expand on his admission that he did not forward information, as is required by NCAA rules, about some of his players possibly receiving improper benefits from a tattoo-parlor owner.

"'What were you thinking? What motivated you to do this?'" Marsh said. "If that didn't matter, you wouldn't have a hearing.�... The body language, and how sincere the individual is, it matters a great deal. It is the show."

If there has ever been a show written specifically for Jim "The Senator" Tressel, it's one that calls on him to look middle-aged bureaucrat types in the eye and convince them that they can still trust Jim Tressel. As Marsh continues, "what really matters to committee members is to try to get an understanding for the coach, their ethic, their lifelong work, their reputation, and whether their institution believes in them."

Clearly, the institution still believes in him —�or, at the very least, is committed to demonstrating to the rest of the world that it still believes in him. If loyalty and remorse qualify as a standard of proof where the NCAA is concerned, the Buckeyes have nothing to worry about.

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Lockout has Collinsworth going back to high school … as a coach

People are doing different things as the NFL lockout drags on ? some are finding alternate employment, others are going back to school to get their degrees, others are boxing and riding bulls, and most players are engaging in workouts they've put together with their teammates.

But what are you supposed to do if you're an NFL broadcaster, you're stuck waiting for play to resume, and you have very little faith in the idea that it will do so on time? If you're former Cincinnati Bengals receiver Cris Collinsworth, now one of the most respected voices in the business as part of NBC's�"Sunday Night Football"�crew, you go back to high school.

As a coach.

At his own site, FootballPros.com, Collinsworth said that he has accepted the offer of head coach Dale Mueller to become the receivers coach at Highlands High in Kentucky, where Collinsworth's son Jac just happens to attend and play. "I had already polluted his brain with most of my receiving advice," Collinsworth wrote. "But what the heck, the NFL will probably miss at least half of their season anyway, I agreed. Today is my first day. I just got the playbook and I feel like a first year rookie all over again. The plays are scrambled eggs in my brain, and I feel a little anxious. But, I love coaching. I coached many of these kids in the junior football league, and they always kept me entertained."

Great idea, but we're less than entertained by Collinsworth's notion that half the season could be lost. Especially since the 12-time Emmy winner is pretty dialed in when it comes to league matters, and probably wouldn't make a commitment like this unless he thought there was really something to a truncated season.

"I had a Xavier Soccer coach tell me that at least once a week he rolls the ball out on the field and steps aside," Collinsworth wrote. "He lets the kids play so that he can learn from them. He said they have a creative imagination that no adult could understand. I hope I can bring some of that imagination to Highlands HS. After four straight state football championships, there is only one way for the Highlands Bluebirds to go with me. Maybe the NFL will save me and actually play football, but if not, you will know where to find me on Friday nights. Go Birds!"

We can only hope the NFL will step in and let Collinsworth return to his primary job on time … but until then … sure. Go Birds! It's pretty cool that Collinsworth gets to coach his son, and the team will surely benefit from his experience. It's just too bad it's under these particular circumstances.

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Florida Panthers finally give Kevin Dineen his NHL coaching job

(Oh, the irony of running a photo of the Whale on a day like today.)

Kevin Dineen, 47, played 1,188 games in the NHL with Philadelphia, Hartford, Carolina, Ottawa and Columbus. He's coached for six seasons with the Portland Pirates of the AHL, having compiled five straight winning seasons. So he's put in his time.

Last year, he was a finalist for the Columbus Blue Jackets' head coaching gig that eventually went to Scott Arniel. His time had to wait.

But on Wednesday, the wait ends: The Florida Panthers will name Dineen as their 11th head coach in franchise history, according to George Richards of the Miami Herald.

He replaces Peter DeBoer, who was fired after three seasons and a 103-107-36 record. According to the Sun-Sentinel, Chicago Blackhawks assistant Mike Haviland and Thrashers associate coach John Torchetti and Manitoba Moose coach Claude Noel were also on the radar.

For more on Dineen's coaching acumen, check out the Columbus Dispatch on his "inspiration and intelligence" as an AHL coach. One refreshing phrased used here about Dineen's teams, at least for Panthers fans: "They go after the puck, they play with speed and they don't back down or get outworked."

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Mini-racing: Get the entire Charlotte I experience in two minutes

It was one heck of a weekend of racing, and depending on your own condition, you may or may not have been awake and/or coherent for much of it. Good thing we're here for ya! We'll wrap up the weekend with the five best events of the races, and you can guess which one is No. 1:

Congrats to Kevin Harvick and Matt Kenseth on races well won. We're on a bit of a roll these days, aren't we?

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Monday, May 30, 2011

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Video: Monfils huffs, puffs and blows ball over net in Ferrer victory

A fortunate bounce over the net helped Gael Monfils earned a crucial break of David Ferrer in their fourth-round match at the French Open. Up 2-1 in the decisive set of their match, which started Sunday and had to be pushed back because of darkness, Monfils earned a break point when his backhand tapped the net cord and fell on Ferrer's side of the court.

Replays and pictures showed that the ball may have had a push from a secondary source:

Every little bit counts, right?

Ferrer would break back at 3-5 in the fifth set to force an extended fifth set, before Monfils broke in the 14th game to win 6-4, 2-6, 7-5, 1-6, 8-6. The Frenchman will play Roger Federer in Tuesday's quarterfinal. This will be the third French Open matchup between the players in the last four years.

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QB Focus: Matt Barkley, USC’s Mr. Nice Guy

Assessing 2011's field generals, in no particular order. Today: USC junior Matt Barkley.

? Typecasting. When scouts go to bed at night, Barkley is the prototype pocket passer they see in their dreams, across the board: He showed up at USC in 2009 as the No. 1 quarterback recruit in America, the latest and most celebrated product of the golden pipeline from nearby Mater Dei High and, within a few months of stepping on campus, the first true freshman in school history to start his first game. Before he even left high school, Barkley had already been on mission trips to build homes for the poor in Mexico, volunteered at an orphanage in South Africa and led a drive to raise money for families of Marines. In terms of advance hype, opportunity at a traditional powerhouse and squeaky-clean charisma, he's the West Coast equivalent of Tim Tebow — except that, in Barkley's case, the NFL scouts are totally enamored with his potential, too.

The fact that he hasn't broken through on anything remotely approaching a Tebow-esque scale is a testament to just how high the bar is for a golden-boy quarterback at USC. Barkley's won 17 games as a starter in two seasons, but also lost as many (7) as predecessors Matt Leinart, John David Booty and Mark Sanchez lost between them from 2003-08. As a freshman, he presided over a dramatic fourth quarter comeback at Ohio State in his second game, but also over two of the worst beatings in school history against Oregon and Stanford. As a sophomore, he finished third in the Pac-10 in passing yards, touchdowns and efficiency, but averaged fewer yards per game than any Trojan passer in a decade, with fewer TDs and a lower rating than any Trojan passer in that span except Booty in 2007. As a junior, Barkley will be the undisputed leader of a lineup uncharacteristically lacking in star power, and may be embarking on his last chance to leave a legacy that transcends the fall of the Trojan empire.

? At his best... On paper, the offense significantly improved last year compared to 2009, and Barkley continued to show flashes of the pocket presence, downfield arm strength and knack for fitting the ball into tight windows that made him such a scout favorite in the first place. He also established a good rapport with true freshman burner Robert Woods, the team's leading receiver, and left no doubt that the offense is built primarily around his right arm.

Most of the goodwill he carries out of 2010 was earned over the first half of the season. Through the first seven games, Barkley passed for multiple scores in six of them, with 20 touchdowns to four interceptions and a seemingly firm grip on Lane Kiffin's new offense. USC rolled to a 4-0 September, and while the defense went to sleep in last-second losses to Washington and Stanford in early October, the offense put the pedal down for 30-plus points and nearly 500 yards of total offense in both. Personally, Barkley dueled Andrew Luck to a draw with went 390 yards and three touchdowns in a losing effort against the Cardinal, and bounced back the following week to bury Cal beneath five touchdown passes in the first half alone en route to a 48-14 massacre. Going into the Oct. 23 bye week, USC was 5-2, averaging 494 yards and 37 points per game —�both top-15 numbers nationally —�and Barkley was the highest-rated passer in the Pac-10.

? At his worst... After the by week, things started to fall apart. Barkley turned in arguably his worst game on Oct. 30, serving up two interceptions and botching a shotgun snap (with some help from Kiffin) that helped turned the tide in an eventual 53-32 beatdown at the hands of Oregon on the season's biggest stage. Beginning with the loss to the Ducks, his last five starts included just six touchdowns to eight interceptions — twice as many as he threw over the first seven games — and zero 300-yard efforts. From Oct. 2 to Nov. 27, USC dropped five of eight games, with two of the three wins coming by one point (34-33 over Arizona State) and three points (24-21 over Arizona), respectively. Well before he was knocked out of the Nov. 20 loss at Oregon State with an injured ankle, Barkley had already thrown a pick-six and was battling through the most nightmarish first half of his career in a humiliating, 36-7 flop.

Even with a relatively consistent running game keeping defenses honest, the occasional Favre-like tendency to strong-arm balls into coverage led to another season of double-digit picks, and contributed to the diminishing returns down the stretch. Barkley didn't play at all against Notre Dame, another disappointing loss in a driving rainstorm, and returned only to serve up two more picks in an ugly finale at UCLA. That win left the offense averaging a full 60 yards and six points less per game for the season than it was averaging at the bye week, and even within the Pac-10, Barkley finished squarely in the middle of the pack by every significant statistical measure.

? Fun Fact. USC got the worst of it from the NCAA in the fallout from its four-year investigation into the Reggie Bush Sweepstakes, but Barkley made the best of the bowl ban last December by spending Christmas break in Nigeria instead through a nonprofit run by a former high school friend:

Barkley produced that video himself, and though his earnestness can occasionally make for a fairly easy target, I think it's safe to say he's sincere.

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? What to expect in the fall. There was some progress in the first season under Kiffin's watch, even if it wound up being of the "two steps forward, one step back" variety. But Year Three is where the rubber meets the road: For other massively hyped pocket slingers like Jimmy Clausen, Mark Sanchez, Matt Stafford, Matt Ryan and Brady Quinn, their junior year was the year the simmering potential gelled into a big season that propelled them into the first round of the draft.

Barkley was arguably ahead of everyone in that group as a sophomore. We still only got glimpses of his ceiling (see the brilliant efforts against Stanford and Cal), but if USC is going keep its head above water throughout the depths of the sanctions era, it will have to be by Barkley continuing to shed the "potential" label and establishing himself as the best player on the field on a consistent basis. So far, the consistency hasn't been there. But he's still on schedule.

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Sooners suffer another tragedy with death of All-American Everage

The Oklahoma football program was hit with yet another tragedy this weekend after former safety Brandon Everage drowned near his hometown of Granger, Texas.

According to a report in the Oklahoman, Everage, 30, was swimming with friends at the time of the accident.

According to Sheriff David Greene of the Milam County Sheriff's Office, Everage, 30, drowned in the Little River about 80 miles northeast of Austin.

Authorities received a call late Friday about a possible drowning and commenced a widespread search into the night. Everage's friends told police he had been swimming, went under water, but never resurfaced.

Everage's body was finally found by a dive team about 10:50 a.m. Saturday, and he was immediately pronounced dead. His body has been sent to the Travis County Medical Examiner's Office for an autopsy.

Everage's death marks a brutal couple weeks for the Sooners.

On May 19, linebacker Austin Box, 22, was found unconscious at a friend's home and later dies. He was buried on Friday. On May 20, the brother of Oklahoma defensive coordinator Brent Venables suddenly died in Colorado. He was 43.

Everage, a high school quarterback, was a member of coach Bob Stoops' first recruiting class and one of the hardest hitters in Sooner history. He was an All-American in 2001 and a member of the 2000 national championship team.

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Illini coach Zook the biggest loser in Guenther’s retirement

The news of Illinois athletic director Ron Guenther announcing he will retire when his contract is up on June 30, hit a lot of people hard, but Illini football coach Ron Zook had to be among the most stung.

Since he hired Zook in 2004, Guenther has been Zook's biggest advocate and has stood by his head football coach even after fan sentiment started to turn ugly. Zook took the Illini to the Rose Bowl in 2007, but went 8-16 the following two seasons, which would have prompted most athletic directors would have cut the rope, but Zook has been hanging on.

Zook expressed similar allegiance to Guenther in a prepared statement released by the school:

"In more than 30 years in this business, coach Guenther is one of the finest men I've ever been around," Zook said in a prepared statement. "He's as good a boss as I've ever had, and I don't say that lightly. He is the ultimate coach's AD. He listens, he helps and he is always there -- always -- when you need him. I hope he will be around in some capacity for a long time, because when he is no longer involved, the university will have lost one of the brightest, most devoted and loyal administrators it will ever have. Nobody cares more about Illinois than Ron Guenther. This place is a much better place because of the time he spent here."

But with Guenther gone and a new AD who's potentially looking to make a splash, all those warm and fuzzies could go right out the window.

Zook's contract runs through 2013, but we all know that means very little in the world of major college sports. If the school is looking to get rid of Zook -- something the fans have been insisting on -- then it will get done.

Zook did improve last year going 7-6 with a win over Baylor in the Texas Bowl. If he can keep the program on an upswing, he can keep the wolves at bay and possibly keep his job.

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NCAA confirms: Be it ever so humble, the Fiesta Bowl will go on

Given the Bowl Championship Series' decision to more or less pardon the Fiesta Bowl for the many legal and ethical excesses of its former leadership last week, the NCAA's standing threat to pull the game's operating license wasn't exactly leaving anyone in suspense. But just to make it official, the Postseason Bowl Licensing Subcommittee confirmed today that, yes, there will be a Fiesta Bowl next January:

The NCAA Postseason Bowl Licensing Subcommittee today reaffirmed bowl licenses for the Tostitos Fiesta and Insight bowls on a one-year probationary period.

This includes the requirement that Fiesta Bowl officials meet in person with the subcommittee at its annual meeting in April 2012 to provide a progress report on its management and business plan changes. Additional requirements may be implemented after the new Division I Bowl Licensing Task Force completes its report this fall.
[…]
"The subcommittee was greatly concerned with the apparent lack of oversight and integrity associated with previous Fiesta Bowl management," said [Big East associate commissioner and subcommittee chairman Nick] Carparelli. "Considering the business model changes and new direction of the bowl, along with the actions from the BCS, the subcommittee felt comfortable with reaffirming the Fiesta and Insight licenses on a probationary status."

Thus ends the first phase of the Fiesta's journey into the wilderness, from which it emerges exhausted, dirty, a little embarrassed and $1 million lighter, but generally none the worse for wear. Compared to UConn and Oklahoma, which combined to absorb more than $5.1 million in unsold tickets the bowl required the schools to buy at far above market value last winter, it still looks positively rosy. (Or Tostitos-y, as it were.)

Now, on to the rough stuff: An ongoing investigation by the Arizona Attorney General's office, the Maricopa County prosecutors and possibly the FBI into (among other things) illegal campaign contributions and fundraisers meant to curry favor with politicians in violation of the bowl's nonprofit status. (One would suspect the $15.3 million surplus the Fiesta reported last year — that's before it hosted the BCS Championship Game in January —�might also cast a few skeptical eyes on that designation.) Presumably, they're not quite as cozy with the prosecutors in those agencies as they were with their juries from the BCS and NCAA. But at any rate, the games will go on.

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Omar Vizquel gets his mitt on at 44, plays first base for 1st time

Somewhat surprisingly, 44-year-old Omar Vizquel did something new on a baseball field Saturday afternoon.

In his 2,874th career major league appearance, Vizquel, an 11-time Gold Glove winner at shortstop, grabbed a mitt and played first base for the first time. As in, his life.

The Chicago White Sox needed him to shift from second base after manager Ozzie Guillen removed Paul Konerko for a pinch runner in the top of the 11th inning against the Toronto Blue Jays.

Vizquel, who said he never had played first base in his life before Saturday, had a hard time finding a comfortable mitt. He went through several that belonged to Konerko and Adam Dunn (who, like Vizquel, is a right-handed thrower in case you're wondering) before finding the right one.

Like "Goldilocks and the Three Bears," only with mitts. As reported in the Chicago Tribune:

"I never even put a [mitt] on my hand at first base," Vizquel said. "It felt very weird. I was really close to playing with my glove."

And, as you might expect, the ball found him quickly. With two outs in the bottom of the 11th, Corey Patterson hit a ball to Vizquel, who muffed the grounder, but recovered in time to throw him out at first base.

His teammates apparently razzed him from the dugout, too. Not even a 23-year veteran can escape the jocular teasing of grown boys.

But Vizquel wasn't having any of it.

Comically, Vizquel playfully flung his mitt toward them as the defense came off the field. In the 12th, he handled another chance without any trouble. It beat his day at the plate ? 0 for 6 with two strikeouts to drop his batting average to .282. And the Blue Jays beat the White Sox in 14 innings on Patterson's home run.

Vizquel went on to say that he thought the coaching staff was joking in spring training when they told him he might be pressed into duty at first base. With Konerko and Dunn on the roster, surely they jest!

"It never went through my mind I'd have a chance it would happen," Vizquel said.

In a long season ? and career ? just about anything is possible. As versatile and valuable as Vizquel has been through the years, he still has yet pitch or get behind the plate. He has logged nearly 22,900 innings at short, along with nearly 800 at third, 324 at second and one in right field. (Plus a start at DH in 2010.)

All that's left is the battery, which makes sense for a guy whose career just keeps going and going.

If the White Sox fall out of the AL Central race in September, Guillen should pull a semi-Bert Campaneris and use Vizquel as a catcher, and also in relief, while he's still able to drink from the Fountain of Youth.

Follow Dave on Twitter ?�@AnswerDave ? and engage�the Stew on Facebook

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Jackson takes main event in a decision at UFC 130

In the main event at UFC 130, Quinton "Rampage" Jackson won a unanimous decision over Matt Hamill with a fight that showed off his defensive prowess and drew boos from the crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. After the fight, Jackson said he was fighting with an injured hand.

Jackson stuffed a takedown attempt early in the first round, setting the tone for the rest of the bout. Hamill used snapping leg kicks throughout the first round, as Jackson punished with strikes every time Hamill came in close. In the last 30 seconds of the round, Jackson teed off, pushing Hamill against the cage and landing a bevy of strikes. There wasn't enough time for Jackson to finish, but Hamill was definitely damaged from the late onslaught.

Hamill came out with an immediate head kick in the second, but Jackson easily answered with strikes. Jackson continued to methodically hold off every one of Hamill's attacks, landing knees and short jabs along the way. Hamill seemed frustrated with his lack of ability to take Jackson down or generate any offense. Again, in the last minute of the round, Jackson tagged Hamill with an uppercut and body shots, but again, it was too late.

The third round featured more counterfighting from Jackson, and more frustration from Hamill. Both fighters appeared to be tired as the round wore on, and neither were capable of throwing any big moves.

After the 30-27 on all three judges cards was announced, Jackson said that his hand was injured.

"I came into this fight with a fractured hand, and I apologize. I wasn't able to put on the fight I wanted to," Jackson said. A big smile appeared on his face as UFC commentator Joe Rogan pointed out that Jackson hadn't given up a takedown.

"I didn't get taken down? Good. Matt Hamill is tough."

With a win, Jackson was expected to get a title shot. His counterfighting style was enough to win the fight, but it was hardly an endorsement of what a great fighter Jackson is. Instead of the knockouts that Jackson is capable of delivering, this fight resembled Jackson's win over Keith Jardine, where Jackson won the bout with big flurries at the end.

Hamill was also expected to be in the running for the title shot with a win, but showed that he still isn't at the elite level of the stacked light-heavyweight division. He falls to 10-3, while Jackson's record improves to 32-8.

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Sunday, May 29, 2011

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Tibau posts ninth UFC win by running over ‘The Tractor’ at UFC 130

LAS VEGAS - Nicknamed "The Tractor," Rafaello Oliveira is a big, strong lightweight. He met his match tonight against the beast of the division and got run off the road. Tibau floored Oliveira with a big left, brutalized him on the ground and finished the fight at 3:28 mark of the second round with a rear-naked choke in bout No. 3 of UFC 130 at the MGM Garden Arena.

"I think I proved tonight that I'm getting close to my peak," Tibau said. "I showed everyone that I can strike, that I can finish guys with jiu-jitsu and that my game is coming together. I'm becoming a more complete fighter every day and I know that I'm heading toward the top of this division. I love the UFC and I want to fight as much as possible so that I can keep rising in this division."

In the opening round, Oliveira held his own. Tibau's size advantage made no difference. In fact, he looked a little slow. When Tibau was able to close space in the second and move the fight near the cage, Oliveira got trapped in a bad spot. He ate a huge left and hit the deck. Tibau jumped on top and moved to mount. Oliveira decided to flip to his back where Tibau got the hooks in and tried to flatten out the fellow Brazilian. Oliveira made a big mistake by trying to rise off the canvas with Tibau on his back. That seemed to sap his energy and allowed Tibau to slap on the choke.

"I think he has some great combos and I didn't see his left hand coming," Oliveira said. "I took this fight on short notice, but there are really no excuses. I need to work on controlling my mind in fights and fighting like I know I can fight. I will be back in the UFC and I will make the necessary changes to my game."

Tibau's won two straight. He's still in search of a huge win to move into the top 10 at lightweight. The 27-year-old Brazilian is 9-5 with the promotion. His only losses have come against Nick Diaz, Jim Miller, Joe Stevenson, Melvin Guillard and Tyson Griffin.

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Headlinin’: Ole Miss pulls two recruiting coups in one swoop

Making the morning rounds.

? You're a sly one, Mr. Nutt. Ole Miss picked up a major recruiting victory Friday with the late commitment of 2011 Loganville, Ga., safety Denzel Nkemdiche —�less so for Denzel himself than for the inside track it gives the Rebels on his brother, 16-year-old Robert Nkemdiche, a rising high school junior who, at 6-foot-5 and 263 pounds, may already be the most coveted prospect in the nation in the class of 2013. Robert has already said the school that signs his brother "will have a big advantage" for his services, and Denzel told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution last week that mama has spoken, and wants her boys to stay together.

"We're definitely going to do a 'package deal' because that's what our mom wants us to do," said Denzel, who initially signed with a Mississippi junior college because of academic issues but was still being targeted by Georgia and Miami and now hopes to qualify and enroll as a member of the Rebels' 2011 class by June. "Ole Miss hasn't mentioned Robert to me. But wherever I sign, that's where Robert is probably going to sign." Now: Give this kid the Masoli treatment and get him into school ASAP. [Clarion Ledger, Atlanta Journal Constitution]

? Let's get really big. The eight current head coaches in the Big East generally favor expanding the conference lineup to 12 teams from the current nine, according to a poll by CBS Sports, suggesting that the conference's plans could extend well beyond its ongoing pas de deux with Villanova to become Team No. 10. "There's been a lot of talk about do you go from nine to 10, which I don't know how much sense that really makes, when the Big Ten left the model of 10, the Pac-10 has left the model of 10," South Florida coach Skip Holtz told a local radio station in North Carolina, where he spent the weekend at a pair of events (a groundbreaking and a charity golf tournament) that pulled him back to his former school, East Carolina. "Both of them more or less said 'This model doesn't work. Let's go to 12.' I think we have to look hard at it."

Holtz's shocking recommendation? "I would love to see East Carolina as one of the additions in this league." Like father, like son. [CBS Sports, St. Petersburg Times]

? Slap on the wing. Elsewhere in the Big East, Louisville has been formally docked three football scholarships for posting an Academic Progress Rate that failed to meet the NCAA-mandated minimum. The Cardinals' APR average for the 2009-10 school year — coinciding with the transition from head coach Steve Kragthorpe to Charlie Strong — was a woeful 869, dropping the multi-year average to 908, well below the Mendoza Line of 925. Fortunately, the school saw the hit coming and preemptively limited itself to offering only 21 scholarships to the incoming recruiting class instead of the full twenty-five. [Louisville Courier-Journal]

? Nothing to see here. Miami coach Al Golden insisted again last week that he's happy with hyped offensive lineman Seantrel Henderson, despite demoting Henderson to second team in spring practice and reportedly suspending him along with multiple other players for the 'Canes' season opener at Maryland. "[Henderson] hurt his hip-slash-back, which hampered him the last five or six practices. But he had a successful spring," Golden said. "He came back in January at 385 pounds and he ended up 340. Seantrel's teammates like him because they know he wants to be a good player." [Miami Herald]

? RIP. The Calcasieu (La.) Parish Sheriff's Office and McNeese State head coach Matt Viator confirmed Friday that McNeese wide receiver Will Hassien died last Thursday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest. The sheriff's office said it received a call at 3 p.m. Thursday to a nearby residence, where they found Hassien, a 5-foot-11, 185-pound redshirt freshman who joined McNeese last fall out of nearby Sulphur High. An investigation is ongoing.

Hassien's death marks the fourth death of a major college football player since the start of May. Last week, Oklahoma linebacker Austin Box was rushed to the hospital and later declared dead of an apparent overdose. On May 12, Alabama offensive lineman Aaron Douglas was found dead in Jacksonville, Fla., of unknown causes after attending a house party the previous night. A Wayne State (Mich.) player, Courtney (Cortez) Smith, was also killed earlier this month in a shooting in downtown Detroit. Crime Stoppers of Michigan is offering a $2,500 reward for information that leads to Smith's killer.
[Lake Charles American Press]

? The Rap Sheet. Former Northern Illinois and Chicago Bears running back Garrett Wolfe, who led the nation in rushing in 2006 after finishing second nationally in 2005, was arrested early Sunday morning in Miami for allegedly refusing to pay a $1,600 bill at a nightclub. Officially, Wolfe was charged with retail theft over $300, assaulting a police officer, resisting arrest with violence and disorderly conduct. He was still being held Sunday night on $11,500 bond. [South Florida Sun Sentinel]

Quickly… Al Golden is still chasing quarterbacks for 2012. … Janzen Jackson is still on track to return to Tennessee this fall. … Appalachian State is still thinking about its place in the world. … And Rich Rodriguez is still looking on the bright side about his tenure in Michigan.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Headlinin’: Notre Dame paid $6.6 million to ditch Charlie Weis -�and counting

Making the morning rounds.

? Mo money, mo problems. How badly did Notre Dame want to get rid of head coach Charlie Weis after the Irish's 0-4 November plunge in 2009? Badly enough to pay Weis a whopping $6.64 million to buy out the remainder of his contract, according to IRS records obtained by the Chicago Tribune ?�and to keep on paying for the foreseeable future: The university remains on the hook for "much smaller annual payments" to Weis through December of 2015. On the bright side, at least Tyrone Willingham is finally off the books. [Chicago Tribune]

? I'm sorry, I was distracted by his rings when he said that. Meanwhile, at Weis' new job, Florida coach Will Muschamp told a crowd of Gators fans in Tampa this week that he hired Weis because "Charlie knows how to run the football." That might come as news to Irish fans: Though his offense in Kansas City ranked fifth in the NFL in rushing last year, Weis' offenses in five years at Notre Dame finished 55th, 72nd, 115th, 100th and 84th on the ground, respectively, from 2005-09.

Still, unlike his predecessor, Weis does seem to grasp how not to run the football: As he told reporters after last month's spring game, "You can count the number of plays we'll call with [quarterback] John Brantley running the option on zero hands." [CBS Sports]

? Are you saying his testimony isn't enough? Opelika (Ala.) Police said Wednesday that their investigation into the alleged assault of accused Auburn tree-poisoner Harvey Updyke after a court appearance last month is at a dead end and will likely be wrapped up soon. "Currently there have been no witnesses to come forward, no evidence collected," Capt. Allen Elkins told the War Eagle Reader. "The investigators have nothing to go on at all." Elsewhere, Lee County prosecutors have also requested a gag order to seal records, restrict access to court proceedings and prohibit parties involved in their ongoing case against Updyke from speaking publicly. [War Eagle Reader, Opelika-Auburn News]

? Turf wars. With the verbal commitment of Detroit cornerback Terry Richardson earlier this week, Michigan now has verbals from seven of the top instate prospects in the class of 2012 ? compared to Michigan State's one ? at least temporarily restoring what looks to Wolverines fans like the natural order of the recruiting world after three years of local futility under Rich Rodriguez. In 2009, Michigan signed just two of the top 10 instate prospects, losing seven of the top 10 to Michigan State; in 2010, the Spartans took five of the top 10 to Michigan's one; and in February, the Wolverines were only able to land four of the top 10 after Brady Hoke's arrival as head coach, watching the state's top three players ? including the No. 1 prospect, MSU signee Lawrence Thomas ? place their signatures elsewhere.

The Wolverines' 2012 haul already includes three Michigan players ranked among Rivals' top 200 overall prospects going into the season, including the only in-stater in the top 100, Detroit linebacker Royce Jenkins-Stone. Michigan State's only instate commitment to date, "athlete" Riley Bullough, is yet to be ranked. [Detroit News, MGoBlog]

? Happy trails. (Yes, that's a request.) Pittsburgh has announced the departures of two veteran backups, tight end Dan Schneider and defensive back Kolby Gray, for entirely different reasons: Schneider is giving up football due to a lingering shoulder injury that sidelined him for all of 2010, but Gray, a Houston native, plans to return home to play for Baylor and, according to the Pittsburgh Tribune, pursue a career in country-western music. And I'm no talent scout, but he might actually have a shot:

I don't know jack about contemporary country pop, but that sure as shootin' beats Big 'N Rich, I know that. [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Pittsburgh Tribune]

Quickly… A call for big-time football to pick a side in its bizarre relationship with the NCAA. … The Rimington Trophy names every center in the nation to its preseason watch list. (The early favorite: Oklahoma State's Grant Garner, for the mustache alone.) … Breaking down the truth and consequences of a nine-game Big Ten schedule. … Watch Washington's spring game from Keith Price's perspective. … Jon Embree is the latest coach to complain about spring recruiting restrictions. … Steven Sheffield is the latest college QB to turn up in the arena leagues. … And don't forget: Saturday is The Rapture, so make sure you have a heathen friend to take care of your pets after you're gone.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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"That is the only reason I haven't killed myself," he says. "I mean, I'm serious. I just can't see...

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Saturday, May 28, 2011

Huawei Windows Phone ?probably? arriving 2012

ZTE’s decision to jump on board the Windows Phone train with a mouthful of tasty Mango has seemingly pushed arch-rival Huawei’s hand, with the company’s CMO confirming that it will “probably” release a WP-based device in 2012. Exec Victor Xu told ZDNet that Huawei has “had some discussions with Microsoft” but has so far been [...]

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Strong winds turn moving day into a battle for survival

IRVING, Texas - Moving day at the HP Byron Nelson Championship was more about maintaining than making a charge up the leaderboard. On a day when temperatures at the TPC Four Seasons course topped 104 degrees with the heat index, players had to contend with something even more sinister than the blistering sun.

With the winds kicking up early in the afternoon, groups going off later in the day had to contend with gusts that constantly blew anywhere between 25-39 mph throughout the day, forcing the entire field to be content with par in the third round.

The only problem was there were very few pars on the course to begin with.�Of the 75 players left in the field, only 8 managed to break par on the day, with Arjun Atwal posting a 3-under 67 for Saturday's lowest round.

Aussie Steven Bowditch had one of the more incredible third round swings, as he followed up a 5-under 65 in the second round with an 80, a 15 shot swing that had him shaking his head as he walked off the course.

He wasn't the only one frustrated with the winds, as the final four groups on the course posted a combined 30-over for the day. For the most part, anything around 2-over on Saturday was considered a decent score.

"It's tough, it's just a hard golf course," said Joe Ogilvie. "The wind is blowing 25 to 30 and you've got stuff all over the place. ... It's an exceedingly difficult golf course, and we're pretty good players ... but it's making us look like amateurs."

The bad news for the players is that Sunday's forecast isn't supposed to be any better. With temperatures predicted in the mid-90's and wind gusts expected to be at least 20 mph, there's a good chance the winner of this year's tournament could come from a player in an early group that posts a good number and waits things out.

It's never an easy proposition to win a tournament on the PGA Tour, but with way the wind is blowing at the moment, the winner of the tournament will have to feel extra good about grinding out a win under extremely difficult conditions.

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FULL COST OF ATTENDANCE MEANS A LOT OF DIFFERENT THINGS

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Doege discusses big role on 'Tech Talk' - College Football - Rivals.com

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Texas Tech News, Notes and Links | 7 Things

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Russell Wilson’s current employer ‘disappointed’ in his football flirtations

Russell Wilson may or may not have been testing the waters in Auburn Tuesday, but the national headlines that followed the rumor only confirmed his status as the most coveted transfer student in America. Besides Auburn, the former N.C. State standout — a first-team All-ACC pick in 2008 and a second-teamer last year after leading the conference in passing yards and touchdowns — has also been specifically connected to Wisconsin and speculatively linked to just about every quarterback-poor program in the country for his final year of eligibility this fall. Frankly, most of them could use him.

With his height and less-than-elite arm strength, though, the NFL scouts are indifferent: If Wilson has a future as a pro athlete, it's always been in baseball, where he was drafted in the fourth round last year by the Colorado Rockies and is currently in the midst of his second season with their Class A affiliate, the Asheville (N.C.) Tourists. This is an obvious problem for his football prospects: Wilson's inability/unwillingness to commit to returning to N.C. State before the end of baseball season this September forced coach Tom O'Brien to cut him loose last month. But his apparent unwillingness to give up on his football career isn't sitting too well with his current employer, either:

[Rockies' senior director of player development Marc] Gustafson also said it would be difficult for Wilson, who is struggling offensively with the Tourists, to return to baseball if he played football this fall.

"It would be hard for him to come back to baseball because he would miss a lot of games and have had so much time away," Gustafson said.
[…]
"It's an interesting scenario," Gustafson said. "He's a premium athlete who doesn't know what he wants to do. Until we know something different, we consider him to be a baseball player only.

"Would we be disappointed if he chose to play football? Yes, we would."

I don't know if that necessarily amounts to a threat, but I'm not sure a guy currently hitting a team-low .216 with more than twice as many strikeouts (53) as hits (25) in 116 at-bats is in position to test his boundaries. (By contrast, Wilson's Asheville teammate, former Clemson quarterback Kyle Parker, is hitting .303 and has accounted for nearly twice as many total bases.) Wilson would also have to return "a significant portion" of the $250,000 signing bonus he received last year if he leaves the team before the end of the regular season on Labor Day, Sept. 5, the same weekend most of the country kicks off the regular season for college football.

So: By pursuing another year of football, Wilson could be risking hits to both his bank account and the goodwill of an organization that's yet to see much return on its investment to be a four-month stopgap at an unfamiliar school, if he's able to wrestle the starting job away from a more tenured member of the team after arriving on short notice. Oh, while also enrolling in graduate school to remain eligible. If he does, at least no one will even question his commitment to the game again.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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MINNESOTA'S FOOTBALL COACH ONCE CUT OPEN ONE OF HIS PLAYERS

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Illini coach Zook the biggest loser in Guenther’s retirement

The news of Illinois athletic director Ron Guenther announcing he will retire when his contract is up on June 30, hit a lot of people hard, but Illini football coach Ron Zook had to be among the most stung.

Since he hired Zook in 2004, Guenther has been Zook's biggest advocate and has stood by his head football coach even after fan sentiment started to turn ugly. Zook took the Illini to the Rose Bowl in 2007, but went 8-16 the following two seasons, which would have prompted most athletic directors would have cut the rope, but Zook has been hanging on.

Zook expressed similar allegiance to Guenther in a prepared statement released by the school:

"In more than 30 years in this business, coach Guenther is one of the finest men I've ever been around," Zook said in a prepared statement. "He's as good a boss as I've ever had, and I don't say that lightly. He is the ultimate coach's AD. He listens, he helps and he is always there -- always -- when you need him. I hope he will be around in some capacity for a long time, because when he is no longer involved, the university will have lost one of the brightest, most devoted and loyal administrators it will ever have. Nobody cares more about Illinois than Ron Guenther. This place is a much better place because of the time he spent here."

But with Guenther gone and a new AD who's potentially looking to make a splash, all those warm and fuzzies could go right out the window.

Zook's contract runs through 2013, but we all know that means very little in the world of major college sports. If the school is looking to get rid of Zook -- something the fans have been insisting on -- then it will get done.

Zook did improve last year going 7-6 with a win over Baylor in the Texas Bowl. If he can keep the program on an upswing, he can keep the wolves at bay and possibly keep his job.

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West Ham United Close To Signing Sam Allardyce As Permanent Manager

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Microsoft board refuses Ballmer roust

Despite calls for Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer to be toppled, the company’s board of directors are apparently standing behind the outspoken exec. According to a source close to the board talking to Reuters, the nine-strong directorial team – which includes ex-CEO and current chairman Bill Gates – all support Ballmer; earlier this week, notorious hedge [...]

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MLB Totals Contest (2011)

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Video: Hear everyone in Vancouver cheer during Game 5 victory

These really have to be our two favorite videos of the 2011 Stanley Cup Playoffs, as Chloe Johns of Yaletown places a camera on the balcony and records the sounds of the city after the Vancouver Canucks' Ryan Kesler tied Game 5 of the Western Conference finals with 14 seconds left …

… and then captures this reaction from the city when Kevin Bieska scored in double OT to eliminate the San Jose Sharks:

We had to listen to them a couple of times because it almost sounded like the same audio placed on different images; but what we're actually hearing are the same fans' delirious reactions (shrieking, banging on walls) to the goals.

Amazing stuff. The stone-cold silence of sitting-on-your-hands nerves, followed by the cathartic jubilation. The evening video really provides a sense of scope as far as how widespread the celebrations were. Vancouver fans: Based on these videos, we want video cameras set to record on every balcony in the city should the Canucks win the Cup. It'll be like a YouTube symphony.

Like we said, two of our favorite videos from the 2011 Stanley Cup Playoffs. But as The Green Men noted in Game 5, not our two favorite things from the playoffs. Humminahumminahummina ...

s/t to Casey Kelley and Stephen Meserve (Hundred Degree Hockey) for the videos; and Dylan Nicholson for the image.

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