Monday, April 30, 2012

Photo: Minnesota fan pimps his ride

So, this exists.

For anyone who didn't think Minnesota had any diehard fans, the owner of this vehicle is here to prove you wrong.

Forget the fact that the Minnesota football team went 3-9 in coach Jerry Kill's first season, this loyal fan is proud of his team and even took his ride to what seems like a parking lot car show to show it off.

And no detail has been left off. It's got the gold and the maroon in a well-executed paint job. The "M" on the hood and Goldy Gopher on the door. All that's missing is a cardboard cutout of quarterback Marqueis Gray in the front seat.

Even though Minnesota has been down for awhile, no one will ever question this fan's loyalty.

H/T to Big Ten Network

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Robert Griffin III wore inspirational burgundy and gold striped socks to the NFL draft

We've known who's going to be the first two picks of the NFL draft for weeks and we found out that Trent Richardson will be the No. 3 pick an hour before Roger Goodell took the podium. The only mystery of the first 30 minutes of the 2012 draft was which socks Robert Griffin III would wear.

[Slideshow: The 2012 NFL draft's best and worst dressed]

The Baylor quarterback wore Superman socks to pick up his Heisman trophy, rocks Barney socks with the flourish of a pre-schooler and had on Subway socks earlier this week at an event in New York City. What special footwear did he have on for his first date with the Washington Redskins?

Burgundy and gold socks, of course.

Do Redskins colors clash with RGIII's baby blue suit? A better question would be: Does anyone in DC care? Griffin could have shown up in Dallas Cowboys socks and I doubt it would have affected his newlywed love affair with the District.

The socks were emblazoned with a saying from RGIII's Baylor coach, Art Briles.

More appropriate for a wide receiver, perhaps. �Still pretty awesome.

[Yahoo! Sports Shop: Buy NFL player T-shirts and team gear]

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Jermaine Oneal PGA Carolina Panthers

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Video: Chandler Harnish explains how he became Mr. Irrelevant

Ever wonder about the stress some of the late-round NFL draft picks go through as they're patiently waiting for their name to be called? Well, former Northern Illinois quarterback Chandler Harnish, who was this year's last pick (or Mr. Irrelevant) breaks the entire scenario down for his family, including the fact that he was all set to go to San Diego before he was picked by the Colts.

"Late in the seventh round I'm very depressed... I was getting calls from like the Kansas City Chiefs, the Tennessee Titans, St. Louis Rams, Oakland Raiders, just a bunch of teams were (calling) - and I'm talking to my agent every three minutes," Harnish explained. "It looked like we were about ready to set up a free agency deal. I was ready to go to San Diego.

"They wanted the decision 10 minutes after they could put the deal on the table, and this was still at pick 240. So there were still 13 picks to go. And they put the deal on the table that they wanted me to be a free agent and I had to say 'yes' to it... We tell San Diego we want that deal. Well, my agent tells the Colts, 'Hey, he's going to San Diego if you guys don't draft him with your last pick.' So, because of that, the Colts were like, 'We want him. We want to take him before he goes to free agency, and then he goes to San Diego.'"

On one hand, Harnish has to feel pretty good that he was so wanted that teams were negotiating with him prior to the end of the draft and ultimately fighting over him. On the other hand, if San Diego really wanted Harnish ? enough to give him 10 minutes to decide his professional fate ? why didn't the Chargers use a pick on him?

In any case, I think we as a viewing public were happy Harnish actually got drafted because it allowed him to have a fantastic reaction after Harnish got the call from the Colts about a minute before the announcement was made on TV.

However, there's still no word on whether Harnish accepted the invitation from a woman wishing to be Mrs. Irrelevant.

- - -
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Hopkins vs Dawson II Results: Shawn Porter, Mike Faragon Win in Atlantic City

Vernon Wells Boston Red Sox Houston Texans

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Young Rangers fan cries after oblivious neighbors keep baseball for themselves

Although there probably should be, there is currently no federal or local law that says you have to immediately hand over a baseball to a nearby toddler who was also reaching for it.

But the video above shows why it's a good idea to just do it anyway: If you act completely oblivious to the child's cries and carry on with your special lady friend ? as this adult fan did at the Rangers-Yankees game on Wednesday night ? there's a chance your apparent self absorption will land you on every highlight show and blog before you even leave the park.

[Related: Young fan rejects generous baseball gift at Kansas City Royals game]

Not to mention earn you an extensive tongue-lashing from Yankees broadcaster Michael Kay, which is arguably the biggest indignity of them all.

Luckily for our little buddy, someone in the Rangers dugout was good enough to eventually toss him a different baseball and turn his night around. Still, l don't think that nice offering is going to get our Romeo and Juliet off the hook in the eyes of those who watched the slight go down. Perhaps they have a good reason for keeping the ball ? a kid of their own, perhaps? ? but it certainly didn't look like they bothered to explain anything to anyone.

Smile folks, you're on one of the world's busiest websites!

UPDATE: The couple has spoken and they want an apology from Michael Kay.

Big BLS H/N: @JimmyTraina

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? Red Sox's Bobby Valentine blames bad cell-phone research after filing wrong lineup
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Vernon Wells Boston Red Sox Houston Texans

Bobby Valentine files wrong lineup after researching opposing pitcher on cell phone

When planning his team's lineup for Wednesday night, Boston Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine whipped out his mobile phone to look up Minnesota Twins pitcher Liam Hendriks. He filled out a lineup card accordingly and posted it, perhaps 3 1/2 hours before the first pitch.

A few minutes later, Valentine re-posted Boston's lineup and it included several changes. Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Ryan Sweeney were in, Kelly Shoppach and Darnell McDonald were out. And a few other guys had been moved around. So, what changed his mind?

Valentine finally realized that Hendriks pitched with his right hand ? and not his left.

Granted that Hendriks is a 23-year-old rookie with 35 career innings coming into Wednesday.

But c'mon, Bobby, really? As reporter Gordon Edes of ESPN writes, yep:

"I looked on this thing," Valentine said, gesturing to his cellphone, "and there was no history on him. It had his name, and 'against left-handed hitting.' My fault. That's why you make these lineups out early enough."

Valentine said Saltalamacchia was the one who discovered the error.

"It was kind of funny," the manager said. "I talked to him yesterday about him not playing, and I thought I alluded to the fact that he could get two days in a row with a left-hander (Wednesday). So I kind of locked into right, right, left."

This reminds me of when Terry Bevington was manager of the White Sox and, one time, he got confused with umpires as to which side of an argument he needed to make. Really:

So, it could have been worse, because Valentine fixed his mistake (or his top catcher fixed it for him) and the Red Sox scored seven runs and beat the Twins. No harm done, right? None at all, except to Valentine's reputation, and the confidence his team (and fans, for whatever it's worth) have in him. He owned up to the mistake, which is what he probably should do, though was it necessary to give all of the details as to why he messed up? Here we are, still in the first month of the regular season and that's the best Valentine can do as far as research and preparation for his lineup? Checking his cell phone?

Also: Why would one assume that any pitcher is left-handed? Most are right-handed. Is it because Hendriks' first name is Liam, which starts with an "L"? Is it because Hendriks is from Australia, where they do everything backward because it's Down Under and the water drains counter-clockwise and the platypus? That assumes Valentine even knows where Hendriks is from. Did he question why Hendriks spells his last name like that?

Of course none of that went through Bobby's head because, like we've all been trained to do, he just looked at his phone to see who was playing that day.

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Friday, April 27, 2012

Baseball films take center stage at Tribeca Film Festival this weekend

They're holding the annual Tribeca Film Festival in New York this weekend and a pair of baseball movies are holding spots among the screenings. There's "Knuckleball!" which features the ubiquitous pitch and the men who throw it. Then there's a "Baseball In The Time of Cholera," the Olivia Wilde-produced film about a young Haitian ballplayer in the middle of the country's recent cholera outbreak.

While "Knuckleball!" looks like a good movie and has been generating some excitement in the blogosphere, �I'm a little more interested to see "Baseball In The Time Of Cholera." Though it may not be all about baseball, it definitely looks like a much more important film. You can answer that age-old question ? "Why are there no major leaguers from Haiti?" ? just by viewing the country's devastation in the 2 1/2-minute long trailer.

But as the clip also shows, it's not like baseball is not being played by children in the country and the universal and hopeful nature of those images really bring a haunting juxtaposition to the brutal reality of living there. It looks like an emotional roller coaster of a movie, but one that will be worth tracking down once it hits a wider release.

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Brandon Weeden is the oldest first-round draft pick in history

How old is Cleveland Browns first-round draft pick Brandon Weeden? Let us count the ways:

? At 28 years, 195 days, he became the oldest player ever taken in the first round of the modern NFL draft.

? He's 48 days older than Aaron Rodgers.

? He's two years older than JaMarcus Russell.

? The man he'll battle for the starting role in Cleveland, Colt McCoy, is entering his third season in the NFL. Weedon was born three years earlier than McCoy.

? He was selected in the same MLB draft as Prince Fielder, Zack Greinke, Cole Hamels, Curtis Granderson and one of the main characters from "Moneyball."

? Will soon be celebrating his 10-year high school reunion.

? Almost definitely used a Walkman when at said high school.

Weeden was selected with the No. 22 pick by the Browns. He'll join third-overall pick Trent Richardson as rookies likely tasked with getting Cleveland back to the playoffs for the first time since 2002. Weeden is expected to enter training camp as the team's starting quarterback, especially in light of recent quotes from Browns GM Tom Heckert in which he said the team would consider trading McCoy.

The Oklahoma State quarterback didn't make our list of the 50 best draft prospects, but he earned praise from scouts for his quick release and accuracy.

Browns fans scared off by Weeden's age can take solace in one fact: He's not as old as Chris Weinke was when he was drafted by the Carolina Panthers in 2001. The Florida State quarterback was older than Weeden by three months, but went in the fourth round, not the first.

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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Pudge Rodriguez?s unique first pitch (VIDEO)

Rather than do the "hang around by the phone and wait" routine that so many aging ballplayers have recently opted for, Ivan Rodriguez cut straight to the chase. The 21-year veteran catcher officially announced his retirement at Rangers Ballpark on Monday and then rode off in the sunset with a "first pitch" that ranks a lot better than being gradually forgotten about. The only thing missing was a symbolic runner being gunned down for the 661 times he caught someone stealing.

_

Rodriguez says he'll be looking for ways to stay in the game and I don't think that comes as too much of a surprise. You don't play a record 2,427 games behind the plate without giving off the strong impression that you're addicted to the sport of baseball. �Nolan Ryan and the Rangers, for their part, are already saying they want him involved in the organization.

What will be interesting to see, though, is if Pudge decides to opt for the easier role of a spring training guru or if he decides to chase a coaching or managing gig. Catchers are always considered prime candidates for managerial positions and there have been few who played the position better. It's not hard to see him becoming a bench coach one day and then maybe even more after that.

Want more baseball fun all season long?
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Masterton Trophy Finalists: Daniel Alfredsson vs. Joffrey Lupul vs. Max Pacioretty

Right wing Daniel Alfredsson of the Ottawa Senators, left wing Joffrey Lupul of the Toronto Maple Leafs and left wing Max Pacioretty of the Montreal Canadiens are the three finalists for the 2011-12 Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy

Sadly, Bill Masterton Hologram won't get to opine on Matt Cooke being up for his namesake award.

The Professional Hockey Writers Association gives this award annually to "the player who best exemplifies the qualities of perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey."

Or, in summary: An award given to really old players that are nice to the media, or given out to the winner of the "my comeback from a horrific potentially career-threatening injury/personal tragedy was more dramatic than your comeback from a horrific potentially career-threatening injury/personal tragedy."

A $2,500 grant from the Professional Hockey Writers Association (PHWA) is awarded annually to the Bill Masterton Scholarship Fund, based in Bloomington, Minn., in the name of the Masterton Trophy winner. The local chapters of the PHWA submitted nominations for the Masterton Trophy at the conclusion of the regular season and the top three vote-getters were designated as finalists.

So who wins the Lifetime Original Movie of NHL Awards?

Why Daniel Alfredsson Deserves the Masterton

From the NHL:

The NHL's longest-serving captain (1999-2000), Alfredsson returned from off-season back surgery for his 16th NHL campaign and was a key contributor to the Senators' successful Stanley Cup Playoff drive. Alfredsson was the leading vote-getter among NHL forwards in All-Star balloting, selected by his peers as an All-Star captain and the recipient of a thunderous standing ovation from hometown fans at Scotiabank Place following his two-goal outburst against Team Chara. Alfredsson finished the season with 59 points -- 27 goals, including the 400th regular-season goal of his career, and 32 assists.

The designated "old guy makes good" nominee, Alfredsson has stuck with this franchise through good times and bad. He's a well-spoken ambassador for the game, and was a tremendous leader for the young players that helped turn Ottawa into an unlikely playoff team.

That said, if you really want Daniel Alfredsson as your example of "dedication to hockey," let's give him the Masterton after he plays a full season at a $1 million salary in 2013. THAT'S dedication.

Why Joffrey Lupul Deserves the Masterton

Returning to health after his career had been threatened in 2010 by two back surgeries and a blood infection, Lupul earned a spot on the Maple Leafs' top line and enjoyed the most productive season of his eight-year NHL career. Teaming with wing Phil Kessel to form the highest-scoring duo in the NHL, Lupul did not go more than one game without a point until January and was selected as assistant captain for Team Chara at the NHL All-Star Game. He notched a career-high 67 points in 66 games before a shoulder injury ended his season in early March.

In a different year, Lupul skates away with this award, because his story was a particularly inspiring one. As he told the Toronto Sun: "You don't know if you'll ever play again, even be able to lead a normal life again." He rehabbed and rebounded and became one of the true bright spots on the Leafs.

Also, he gets an eternal pass for being on "Sober House" and sharing a toilet with Scott Hartnell.

Why Max Pacioretty Deserves the Masterton

Pacioretty returned to action this season after missing the team's last 15 regular-season games and the Stanley Cup Playoffs in 2010-11 due to injuries suffered on March 8, 2011 against Boston. The 23-year-old left wing set single-season career highs in goals (33), assists (32), points (65), game-winning goals (five) and shots on goal (286). His 29 even-strength goals ranked fourth in the League. On March 8 at Edmonton, the New Canaan, Connecticut native became the first U.S.-born player in Canadiens history to notch 30 goals in a season.

All you have to do is go back and watch that horrific scene last season and read this story from February to understand how far Pacioretty's come. The Chara Incident was a life-altering thing for him; he persevered, and now he's dedicated not only to hockey but to the continued funding of brain injury research.

Who Wins The Masterton?

Pacioretty.

Our Ballot

1. Max Pacioretty, Montreal Canadiens
2. Joffrey Lupul, Toronto Maple Leafs
3. Matt Cooke, Pittsburgh Penguins

Scoff at the Cooke thing all you want, but go back and read this story by Rob Rossi to get the full understanding of where he was as a person and a player. The bottom line is that Cooke was, maybe still is, perilously close to being out of the NHL for his previous infractions. He's worked to change his game, change his priorities.

He's not an old guy, and he's caused more horrific injuries than he's suffered. But he was worthy of consideration.

Brett Favre San Francisco 49ers Peyton Manning

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Jenny McCarthy says relationship with Brian Urlacher makes her ?giddy?

Look at the bright side, Bears fans: At least it's not Kim Kardashian.

Chicago Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher is reportedly hot and heavy with former Playboy playmate, actress and anti-vaccine advocate Jenny McCarthy. The two were leaving a Beverly Hills steakhouse earlier this month when they were "accidentally" caught by TMZ cameras. (It seems to me that if you didn't want your relationship public, you'd choose a nice Japanese restaurant out in San Marino rather than flaunting it in the heart of paparazzi country but, hey, I don't have a TV show to promote.) Now, McCarthy tells Parade magazine she's "giddy" about her new relationship, even if she won't specifically say who it is.

[ Also: Trades for high NFL draft picks discussed more than previous years ]

McCarthy was asked about Urlacher while doing PR for some NBC reality show this week. "I don't know�what you guys are talking about," she said unconvincingly, demonstrating why her acting career never took off. "Um, you know, we shall see."

Urlacher has been mum on the subject, no doubt counseled by quarterback Jay Cutler on how to not talk about celebrity romances.

The linebacker made headlines in 2003 when Paris Hilton sat in a luxury box at a Bears game while wearing his No. 54 jersey. (Has Paris Hilton really been famous for that long?)

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The Shutdown 50 ? #10: David DeCastro, OG, Stanford

With the 2011 NFL season in the books, it's time to turn our eyes to the NFL draft, and the pre-draft evaluation process. Right up to the draft, we'll be taking a closer look at the 50 players who may be the biggest NFL difference-makers when all is said and done.

We continue this year's series with�Stanford guard David DeCastro, the second-best prospect in a Cardinal draft class that could see four players go in the first round. He's not quite as positionally interesting as that Andrew Luck guy, but DeCastro is the best guard prospect in a number of years -- at least the best since Florida's Maurkice Pouncey and quite possibly the best since Michigan's Steve Hutchinson. It's rare that you see an offensive line prospect this pro-ready right out of the chute -- DeCastro said at the scouting combine that when he watches former Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh dial up plays for the San Francisco 49ers, he can call the plays before they happen.

A technical marvel -- he almost never loses ground because he's so textbook in his approach -- DeCastro also has the kind of attitude all coaches love in offensive linemen. "He arrives angry and focused and expects everybody else to be the same," current Stanford head coach David Shaw recently said. "If he thinks something needs to be said, he says it and when he speaks the players listen."

"He is so serious he sometimes thinks a high five after a touchdown is too frivolous because it might break concentration," Luck recalled. "But the person he is hardest on is himself." That may be true, but DeCastro was also known to be the one teammate able and willing to bust Luck's chops in the huddle if things weren't going well.

He gave up one sack in his entire college career, and it was easy to get the recall when he was asked about it at the combine. "Brian Price of UCLA," he remembered. "I set outside and he came back and countered inside. He sacked Andrew."

It won't happen often, no matter who DeCastro is protecting; he allowed just 14 tackles of any kind in 2011. As a redshirt freshman in 2009, DeCastro started all 13 games and finished the season as an honorable mention on the All Pac-10 team. It's been all uphill from there, proving that DeCastro doesn't just arrive angry -- he also arrives ready to dominate. There's no reason to think that it won't be the same in the NFL, right from Day One.

Pros: DeCastro is the most fundamentally sound collegiate guard I have ever watched extensively on tape. He does everything required of him at an extremely high or elite level. He uses his hands with force and authority, his footwork is superlative, he pulls and traps well enough to play in the NFL right now, he hits the second level quickly, and he blows up his targets when he gets there. Perhaps the most impressive -- and at times astounding -- aspect of his play is his pulling ability. Your average guard is lauded for pulling with consistency to the next gap on either side, but DeCastro will regularly pull from the right guard position and actually seal the edge on run plays outside of left tackle. The speed, agility, technique, and power required to do that puts DeCastro in rarefied air.

In zone blocking, DeCastro gets in his stance quickly and always looks to chip or pop the man at the closest gap if he doesn't have a man right on him. Once he gets momentum on a zone slide, he's not only hard to beat, he can make ends and linebackers look just silly at times by blasting them out to one side. Does a tremendous job of checking off to second targets when facing stunts, loops, and advanced blitz concepts. Elite two-defender blocker -- he's great on chips inside (reminds me of the underrated Chris Kuper here) and will peel off with great speed to help tackles maintain position on edge rushers. Will push off his initial blocker to the tackle and zap a linebacker in space pretty frequently. Keeps his head on a swivel and operates with minimal wasted movement. Blocks as well on an island as any guard you'll see on any level -- rarely do you see him need help to a gap on either side. Uses technique and agility to deal with rip, swim, and spin moves -- redirects after first contact and a quick move very well. Primary zone blocker who could learn to mash every play in a man-on-man system -- has what it takes to be truly scheme-transcendent.

Cons: DeCastro and Luck are the two players in this draft class that present the fewest obvious dings when you watch them on tape. But if there's one thing that I would like to see DeCastro do more often (and this comes up in a comparative sense, because people are already comparing him to Steve Hutchinson and Steve Wisniewski), it's to play with extreme power when he's handling bigger linemen.

He gets by at times more on fundamentals than pure power, but again, we're splitting hairs here -- I'm lining him up next to Hutchinson, who was the most functionally powerful guard I've ever seen when he was in his prime. DeCastro will get walked back in the pocket by bigger men, but he almost never loses contact and you never see him get fast-out beaten by pure speed or power.

Conclusion: You'll hear some say that DeCastro would provide more value to a team as a center, a position he's also able to play. I also believe that he would be an excellent right tackle in certain systems. But this is a guard at heart -- a nasty, football-obsessed, grinder with the mentality required to make 10 straight Pro Bowls. Just as it is with Trent Richardson this year, certain players force you to throw away the idea of positional value in a strict sense and simply deal with the explosions on tape.

DeCastro is a safe player in every positive sense, but don't let that fool you into thinking that his game tape is a good way to cure insomnia. Connoisseurs of great offensive line play are already clued in, and the opponents of the offense DeCastro plays for at the NFL level will soon get the message. Sitton is the best offensive lineman on his team at the right guard position, which seems to personify a trend that has a lot of teams going more right-handed with their offensive line talent. I don't automatically see a switch to left guard for DeCastro as a result, but in a way, it doesn't really matter where he plays. He's already set the bar ridiculously high, and he's only going to get better.

Pro Comparison: Josh Sitton, Green Bay Packers

More Shutdown 50:
#11: Stephon Gilmore, OG, Stanford |�#12: Kendall Wright, WR, Baylor |�#13: Courtney Upshaw, OLB, Alabama |�#14: Quinton Coples, DE, North Carolina|�#15: Ryan Tannehill, QB, Texas A & M|�#16: Luke Kuechly, LB, Boston College |�#17: Michael Floyd, WR, Notre Dame |�#18: Dre Kirkpatrick, CB, Alabama |�#19: Mark Barron, S, Alabama |�#20: Cordy Glenn, OL, Georgia |�#21: Riley Reiff, OT, Iowa |�#22: Coby Fleener, TE, Stanford|�#23: Devon Still, DT, Penn State |�#24: Janoris Jenkins, CB, North Alabama|�#25: Jerel Worthy, DT, Michigan State|�#26: Nick Perry, DE, USC|�#27: Alfonzo Dennard, CB, Nebraska|�#28: Dontari Poe, DT/DE, Memphis |�#29: Whitney Mercilus, OLB/DE, Illinois |�#30: Brandon Thompson, DT, Clemson|�#31, Dwayne Allen, TE, Clemson|�#32: Jonathan Martin, OT, Stanford|�#33: Bobby Massie, OT, Mississippi|�#34: Andre Branch, DE/OLB, Clemson |�#35: Dont'a Hightower, ILB, Alabama |�#36: Chandler Jones, DE, Syracuse|�#37: Stephen Hill, WR, Georgia Tech|�#38: Vinny Curry, DE, Marshall|�#39: Doug Martin, RB, Boise State |�#40 : Mohamed Sanu, WR, Rutgers|�#41: Zach Brown, OLB, North Carolina|�#42: Lavonte David, OLB, Nebraska|�#43: Jared Crick, DE/DT, Nebraska|�#44: Alshon Jeffrey, WR, South Carolina |�#45: Kirk Cousins, QB, Michigan State|�#46: Orson Charles, TE, Georgia|�#47: Lamar Miller, RB, Miami|�#48: Shea McClellin, OLB/DE, Boise State|�#49: Rueben Randle, WR, LSU | #50: Jonathan Massaqoui, OLB/DE, Troy

San Diego Chargers College Football Rashard Lewis

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Days of NBA Lives: Wherein Danny Green meets Mariska Hargitay

At this point, most of the NBA is on Twitter. It's a wild world of training updates, questions as to which movies they should go see, and explanations of their Call of Duty prowess. Every so often, though, you also get a picture into the more interesting aspects of NBA life. This feature is your window into that world.

Danny Green: One of my favorite shows...Law n Order...n I got to see Olivia lastnight court side, was kinda shocked lol

Adonal Foyle: So long Dick Clark. Thank you for exposing people of all color to national television.

Kenneth Faried: Yo #RealTalk I have to show some love to this nap I'm about to take!!

Elliot Williams: Sitting here watching NASCAR for no reason

Mo Williams: Congrats to Jamie Moyer. I witnessed history 2nite. 49yrs old still doing it #hardwork

You can also follow Eric Freeman on Twitter at @freemaneric.

Kevin Garnett Memphis Grizzlies Torii Hunter

A Carmelo Anthony/Lionel Richie parody: ?Melo (Is It Three You?re Looking For?)? (VIDEO)

The comedy internet is good for many things, including cat videos and Tumblr accounts that are really hilarious for three days and forgotten soon after. It's also full of ridiculous parody songs, most of which take topical stories and apply them to well-known but somewhat old pop songs. It's a comedy formula as old as throwing a pie in the face of a caveman.

Recently, we got a new addition to the genre: "Melo (Is It Three You're Looking For?)" In case you didn't make the connection immediately, it's a parody of the Lionel Richie classic "Hello (Is It Me You're Looking For?)", just with lyrics about Anthony Morrow and pull-up jumpers in transition. All sung in a voice I can only describe as a cross between Rush frontman Geddy Lee and Metallica's James Hetfield.

With any luck, we'll get some more Lionel-themed NBA parody songs soon. I think we can turn "Endless Love" into a song about Dirk Nowitzki and Steve Nash pretty easily.

(via Justin Adler and TBJ)

Boston Celtics Toronto Blue Jays AJ Burnett

Monday, April 23, 2012

Photo: TCU reveals its new uniforms

Earlier this week, TCU receiver Josh Boyce tweeted out what he thought might be one of TCU's new helmets. Turns out, he was right.

TCU tweeted out pictures of its new uniforms as it readies for its first season in the Big 12.

The Horned Frogs added a lot of black to their new uniforms and kept the gray helmet, which I really like. These uniforms definitely embrace Nike's cutting edge style, but they're not over the top and keep in line with TCU's past uniform changes.

No one knows how TCU will fare in the Big 12 next year, but at least the Horned Frogs will look good.

- - -
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NBA.com perfectly describes the Charlotte Bobcats in three words

NBA.com's John Schuhmann is pretty big on efficiency. He likes assessing the offensive and defensive performances of teams and players by digging into the stats to see how effectively they can create or prevent baskets. It's an approach to evaluation that emphasizes economy and execution.

So it's no surprise that Schuhmann only needed three words to tell you everything you need to know about the 2011-12 Charlotte Bobcats in the latest edition of his NBA.com Power Rankings:

Yep, that about sums it up.

What information lives inside that summation? The Bobcats rank last in the league in both points scored per 100 possessions and points allowed per 100 possessions, which accounts for the horrid "efficiency" numbers that led Schuhmann to his succinct, pitch-perfect conclusion. They're also first in the league in head-coach facepalms, which doesn't show up in a box score but does show up in a proprietary statistical system that I've developed to help me identify and exploit NBA memes. You're just going to have to trust me on that one.

[ The PostGame: Chicago Bulls' Derrick Rose says Michael Jordan's titles 'drive me' ]

Charlotte has lost 17 straight games, including a 28-point loss to the second-worst team in the league, and have a real shot at catching the 1972-73 Philadelphia 76ers for the lowest winning percentage in league history.�Even if they don't, though, people who blog about the team, like Spencer at Queen City Hoops, now find it "hard to imagine a team once [existed] that was worse than this."

And while the opportunity exists for a bright future led by capable general manager Rich Cho, 2011 lottery picks Kemba Walker and Bismack Biyombo, and whichever lottery pick Charlotte can import this summer (Kentucky big man Anthony Davis, 'Cats fans hope), the specter of Michael Jordan ? the greatest to ever lace 'em up, but a dire-at-best executive who might not care enough to do the work necessary to bring Carolina a winner ? hands over it all, forever threatening to turn flexibility and options into another run of dead-end campaigns. Hope springs eternal, but hard-earned pessimism's got alligator blood, too.

When you look at all that, "This team stinks" actually seems pretty kind, doesn't it?

Hat-tips to Deadspin and Sharapova's Thigh.

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Sunday, April 22, 2012

Report: Urban Meyer might not be so squeaky clean

Urban Meyer has always been above the fray.

The new coach at Ohio State has never been in trouble with the NCAA, speaks out against coaches who bend the rules and, in his one year as a college football analyst, played morality watchdog with several of his peers.

But according to the Sporting News, the Urban Meyer we think we know might not be an accurate portrayal. During a three month investigation, the Sporting News uncovered a trend of player drug use and preferential treatment that fractured the Florida teams Meyer coached and is more or less to blame for the struggles Florida is having now under new head coach Will Muschamp.

It was Meyer who declared the Florida program "broken" at the end of his last regular season game in Gainesville in November of 2010. But why was it broken?

"Over the last two years he was there," one former player said, "the players had taken complete control of the team."

Only now, through interviews with multiple sources during a three-month Sporting News investigation, do we see just how damaged the infrastructure really was and how much repair work second-year coach Will Muschamp has had to undertake in replacing Meyer?who has moved on to Ohio State less than a year after resigning from Florida for health reasons. ?

Left in the wake of Meyer's resignation were problems that can destroy a coaching career: drug use among players, a philosophy of preferential treatment for certain players, a sense of entitlement among all players and roster management by scholarship manipulation.

The story describes a "Circle of Trust," which referred to a group of the Gators' best players who were given preferential treatment when it came to discipline. The article notes several examples, including wideout Percy Harvin, linebacker Brandon Spikes and tight end Aaron Hernandez, who supposedly missed a game with injuries when in fact all three had failed a drug test. The article also cites Harvin's lack of respect for leadership. Once he refused to do stadium stairs s a conditioning drill, so the team ended up playing basketball instead. He also reportedly physically attacked wide receivers coach Billy Gonzales. He wasn't disciplined for either incident.

Meyer, who is quoted several times throughout the story, denied or talked around most of the allegations throughout the article. But the Sporting News cites quotes from several unnamed sources and uses former Florida safety Bryan Thomas to back up its claims. Thomas, spent two seasons with Florida before knee injuries derailed his career and he was forced to take a medical hardship. He graduated from Florida and spent his final two seasons at North Alabama.

The entire article is an interesting look at a coach who is regarded as one of the moral pillars of college football. While the revelations in this article likely aren't cause for some sort of NCAA investigation ? there are several players around the country who get preferential treatment and have a sense of entitlement ? it should give Ohio State fans some pause especially after similar issues crept into Buckeyes program a year ago.

- - -
"Like" Dr. Saturday on Facebook for football conversations and stuff you won't see on the blog. And follow Dr. Saturday at its new home on Twitter: @YahooDrSaturday

Tracy McGrady Detroit Pistons Dwayne Wade

The 10-man rotation, starring the Paul Silas Facepalm Timeline

A look around the league and the web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.

C: NBA247365.com. Watch the Charlotte Bobcats' season as measured by the face of head coach Paul Silas. It gets rough, but infographics are intended to inform, even if it hurts.
PF: NBA.com's Hang Time Blog. Sekou Smith's got a pop quiz for you, hotshot: If you're starting a franchise today and you need a center, are you taking Dwight Howard or Andrew Bynum?
SF: Heat.com and Grantland. Couper Moorhead and Sebastian Pruiti, two really smart basketball minds, on how LeBron James and the Miami Heat defended Carmelo Anthony in Miami's Sunday afternoon win. You will learn things at both links.
SG: Bounce Bounce Bounce. A lovely guide to common NBA celebratory hand gestures, some of which may be fictional, but frankly, shouldn't be.
PG: Basketball Prospectus. Kevin Pelton on Heat coach Erik Spoelstra using LeBron as Miami's backup point guard, a rotation shift we've seen more of late and could see much more in the postseason.


6th: SB Nation. Tom Ziller nails another Hook on how David Stern's NBA, villains in so many fans' eyes for the way their teams get treated, actually did right by the city of New Orleans and the newly purchased New Orleans Hornets.
7th: Detroit Free Press. Vincent Ellis digs deeper on a story we brought you a couple of weeks back: How undergoing therapy has helped Detroit Pistons guard Rodney Stuckey. (Hat-tip to Dan Feldman at Piston Powered.)
8th: ESPN Insider. Tom Haberstroh digs in the crates, as is his wont, and finds out which NBA players really take over during crunch time. Some players, Haberstroh found, take over and excel, while others do not. Interestingly enough, Carmelo Anthony ? he of the hard-earned closer's rep ? has been found wanting this season, which lends some credence to this excellent piece on the dark side of 'Melo taking over in The New York Times. (NOTE: Yep, that's right ? another two-fer. I'm getting dirty on y'all cats.)
9th: The National Post. The Toronto Raptors' failure to even tank properly is on some level hilarious, writes Eric Koreen, but it could also be important, and even positive.
10th: Sactown Royalty. Ziller pulls double-duty on today's list, but he earns his spot by FJMing his way through the 16 points of contention that the Maloof family has raised in opposition to the Sacramento arena deal. In summation: They're bull[EXPLETIVE]ing and not even bothering to do a good job of it. The Maloofs want to weasel their way out of Sacramento, and the league may just let them, and they may even get there. Just don't forget that "weasel" part. Or that "bull[EXPLETIVE]" part. Lord knows Kings fans never will, or would.

Got a link or tip for Ball Don't Lie? Give me a shout at devine (at) yahoo-inc.com, or follow me on Twitter.

Portland Trail Blazers New Jersey Nets Arizona Diamondbacks

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Update: Jessica Dorrell?s fiance, Josh Morgan, still employed at Arkansas just off the website

Bobby Petrino wasn't the only one affected by his affair with Jessica Dorrell to leave Arkansas. Dorrell's fianc� Josh Morgan, who was the director of swimming and diving operations for the Razorbacks, has been removed from the swimming page of the university website.

However, an Arkansas spokesman said Morgan is still at the university and listed in the campus directory. He said law would not allow him to discuss more about Morgan's status.

Early Wednesday, a website called swimswarm.com reported that Morgan had left his position with the University.

However, Josh Morgan is no longer the Director of Swimming and Diving Operations at Arkansas. It is now swimming-news.

The unfortunate affair has cost him his job (whether it be from intimidation, firing, or resignation is unclear). Former graduate assistant Megan Haskins has been promoted to take over his spot.

AP reported Dorrell was "at one point" engaged to Morgan, insinuating that the relationship was over.

Morgan, similar to Petrino's wife, Becky, and his four kids, becomes the collateral damage in what has become an ugly story for Arkansas. It's easy to focus on the primary characters in this mess and forget the people it's affecting the most. Neither Dorrell nor Morgan have commented since news of the inappropriate relationship broke last Thursday and Dorrell remains employed by the university.

- - -
H/T to The Big Lead

"Like" Dr. Saturday on Facebook for football conversations and stuff you won't see on the blog. And follow Dr. Saturday at its new home on Twitter: @YahooDrSaturday

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Photo: The morning after Bobby Petrino?s firing

As the sun rose up over Fayetteville on Wednesday morning after a stunning night where athletic director Jeff Long announced coach Bobby Petrino had been relieved of his duties, there was a sign that perhaps things were going to be all right for the Razorbacks.

- - -
Photo courtesy of @ksrikerhall

"Like" Dr. Saturday on Facebook for football conversations and stuff you won't see on the blog. And follow Dr. Saturday at its new home on Twitter: @YahooDrSaturday

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Friday, April 20, 2012

Bobby Petrino will not contest his dismissal and walk away quietly

Bobby Petrino will not contest his dismissal or seek any of the $18 million buyout clause from his contract, Petrino's agent Russ Campbell said in an email to athletic director Jeff Long late Thursday evening.

Petrino was fired for cause after he used his position as head football coach to hire his mistress, Jessica Dorrell, for the position of student-athlete development coordinator. Dorrell was hired over 158 other applicants, including Benjamin Wilkerson, a former LSU offensive lineman who had endorsements from LSU coach Les Miles, Alabama coach Nick Saban, Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher, Florida coach Will Muschamp and Tennessee coach Derek Dooley.

Per his contract, Petrino had five days from the date of his dismissal to dispute the firing in writing. However, according to the Associated Press, Petrino accepted ''responsibility for the events that led to the university's decision to terminate his contract.''

[ Eric Adelson: Firing Bobby Petrino wasn't easy but was the right move ]

On Friday, the school released Long's letter to Petrino, which outlined some of those events. In it, Long described some of the frustrations he shared during his press conference Tuesday.

"(Y)ou deliberately failed to tell me that you had engaged in an extramarital affair with Ms. Dorrell over a period of several months leading up to your recommendation to hire her,'' Long wrote. ''If you had been forthcoming with me about the true nature of your relationship, I would not have approved the hiring." ...

The athletic director ripped Petrino for ''poor judgment'' and said that by lying to his boss and the public he had left the school with the task of ''restoring the reputation of our institution and our athletics programs.'' ...

"I recognize that you are a very talented football coach,'' Long wrote, ''but the university may not disregard your conduct or sacrifice its integrity, reputation and principles."

The letter also mentioned the $20,000 "gift" Petrino gave to Dorrell when she was first hired. The money came out of Petrino's personal account and Dorrell used it to buy a black Acura.

"Among other concerns relating to this 'gift,' you should have disclosed this fact to me ... but you failed to do so," Long wrote.

Dorrell was placed on paid leave Friday.

- - -
"Like" Dr. Saturday on Facebook for football conversations and stuff you won't see on the blog. And follow Dr. Saturday at its new home on Twitter: @YahooDrSaturday

Related video on Yahoo! Sports

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Sam Vincent backtracks, somewhat, in his comments about Michael Jordan?s work ethic

Former Charlotte Bobcat coach Sam Vincent doesn't have to make nice with Charlotte Bobcat owner Michael Jordan. Sure, Jordan hired Vincent to coach his team in 2007, but he also fired him a year later. But that didn't stop Vincent from clarifying, in a thoughtful and spot-on interview with Bulls.com scribe Sam Smith, the comments that he made to the Washington Post earlier this month about MJ's dedication as Bobcat owner.

We detailed this story soon after it came out, with the crux of Vincent's appeal coming in telling writer Rick Maese that the "additional time you spend on jump shots, running, dunking, I don't know if he puts in that same amount of time as an executive or if he even cares to." Now Vincent is attempting to clarify, while not exactly backtracking, to Smith:

"There is going to be a very fortunate man coaching the Bobcats soon. I love what Michael is doing and the patience he is showing in building what I think will be a winner. I will always appreciate the experience I gained while working with the Bobcats organization and the insights MJ shared with me during my season as head coach. He was always there when I had a question or concern."

Vincent told Sam that he "didn't do the best job expressing myself," which is a little odd, because I thought he was spot-on in his take on Jordan and the Bobcats.

As we mentioned in our take, Jordan the owner puts in about as much time with the team as most NBA owners outside of Dallas' Mark Cuban tend to do. Even if the owner isn't a figurehead, and knows the game inside-out like MJ, he doesn't have to be around all that much or in the owner's box every night.

The distinction here is that when Vincent worked for the Bobcats, Jordan wasn't the owner. He was the ostensible GM (if not in name, then in execution of role) in charge of paying attention to 450 NBA players, the 15 guys on the Bobcats, and the hundreds of potential NBA prospects the team could possibly employ. And for that role, I'm sorry, Jordan did not put in the same amount of work of some of his contemporaries. At the same time, he also put in about the same amount of work as some NBA GMs. He wasn't alone, in playing a lot of golf.

And, to be sure, he definitely put in far, far less work than the MJ that sweated for hours in the gym, during his playing days. Vincent wasn't wrong in that regard, in making the comparison to the Washington Post, because no GM has ever worked as hard as a personnel boss as Jordan did as a player.

This is a long way of saying that Sam Vincent, Jordan's former teammate and one-time boss, has nothing to apologize over. And if Jordan is going to truly hand the reins of the Bobcats over to current team GM Rich Cho, then the hours he's putting in are absolutely appropriate.

In talking with Smith, a Hall of Famer himself, Vincent accurately went on:

"The route MJ is taking isn't popular, but it's the right thing," said Vincent. "He had a team built around good, but not great players in Stephen Jackson and Gerald Wallace, and had a ceiling of just making the playoffs. That's nice for an ongoing story during the season, but it's dishonest with your fans. MJ is about winning and winning big. He's been adding talented, young players through the draft and is in position to land a high level player in a good draft this season. He hasn't been impatient and gone recklessly into free agency for a quick fix player and he has a nice management team in place now. He's positioned himself well under the salary cap and players will want to play in Charlotte.["]

It's certainly no guarantee, completely clearing house and loading slowly through the draft doesn't always work (as Jordan's former team in Chicago found, in the years following his second retirement), but it still is the smartest and most potential-laden rebuilding route. And Vincent is correct in pointing out that the former core surrounding Gerald Wallace and Stephen Jackson absolutely would top out with a lower-rung playoff berth, and that MJ is right to start over.

Where Michael could go wrong, as has always been the case, is refusing to trust his teammates. Years ago and in Chicago, Vincent was one of those guys; especially after he was brought in after a controversial trade that sent Sedale Threatt to Seattle. If Jordan doesn't trust Rich Cho, his track record (selecting Kwame Brown in the 2001 draft, and Adam Morrison for the Bobcats five years later) and rumors about work ethic don't speak highly of the mind behind a team that is going to have all eyes on them as they attempt to dig their way out from the bottom of the NBA, and well-intentioned ridicule.

Eli Manning Kansas City Royals San Diego Padres

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Evan Longoria gets crazy in acrobatic stunt plane

Evan Longoria has become the latest athlete to sign on with Red Bull, which means he gets to join Tim Lincecum in doing any number of extreme activities that will eventually end up on Big League Stew. We are nothing if not complicit thrill seekers around these parts.

Anyway, the first mission for the Tampa Bay Rays third baseman was actually something Lincecum did over San Francisco last season. But while Tiny Tim (or others looking out for his safety) gave strict instructions to keep his flight stunt-free, Longoria was able to experience all of the acrobatics that pilot Kirby Chambliss and the Red Bull plane has to offer.

From Red Bull:

Longoria experienced snap rolls, upright blind spins, felt the airplane go nose over tail several times and went straight up at nearly 100 miles per hour backwards. �After cartwheeling end-over-end and living through it, Evan said, "I thought we were going down. �It went black there for a second. �I'm a bit light headed, but I didn't throw up."

Longoria may not have thrown up, but we can only imagine the somersaults that were going on in Andrew Friedman's stomach when he heard about his franchise cornerstone ? the one with the insanely team-friendly contract! ? climbing aboard for his adventure.

But all's well that ends well and the video from Longoria's mission looks completely awesome. Onto the next bucket list item ...

Make sure you're ready for the season ahead ...
Follow @bigleaguestew,�@KevinKaduk and the BLS Facebook page!

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Report: Urban Meyer might not be so squeaky clean

Urban Meyer has always been above the fray.

The new coach at Ohio State has never been in trouble with the NCAA, speaks out against coaches who bend the rules and, in his one year as a college football analyst, played morality watchdog with several of his peers.

But according to the Sporting News, the Urban Meyer we think we know might not be an accurate portrayal. During a three month investigation, the Sporting News uncovered a trend of player drug use and preferential treatment that fractured the Florida teams Meyer coached and is more or less to blame for the struggles Florida is having now under new head coach Will Muschamp.

It was Meyer who declared the Florida program "broken" at the end of his last regular season game in Gainesville in November of 2010. But why was it broken?

"Over the last two years he was there," one former player said, "the players had taken complete control of the team."

Only now, through interviews with multiple sources during a three-month Sporting News investigation, do we see just how damaged the infrastructure really was and how much repair work second-year coach Will Muschamp has had to undertake in replacing Meyer?who has moved on to Ohio State less than a year after resigning from Florida for health reasons. ?

Left in the wake of Meyer's resignation were problems that can destroy a coaching career: drug use among players, a philosophy of preferential treatment for certain players, a sense of entitlement among all players and roster management by scholarship manipulation.

The story describes a "Circle of Trust," which referred to a group of the Gators' best players who were given preferential treatment when it came to discipline. The article notes several examples, including wideout Percy Harvin, linebacker Brandon Spikes and tight end Aaron Hernandez, who supposedly missed a game with injuries when in fact all three had failed a drug test. The article also cites Harvin's lack of respect for leadership. Once he refused to do stadium stairs s a conditioning drill, so the team ended up playing basketball instead. He also reportedly physically attacked wide receivers coach Billy Gonzales. He wasn't disciplined for either incident.

Meyer, who is quoted several times throughout the story, denied or talked around most of the allegations throughout the article. But the Sporting News cites quotes from several unnamed sources and uses former Florida safety Bryan Thomas to back up its claims. Thomas, spent two seasons with Florida before knee injuries derailed his career and he was forced to take a medical hardship. He graduated from Florida and spent his final two seasons at North Alabama.

The entire article is an interesting look at a coach who is regarded as one of the moral pillars of college football. While the revelations in this article likely aren't cause for some sort of NCAA investigation ? there are several players around the country who get preferential treatment and have a sense of entitlement ? it should give Ohio State fans some pause especially after similar issues crept into Buckeyes program a year ago.

- - -
"Like" Dr. Saturday on Facebook for football conversations and stuff you won't see on the blog. And follow Dr. Saturday at its new home on Twitter: @YahooDrSaturday

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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Jeff Francoeur sends 20 pizzas to A?s fans

Jeff Francoeur could write a book about making friends and influencing people in the bleachers at Oakland Athletics games.

Francoeur, an outfielder for the Kansas City Royals, had 20 pizzas delivered Wednesday afternoon to fans sitting in the right-field grandstand at the Oakland Coliseum. He also sent along a signed bat, with a personal message inscribed. That's quite a gift package. To what did the Oakland folks owe such generosity? Why in the name of another Jeff ? Spicoli ? would he buy them pizzas?

The unorthodox acquaintance of a visiting slugger and some East Bay baseball crazies began a season ago when a group in the bleachers decided to celebrate "Bacon Tuesday" by bringing homemade bacon-flavored eats to the ballpark. With the Royals in town, fans also made Francoeur the target of good-natured heckling (being the right fielder, he was closest to them). Inevitably, the memes collided. Francoeur got along so well with the crowd ? he would wave, shout back at them, and laugh along ? that after the game he went over for a meet and greet.

Make that a meat and greet. Someone had saved Francoeur a plate of bacon goodies. And, apparently, Jeff Francoeur loves bacon. (He's an American, isn't he?)

[ Related: Royals' Jonathan Broxton makes dubious history ]

The next night, after spotting his new BFFs, he threw a signed baseball into the stands with a $100 bill wrapped in a rubber band (maybe you thought I'd say "wrapped in bacon"?) As the Hardball Times reported, the note read:

"Beer or Bacon Dog on me. Jeff Francoeur."

All for a plate of bacon and some friendly conversation. Well, Tuesday night was the second annual Bacon Tuesday, so the food got really elaborate and somebody made T-shirts with Francoeur's name on them, claiming him to be the event's "sponsor." At some point, Francoeur stopped by again and fans gave him treats ? perhaps some chocolate bacon, bacon cheesecake or bacon jalape�o poppers ? along with a shirt. He was happier than a pig in slop as he showed off the shirt to teammates. Reporter Joel Goldberg of FSN Kansas City has done a lot of legwork on this:

Watch Francoeur get his bacon on

On Wednesday, Francoeur paid back the fans again. It was pizza delivery time, along with a bat, again signed by Francoeur:

"RF Bleachers, keep cooking Bacon, Jeff Francoeur"

A classic and classy move, and he didn't make the mistake that selfish Spicoli made in "Fast Times" by getting pizza delivered for just himself. After all, Frenchy was on "our time," wasn't he?

You know, the world has made a lot of fun of Jeff Francoeur because he'll swing at anything and sometimes we have no idea where his next throw will land. But he's exactly the kind of ballplayer I'd love to root for. He obviously loves playing the game, feels rewarded interacting with the fans, and eats his share of bacon. That's a wonderful combination of qualities, isn't it?

And A's fans collectively don't have the greatest reputation. Usually it's for not showing up at games at their sketchy ballpark ? to the point that ownership wants to pull up stakes and move them out of town. But if that means fans like these wouldn't go to games anymore, it would be a shame.

You know, they never bought beer or bacon dogs with Francoeur's money. Just a case to keep the ball in, with the money still attached. It's too bad they get painted with a broad brush, because these A's fans are witty enough, enthusiastic enough and, doggone it, Jeff Francoeur likes them. And, bacon.

Big BLS H/N: @Sniff009, along with Bacon Tuesday ring leaders @AnsonCasanares and @OmarInTheOF.

Make sure you're ready for the season ahead ...
Follow @AnswerDave on Twitter and befriend the�BLS Facebook page!

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The Shutdown 50 ? #29: Whitney Mercilus, OLB/DE, Illinois

With the 2011 NFL season in the books, it's time to turn our eyes to the NFL draft, and the pre-draft evaluation process. Before and after the 2012 scouting combine, we'll be taking a closer look at the 50 draft-eligible players who may be the biggest NFL difference-makers when all is said and done.

We continue this year's series with Illinois defensive end Whitney Mercilus. Yes, the last name is awesome, and Mercilus is as tough as the name suggests. While spotting for a teammate during a 2011 weightlifting session, Mercilus lost the tip of his left index finger when it was crushed beneath 405 pounds of weights. Mercilus got stitches, peroxide baths for his hand that sound old Palmolive commercials as re-imagined by the people who make Saw movies, and a splint to make his glove fit properly. He also got new nicknames:"Nubs" and "Nine Piece," no doubt earning Ronnie Lott's rare respect. Mercilus did not let the digital divide stop him: He led the nation with 16 sacks and nine forced fumbles, exploding onto the draft scene after two nearly invisible seasons at Illinois.

Mercilus still has a lot to learn about his craft, but he has tremendous upside, and he has proven that a little thing like a severe, terrifying injury will not stand in his way. The son of Haitian immigrants who worked three jobs at a time to put food on the table, Mercilus is motivated to succeed. Once his game develops, opposing quarterbacks will learn just how little mercy he possesses.

Pros: Like most high-end pass rushing prospects, Mercilus has an explosive first step that allows him to beat blockers into the backfield. Unlike many other young pass rushers, Mercilus counters with an impressive inside move. Mercilus has another move which he calls the "double spike" in which he uses both his arms to swat away his blocker's hands while lowering his shoulder to turn the corner to the quarterback. That's a pretty advanced repertoire of moves for a young player, and offensive linemen were a step behind him all year long in 2011.

Mercilus is effective when stunting or slanting. He is very strong, and he uses his quickness to get inside his blocker's shoulder when moving toward the middle of the field. He hustles and keeps working when he is blocked, and he recorded a handful of clean-up sacks last year. He gets high marks for both his motor and his off-field habits.

Cons: Mercilus disappears for long stretches of games. If a blocker defends himself from the "double spike," he can latch on to Mercilus and keep him occupied all day. Mercilus is sometimes content to try to beat blockers to the outside and must learn to perfect his moves, add new ones, and find better ways to set up his blockers.

Mercilus does not read running plays well and sometimes looks lost on the backside of the play. He allows blockers to dictate and steer him around when the ball is not coming right at him. Again, this is lack of experience at work, as Mercilus was strictly a situational player until last year. He must learn to play the run with better leverage and recognize when he is being pinned to the sideline to open a cutback lane.

Despite fine initial quickness, Mercilus does not have great open-field speed, and many quarterbacks will be able to run away from him.

Conclusion: Mercilus is a cut above the Andre Branch-style pass rush prospect because he has an inside dimension to his game and has learned to be an effective hand fighter. His upside is very high, and his effort and hustle are exemplary. He can step into a situational pass rush role as a rookie and will probably be a handful, at least until opposing linemen adjust to what he can and cannot do at this stage of his career.

It is hard to project Mercilus as a three-down defender who is as good against the run as the pass, and it is tricky to project him as a 3-4 outside linebacker because he would be incredibly raw in coverage. Still, anything is possible for a player who is so gifted and so raw. Double-digit sack totals, however, are all but inevitable.

NFL Comparison: Charles Johnson, DE, Carolina Panthers

More Shutdown 50:
#30: Brandon Thompson, DT, Clemson |�#31, Dwayne Allen, TE, Clemson |�#32: Jonathan Martin, OT, Stanford |�#33: Bobby Massie, OT, Mississippi |�#34: Andre Branch, DE/OLB, Clemson |�#35: Dont'a Hightower, ILB, Alabama |�#36: Chandler Jones, DE, Syracuse |�#37: Stephen Hill, WR, Georgia Tech |�#38: Vinny Curry, DE, Marshall |�#39: Doug Martin, RB, Boise State |�#40 : Mohamed Sanu, WR, Rutgers|�#41: Zach Brown, OLB, North Carolina|�#42: Lavonte David, OLB, Nebraska|�#43: Jared Crick, DE/DT, Nebraska|�#44: Alshon Jeffrey, WR, South Carolina |�#45: Kirk Cousins, QB, Michigan State|�#46: Orson Charles, TE, Georgia|�#47: Lamar Miller, RB, Miami|�#48: Shea McClellin, OLB/DE, Boise State|�#49: Rueben Randle, WR, LSU |#50: Jonathan Massaqoui, OLB/DE, Troy

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