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News sport : Are Pittsburgh Penguins in meltdown or is ice cream bowl half-full?

Perhaps not since “have another donut, you fat pig” has a bizarre food-related non-sequitur entered the collective conscious of hockey fans. 

After the Pittsburgh Penguins’ Game 3 loss to the New York Rangers on Monday night, kindly old GM Jim Rutherford decided to let off some steam at the expense of Rob Rossi, caustic Pittsburgh Tribune-Review columnist, Penguins naysayer and occasional guest on the Marek Vs. Wyshynski podcast (in full disclosure).

It was there, in the bowels of the arena, where Rutherford delivered a dish best served cold:

After exiting a media elevator and while walking with other reporters to the Penguins' dressing room, Rutherford addressed this columnist, a frequent critic since his hiring last June, in an obscenity-laced diatribe.

“Thanks for your support,” Rutherford said repeatedly.

“You're a (expletive) jerk,” Rutherford said repeatedly.

Rutherford followed the jerk comment with a suggestion to “go sell ice cream now,” then a challenge to look him in the eye, which I did while explaining my role as Trib Total Media's lead sports columnist.

My role is to provide opinion.

“Well, your opinion is (expletive),” Rutherford said.

OK, so it’s not a Bryan Price-level tirade, but it’s still pretty good.

While we’re still baffled by “go sell ice cream,” except to say it might be the ultimate insult for a 66-year-old grandpa, the question remains: Are the Penguins as dire as Rossi makes them out to be, or is his opinion [expletive]?

They’re down 2-1 to the Rangers, but the gap feels much larger. New York’s carried play for most of the series, never seemingly in danger, never all that flustered.

For all the talk about Sidney Crosby’s playoff struggle, Evgeni Malkin has been invisible in this series: No points, four shots on goal and a minus-1.

For all the talk about their retooled bottom six, the only player that’s made an impact is Brandon Sutter, a Ray Shero addition. Aming the scorers, inconsistency reigns. Crosby and Chris Kunitz had their Game 2 resurgence, but not much else. Rutherford’s big score, David Perron, has looked listless.

Mike Johnston, the coach Rutherford hired to take over for the successful by any measure Dan Bylsma, has been outcoached in the series, including the Rangers’ handily winning the possession battle in the first 40 minutes before the Penguins’ mad scramble to try and tie it in the third. But hey, at least he found a way to end the parade of penalties that destroyed the team in Games 1 and 2.

So they’re a mess. They’re a mess if they win Game 4, they’re a mess if they somehow win this series.

But are they an irredeemable mess?

Add Kris Letang, Olli Maata and Christian Ehrhoff to that defense, and what does this team look like? Add Pascal Dupuis' heart and soul to a team that’s completely lacked it, and what do you have? This isn’t to say that man-games-lost is an excuse, because it never was for those Dan Bylsma teams that would win divisions despite unfathomable injury losses.

But that’s a whole lotta talent on the outside of the rink for Pittsburgh. 

Shero stocked the system with young defensemen. There’s still that notion that the Penguins are a forward or two away from igniting their stars’ offense again.

That’s the ice-cream bowl half-full assessment. But what about Rossi’s worldview?

A top-four Eastern seed in each of the previous seven years, they did not qualify for the playoffs until the final night of the regular season and are in the postseason as the No. 8 seed.

A franchise branded for its offensive prowess, co-owned by the team's all-time leading scorer in Lemieux and employing two former two-time scoring champions in Crosby and Malkin, the Penguins finished 19th in goals during the regular season.

They have scored only two goals in their two losses to the Rangers during this series, which they likely would trail, 0-3, if not for Crosby's two-goal surge in a 4-3 win in Game 2 on Saturday night.

Rossi’s gotten the reputation for doom and gloom, hence Rutherford’s ill-conceived in-series tirade. But in speaking with a number of people who cover the Penguins and are close to them, they all say the same thing: There are significant cracks in the foundation of this team. One insider who reached out this morning simply said "so many buried bodies."

The more you think about the hiring of Rutherford, the less it seems like an expert hand coming in to create a champion and the more it seems like a desperation move from a franchise that felt the only solutions were sweeping changes, but that never really thought out the next steps.

Unless the next steps were hiring Mike Babcock, but given the current landscape of available jobs in the NHL, that’s in no way assured.

One of the NHL’s flagship franchises is taking on water. In ice cream terms: It’s a small, increasingly melted lump of vanilla surrounded by a milky soup of disintegrating rainbow sprinkles, held in a bowl by an old man cussing at a professional pessimist for not eating it fast enough.

And somewhere, Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero are eating massive sundaes, smiling through the ice cream headaches, wondering what all the fuss was about if the end result was a team that can’t score, can’t find chemistry and is going to be eliminated by the Rangers with an even more emphatic whimper.

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News sport : Baylor players spent Monday perfecting their trampoline dunks

Whether it's taking batting practice at the baseball diamond, rowing with the crew team or playing flag football on the practice field, the Baylor basketball team has spent the first couple weeks of the offseason dabbling with other sports.

The Bears joined the gymnastics team at a trampoline park Monday, the perfect setting for them to bring along a Fisher Price basketball hoop and have a little fun.

It was 6-foot-8, 280-pound Rico Gathers who delivered the most impressive dunk, a flying one-handed dunk preceded by bounces on three different trampolines. The agility Gathers displayed at his size was a reminder why many think he has the athleticism to switch to football if pro basketball doesn't work out for him.

A close second for dunk of the day? This slam ball-esque alley-oop slam from Royce O'Neal to Taurean Prince.

Of course, not all Baylor's trampoline dunks were successful. This Gathers outtake belongs on the blooper reel.

Fun stuff, Baylor. Here's hoping the Bears join the equestrian team for a practice session next. The world needs to see Gathers jump a gate riding a horse.

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Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Miami releases dramatic video touting Sun Life Stadium overhaul

Miami really wants you to get excited about renovations to Sun Life Stadium.

The facility, which hosts the Hurricanes and the Miami Dolphins, is in the midst of massive renovations detailed in a(n overly?) dramatic video due to be complete in 2016.

As you can see, a roof is being installed over the seating sections of the stadium and other upgrades are being made. And while we appreciate Miami's optimism when it comes to crowd size, we wonder just how often the stadium will be as full as it's shown in the renderings. Maybe they're playing Florida State in the video? Below are a few pictures from Miami games in 2014.

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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Adrian Peterson’s agent trolls, confuses Vikings fans by wearing Bucs hat

The relationship between Adrian Peterson and the Minnesota Vikings is deteriorating as his agent is trying his best to get his client traded.

Monday night, Ben Dogra (Peterson’s agent) posted a confusing picture on his Facebook account that had Vikings fans scratching their heads — or perhaps inducing more of their teeth gnashing.

Here’s the picture — with the caption “Game on!” — of Dogra with Peterson jerseys and him wearing a Tampa Bay Buccaneers hat:

What did it mean? Had AP been traded to the Bucs? Or just Dogra poking the bear a bit? Dogra, after all, reps some Buccaneers players, such as Gerald McCoy. Can’t the agent just be supporting two of his guys? (And … is that a Jerry Rice-autographed ball he’s holding? Cryptographers needed!)

On the hoof this might not mean much except for that it has been reported the Buccaneers are one of the teams interested in Peterson via trade. (Also worth noting: The Bucs travel to Minnesota for their preseason opener in August.)

Dogra has been a thorn in the Vikings’ sides since Peterson let it be known that he’d likely rather play elsewhere next season. The agent has said that it would not be in Peterson’s “best interests” to return to Minnesota following a difficult 2014 season in which he was indicted on a child abuse charge, deactivated by the team and eventually suspended by the NFL in the case.

However, a report by PFT on Monday said that the Vikings might need to be blown away by an offer for Peterson for them even to consider a trade, even with multiple teams interested in acquiring him.

With the draft closing in, the Peterson situation becomes more interesting by the day. And Dogra might put on hats and jerseys for the other 31 teams until them if it means forcing the Vikings’ hands on a trade. That’s how badly it appears he and Peterson want to turn the page.

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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Colorado State superfan wants to walk on to CSU football team

If you've paid attention to Colorado State athletics over the last couple years, you may remember Justin Stank.

He's the superfan who was noticed during the 2013 NCAA tournament, when the Rams beat Missouri and lost to Louisville. Stank, set to graduate high school this spring, has been attending Colorado State games in a ram costume for much of his life.

He now has plans to be at Colorado State football games in the near future, though the goal is to be in a Rams uniform. He hopes to walk on to Colorado State's football team after getting his associate's degree at a Fort Collins-area community college.

From the Coloradoan:

Stank, now a senior, was recruited by NAIA and junior colleges to continue his football career, but there's only one school he's ever had an interest playing for, CSU. Since his grades won't allow him to enroll in the fall, he plans on attending Front Range Community College in Fort Collins to get his associate's degree before transferring in, similar to what former star running back Kapri Bibbs — now a Denver Bronco — did, Stank said, but as a walk-on.

At 5-7, Stank's height likely contributed to the lack of attention he got from big-time colleges. He played center at his high school and his coach said he was a great fit for his offense's system.

According to the Coloradoan, he got offensive line pointers from former Colorado State coach Jim McElwain. With McElwain now at Florida, Stank likely won't be playing for him in the near future, though we hope he can go from mascot to player. It'd be a pretty cool story.

For more Colorado State news, visit GreenandGoldNews.com.

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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Closing Time: Make room for Addison Russell

Ah, Chicago. Come for the culture, the bars and the pizza, stay for the prospects.  

Addison Russell, come on down.

The news leaked out late Monday – the Cubs are going to promote Russell, another touted prospect, in advance of Tuesday’s game at Pittsburgh. It looks like Russell will settle in as the team’s new second baseman.

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Kris Bryant, Carlos Rodon, now Russell - it’s been a fun five days. 

The speedy promotion speaks to how highly the organization regards Russell. The 21-year-old infielder has been a shortstop for most of his pro career, but the Cubs still made the call after watching him play a week of second base at Triple-A Iowa. Russell also saw some keystone time in the Arizona Fall League, but it’s still a new position for him.

Fantasy owners want to talk about the offensive profile, of course, and there’s a lot to like. Russell posted a .301/.377/.520 slash line through his 244 Bush League games, with a mix of power (38 homers) and speed (44 bags in 53 attempts). He was off to a .318/.326/.477 start with Iowa this spring, through 11 games (five at second base, six at shortstop). 

Unlike Bryant, the Cubs are unlikely to give Russell a premium lineup spot right away. The 2-3-4 combination of Jorge Soler, Anthony Rizzo and Bryant seems chiseled in granite, and my guess is the club doesn’t want to take Dexter Fowler out of the leadoff spot, slow start to the side. Russell could easily wind up batting sixth, seventh or ninth  remember, the Cubs are one of those new-agy teams that use their pitchers in the eighth spot, even the ones who can’t hit. 

The normal rules apply with buzzy promotions  add first, ask questions (and seek possible trades) later. Russell is still available in two-thirds of Yahoo leagues as we go to press. He’s a Top 5 prospect on everyone’s clipboard. He’s capable of filling all five roto categories down the road. Maybe he’ll produce right away, maybe he won’t, but when we see theoretical upside on the table, we have to take a stab. 

There’s your opener for Tuesday  more bullets will follow shortly. 



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News sport : Steve Spurrier: I still think Joe Paterno got a bad deal

South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier still thinks Penn State coach Joe Paterno was treated unfairly during the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal.

The former Penn State coach was fired from his post as the scandal involving his defensive coordinator took off. The topic of Paterno came up when Spurrier referenced him in an interview with The State about turning 70 years old. Spurrier's birthday was Monday.

From The State:

Question: When you were 50 years old, what did you think about guys who were coaching in their 70s?

Answer: Well, there weren’t many. There weren’t many because just nobody did it. Nobody lasted that long, and most of the time they didn’t last that long because at some point they quit winning as much as they used to win. Bobby Bowden, of course, went a long time, and they finally had to tell him, ‘You’re finished.’ Joe Paterno was still there. That was very unfortunate what happened up there. I still think he got a bad deal, got a terrible deal.

Q: In terms of taking so much blame?

A: Correct. He did what the head coach is supposed to do. He told the athletic director, and (the AD) and the president let it die down I guess, and of course it flared up later. He was a good guy, a good friend. I liked him.

The interview with the State came on the heels of the publication of Spurrier's workout video.

Paterno told vice president Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim Curley when he was told of allegations surrounding Sandusky. In testimony to a grand jury before his death, Paterno said he figured Curley would handle the allegations "appropriately." They were not.

Shortly after his firing in November 2011, Paterno died in January 2012 at 85.

As part of the NCAA's punishment against Penn State, a portion of Paterno's wins were vacated in addition to a bowl ban, scholarship reductions and a fine. The NCAA reinstated Paterno's wins in January as part of a settlement agreement.

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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Troy Aikman donates $1 million to UCLA football center

Troy Aikman's name is going to be on UCLA's strength facility.

The former Dallas Cowboys quarterback and Fox NFL analyst donated $1,000,000 to UCLA's Wasserman Football Center. As a result of his donation, the strength center inside the building will be known as the Troy Aikman Strength and Conditioning Center.

"UCLA holds a very special place in my heart,” Aikman said in a statement.  “As you go through life, it is common to be defined by the company you keep.  I’ve been fortunate to be associated with two outstanding institutions.  In many eyes, I’ll always be a Dallas Cowboy, and I’m extremely proud of that.  By making this contribution to UCLA Football, It’s clear that I am, and always will be, a UCLA Bruin as well.  My time at UCLA helped mold me into the person I am today, and I want the Bruin student-athletes that come after me to have the same opportunity I had to achieve their boyhood dreams.” 

Aikman, an NFL Hall of Fame quarterback, transferred to UCLA after he left Oklahoma. After two seasons at UCLA, he was the No. 1 pick in the 1989 NFL draft by the Cowboys and won three Super Bowls in his career. His jersey was retired in November at UCLA.

The Wasserman Football Center is being built as part of upgrades to UCLA's facilities. According to a sheet published last fall, the strength and conditioing facility was the second-biggest asset in the facility (behind the facility and lobby) in terms of donor naming rights.

For more UCLA news, visit BruinSportsReport.com.

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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : No way, Jose: Tigers shortstop Jose Iglesias makes another incredible play

Perhaps you forgot, because Detroit Tigers shortstop Jose Iglesias missed all of the 2014 season with injuries, but the dude can play defense better than any shortstop in MLB not named Andrelton Simmons.

While the surprise story of Iglesias' comeback thus far has been his offense — that .436 average is nice, regardless of sample size — Iglesias reminded us Monday night how unbelievable he is in the field too.

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Just watch the clip above. We dare you not to be wowed. And no, this is not the place for one of those "this-happens-all-the-time" quips, because this play is downright filthy. The stop itself is nice, but that throw. Wow. Across his body and he's not even looking at first base as he makes it. Enjoy the photographic evidence.

(AP)

What makes the play even better is that Brett Gardner was at the plate, and he's a left-handed hitter who runs pretty well. So it's not like Iglesias did a bunch of fancy stuff to cut down Albert Pujols. 

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This still isn't the best Iglesias play — that's his catch in the 2013 playoffs, which we're always happy to share again, because it was so breathtaking. 

Jose Iglesias, it's nice to have you back.

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Mike Oz is the editor of Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : White Sox score four in the ninth, beat Indians in walk-off thriller

Take a look around MLB with Big League Stew's daily wrap up. We'll hit on all of the biggest moments from the day that you may have missed, while providing highlights, photos and interesting stats.

If the bottom of the ninth had gone a different way in Chicago, this would be a story about Trevor Bauer and how the Cleveland Indians pitcher turned in a dominating performance against the Chicago White Sox. Yep, that was almost the story.

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Then the bottom of the ninth happened. And the White Sox, who had four hits and nary a run in the first eight innings of the game, summoned one of those rallies that can change a team's outlook. The Sox strung together seven straight base runners against Indians' closer Cody Allen, turning a 3-0 deficit into a 4-3 win when Melky Cabrera hit a walk-off single.

"To be able to come back in the ninth inning off of anybody is always good momentum for guys to score late," White Sox manager Robin Ventura said after the game. "But especially as flat as that was, it shows you it can happen at any time."

Like we said, Bauer started off well for Cleveland. He pitched seven scoreless, allowing four hits and striking out seven. He even limited his walks to two and spent 104 pitches baffling the White Sox. Cleveland got homers from Ryan Raburn and Brett Hayes, plus an RBI double from Michael Brantley. Things looked to be going their way.

Instead, the bottom of the ninth went like this for the White Sox: double, walk, double, then four straight singles culminating in Cabrera throwing his hands into the air as he passed first base.

The Indians dropped to 4-8 on the season, while the White Sox improved to 5-7. It's not yet the South Side revival many expected after their big offseason, but Monday's win was the type that could re-energize a team.

BREWERS LOSE TWICE — THEIR GAME AND JONATHAN LUCROY TO INJURY
Cincinnati Reds manager Bryan Price, he of the 77 F-bomb tirade, wasn't the only one saying swears at Monday night's game between the Reds and the Milwaukee Brewers. The Reds won the thing, actually, putting a 6-1 decision on the Brewers. For the Reds, Anthony DeSclafani impressed, tossing eight shutout innings and allowing two hits.

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But Milwaukee's side is where everything so wrong it probably inspired some four-letter words. The Brewers' offensive struggles continued, as Ryan Braun's homer saved them from getting blanked. The bigger problem: They lost catcher Jonathan Lucroy to a broken toe, which immediately sent him to the disabled list. He suffered the injury when a foul tip hit his foot, which was surprise to Lucroy because he says that's happened to him plenty of times, but he's never broken a toe before.

The Brewers are now 2-11 and losers of six straight. They're also without Carlos Gomez, who is on the DL with a hamstring problem, and second baseman Scooter Gennett who, no joke, hurt himself taking a shower Sunday.

TIGERS EDGE YANKS DESPITE SABATHIA'S COMPLETE GAME
In a game that featured strong pitching performances on both sides, the Detroit Tigers edged the New York Yankees, 2-1. The high-powered Tigers proved they can win close ones, too. Alfredo Simon pitched 7 1/3 innings for Detroit, striking out seven and allowing one run. The Yankees got a complete game from C.C. Sabathia, who took a loss but looked encouraging while allowing two runs on seven hits. Yoenis Cespedes had he big hit for Detroit — a seventh-inning single that brought home Victor Martinez as the go-ahead run.

PADRES ENJOY THE COLORADO HIGH
The new-look San Diego Padres feasted at Coors Field on Monday night, turning MLB's famous hitters park into their offensive playground. The Padres KO'd the Colorado Rockies by the score of 14-3, knocking 17 hits. Jorge De La Rose, making his first start of the season for the Rockies, got ripped for seven earned runs and nine hits in two innings. Matt Kemp was the offensive star for the Padres with three hits and four RBIs.

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Mike Oz is the editor of Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Report: Josh Hamilton could be back in June under Angels' plan

(USA Today Sports)Josh Hamilton could be playing baseball for the Los Angeles Angels by June, if everything goes according to the team's comeback plan for the troubled former MVP.

The Angels and Hamilton have been locked in a dispute about his future with the team after he admitted a drug relapse to MLB. Angels owner Arte Moreno has threatened to void Hamilton's contract, while teammates have publicly supported Hamilton's return.

We've been unsure for months about whether Hamilton would ever play for the Angels again. But now, according to the Los Angeles Times' Bill Shaikin, we're learning that the Angels have a plan in place that could bring Hamilton back to the big leagues.

Under the tentative plan, Hamilton would report to the Angels' Arizona training complex for two to three weeks of work with the team's extended spring program. He would then proceed to a minor league rehabilitation assignment and could rejoin the Angels thereafter.

Hamilton is expected to report to Arizona "sooner rather than later," according to a person familiar with the plan but unwilling to discuss it publicly until the Angels announce it. The person spoke before the Angels' 6-3 loss to the Oakland Athletics at Angel Stadium on Monday.

The plan does not guarantee that Hamilton plays again for the Angels, but at the least it buys time for owner Arte Moreno. If Hamilton appears sound enough that his presence on the roster could give the Angels their best chance to win, the players might be discouraged if Moreno lets Hamilton go.

The best thing about this? It gives Hamilton a chance to prove himself again, rather than sitting in baseball purgatory. Recently, the Angels seemed like a team desperate for a loophole to shed their $83-million commitment to Hamilton. They spoke out publicly, surprised when an MLB-appointed arbitrator didn’t suspend Hamilton

Even before the relapse, Hamilton's contract was on the brink of being a boondoggle. He'd been injured and unproductive through most of his tenure with the Angels, including a hitless 2014 postseason. Shoulder surgery sidelined him for the start of the 2015 season too.

When the Angels traveled to Houston last week, a handful of teammates visited Hamilton, who has been rehabbing his injury there. Their public statements in support of Hamilton have only strengthened the case for his return. As has the Angels' not-so-great 5-8 start. They're in the bottom third of the league in runs, hits, batting average and OPS. If you take away Trout's contributions, the team is hitting .196.

Of course, the Angels could still hope to trade Hamilton too. Getting him onto the field and showing other teams he can still play ball would be the first step in that process. The next step would most assuredly be agreeing to write a big ol' check to help pay Hamilton's salary in the coming years. 

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Mike Oz is the editor of Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Warriors grind out Game 2 win over Pelicans, take command of series

OAKLAND, CA - APRIL 20: Klay Thompson #11 of the Golden State Warriors slam dunks the ball against the New Orleans Pelicans in the third quarter during the first round of the 2015 NBA Playoffs at ORACLE Arena on April 20, 2015 in Oakland, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)The Golden State Warriors cruised to 67 wins this regular season, causing some pundits to wonder if they would be able transcend adversity in a tight playoff game. Monday's Game 2 of their first-round series against the New Orleans Pelicans will not end that conversation, but it does suggest that the West's No. 1 seed can find plenty of ways to win when they aren't lighting up the scoreboard.

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The Warriors withstood an early surge from the Pelicans and got a tremendous and necessary fourth-quarter performance from All-Star guard Klay Thompson for a 97-87 victory at Oracle Arena, opening up their first 2-0 series lead since 1989 as the action shifts to the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans for Thursday's Game 3. The Pelicans played well enough to make their upcoming two home games interesting, but it's possible that they just lost their best chance to take a game in Oakland.

The game started very well for New Orleans and particularly superstar forward Anthony Davis, who picked up where he left off his 20-point fourth quarter in Game 1. Davis affected the game at both ends in the first quarter with a surge of activity, scoring 11 points but making impacts that didn't necessarily show up in the box score. His high level of play, 11 points from Eric Gordon, and terrific team defense led the Pelicans to a 28-17 lead after one quarter — not bad against a team that lost only two home games all season.

But the Warriors have shown an amazing ability to go on runs, and they managed to make it a very close game again within the first few minutes of the second quarter. Veteran scorer Leandro Barbosa was the unlikely catalyst with 10 first-half points on 4-of-6 shooting as Golden State began to turn around its fortunes. It quickly became a barrage, with the Warriors scoring 38 points in the quarter on 76 percent shooting from the field (vs. 32 percent in the first quarter) to finish the first half on a tear. Stephen Curry led the way with 16 points (6-of-10 FG and 3-of-4 3FG) and hit this three-pointer with nine seconds remaining to send the Warriors into the break with a 55-52 lead:

That dominant second quarter looked like prelude to another third quarter in which the Warriors could build a big lead in advance of a comfortable win. However, the Pelicans took frustrated the Warriors throughout the quarter and held them to just 29 percent shooting in the period and only seven points in its final 8:30. It wasn't a pretty sight for either squad — New Orleans only won the very frantic quarter 19-16 — but the roving defensive presence of Davis turned the Golden State offense stagnant and helped them take back some control of the game. It was impressive if only for what didn't happen, and the Pelicans entered the fourth quarter with a 71-71 tie and a chance at an unlikely road win.

They remained in decent position throughout most of the fourth, taking no leads but finding themselves down by only two points as late as the 4:00 mark. Unfortunately for the Pelicans, they struggled to find good shots on offense and failed to run the offense through their star when they needed him most. Davis scored six points in the quarter on free throws but shot 0-of-5 from the floor thanks to tremendous defense from Draymond Green, who has announced himself as a near-certain max player after just two appearances this postseason. Davis was a clear victim of fatigue after sitting only three minutes over the course of the night, but the Pelicans didn't put him in positions to succeed and generally seemed to lack an offensive identity in crunch time. The Warriors deserve lots of credit for their defense — they were the best in the league, after all — but their task was made easier.

On the other side, the Warriors managed to get by despite struggles from their own MVP candidate. Curry didn't score in the final 17 minutes and contributed primarily with drives and the near-constant threat that comes with his mere presence. Meanwhile, Thompson picked up the scoring load and went 6-of-8 from the field to score 14 of his team-high 26 in the fourth quarter.

Thompson's fine play came as no surprise, but it did serve as a reminder that the Warriors can win in multiple ways. This was not the best advertisement for their status as title favorites, and they arguably only played really well in the second quarter. But they have options — several shooters, a lockdown defender in Green, a superbly capable defender and screener in Andrew Bogut, bench scorers, etc. Charles Barkley argued against their style of play on "Inside the NBA" after the game, but he was dealing with a stereotype rather than the product on the court. The Warriors win ugly when necessary, and they're heading to New Orleans with control of this series and a very good chance to get some extra rest before the second round.

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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Kris Bryant turns a double into wacky Little League home run (Video)

Kris Bryant still hasn't hit his first MLB home run yet, but the Chicago Cubs phenom got himself a Little League-style "homer" Monday night. We didn't get to see Bryant's home-run trot, but what happened in the seventh inning of the Cubs' game with the Pittsburgh Pirates was a lot more exciting anyway.

Who needs a home-run trot when you can watch frantic base-running?

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It started with Bryant launching a deep fly ball to centerfield off Pittsburgh reliever Arquimedes Caminero. Off the bat, it looked like we might be seeing Bryant's first dinger, but the ball hit the bottom of the wall. It looked like Bryant would be stopping at second base with a two-run double, but then the Pirates' defense happened.

Bryant ran to third when the Pirates threw to the plate, trying to mow down Anthony Rizzo. When catcher Francisco Cervelli couldn't handle the throw, Bryant took a wide turn toward home. But the Pirates grabbed the ball and fired it back to third. It looked like a rundown, but Cervelli couldn't handle the throw at the plate (again!) and Bryant scored. Just like how 12-year-old hits "home runs" in Little League.

(Getty Images)

While this is the most exciting piece of video in Bryant's young career, it wasn't his only highlight Monday night. He had three hits and three total RBIs. After his disappointing debut, Bryant has rebounded to post a .429 average with a .579 on-base percentage.

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Bryant now has four RBIs in four games, which means he's driven in as many runs this season as David Ortiz, Victor Martinez, Robinson Cano, Pablo Sandoval and Yasiel Puig. Not bad, kid.

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News sport : Anaheim Ducks late punch sets up sweep of the Jets

The Winnipeg Jets keep breaking hearts all over Manitoba in the playoffs. 

Winnipeg held a lead entering the third period for the third straight game in this first round series against the Anaheim Ducks. And the Jets were totally going to not blow it this time, like they did in Games 1 and 2. Right? Wrong. Totally wrong. They somehow did it again in a 5-4 loss to Anaheim. 

Now, Winnipeg is down 0-3 against the Ducks. The Jets franchise – which goes back to the Atlanta Thrashers – has yet to win a playoff game.  

"We don’t stop believing in that room," said Ryan Kesler per the Winnipeg Free Press. "It has been like that all year. To do it in the playoffs in three straight games, it’s pretty special, and there is something special growing in that locker room right now."

Kesler scored the game-tying goal for Anaheim with 2:14 left in regulation. Rickard Rakell tipped in a Francois Beauchemin shot at the 5:12 mark of OT for the game-winner.

"We had a good forecheck going there and Cogs made a good pass up to Beauch, Beauch made a great shot to find my blade there and I just tried to deflect it to the net," Rakell said. "It felt good.

Said Jets forward Blake Wheeler via the Winnipeg Sun:

“Yeah, it’s hard. It’ just more of the same. We lead the whole damn series and we’re 0-3. That’s the way it goes. That’s hockey. We just have to find a way to get that first one.”

According to TSN’s Rick Ralph, the Jets have led for 65:53 of this series. The Ducks, 11:21. The Ducks do deserve credit for being an excellent third period team. But in hockey, if you have a third period lead in three straight games in the playoffs, losing all three is pretty bad. 

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News sport : Cubs promote Addison Russell to big leagues

(Getty Images)

It looks like Kris Bryant's call-up was just the start of prospect mania on the North Side. The Chicago Cubs, eyeing a run in the NL Central, are calling up their next hotshot prospect, 21-year-old infielder Addison Russell.

The news was first reported by CBS Sports' Jon Heyman and confirmed by our Jeff Passan, who notes the Cubs (7-5 after winning Monday night) will initially move Russell out of his natural position to better fit their needs:

Russell ranked as Baseball America's No. 3 prospect coming into the 2015 season. Bryant was No. 1 and Byron Buxton of the Minnesota Twins was No. 2. Russell was the No. 5 overall prospect on MLB.com's list.

Russell was expected to reach the big leagues in 2015, but not exactly this fast. His acceleration is in part because second baseman Javier Baez didn't make the big-league roster out of spring training and has been away from the Triple-A team since the start of the season because of the death of his sister. The Cubs recently shifted Russell to second base in the minors, signaling a change like this might be in his future.

Part two of Russell's rocket ride to the big leagues is because of his prodigal talent — he's good defensively, hits for average and has impressive bat speed with surprising power. He hit .317 in spring training with the Cubs, and has posted a .318 average in Triple-A with a homer and nine RBIs in 11 games.

The Cubs acquired Russell in their trade last July with the Oakland Athletics, in which Jeff Samardzija was sent to the Bay Area. That trade made the Cubs rich with young talent. Now they're looking to cash in.

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News sport : NHL Three Stars: Wild blank Blues; Ducks spoil Winnipeg's whiteout party

No. 1 Stars: Zach Parise/Jason Pominville/Mikael Granlund, Minnesota Wild

The Wild went up 2-1 in their series versus the St. Louis Blues with a big 3-0 shutout Monday night. The Parise/Pominville/Granlund line combined for both Minnesota goals in the second period, which were scored in a span of 2:05. Devan Dubnyk earned his first career playoff shutout with 17 saves.

No. 2 Star: Jakob Silfverberg, Anaheim Ducks

The Ducks spoiled the first Stanley Cup playoff game in Winnipeg since 1996 with a 5-4 overtime victory. Silfverberg scored a goal and assisted on two others, while Andrew Cogliano had a trio of assists. Francois Beauchemin recorded two helpers, with his second coming on Rickard Rakell’s overtime winner:

No. 3 Star: Henrik Lundqvist, New York Rangers

King Henrik made 23 saves, including 12 in the final period as the Rangers edged the Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 to take a 2-1 lead in their series. Carl Hagelin opened the scoring in the first and Chris Kreider doubled New York’s lead in the second: 

Honorable Mention: Lee Stempniak's tally midway through the first period was the first Stanley Cup playoff goal scored in Winnipeg since 1996 ... Dubnyk, Ilya Bryzgalov and Darcy Kuemper are the only goaltenders to post a playoff shutout in the history of the Wild ... Kreider now has five career post-season game-winning goals.

Did You Know? 

Dishonorable Mention: Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin were held to a combined two shots … Pittsburgh has been outscored 4-0 in first periods through three games … St. Louis has lost nine consecutive playoff road games … Dustin Byfuglien, what are you doing?

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News sport : Chicago rides Jimmy Butler's 31 points to a 2-0 series lead over Milwaukee

CHICAGO – It came two days late and just as many dollars short, but the Chicago Bulls and Milwaukee Bucks finally came through with the sort of hash mark-heavy, ugly basketball we anticipated before their first round series even began. The Bulls prevailed by a 91-82 score in Game 2 of its first round series, but not before Milwaukee reminded them that this was supposed to be a defensive-minded run reminiscent of the chilly Central Division.

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Milwaukee held Chicago to 11 points in the first quarter, the fewest amount of points Chicago has scored in any playoff quarter in the team’s postseason history. Unlike the freewheeling Game 1, one that saw both teams combine for 59 points, the Bucks set the tone early by diving into its defensive sets quickly and forcing Chicago away from its ball movement. Derrick Rose, who set the tone with 23 points and seven assists in the opener, was forced into good but hurried looks both inside and outside – he missed his first nine shots from the field before hitting true in the third quarter.

The Bucks relented in a crucial second quarter, however, utilizing spacing as Milwaukee lost its edge. By the time Rose’s touch returned in the second half, Bulls All-Star Jimmy Butler was ready to dominate – he topped off an eight-point second quarter with seven more in the third, while Rose managed 12 points.

Following the win, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau credited Rose for his all-around work prior to his mini scoring burst, telling media that “once he gets lost in the game,” the 2011 NBA MVP can turn explosive again. Rose, who played a lengthy-for-him 38 minutes in the win, managed nine assists and seven rebounds on top of what turned into 15 points on 14 shots.

This was Jimmy Butler’s game, however.

The Chicago All-Star absolutely took over in the fourth quarter, despite entering the period after missing all six of his three-pointers and an uncharacteristic four free throws. Butler hit for 14 points as the Bulls outscored Milwaukee by six in the final period, nailing four of five shots on his way toward 31 points in total.

“They were literally telling me to shoot,” Butler explained after the game, as his team entered the fourth quarter with just 71 points to its credit, before deflecting the credit to his backcourt partner and an unselfish frontcourt that features Pau Gasol and Joakim Noah.

“I think I took a lot of bad shots that happened to go in,” Butler offered, “All because of [Rose] and Pau and Joakim I feel like I have a pretty easy job.”

Perhaps, as that frontcourt is to be lauded for its performance on the glass. Once again, Noah looked as if he could barely get off the ground, and yet he used savvy, timing and length to haul in 15 defensive rebounds and 19 in total, as Gasol managed 16 caroms on his own alongside four blocks.

Following the contest, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau seemed to deflect every question toward Gasol’s direction. Even in one of his worst shooting games (4-12) as a Bull, Gasol still cleared space on both ends. “I want us to play with intelligence and play together,” Thibodeau pointed out, and few NBA players try to encourage as much as the 34-year old future Hall of Famer from Spain.

Faced with his team’s 64-48 rebounding deficit, Bucks coach Jason Kidd was sanguine. “This is a learning experience for us,” he reminded. “They held serve here, now we have to go back home and do the same.”

This is true, with Game 3 in Milwaukee set to tip off on Thursday, but the Bucks are also staring own the off-ridiculed idea of “United Center North,” as scads of Bulls fans routinely make the short trip up Interstate 94 to dot the former Bradley Center with all manner of red apparel and Richard Daley-styled hard “a”- pronunciations.

Jimmy Butler, who went to college in Marquette and played his NCAA basketball in the same building Games 3 and 4 will take place, wordlessly laughed off any insinuation that the next two contests would serve as veritable home games for the Bulls.

Joakim Noah, however, wasn’t having any of it:

“I’ve never met anyone so excited for a shootaround” in Milwaukee, Noah offered, which should keep Chicago fans grinning as they move forward. On top of that nudge, the Bulls and Bucks managed to make it through two different playoff-styled post-foul scrums without any hint of a potential suspension – only Zaza Pachulia was ejected for a second technical, neither earned in the same would-be fight. These guys even know how to jaw professionally, it seems.

The idea of healthy amount of Chicago support in Wisconsin won’t carry the Bulls to a commanding 3-0 lead on its own, however. The Bucks have proven they can both limit the Bulls to miniscule scoring amounts and keep up in a shootout with Chicago.

It’s true that both of these hallmarks came in the two first quarters of this series, but Milwaukee was up three points with ten minutes to play in Game 2, and they seem a few O.J. Mayo (4-17 on the series) or Giannis Antetokounmpo (6-24) buckets away from holding serve. Both have been afforded good looks by an up and down Chicago defense, and both could be the difference in Milwaukee. Meanwhile, standout Bulls rookie Nikola Mirotic looks frustrated while playing at small forward, and he left Game 2 in the final minute with what was called a left quad strain.

“I feel,” Jason Kidd maintained after the game, “we’re getting better with each game and confidence is growing. I think as a team we’ve gotten better each time we took the floor. This is a learning experience for us.”

That much is true. Now this needs to turn into a growing experience for a Bucks team that could be facing the final few days of its season.

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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Lee Stempniak scores Winnipeg's first Stanley Cup playoff goal since 1996 (Video)

That sound you heard earlier Monday night? It was probably eminating from MTS Arena in Winnipeg, where the Jets hosted a Stanley Cup Playoff game for the first time since 1996 when they faced off against the Anaheim Ducks.

Scoring the first playoff goal for Jets 2.0? That would be Lee Stempniak, who gave Winnipeg a 1-0 lead midway through the first period of Game 3 and caused the decibel levels to spike.

Nineteen years ago next Tuesday, Norm McIver scored the final goal in the history of Jets 1.0 before the franchise moved to Phoenix to become the Coyotes. Since the Atlanta Thrashers moved to Winnipe in 2011, Jets 2.0 failed to reach the playoffs until this season.

Despite the franchise history not connecting, the Jets and their fans brought back the whiteout tradition (even as the team wore their blue jerseys) and the arena looked like Winnipeg Arena of the 1990s. 

Fans got creative in their whiteout attire, like this guy, who dressed as the Queen:

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News sport : Reds manager Bryan Price unleashes 77 F-bombs in epic tirade against media

(Getty Images)

If only Cincinnati Reds manager Bryan Price had a swear jar in his office. He might be able to pay star first baseman Joey Votto's $14 million salary after unleashing an epic, F-bomb laced tirade aimed at the local media before Monday night's game. The staggering final count: 77 F-bombs.

Price, the Reds' second-year manager, was none too pleased with beat reporters — particularly C. Trent Rosecrans of the Cincinnati Enquirer — after news went public that catcher Devin Mesoraco wasn't available to pinch hit Sunday because he wasn't with the team. Price said he didn't like the media reporting news that could help the Reds' opponents.

The Reds had lost four in a row before Monday's game, so Price had reason to be frustrated. Though, it seems a bit like he was taking it out on the media, saying things like: "I bend over backwards to be honest and direct with you f****** guys and you stick it right up my f****** a** — and the f****** team's a**." Keep in mind, the matter at hand is rather mundane in the grand scheme of things. We're talking about a pinch hitter in an April game.

Here's part of Price's rant, as transcribed by Rosecrans and the Enquirer:

Bryan Price: I just want an answer on how we benefit from them knowing that Devin Mesoraco isn't here.

C. Trent Rosecrans: I don't think you do and I don't know that that's my job.

BP: Your job is not to sniff out every f****** thing is about the Reds and f****** put it out there for every other f****** guy to hear. It's not your job. You want me to be candid with you? I've been candid with you. I f****** talk to you guys like men, I tell you what the f***'s going on with the team, I tell you how I'm feeling as candidly as I can and then this s***? You've got to watch this f****** s***? I've got to f****** read that on a f****** Tweet on our own people in here that we don't have a f****** player? How the f*** does that benefit the Reds? It doesn't benefit us one f****** bit. God **** we try to go out there and win f****** games and I got to come in here and then you guys f****** blow it all over the f****** place? Who we can play? Who we can't? I'll tell you what you want to know, I'm not going to f****** lie to you. I didn't tell you f****** s***.

CTR: You did not lie to me and I appreciate it.

BP: Ah, f***. I'm just, I'm f****** p****** up a rope in this f****** business. Because everyone has to know everything all the f****** time. That's not my f****** obligation, it's not their obligation. You know why f****** Billy Hamilton didn't f****** play? The other day? Because his f****** finger's hurt and he couldn't hit right-handed comfortably. Right? So that's something that I need to know and no one else needs to know. No one else needs to f****** know it, and all of a sudden it's out there. His f****** fingers are sore. It doesn't benefit us. It wasn't from you, but it doesn't benefit us one bit to f****** announce to the f****** other teams that we're playing to bring in lefties when they need to f****** get Billy out. There's no benefit. So, I'm f******, to be honest with you, I'm f****** sick of this s***. I'm sick of listening to this f****** s***, I'm sick of f****** the f****** second-guessing b*******, you guys can do whatever the f*** you want, but I'll tell you this — I'm not going to f****** tell you everything about this f****** club, because you f****** guys are going to out there and sniff it out anyway. I don't f****** like it one f****** bit. I bend over backwards to be honest and direct with you f****** guys and you stick it right up my f****** a** — and the f****** team's a**. And I'm sick of it. What do you got? If you don't got anything, get out and I'll do this f****** interview with Marty. You don't have anything? Just get out, please.

Bryan Price: He gets mad at umpires too. (Getty Images)At least Price ended with "please." That's one point for politeness against the -100 elsewhere within Price's tirade.

Price's main beef here is often a sticky one for those in the public eye. Some people expect the media to benefit them — especially on the local level. And while it's true a high-school baseball team gets covered differently than a pro team, the expectation that the local media should be writing stories that benefit the hometown is silly. It's about as silly as expecting a pitcher to throw the ball right down the middle so the batter has a fair chance to hit it.

Some media is on the team payroll — like the TV and radio broadcasters — but by and large, reporters aren't required to make the teams they cover look good. Nor should they be. 

Kudos to Rosecrans for handling things calmly in this situation. We've seen media remembers react much worse in "stressful" situations, so his ability to keep a level-head and not respond with F-bombs of his own is to be commended. He's clashed with the Reds before, particularly with star second baseman Brandon Phillips and took the high road there too.

If Price had an ulterior motive here, like kick-starting a losing team, that may have worked. His Reds beat the Brewers 6-1 on Monday night to end a four-game losing streak. The Brewers have now lost six straight, so maybe some F-bombs are needed in their clubhouse too.

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News sport : Dustin Byfuglien sucker punches Corey Perry after goal (Video)

Dustin Byfuglien totally learned from his crosscheck to the back of the head of J.T. Miller that he will never try to create any blunt force trauma to the noggin of an unsuspecting player ever again. Wait, no he didn’t learn.

Check out this sucker punch of Corey Perry after the Anaheim forward put the Ducks up 2-1 in Monday’s Game 3 against Winnipeg. Byfuglien was assessed a 2-minute minor for a rough.

Just dumb stuff again from Big Buff. Is Perry known as a guy who dives a bit? Yeah, he is. But when you’re hit to the back of the head and not prepared for it, of course you’ll drop. Not to make this all about Byfuglien and his in-game ability to be brain dead at points, but between the Miller crosscheck and now this, dude needs to learn a little. 

But there’s another day for that argument on Byfuglien. As of this moment, Perry is still in the game, as is Byfuglien, and there was discipline on the play in the game. 

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