News sport : Russell Westbrook stonewalls reporters in awkward post-game scene

The vast majority of interactions between athletes and media members are filled with disdain. Even when questions and answers take on the most innocuous forms possible, there are often undercurrents of mutual condescension between those who ask and those who respond. A press conference filled with utterances of "talk about" and "just played hard" isn't exactly kind just because it's professional. Both parties are playing roles, not interacting in any meaningful way.


Oklahoma City Thunder star Russell Westbrook has never shown much interest in that sort of post-game professionalism. The three-time All-Star left a post-game scrum in disdain two seasons ago, answered every question with the same answer after an ejection earlier this season, and gave another super-short media availability just this past Monday. It is officially a trend for him to disregard questions from the media.


In some ways, then, Westbrook's time with reporters after Friday's impressive 127-115 win over the NBA-best Golden State Warriors is not especially new. It did, however, reach new levels of awkwardness and discomfort. Take a look:



The Oklahoman's Anthony Slater posted the full transcript to Twitter:



The most awkward part of the interaction — which is really saying something — is absolutely when Westbrook tells columnist Berry Trammel of The Oklahoman that he flat-out doesn't like him. As noted by Seth Rosenthal of SB Nation, Trammel has a history of calling out the notoriously (and often unfairly) divisive Westbrook and works at the newspaper responsible for the bizarre "Mr. Unreliable" criticism levied at Kevin Durant when the Thunder were on the brink of elimination at the hands of the Memphis Grizzlies in the first round of last spring's playoffs. They later went on to win that series.


Yet that backstory doesn't necessarily explain this interaction, because Trammel had not done anything recently that would seem to make Friday night different from all previous nights. In fact, Westbrook would figure to have been in a good mood after a dominant triple-double and all-time-great highlight in what was probably his team's best win of the season so far. Given the circumstances and recent history, it's fair to assume that Westbrook has just decided he no longer wants to help out the media with usable answers to questions and will call out anyone who suggests that he's doing exactly that.


Athletes have done this enough times in the past that we shouldn't consider it the most shocking thing ever. Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch has gone from not talking to media at all to turning his required meetings into short sessions entirely lacking worth. Less recently, why some might not have much interest in fulfilling these duties. It's not as if Westbrook is alone here.


The difference is that we're not exactly sure why he's doing any of this. It's possible that he has longstanding beefs with the particular media members assigned to cover the Thunder, or that he hates talking to media altogether, or that he's just trying to lay bare the aforementioned condescension at the heart of most athlete-media interactions. Friday's scrum doesn't look like the product of someone with a clear opinion on his role as an athlete who talks to media. While Lynch acted and continues to act in similar ways to Westbrook, he at least started with not talking at all, which would seem to say he hates this part of the job — there is a consistency of purpose to his actions. By contrast, the video of Westbrook presents him as someone who has little time for the specific people in front of him, let alone the capacity to humor them. To put it another way, he comes across as a jerk.


However, that impression is not necessarily the full story, and we would be wise to consider Westbrook's point of view before we saddle him with a problem-child label. If his actions appear difficult and confusing, it might be because regular appraisals as the devil to Durant's angel have convinced him that he can't win with the media. Then again, that point likely assumes too much about his approach when the man himself has offered little in the way of explanation.


For now, what we know is that Westbrook is not giving media much to work from and shows little interest in explaining himself. Perhaps he never will, even with more comfortable opportunities to do so. If he doesn't, there may eventually come a time at which giving him the benefit of the doubt isn't worth it. Either way, he'll still be a basketball player who does all this:





It should be enough to sustain our interest.


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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 : Wilson Chandler dunks all over Tyson Chandler (no relation)

When a player dunks on another, the play often gains relevance or amazingness due to some special context. For instance, when a rookie Blake Griffin Mozgov'd then-Knicks center Timofey Mozgov, it mattered because the all-time great dunker-brutalizer Amar'e Stoudemire acknowledged Griffin afterwards. It was like a passing of the torch, if said torch were the ability to cram on and embarrass dudes.


Other times, though, the connection between involved players is utterly meaningless but superficially notable. Like, say, when Denver Nuggets wing Wilson Chandler detonated on Dallas Mavericks center Tyson Chandler in the first quarter of Friday's game at American Airlines Center:





Despite the last name, these two aren't related. Yet it's very easy to imagine some alternate universe where this dunk causes big issues at all major Chandler family holiday gatherings. Instead it's just another very amazing highlight in a league full of them.


While this was clearly the play of the game, the Nuggets struggled overall in this one, falling to the Mavs 97-89. Tyson Chandler was arguably the game's best player with 11 points on 4-of-4 shooting and 16 boards.


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News sport : Dan Carcillo injures Mathieu Perreault with vicious cross-check (Video)

Daniel Carcillo is not a popular man in among many of those who follow National Hockey League. He can cross the province of Manitoba off the list of places he's welcomed in Canada after his decision to cross-check Jets center Matheiu Perreault.


To set up the video you're about to witness - and if you're squeamish, it's probably not for you - Perreault was initially whistled for knocking Duncan Keith's stick out of his hands. As the play comes to a halt, Perreault is standing next to the boards with his back to the on coming Carcillo, and the Blackhawks forward cross-checks Perreault in the arm; a completely unnecessary move on Carcillo's part.


Again, WARNING: the video is a bit gnarly, via @GoJetsGoDmo:



Yeah...arms aren't supposed to bend like that.


Perreault went immediately to the ice and stayed there as a scrum started around him. When he was finally able to get up, he was slumped down and holding his arm as he skated off. He did not return to the game.


Carcillo was earned a two-minute minor for the cross-check.


The Jets wouldn't comment on Perreault's status except to say that he'd be re-evaluated tomorrow. Some beat writers noted on Twitter that he was in the locker room after the game, but made no mention of a cast or a sling.


Ok, now that we've addressed what happened, let's look at what could happen next.


According to Chicago Sun-Times beat writer, Mark Lazerus, the Department of Player Safety is reviewing the cross-check to decide if it is worthy of supplemental discipline. As of right now, no decision has been made regarding a hearing.


Carcillo has a reputation, and that will probably factor into the DoPS's decision whether or not to move forward with further discipline. They've also been factoring injuries into decisions lately, and if that video is any indication of what Perreault's current status might be, it doesn't look good for the one they call 'Car Bomb'.


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News sport : Greg Anthony reportedly arrested in prostitution sting

Greg Anthony at a party in September 2013. (Photo by Bryan Steffy/Getty Images for Showtime) Retired basketball player and TV analyst Greg Anthony has been arrested in connection with a prostitution sting. According to reports from WJLA, the ABC affiliate in Washington D.C., Anthony was arrested in a vice operation for soliciting a prostitute. A brief note at the station's website says that Anthony is in lockup as of this writing.


The report was first posted on Twitter by a member of the ABC7 news team:



Jennifer Donelan then credited her colleague Sam Ford with first obtaining the relevant information:



Anthony rose to prominence as a member of the iconic UNLV Runnin' Rebels teams of the late '80s and early '90s. He joined the New York Knicks as the 12th-overall pick of the 1991 NBA Draft and went on to play for five more teams until his retirement in 2002.


More recently, Anthony has been in the public eye as an analyst for Turner Sports and CBS, including as the lead color commentator for the latter during the NCAA Tournament. He is also a contributor to Yahoo Sports as a basketball analyst.


As noted by Matt Yoder of Awful Announcing, Anthony was scheduled to call Saturday's game between Michigan State and Maryland in College Park for CBS:



We will continue to update this story as it develops.


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News sport : Utah's Kyle Whittingham agrees to new contract, will make $2.6 million in 2015

Utah coach Kyle Whittingham stands on the field as players get ready for an NCAA college football game against UCLA on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2014, in Pasadena, Calif. (AP Photo/Alex Gallardo) Apparently Kyle Whittingham wasn’t all that unhappy after all.


He just wanted a better deal.


Utah announced Friday that it had agreed to a deal that will pay Whittingham $2.6 million in 2015 and provide an automatic $100,000 raise each year through 2018. The entire contract is worth $11 million.


“We are excited to come to terms on a contract extension for Coach Whitt and under his leadership, we’re looking forward to a successful football season next fall and in the years to come,” athletic director Chris Hill said in a statement.


Utah finished last season 9-4 with a 45-10 victory over Colorado State in the Las Vegas Bowl. The Utes finished ranked No. 21 in the final AP poll.


However, reports surfaced in late December that Whittingham was unhappy in Salt Lake City and was looking for a way out. His main gripe was that Hill was "trying to sabotage" his program by not making more money available to his assistants.


Speculation about Whittingham’s unhappiness was only fueled by defensive coordinator Kelani Sitake and defensive line coach Ilaisa Tuiaki going to Oregon State, and offensive coordinator Dave Christensen leaving to become offensive line coach at Texas A&M.


However, Hill refuted the rumors saying he had met with Whittingham and that everything was fine.


Whittingham is 85-43 at Utah and has been with the program in some capacity for 20 seasons. He took over for Urban Meyer following the 2004 Fiesta Bowl-winning season.


For more Utah news, visit Utezone.com.


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News sport : Jay Norvell, fired from Oklahoma, becomes new WR coach at Texas

WACO, TX- NOVEMBER 20: Wide receivers coach Jay Norvell of the Oklahoma Sooners talks to players during their victory over the Baylor Bears on November 20, 2010 at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. (Photo by Jackson Laizure/Oklahoma/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Jay Norvell Former Oklahoma offensive coordinator Jay Norvell has landed on the other side of the Red River Rivalry with the University of Texas, adding another layer to an already intense rivalry between the Sooners and the Longhorns.


Norvell spent seven seasons with the Sooners, including four as co-offensive coordinator, before being let go earlier this month. He will serve as the Longhorns new wide receivers coach.


"Jay is a guy that has always had an outstanding reputation, and when I had a chance to talk to him, what impressed me the most was his energy, passion and drive to be successful," Texas coach Charlie Strong said in a statement. "The thing you see and everyone talks about with him is that he's a great teacher, very detailed and organized, and he really develops his players. He's coached so many great players, gets the most out of his guys, and they really like playing for him.


"He brings a lot to our staff, is very familiar with the Big 12 and has experience recruiting in Texas. We're really excited he's joining us."


Norvell takes over for Les Koenning, who was fired after one season. The Longhorns struggled in passing offense where they averaged just 212.5 yards per game and ranked 95th in offensive passing efficiency. The Longhorns did have a 1,000-yard receiver in John Harris, but he's gone and so is receiver Jaxon Shipley, who was second on the team with 577 yards.


Prior to his time at Oklahoma, Norvell coached at UCLA, Nebraska, Iowa State and Wisconsin.


"The first thing that really drew me to this opportunity was the chance to work with Charlie Strong," Norvell said in a statement. "I've followed his career for a long time, and after sitting down and talking to him, seeing his vision for the program, the recruiting philosophy, his values, every area of the team, I was totally impressed. Our visit convinced me I wanted to be a part of that championship vision at Texas."


For more Texas news, visit Orangebloods.com.


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News sport : Jay Norvell, fired from Oklahoma, becomes new OC at Texas

WACO, TX- NOVEMBER 20: Wide receivers coach Jay Norvell of the Oklahoma Sooners talks to players during their victory over the Baylor Bears on November 20, 2010 at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. (Photo by Jackson Laizure/Oklahoma/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Jay Norvell Former Oklahoma offensive coordinator Jay Norvell has landed on the other side of the Red River Rivalry with the University of Texas, adding another layer to an already intense rivalry between the Sooners and the Longhorns.


Norvell spent seven seasons with the Sooners, including four as co-offensive coordinator, before being let go earlier this month.


"Jay is a guy that has always had an outstanding reputation, and when I had a chance to talk to him, what impressed me the most was his energy, passion and drive to be successful," Texas coach Charlie Strong said in a statement. "The thing you see and everyone talks about with him is that he's a great teacher, very detailed and organized, and he really develops his players. He's coached so many great players, gets the most out of his guys, and they really like playing for him.


"He brings a lot to our staff, is very familiar with the Big 12 and has experience recruiting in Texas. We're really excited he's joining us."


Norvell takes over for Les Koenning, who was fired after one season. The Longhorns ranked 64th in total offense with 408.7 yards per game and 65th in scoring offense with 29.3 points per game. Both of those figures ranked sixth in the Big 12. The Longhorns especially struggled in the passing offense where they averaged just 212.5 yards per game and ranked 95th in offensive passing efficiency.


Oklahoma’s offense wasn’t a whole lot better in 2014. It ranked 52nd in total offense with 423 yards per game and 40 in scoring offense with 32.8 points per game.


Prior to his time at Oklahoma, Norvell coached at UCLA, Nebraska, Iowa State and Wisconsin.


"The first thing that really drew me to this opportunity was the chance to work with Charlie Strong," Norvell said in a statement. "I've followed his career for a long time, and after sitting down and talking to him, seeing his vision for the program, the recruiting philosophy, his values, every area of the team, I was totally impressed. Our visit convinced me I wanted to be a part of that championship vision at Texas."


For more Texas news, visit Orangebloods.com.


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News sport : Russell Westbrook's got the greatest bounce ever on a missed dunk

Oklahoma City Thunder star Russell Westbrook is one of those players who makes the phrase "attacking the rim" seem literal, not just a cute way of saying a guy likes to gets to the basket. He drives and finishes with intensity that only ever really gets challenged by LeBron James, who doesn't match Westbrook's singular consistency in this area. If anything, his problem is that he sometimes goes too strong, trying to do something with too much force when a little bit of touch is required.


That is perhaps what happened to the Thunder guard during a bizarre play in the second quarter of Friday night's game against the visiting Golden State Warriors. With roughly 5:18 left in the period, Westbrook made a cut to the basket in the early offense and took a pass from Kevin Durant with an open lane to to the hoop. Draymond Green challenged the dunk, but Westbrook powered through the contact (without a foul) to finish with authority. Unfortunately for him, he missed and saw the ball carom very, very high off the rim. That's when things got weird:



Most missed dunks result in very long rebounds, so it's hard to explain exactly what happened here. Regardless, if anyone could end up with a basket like this one, it's Westbrook. Weird things happen when a guy brings so much force to the rim.


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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 : Tulsa player arrested, dismissed from team, after drug and firearm arrest

Tulsa offensive lineman Zach Webb (Tulsa Athletics) Tulsa offensive guard Zach Webb was arrested Thursday for possession of firearms and drug paraphernalia, according to Tulsa’s NBC affiliate, which obtained the police report.


Tulsa University security and housing was called to Webb’s residence on a conduct complaint, but after a search of the premises found a firearm, multiple ecstasy pills, a scale and smoking device, ammunition, and a pill bottle that didn’t have Webb’s name on it.


Tulsa coach Philip Montgomery was aware of the arrest and Webb was released from the team Thursday evening.


Webb was a 2013 two-star recruit out of Metro Christian Academy in Tulsa. He redshirted during the 2013 season and did not play in 2014.


For more Tulsa news, visit InsideTulsaSports.com.


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News sport : New 49ers head coach gets a little grunty in his first interview


The 49ers hired new head coach Jim Tomsula this week, a move that was met with a great deal of "Who the heck is Jim Tomsula?" And while fellow new coaching hire Rex Ryan unleashed an introductory press conference in Buffalo that was equal parts pep rally, revival meeting and confessional, Tomsula's introduction was a bit more ... muted.


Speaking with CSN Bay Area in an interview taped Wednesday and released Friday, Tomsula takes "keeping it close to the vest" to new extremes. Pressed on everything from whom he might consider as his coordinators to his relationship with departed coach Jim Harbaugh, Tomsula says so little that, in some cases, he doesn't even form actual words, simply breathing heavily into the microphone.


Granted, this is a fidgety place to put a guy who clearly is more comfortable on a sideline than behind a mic. But 49ers fans have to hope that Tomsula is a little more inspirational in the locker room than he is on video.


Then again, "I wouldn't say that, I wouldn't NOT say that" will be Marshawn Lynch's next media-dismissal line, you watch.


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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring how to get Kevin Love going

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: ESPN Insider ($). Kevin Pelton and Amin Elhassan look at why Kevin Love hasn't been anything like the hand-in-glove fit that many of us expected him to be with the Cleveland Cavaliers, and what tactical changes David Blatt might implement to get the All-Star power forward on track. (Over at BBallBreakdown, Seth Partnow has some other ideas for getting Love unstuck.)


PF: Eye on Basketball. Zach Harper with a good breakdown of what's fueling Andrew Wiggins' strong play and markedly improved scoring of late.


SF: Blog-a-Bull. After a red-hot start to the season for the Chicago Bulls, Jimmy Butler has fallen to Earth a bit of late, and Jason Patt sees the absence of injured wing Mike Dunleavy Jr. as a pretty big reason why.


SG: SB Nation. A good read from Mirin Fader on Gordon Hayward doing his level best to live up to his much-derided max contract and develop into the sort of leader that Quin Snyder's Utah Jazz so desperately needs.


PG: Truth About It. With the Washington Wizards holding down the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference and the Brooklyn Nets in the midst of trying to shed high-priced talent and possibly find new ownership, Kyle Weidie catches up with a fan who decided to break up with the Wizards in favor of rooting for the Nets back in 2012. A fun Q+A.


6th: Bloomberg View. Kavitha A. Davidson on reports that a number of former athletes — Hank Aaron, Dikembe Mutombo, Dominique Wilkins, Chris Webber, Grant Hill and Junior Bridgeman, and possibly others — are intereted in buying into the 100-percent-for-sale Atlanta Hawks: "The reality is that if we want more black representation and former players among NBA ownership, they’re likely going to have to be part of a consortium."


7th: Bloomberg View, again. While we're at it, let's also plug Davidson's column on the New York Knicks somehow managing to get tanking wrong by allowing Carmelo Anthony to delay shutting himself down, and 'Melo getting brand management wrong by letting ancillary interests get in the way of Job No. 1.


8th: Bleacher Report. Ethan Skolnick on how Stan Van Gundy has, if not mellowed out, then at least learned to enjoy the peaks his Detroit Pistons are experiencing now after suffering through some valleys to start the season.


9th: ESPN.com. Ethan Sherwood Strauss considers the possibility that Draymond Green, the "heart and soul" of the league-leading Golden State Warriors, could not only receive a max contract offer in restricted free agency this summer, but that he might actually deserve it.


10th: ESPN Boston. Chris Forsberg on how Danny Ainge's seemingly ceaseless swapping calls to mind the "red paperclip" experiment, and the likelihood that Trader Danny can turn the Boston Celtics roster into a two-story farmhouse in Saskatchewan. (Metaphorically speaking.)


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News sport : Brad Marchand suspended 2 games for slew-foot (Video)

Perhaps Brad Marchand has forgotten that slew-footing another player is still illegal in the NHL?


On Thursday night, Marchand slew-footed Rangers forward Derick Brassard sending him dangerously into the boards and down to the ice. The referees did not penalize Marchand on the play; however, the NHL was quick to announce post-game that Marchand would have a hearing on Friday.


The hearing was completed and the Bruins will be without Marchand for the next two games. He'll also be a hefty $48,387.10 lighter in the wallet, with the funds going to the Players' Emergency Assistance Fund.


Here's the Department of Player Safety with their reasoning for the suspension:



As mentioned in the video, this isn't Marchand's first time at the slew-footing rodeo.


Back in 2011, Marchand was hit with a $2,500 fine by the NHL for slew-footing then-Pittsburgh defenseman Matt Niskanen. The Bruins forward acknowledged his negative behavior:



“It was a dangerous play and it was definitely a slew-foot,” Marchand said. “Those are dangerous plays and guys can get hurt like that. It’s something I shouldn’t have done and they penalized me for it and I’ll move on now.”



It's been a few years in between incidents, at least incidents caught by the NHL, but the play is still dangerous and still illegal. Changes in the CBA, and possibly the leadership at the DoPS, have resulted in the transformation from fineable to a suspendable.


Marchand will miss Boston's next two games: at home versus Columbus on Saturday and on the road against Dallas on Wednesday. On the season, the forward is fourth on the team in scoring at 24-points; he has 12 goals, 12 assists, and 62 penalty minutes.


He knows better, as do all players who are trying to get a competitive advantage over their opponents. The way the decide to do the latter is up to them.


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News sport : Paul Pierce says the Nets miss him because 'any team that doesn't have Paul Pierce misses him'

The charm of pro athletes referring to themselves in the third person dissipated decades ago, well before the idea of branding took hold. The go-to premise that an athlete would dot even a brief interview with several references to his own name as if he were a commenter describing the action was hacky even in the 1990s; and as a result quite prone for ridicule as we enter 2015.


Still, this is pretty cool. And spot on.


The white hot Washington Wizards have won five of seven games, they knocked off the defending champion San Antonio Spurs and NBA Finals hopeful Chicago Bulls in consecutive games on consecutive days this week, and on Saturday the team is readying itself to take on a Brooklyn Nets club that has lost seven straight.


The Nets, “reportedly,” are for sale. The team is trying to deal all but one player and another stalwart that has a no-trade clause and a bit of a nasty disposition. New’ish Wizard Paul Pierce, a Net for one whole season in 2013-14, decided to pile on in anticipation of meeting his ex-team:



That’s hilarious. And, if we’re honest, not without merit.


Pierce was a Celtic from the 1998 NBA draft until the 2013 version, and Boston dropped precipitously in the standings following a trade that sent Pierce and Kevin Garnett to Brooklyn for a batch of draft picks and swaps that the Celtic faithful hopes will eventually turn the C’s (currently ranked far below even Brooklyn in the Eastern standings) around.


The Nets declined to attempt to re-sign Pierce to a free agent deal last summer so as not to once again tilt their luxury tax-addled payroll status back toward the near-$200 million mark. A sound financial move, but one made after years of general manager Billy King’s outrageously short-sighted deals. Lopping Pierce off the roster in order to achieve some relative semblance of fiscal security was almost laughable in its approach. It was akin to a casino denizen cashing in on his free buffet breakfast coupon in the hours after basically gambling a (two?) billion dollar franchise away while chasing down what could have been a 7-to-Jack straight hand.


Paul Pierce is not the reason the Nets, who are still in the playoff bracket despite the team’s 16-23 record, are terrible. Nor is he the reason, despite the marvelous 22-point performance against Chicago on Wednesday, that the Wizards are ascending. He’s still a damn good player, even at age 37, that you wouldn’t want to spy loping up to the top of the key in the late stages of a playoff game this spring, though.


Credit Pierce for acting as a sound GM would, and leaving Brooklyn as the ship started to think. It doesn’t take a lot to be a better NBA GM than Billy King, but Paul Pierce – even while speaking in the third person – has already bested him on that end.


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News sport : Bucks' Larry Sanders suspended 10 games for another violation of league drug policy

Larry Sanders has run afoul of league rules again. (Raj Mehta-USA TODAY Sports) Milwaukee Bucks big man Larry Sanders has been suspended without pay for a minimum of 10 games "for violating the terms of the NBA/NBPA Anti-Drug Program," the NBA announced Friday afternoon. Sanders' punishment will begin with Milwaukee's Monday meeting with the Toronto Raptors, and it's an open-ended sentence that "will continue until he is in full compliance with his treatment program," according to the league's statement.


[Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball]


This is Sanders' second suspension for violating the league and players' union's drug policy. The first was a five-game rip for marijuana use last April, levied while Sanders was sidelined by surgery to repair a fractured orbital bone near his right eye. (The Bucks found a way for the previously-considered-out-for-the-season Sanders to serve that suspension before it bled into the 2014-15 campaign.)


While Sanders apologized at the time to the Bucks organization and Bucks fans for breaking league rules and getting himself suspended, he wasn't apologetic about smoking pot, telling Charles F. Gardner of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, "I believe in marijuana and the medical side of it [...] I study it and I know the benefits it has."


Evidently, Sanders' belief has persisted enough to result in continued use. While the NBA's announcement did not specifically identify the substance for which Sanders tested positive, the penalty structure laid out in the joint anti-drug policy points toward the new 10-game penalty building on top of Sanders' previous pot-related indiscretions (emphasis mine):


(c) Penalties. Any player who (i) tests positive for marijuana pursuant to Section 5 (Reasonable Cause Testing), Section 6 (Random Testing), or Section 15 (Additional Bases for Testing), (ii) is adjudged by the Grievance Arbitrator pursuant to Section 5(e) above to have used or possessed marijuana, or (iii) has been convicted of (including a plea of guilty, no contest or nolo contendere to) the use or possession of marijuana in violation of the law, shall suffer the following penalties:

(A) For the first such violation, the player shall be required to enter the Marijuana Program;

(B) For the second such violation, the player shall be fined $25,000 and, if the player is not then subject to in-patient or aftercare treatment in the Marijuana Program, be required to enter the Marijuana Program;

(C) For the third such violation, the player shall be suspended for five (5) games and, if the player is not then subject to in-patient or aftercare treatment in the Marijuana Program, be required to enter the Marijuana Program; and

(D) For any subsequent violation, the player shall be suspended for five (5) games longer than his immediately-preceding suspension for violating the Marijuana Program and, if the player is not then subject to in-patient or aftercare treatment in the Marijuana Program, be required to enter the Marijuana Program.

NBA players are subject to as many as six random tests each season and offseason — four during the season, two in the offseason. They may also receive "reasonable cause testing," triggered when an "Independent Expert" decides there's reasonable cause to test a player for a banned substance; said player is then subject to four extra random tests over a six-week span.


Sanders' new suspension will cost him a cool $1 million in game checks, and it comes less than two weeks after reports began to circulate that the shot-blocking big man — who left the Bucks just before Christmas for what Milwaukee head coach Jason Kidd termed "personal reasons" — was no longer interested in playing professional basketball. The 26-year-old Sanders, who is in the first season of the four-year, $44 million contract extension he signed with the Bucks in August 2013, returned to the team on Jan. 6 to refute those reports, telling reporters that he is "in the process of working things out now to do what's best for my psyche and my physical health going forward," and that "there's a lot of evaluating going on."


"Without these things being corrected, I don't think basketball will be something I can even do," he said.


Despite returning to the team to clear the air surrounding his absence, Sanders has still not suited up for the Bucks since Dec. 23. While Kidd has shown support for the prodigal pivot — "He’s ours. He’s part of the family," the coach said — the Bucks have pressed on without him on the court. They've leaned on the likes of Zaza Pachulia, John Henson and rookie Johnny O'Bryant in the frontcourt rotation, and signed veteran big man Kenyon Martin to add frontcourt depth. With those bigs holding down the fort and Kidd continuing to get strong play from point guard Brandon Knight and wings Giannis Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton, Milwaukee has gone 7-4 since Sanders last saw action, improving to 21-19 on the season, good enough for fifth place in the Eastern Conference.


With the team continuing to surprise without Sanders, the 10-game-minimum suspension putting him out through Milwaukee's Feb. 7 meeting with the Boston Celtics at the earliest, and the league's edict that he won't be eligible to return to the floor until "he is in full compliance with his treatment program," one has to wonder what the likelihood is that we'll actually see Sanders on the floor for the Bucks again this season. And while the Bucks are on the hook for another three years and $33 million after this season, you wonder whether Sanders' persistent off-court issues — whatever their specific makeup and whatever your feelings about his perspective on the benefits of marijuana use — and the well-underway franchise reconfiguration around new foundational players like Antetokounmpo, Knight and injured rookie Jabari Parker could lead Milwaukee's front office and ownership to determine that keeping the former Virginia Commonwealth standout around might be more costly than taking pennies on the dollar in exchange for his services in trade, or even just paying him to go away.


These are grim, sad possibilities, the sort of options that nobody wanted to consider when Sanders burst on the scene two seasons ago as an arguably-Defensive Player of the Year-caliber rim-protector and analytical darling. But after the locker room issues, the on-court static and off-court problems, and his apparent difficulties with abiding by this one particular league rule, they're the sort of possibilities we're forced to consider. We'll keep hoping that the future will bring better things for Sanders as an individual and the Bucks as an organization, but it's starting to feel more and more like the journey toward healthy and positive resolutions for both parties might soon diverge into different paths.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Kobe Bryant swears that bone broth 'contributes' to his NBA sustainability

In the 1950s and 1960s, when the Chicago Bears played at Wrigley Field, my grandfather would attend games in the cold of the Chicago winter accompanied by his trusty giant Thermos full of what he called “bullshot.” As the Bears worked themselves to yet another 13-10 win, my (as you’d expect) since-deceased grandfather would throw back cupfuls of what was essentially vodka mixed with beef broth before taking the train back home.


I don’t think this is part of Kobe Bryant’s rejuvenation regimen. Though, in a year like this, you wouldn’t blame the guy.


In a report published on Wednesday, ESPN reporter Baxter Holmes talked to Los Angeles Lakers nutritionists to further detail the team’s obsession with serving Bryant and others various meals created with the help of bone broth. “Broth,” by definition, should be created by straining the results of lengthily-simmered animal bones that were originally doused in cold water and various vegetables. To the Lakers, however, mere “broth” from a supermarket box just isn’t enough:



"You could go into a store and on the shelf you've got this carton of vegetable stock or chicken stock, and that's probably something that's been flavored with salt and chicken-flavored bouillon cubes or something like that," [Lakers head strength and conditioning coach Tim] DiFrancesco said.




"But there's no actual vitamin, mineral nutrient value in there. It just tastes good because there's enough salt in there. But when you make a bone stock the right way, it's like liquid gold. And the way you know you have real stock on your hand is if you put it in the refrigerator over night and it basically turns into Jell-O."




The broth is a base for a wide variety of soups: minestrone, beef stew, chicken meatball, chili, a 15-bean soup with kale or what Padilla said is Bryant's favorite - chicken tortilla.



(As someone who keeps his own cooked-down chicken bone broth on hand to flavor this household’s chicken tortilla soup, I can tell you that Kobe has made the sound choice, here.)


Kobe?



"It definitely contributes," Bryant said. "I think it's a balance of a lot of things, but I think doing the small things all together, it makes a big difference."



Bone broth, because it is delicious and savory and warming, has become a staple of some of New York’s trendier restaurants of late; mainly because a bit of salty and fatty animal soup (let’s be honest here) combined with a few scallions or some other choice of similarly-sourced protein is absolutely delicious.


To the Lakers, though, it serves as something more important:



"Everybody is looking for a magical elixir or some cure-all," said Tim DiFrancesco, the Lakers' head strength and conditioning coach, "but bone broth is where it's at."



Now, some of you might cackle at the “where it’s at”-declaration the same way we all laughed down our sleeves at Byron Scott’s semi-insinuation that the (then) 12-27 Lakers were somehow months away from being taken out of “playoff contention.” Kobe has played in only 40 NBA games since tearing his Achilles (and eventually fracturing his right leg) some 21 months ago. He may have dished a career-high 17 assists on Thursday night, but he shot 31.6 percent in 11 games prior to that. What good are these minerals and vitamins doing?


The issue here is that Kobe Bryant has been, to re-use the word, doing this since the fall of 1996.


Kobe Bryant isn’t just “old,” he’s, “I played 200 NBA games against top rank competition by the same time in his life that Michael Jordan only played 101 NCAA games”-old. He’s, “most of my first round playoff series were best-of-seven”-old. He’s, “we’re shamed into playing for Team USA during the offseason all the time”-old. He’s, “count the rings, and also count the two other Finals appearances and 220 playoff games”-old.


He’s also, “guys, I tore my Achilles and then broke my leg all within the space of nine months”-old.


For him to be still out there, after all these miles, is an achievement. Yes, he needs to shoot less. Yes, the Lakers are a laughingstock, and yes the “it takes real skill just to be able to get up those 19 shots that I missed 16 of”-nonsense is nuts. Whatever the reason, Bryant is still out there, somehow working through all this. He might not be efficient, the Lakers might be losing, but he’s still making his way onto the court.


Do you credit bone broth, as opposed to a carton (or, as most caterers work with, a massive tin can) of stock in his soup as the cure-all?


Choose your own path in this regard; just don’t throw away your bones. You shouldn’t be done with those yet.


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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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