News sport : Keith Olbermann returns to air, offers bizarre apology for Penn State tweets

Following his suspension for a barrage of foolish tweets aimed at Penn State students and fans, Keith Olbermann, the self-righteous, egomaniacal ESPN host, returned to the air Monday and offered what was apparently supposed to be some sort of apology.


In the long-winded “apology” which opened his show, Olbermann made a bizarre comparison between social media and batting practice in baseball.


To recap: among a bevy of other obnoxious tweets, Olbermann called Penn State students “pitiful” in response to a link which detailed the efforts of thousands of Penn State students in THON, which raised over $13 million for pediatric cancer.


Olbermann said he did not click on the link before sending the tweet.


Here’s the full thing in all of its bizarre glory:



“Under ordinary conditions if I had come across that fact on Twitter or elsewhere, I would have been retweeting it with my congratulations or retweeting it with my congratulations and then my donation,” Olbermann said. “But this is a batting practice world now. And in this batting practice world there is no time for anything good – only everything fast. Fast and resonant of the smack of the ball hitting the bat. That’s the position this can put you in.”


How eloquent, Keith.


Olbermann then went on to point out his previous charitable donations (over 200) to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and the Make-A-Wish Foundation and that he does not publicize those offerings.


He also made reference to the “wild, wild west of social media” and went back to that weird batting practice metaphor, seemingly placing at least some of the blame for his idiocy on social media itself.


“In my haste to win batting practice on Twitter, I’ve attached the word pitiful [to charity]. As I tweeted last week, I’m sorry for the Penn State tweets – stupid and immature. But I’m much more sorry about batting practice. So for me, batting practice ends, and as quixotic as this may seem to you, I hope you will join me in trying to end it for all of us, so we can get back to what matters.”


Whatever you say, Keith.


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News sport : If its team huddles are any indication, the Nuggets can't wait for the season to end

This is why sportswriters need to be given floor-level, “press row,” seats again.


In the hours after a blowout home loss to the Utah Jazz on Friday evening, Denver Post columnist Chris Dempsey dropped this little nugget about the National Basketball Association team that plays in Denver:



A fourth-quarter huddle late in the Nuggets' 104-82 loss to the Utah Jazz on Friday broke with this phrase: "1-2-3 ... six weeks!"




As in six weeks to go until the end of the season. That's 24 games, 46 days and 1,152 minutes away.




Tax day, April 15, is getaway day: the last day of the Nuggets' season. Rest assured, there are players who are already counting.



There are Nuggets fans that are already counting. I’d be lying if I didn’t tell you that I’m also looking forward to the day when Nugget games aren’t located just one channel over when I flip around on League Pass from night to night. They are a dreary, dreadful watch.


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Denver has lost 19 of 21 games. The team made a series of trades to bring in future assets this season, and coach Brian Shaw seems like he’s well on his way toward being given the boot following the six weeks that his players can’t stop chanting about. There have been calls to fire Shaw immediately in the wake of this embarrassing post-huddle break, and while that might do some good on the sensational side, there is no real massive benefit in playing hardass with the rest of the roster (presumably the ones that aren’t breaking huddles like that) for the final 22 contests.


It’s not wrong to call for Shaw’s firing if this is true, but is that really going to do much? The Nuggets are a mess. This has to be a low point.


The Nuggets were cobbled together in the hopes of grabbing a lower rung playoff spot, but the outfit is currently working with the third-worst record in the West. The two teams below Denver, Los Angeles and Minnesota, were designed with the future in mind. These Nuggets? Weirdly, they decided to stick to the remnants of a roster that George Karl took to 57 wins just under two years ago, without recognizing that good health and good luck (not to mention the presence of Karl and Andre Iguodala) had as much to do with that record as anything.


As it stands, the Nuggets are the worst watch of all – a team created to score 45 wins that will be lucky to manage 25 – pushing the ball and getting nowhere offensively, while barely registering defensively.


One fan and Nugget writer, Andrew Feinstein at Denver Stiffs, is not enjoying this execrable era of Nugget basketball:



But while even the most educated of Nuggets fans can tolerate losing as long as it's for a bigger purpose reason, no fan can tolerate the type of losing we're collectively experiencing this season. The Nuggets haven't just lost 19 of 21 games - including 10 straight at home - but they've lost them in the worst fashion possible: blowouts, early blowouts, no effort, no defense, no spark, no entertainment value and so on. And while fans like me secretly root for the losses to pile up knowing that a high value lottery pick could be available at the end of this long, dark tunnel of despair, try explaining that to the person paying thousands of their hard-earned dollars a year towards season tickets.



You can’t watch this team, and Nugget fans aren’t – TV ratings are down 53 percent from last season’s just-as-dull 36-win team, and the squad’s home attendance figures are third-worst in the NBA.


Now that we’ve established the low point – a truly embarrassing and unprofessional low point – where does this team go from here?


The team had to package a future first-rounder that Oklahoma City owed them in order to dump JaVale McGee, and partially as a result the squad will have cap space this summer. It will also have three players making eight figures a year next year in Ty Lawson, Danilo Gallinari, and Kenneth Faried. This, sadly, will be Denver’s core next year.


Lawson and Faried are certainly tradeable, but they’ve also been revealed a bit. Faried did well to bound over international opponents during last summer’s World Championships, but he remains a lacking defender on the NBA level with no true consistent offensive game to turn to when things go sour. Lawson, as is his custom, has turned in some brilliant nights this year, but to these eyes he still looks like he’s working through that early-season ankle injury, and his off-court exploits are frightening to say the absolute least.


Lawson is also the guy that took full advantage of the team’s extended All-Star break, stretching things out to the point where one travel derailment (and we’re giving Ty the benefit of the doubt, here) made him a no-show for his first post-break Nuggets practice. Gallinari is a lessened version of his former self, overly relying on three-pointers he’s hitting just 31.8 percent of, never the same following a knee injury the Nuggets may have botched.


Because the Nuggets made repeated attempts to move back into the playoffs following Karl’s (and Masai Ujiri’s, who is also on the hook for several poor Nugget personnel choices) departure, the team hasn’t tanked to a high end level in 2014-15. The squad was even just two games under .500 after 38 games, and odds have them selecting sixth overall in this year’s draft even after the most recent malaise.


Gobbling up draft picks will help, and the team does have the right to swap first-round picks with the New York Knicks (current holders of the NBA’s worst record, not likely to improve all that much next season even after throwing money around) in 2016, but this is a slow build.


Conditions make it so Denver will probably only get to grab Memphis’ first-rounder in 2017, and while an aging Grizzlies squad may have fallen off by then, the Memphis front office has been planning its post-Zach Randolph turnaround for some time. Denver will also get Portland’s lottery-protected first rounder in 2016 in exchange for Arron Afflalo, a good take, but that pick won’t put anyone over the top.


As it stands, the Nuggets are dreadfully dull, they’re not competing, they’re clearly working with a lame-duck coach in Shaw, and there are still some lingering concerns as to how on top of things the franchise’s front office is.


I wouldn’t want to hang around either. Just 44 more days, everyone.


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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 : UNC QB Marquise Williams to miss spring practices with hip injury

DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 26: Marquise Williams #12 of the North Carolina Tar Heels throws a first quarter pass while playing the Rutgers Scarlet Knights during the Quick Lane Bowl at Ford Field on December 26, 2014 in Detroit Michigan. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) North Carolina starting quarterback Marquise Williams will miss spring practices while he recovers from a hip injury, the school announced via its website.


Backup Mitch Trubisky will take all the first team reps in Williams’ absence.


Just because Williams isn’t suiting up doesn’t mean the coaches don’t expect the same type of effort out of him. Quarterbacks coach Keith Heckendorf told GoHeels.com, that he wants Williams taking mental reps while the team goes through drills.


"I want [Williams] to get as much out of spring ball as anyone,” Heckendorf said. “When he walks off the practice field I want him to be exhausted mentally from concentrating on every read and every play on every progression on every defense."


Heckendorf also noted that Williams was still the starter, but that the competition was not yet closed.


Williams and Trubisky were in a fierce competition for the starting role at the beginning of the 2014 season and split time at starter through the first month of the season before Williams eventually won the job. Williams threw for 3,068 yards, 21 touchdowns and nine interceptions and ran for 788 yards and 13 touchdowns in 2014.


For more North Carolina news, visit TarHeelIllustrated.com.


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News sport : Wizards owner Ted Leonsis created an off-putting tribute to Martin Luther King Jr.

The NBA and its owners tend to rate very highly when it comes to encouraging diversity amongst its workforce, and the league itself routinely promotes Black History Month amongst many other inclusive endeavors.


Sure, there have been some notable step-backs, but usually this group of one-percenters seems to act properly when faced with what could be sensitive topics.


I’ll let the readers decide if Ted Leonsis’ decision to pair his face with that of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s visage, in some ham-hock attempt at celebrating Black History Month, would rank amongst those proper acts.


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From the Wizards’ Facebook account, via Vice, take a look at what popped up on Saturday:



(Via Facebook, though I'm not sure they want to take credit for this one.)

(At least Leonsis got the month right. Barely.)


As Vice pointed out, even Leonsis’ choice of pull quote is a little maddening – the sort of Tony Robbins-esque nonsense that corporate types love to spew while combing their various industries for new loopholes to exploit. That’s not the most upsetting thing here, though.


At best, Ted Leonsis is aligning his thoughts with that of Dr. King. That’s passable – his words are usually ones worth riding with.


The average viewer, here, would contend that Leonsis is outright comparing himself to Dr. King, all while passing off some corporate-speak pablum as on the level as one of King’s statements. That’s outrageous and infuriating enough.


At worst? This is the owner of a basketball and hockey team, someone who made most of his fortune in investing in AOL in its nascent days, piggybacking on Martin Luther King Jr. in order to win some weird strain of Facebook favor. The median take is also the absolute worst take.


“Doing well is doing good” means absolutely nothing, and yet Ted Leonsis still somehow failed to live up to the ideals behind his own made up language.


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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 : Kevin Garnett bought 1,000 tickets to Wolves-Clippers to give away to fans

Kevin Garnett waves to fans at Target Center. (Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports) Kevin Garnett's stunning return to the Minnesota Timberwolves at the NBA's February trade deadline brought with it a fresh injection of excitement for a franchise in the midst of a youth-movement-led rebuilding effort. The reintroduction of the greatest player in franchise history after eight years in the East carried with it a powerful nostalgia, a sense of a career come full circle and, as we saw during Garnett's first game back in Minneapolis, a significant surge of energy that showed Andrew Wiggins, Zach LaVine and the rest of the young Wolves just how electric the Target Center can become during big moments.


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While the 38-year-old Garnett isn't nearly as live a wire as the 19-year-old version that stormed the Twin Cities straight out of Farragut Academy, or nearly as complete a player as the 27-year-old model who won league MVP honors while carrying the Wolves to the 2004 Western Conference finals, he's an inarguably thrilling character who can still clean the glass and direct a defense while acting as a magnetic mentor for the Pups. He's another major reason to show up and watch the games ... and that's very literally true for Monday's matchup with Chris Paul, DeAndre Jordan and the Los Angeles Clippers.


From Paul Walsh of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:


Kevin Garnett, the Big Ticket, has bought 1,000 tickets to give away to Timberwolves fans for Monday’s home game at Target Center vs. the Los Angeles Clippers as a way to say thanks to fans for their warm welcome upon his return to the team last week.

“The response and support I’ve received from Wolves fans since my return to Minnesota has been nothing short of amazing. It’s been unbelievable,” Garnett, acquired in a trade with Brooklyn, said in a statement released Sunday morning by the team. “As a gesture of thanks, I would like to treat some fans to Monday night’s game against the Clippers. Love you all, and thanks for the love. Enjoy the game on me.”

Those tickets, as you might expect, went quite quickly, according to the Wolves:


Thank you for your support of the Minnesota Timberwolves. Earlier this morning, the 1,000 tickets purchased by Kevin Garnett were claimed in under 3 minutes.

But for Wolves fans who came up short on snagging those KG freebies but share an age group with the team's bright-future pieces, Minny decided to offer another low-cost option for checking out the Clippers contest:



It remains to be seen whether Garnett's return will energize the Wolves' base to the point of packing the gym for the remainder of this lottery-bound season, or whether the team will continue to look for cost-cutting methods of lowering the barrier to entry for fans who might have turned away since Garnett last stalked the hardwood in Minnesota. This sure does seem to represent a nice start, though, one in keeping with KG's vocal gratitude at his reception by the Minneapolis faithful against the Washington Wizards last Thursday night.


"I've been back before and I never paid attention to how much love is here still for me because I'm too busy being focused on the game," Garnett said after the win, according to Jon Krawczynski of the Associated Press. "And tonight it was just over the top. I did not know the city missed me like this. I don't think that you can ever wish or ever think the city loves you like this. But to see it is reality and I'm very appreciative."


And, clearly, he's more than willing to show a pretty significant token of his appreciation.


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News sport : Corey Hart slices foot stepping into a hot tub


(AP Photo)

Corey Hart is giving Ronald Belisario and Chris Sale a run for the weirdest injury to come out of spring training this year.


From Rob Biertempfel of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review:



Belisario fractured his shoulder climbing out of his pool and Sale is said to have fractured his foot while stepping off the back of his truck.


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Now you can add entering a hot tub to the list of potentially dangerous activities for a baseball player.


The good news is that Hart is only expected to be out for a few days. The 32-year-old veteran signed a one-year deal with the Pirates this offseason as he tries to get his career back on track. He missed all of 2013 while recovering from knee surgery and only played 68 games in 2014 with the Seattle Mariners.


Hart entered camp as Pittsburgh's backup first baseman and could also see some time in the outfield.


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News sport : Illinois staffer Ryan Cubit sentenced to two years' probation for DUI

(via Illinois Athletics) After pleading guilty to a misdemeanor DUI charge in January, Illinois director of student-athlete development Ryan Cubit was sentenced to two years of court supervision on Friday.


Additionally, according to The News-Gazette, Cubit – the son of Illinois offensive coordinator Bill Cubit – will have to wear an alcohol-monitoring device for three months, perform 100 hours of public service, pay a $1,000 fine and “attend a victim impact panel.”


The charge stemmed from Cubit being pulled over on Oct. 12 at 12:30 a.m. in Champaign. His blood-alcohol content was 0.12 percent.


If the 32-year-old Cubit completes the period of supervision without any hiccups, the incident will not appear on his record.


Cubit received a citation for underage drinking in Michigan in 2003 and Judge Richard Klaus said that incident, coupled with the DUI, gave him “pause.”


“I know it was 12 years ago and you’ve had nothing since,” Klaus said. “Given that, and this, if you show up in a courtroom again for anything related to alcohol, you are going to be in trouble. I believe you when you say you are never going to let this happen again, but the SCRAM monitor is insurance for the court.”


Cubit issued an apology to the court and said that he has already performed “more than 80 hours” of public service since his arrest.


“I made a mistake. I’m truly sorry,” Cubit said. “I’ve learned a lot from this and just want to move on.”


Before joining the Illinois staff in March 2014, Cubit spent five seasons on his father’s staff at Western Michigan, including a season as co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach in 2012. Cubit played at Rutgers for a season before following his dad to WMU. He finished his WMU career fifth in school history with 4,729 passing yards.


According to Illinois’ website, Cubit’s role as director of football student-athlete development includes managing and coordinating “all on-campus admissions for incoming freshmen and transfers,” performing “preliminary transcript evaluations for those prospective student-athletes” and managing “all official and unofficial visits for football recruits.”


For more Illinois news, visit OrangeandBlueNews.com.


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News sport : The Bulls can survive without Jimmy Butler, but just barely

Jimmy Butler has joined the perpetually revolving crew of Chicago Bull contributors that are working through nasty injuries. Butler, typically a workhorse, left Sunday’s Chicago loss to the Los Angeles Clippers with a sprained left elbow. On Monday, his team learned the full extent of his injury:



A later Bulls press release pegged the ulnar ligament sprain as possibly keeping Butler out for three to six weeks.


Despite playing the entirety of the 2014-15 season with a badly sprained left thumb, Butler emerged in his fourth season to become an NBA All-Star, a Most Improved Player award front-runner, and even a (regional, but still) Sports Illustrated cover boy. His points per game average has shot up to over 20 a contest, he ranks fifth in the NBA in free throws attempted per game, he rarely turns the ball over, and he’s been good for almost six rebounds a contest. Butler is leading the NBA in minutes per game at 38.9, and appeared no worse for the wear – unlike some of the other Bulls contributors that coach Tom Thibodeau hands endless and needless minutes to.


Due to his new batch of offensive responsibilities, Butler isn’t quite the dominant defender that we saw last year, when the third-year player managed to make the NBA’s All-Defensive Second Team. He’s still as good as they come defensively at the swingman spot, however, and the Bulls will badly miss him on both ends of the court.


Of course, because these are the Bulls, they will try to chip away at that “three to six week”-diagnosis:



This is what this organization does, and in repeatedly drafting dogged types like Butler, Taj Gibson, and Joakim Noah, they’ve aligned themselves with a series of players that don’t mind playing through injury. Gibson himself has been playing through a sprained ligament in his left hand for weeks, but it took a serious ankle sprain to put him on the shelf recently. Noah, meanwhile, underwent what was clearly a serious knee operation in May, 2014 – one that he was clearly still feeling the aftereffects of even in the 2015 calendar year. The Bulls initially reported that Noah underwent a “minor” operation, even though the surgery was set to keep him off the court for eight to 12 weeks.


Chicago’s status in the Central Division was all but assured when the Cleveland Cavaliers got their act together and began the 18-4 run that currently has them just a half-game in back of Chicago. The Bulls have lost two of three since Derrick Rose went down with what could be yet another season-ending knee injury, but as is always the case with the Bulls, it is possible that they can circle the wagons.


A three-week return for Butler could have the All-Star missing 12 games. If Chicago can split those contests, and if the fifth-seeded Washington Wizards continue at their current pace, it is possible that the Bulls will only fall to the fourth seed upon Butler’s hoped-for late-March return. With LeBron and company rampaging as they are, Chicago was always likely to relinquish that spot atop the Central, and the third seed that goes along with it, so the damage might not be all that great.


It is possible that Kirk Hinrich could slide into the starting spot in Butler’s absence, as coach Tom Thibodeau’s security blanket can play both guard spots, but the veteran has missed 16 of 22 attempts from the field in Rose’s absence thus far. Luckily for Bulls fans, second-year swingman Tony Snell had a fantastic February – the youngster came out of Thibodeau’s doghouse to hit 58 percent of his shots on the month, and he hit three three-pointers in the loss to the Clippers on Sunday. He should and likely will start.


Bulls rookie Doug McDermott, whom the team traded two draft picks (one that became standout Nuggets center Jusuf Nurkic) to select last June, hasn’t been a part of Thibodeau’s rotation since the first week of November. The Bulls coach has failed to develop or take chances on the shooter out of Creighton, to the source of much consternation from fans and likely the team’s front office.


With Butler’s 39 minutes a contest taken away, Thibodeau will be forced to rely on more than Snell, Hinrich, and veteran Mike Dunleavy to make up for his absence. McDermott will have to play, and he’ll have to contribute as he did earlier in his frustrating season – Doug hit for 16 of his first 30 shots as a pro before Thibodeau took him out of the rotation.


The Bulls haven’t been able to keep their injuries on the same page this season. Joakim Noah has finally rounded into an approximation of his former self, but it took him half of 2014-15 to get there. Derrick Rose was looking like a B-version of his former self in the days prior to his most recent knee injury. Butler started the season with an injured hand and he’ll miss at least a good chunk of the home stretch with the bum elbow. The Bulls were 9-10 with Dunleavy on the bench with an ankle injury, Gibson has been banged up all season, and McDermott missed weeks following a secretive (and possibly career-altering) snipping of his meniscus.


The Bulls can keep their heads above water, especially as Washington continues to fritter away its season. That much is in place.


Butler’s return is worrying, however. It wasn’t the element of surprise that allowed him to develop into a 20-point scorer, but the weight of expectations upon his comeback might be a bit much. He might forget what it took to stay in the moment and build his box score bucket by bucket. His work ethic and ability will be in place once he returns to live action, that’s not the fear in this instance.


It’s the expectation, one that asks him to keep with that uptick in usage and flip the switch toward 20 points instead of 11 per game. Recovering from this injury won’t be a problem for Jimmy Butler. Returning as an All-Star could be, however.


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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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Sunderland star held for child sex

Sunderland and England midfielder Adam Johnson has been arrested on suspicion of having sex with an under-age girl.


|||

London - Sunderland and England midfielder Adam Johnson has been arrested on suspicion of having sex with an under-age girl, the BBC reported on Monday.


“A 27-year-old man was arrested earlier today on suspicion of sexual activity with a girl under 16,” Durham Police said in a statement.


“He remains in police custody and is helping officers with their enquiries.”


British media said Sunderland had suspended Johnson, who has won 12 England caps, while police investigations were ongoing.


Reuters






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News sport : Michael Jordan is now officially a billionaire, according to Forbes

Michael Jordan approves. (Getty Images) Somebody prep LeBron James' Mirror of Somber Introspection — as it turns out, he won't accomplish his long-since-established goal of becoming the first billionaire athlete. He's been beaten to the top of that particular mountain of cash by — who else? — Michael Jordan.


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Forbes estimated back in June that Jordan, 52, had joined the ranks of the billionaires after increasing his stake in the Charlotte Hornets — the franchise in which he purchased a majority interest for $275 million in March of 2010, back when they were the Bobcats — from 80 percent to 89.5 percent. On Monday, the magazine confirmed Jordan's status as one of the world's 290 new billionaires, which sure must represent a nice cherry on top of the Hornets' 98-83 Sunday win over the Orlando Magic for Charlotte's Hall of Fame boss. From Forbes' Dan Alexander:


The most famous rookie on the billionaires list? Michael Jordan, arguably the greatest basketball player of all time and indisputably the best-paid athlete of all time. Most of his cash comes from Nike payouts on his iconic brand. The Jordan brand grossed an estimated $2.25 billion in 2013, earning his Airness some $90 million. But his most valuable asset is his stake in the Charlotte Hornets, worth more than $500 million. When ex-Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer bought the Los Angeles Clippers for a stunning $2 billion, values of all NBA teams skyrocketed, creating three new billionaires. Jordan’s old boss Jerry Reinsdorf, owner of the Chicago Bulls, joined the list with a fortune of $1.3 billion, and Houston Rockets owner Leslie Alexander boosted his net worth to $1.6 billion.

As a matter of fact, as ProBasketballTalk's Dan Feldman notes, a whopping 18 NBA owners — a majority of the 30-team league — pop up on Forbes' list — 19 if you include James L. Dolan of the New York Knicks, whose individual net worth falls shy of 10 figures, but whose family fortune exceeds $4 billion.


That seems like the sort of thing that National Basketball Player's Association Executive Director Michele Roberts might file away for future discussions with NBA Commissioner Adam Silver about how one-third of NBA teams are still losing money ... especially considering these net-worth evaluations come before the owners' coffers get reloaded with their share of the league's new $24 billion media rights deal. Saying the nay-no to cap smoothing, one would suspect, is just the tip of the iceberg when those negotiations open up.


But let us not sully this lovely moment by considering impending labor doom. Let us instead congratulate Michael Jordan on becoming the 513th richest person in America, and let us allow our minds to wander as we contemplate Michael Jordan's reaction to learning he ranks 513th in anything, even if the category is "being obscenely rich." (Basically, watch your backs, other billionaires.)


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News sport : Hey everybody, Steve Spurrier is now on Twitter

Yes folks the rumors are true, Steve Spurrier has joined Twitter.


The South Carolina Head Ball Coach who has been entertaining us for years with his not-so-subtle jabs at Clemson and his witty press conference quips can now drop those gems at his leisure thanks to the wonders of social media.



His introductory tweet was a little tame:



But we hope once he gets into the groove — the befuddled look on Spurrier’s face in the above pic looks like he’s making his first transition from the Zach Morris oversized mobile to a smartphone — he’ll be the best thing that’s happened to Twitter since the @midnight hashtag (or whatever you think the best thing on Twitter is).


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News sport : Former Rutgers captain, now police officer, saves life of 3-month-old boy

SOUTH BEND, IN - NOVEMBER 23: Fullback Ray Pilch #47 of Rutgers runs for a big gain as linebacker Mike Goolsby #41 of Notre Dame closes in during their game on November 23, 2002 at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images) After his playing career at Rutgers came to an end in 2004, former Scarlet Knights team captain Ray Pilch moved into law enforcement and became a police officer in Piscataway, N.J. – just a few miles from Rutgers’ New Brunswick campus.


Late last week, Pilch and another officer saved the life of a 3-month old boy who had stopped breathing.


Pilch was the first officer to arrive on the scene following a 9-1-1 call on Thursday afternoon. According to NJ.com, Pilch performed CPR on the unconscious boy, whose skin “had turned blue.” Officer Michael Rountree then arrived on the scene and helped Pilch revive the child while receiving CPR instructions from dispatcher Cara Brandenburg.


Thanks to their efforts, the baby’s color returned and he was able to breathe on his own.


From NJ.com:



The officers' efforts worked: the baby's color returned to a healthy pinkish-white as he began to breathe on his own once more. Then he started crying. Officers continued to administer oxygen until ambulances from Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and JFK Hospital arrived. The baby was taken to St. Peter's University Hospital for treatment.



"I am proud to commend Dispatcher Brandenburg and Officers Pilch and Rountree for their quick actions that made a difference," said Piscataway Police Chief Richard Ivone.


Pilch arrived at Rutgers as a walk-on in 2001 and worked his way into the starting lineup as a fullback and tight end. After catching 24 passes for 296 yards, Pilch bulked up and moved to center as a senior, earned the starting role and was named one of three team captains.


Pilch, who played at Piscataway High School, also earned the Scholar Athlete Award, the Paul Robeson Award for leadership and was a three-time Academic All-American during his time at Rutgers.


For more Rutgers news, visit ScarletNation.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : The 76ers are the latest team to cut ties with JaVale McGee, making him a free agent

Remember all the way back in the great month of February, when JaVale McGee swore up and down that he wanted to be part of the Philadelphia 76ers’ rebuilding plan? That he wanted to mentor the team’s young big men, and that he wasn’t the type to go chasing for a ring?


Confronted with the ability to make all the money he is owed – the rest of the $11.25 million he’s set to take in this year, and $12 million in 2015-16 – while being afforded the luxury to hop to whatever team will have him, McGee has now decided to leave those poor and mentor-less Sixer bigs to the wolves.


Philadelphia officially bought him out on Monday afternoon, after Sam Amick of USA Today first reported that the two sides were looking to officially part ways. From Amick:



Players waived by March 1 can still sign with teams that compete in the postseason, meaning the 27-year-old McGee will likely have a fruitful market when he clears waivers. Whether it's a new job with one of the Texas teams (San Antonio Spurs, Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets), the Miami Heat or another contender, McGee has every reason to be enthused about what lies ahead — especially considering he didn't give any money back.



As you’ll recall, this flies in the face of what JaVale told Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer just last week:



"I don't want to get bought out," said McGee, a 27-year-old in his seventh NBA season. "That's not a positive thing. When you think about it, you don't get all of your money when you get bought out.



"So it doesn't make sense why someone would want to get bought out unless they are older - older and they want to go to a contender or something. I'm not that old. I just want to play basketball.”

Sixers coach Brett Brown was less enthusiastic about McGee’s time with the Sixers, especially after he came through with some rather pitiful basketball in his first few times out with the team, telling the press that “it's not going to be on us” if McGee didn’t work out in Philly. Because the Sixers only dealt for McGee’s massive contract in order to take on a first-round pick and approach the NBA’s minimum salary floor, the team wasn’t exactly looking at the 27-year old as a future cornerstone.


McGee did get regular minutes in his six games with the 76ers, but he appeared woefully unprepared to take on the task of collecting the only things he knows how to pick up: JaVale managed just 13 rebounds and only one block in 61 minutes of play with the team. McGee has always been a careless, inconsistent, and often indifferent player that never seemed keen to build upon the physical gifts he’d been given, but at the very least you could count on him to corral some caroms or reject a few shots before slunking back off to acting a basketball ghost.


Somehow, McGee has gone from a raw young prodigy to an older and less-appealing non-contributor in just a few years, without giving us that productive middle of a career that even the most frustrating project players seem to usually provide. And he’s certainly proven not to be worth that four-year, $44 million deal he signed back in 2012.


McGee, who had played 22 total games in over a season and a half with Denver prior to the trade to Philadelphia, will now have his pick of the litter. He’ll also be playoff eligible, as Philadelphia cut ties with the 24th player to wear a Sixers uniform in 2014-15 prior to the postseason cutoff.



Despite his past transgressions, some playoff contender will take a chance on McGee, he’ll likely end up at the end of the team’s bench and hardly factor into the team’s postseason run, but he will be the biggest part of one or two second quarter runs off the bench – offering a batch of nationally televised blocks and throwdowns as fans in Washington, Denver and even Philadelphia roll their eyes.


And he’ll be paid $12 million next year, as yet another team (possibly his fourth in six months) takes another chance at making a consistent contributor out of JaVale McGee.


As always, good luck to both sides.


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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 : Arkansas coach Bret Bielema takes car away from player charged with DWI

Arkansas coach Bret Bielema has taken a different approach to disciplining defensive end Tevin Beanum, who was arrested and charged with DWI and minor in possession of alcohol last weekend in Fayetteville.


He took away Beanum’s car.


In conjunction with Beanum’s mother, Sandra, Bielema restricted Beanum’s vehicle use to driving to the Fred Smith Football Center and class.


“He has to go through the court system and obviously he’ll have ramifications, but I’ve basically banned the use of his car for any time other than when he’s coming over here or going to academics,” Bielema said. “His car is to remain parked. If he gets pulled over for running through a stoplight at 10:30 at night then he’s violated my rules and there’s going to be an even bigger consequence.”


Beanum was driving with his bright headlights on around 2:26 a.m. Feb. 22 when police pulled him over. Police found an open bottle of brandy on the backseat and said Beanum smelled of alcohol.


He was due in court on Feb. 23, but his legal matter has not yet been resolved.


For more Arkansas news, HawgSports.com.


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Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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News sport : Rockets-Cavs: LeBron starts with the man in the mirror, Harden crowned 'new King James'

The Houston Rockets beat the Cleveland Cavaliers in overtime on Sunday in a physical, hotly contested potential NBA Finals matchup highlighted by excellent play from James Harden and LeBron James, two members of the lead pack in the race for the 2014-15 NBA Most Valuable Player Award. With the contest in the balance late in overtime, LeBron missed a pair of free throws that could have tied the game or given Cleveland the lead, helping the Rockets hold on for their 41st win of the season and making the Cavs losers of two straight for the first time since before head coach David Blatt took the whole gang bowling.


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


The four-time MVP scored a game-high 37 points, but shot just 3-for-11 at the charity stripe on Sunday. It was a bummerific outlier for James, a 74.6 percent career free-throw shooter who now sits at 71.6 percent this season, and he seemed to take it to heart:




Evidently, that disappointment persisted well after James had exited the visiting locker room at Toyota Center and returned to a neutral corner for some soul searching ... which, since this is 2015, is best communicated through a poignant mirror selfie:



The caption on James' photo confirmed the somber mood he was in:


Looking in the mirror tonight after a tough lost [sic] of my part like You're your biggest challenge, competition, drive, obstacle, motivation, etc so it's nothing u haven't seen before! Back in the lab tomorrow to continue the drive to striving to be the Greatest I've ever seen! #StriveForGreatness

On balance, it's not a bad thing for James to begin his post-mortem by starting with the man in the mirror, literally and figuratively. After all, while he did lead the Cavs' offense in the absence of injured point guard Kyrie Irving, he took 35 field-goal attempts, more than he has in nine years and tied for the second-highest shot total of his career. And as David Zavac of Cavs blog Fear the Sword points out, in a non-Kyrie context, more LeBron isn't necessarily always a great thing:



And beyond that, there is, of course, the matter of those eight missed freebies. While it's not exactly a common occurrence for James to miss that often at the line — it was the sixth time (here are all the others) in 892 career regular-season games that he's clanked eight or more free throws — those misses are on him, and nobody else. He could point fingers elsewhere for the Cavs' loss — J.R. Smith's 3-for-13 performance, Iman Shumpert and Matthew Dellavedova combining to miss seven of their eight attempts, the Cavs' perimeter defenders relative inability to slow down Harden (33 points on 8-for-18 shooting, 15-for-18 at the line), etc. — but his position at the top of the Cavaliers' food chain means he has to hold himself accountable first and foremost. Heavy is the head that wears the crown, and all that.


Then again, maybe LeBron doesn't have to carry all that weight. According to the Rockets, he's been deposed. Watch the throne, y'all:



Unlike the Rockets' social media personnel, I'm not so sure that winning one regular-season game at the start of March means that Houston's bearded wonder is the new sheriff in town and that the four-time NBA MVP and two-time NBA Finals MVP is yesterday's news. But big wins lead to big excitement and, at times, big statements; the shots-fired, big-ourselves-up line-stepping sure does seem to be a tonal fit for a Rockets club that — from Patrick Beverley taking exception to a LeBron push after a collision to Harden going "Nature Boy" on James and beyond — sure doesn't seem to mind doing a little scrapping and clawing in pursuit of victory.


It's just a shame that the season series between these two clubs has now wrapped up — Houston won the first meeting back in January, while LeBron was sidelined — because it'd be awful interesting to see how LeBron responded to this particular slight. Oh, well. Maybe we'll get to find out come June. If we do wind up seeing Cavs vs. Rockets in the Finals, I'm guessing LeBron's mirror work will take on a much more aggressive tone — something along the lines of:





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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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