News sport : Pat Connaughton's blocked shot helps Notre Dame reach Sweet 16


Notre Dame is back in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2003 after surviving a dramatic turnover in the final seconds of regulation against Butler late Saturday night and winning 67-64 in overtime.


Junior Zach Auguste grabbed a rebound in the final seconds and began dribbling up court hoping for a heave at the basket, but officials correctly called him for a double dribble, giving the ball back to Butler in its offensive end with 2 seconds remaining.


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Butler junior Kellen Dunham worked his way free and took the inbounds pass, but Notre Dame senior Pat Connaughton leaped in from the side and blocked his potential game-winner out of bounds to save the day for the Fighting Irish. Two minutes into the overtime Connaughton makes huge 3-pointer after going 0-for-5 from behind 3-point line in regulation.


Jerian Grant scored on a driving runner in the final seconds to give Notre Dame a three-point lead. Steve Vastuira led Notre Dame with 20 points.


This is only the fourth time Notre Dame has been to the Sweet 16 since it advanced to the Final Four in 1978. The Irish have lost three consecutive Sweet 16 games. They will face the winner of Sunday's Kansas-Wichita State game next week in the Midwest Regional.


Butler guard Roosevelt Jones scored 23 points and Andrew Chrabascz added 20.


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News sport : Crying Villanova band member plays through her tears after Wildcats' loss


When Villanova became the first No. 1 seed to lose in this year's NCAA basketball tournament on Saturday night, television cameras caught a piccolo player in the Villanova band steadfastly doing her job while her tears flowed.


She became an Internet sensation in a matter of minutes, with some choosing to have a little fun with her plight and others supporting her dedication to keep playing.


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Collegespun.com identified her as Roxanne Chalifoux. A post from a Twitter account under the same name voiced support for her school.



And then the memes came and added some comic relief to the whole situation.





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[Kyle Ringo is the assistant editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at kyle.ringo@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : N.C. State guard calls out President Obama with expletive after Villanova upset (Video)

President Barack Obama is a big basketball fan, so he fills out an NCAA tournament bracket for ESPN each year. This year, for some reason, teams seem to be taking his picks to heart.


Cameras were rolling in the locker room after N.C. State upset No. 1 seed Villanova on Saturday night and Wolfpack guard Anthony “Cat” Barber evidently wasn’t too pleased that the President picked Villanova to move on to the Sweet 16.



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“The [expletive] is wrong with Barack Obama?” Barber asked his teammates.


Here’s video of the incident.


(Obvious warning: Video contains strong language)



It was clearly a playful moment in a winning locker room, but it’s still pretty funny that was the first thing that came to Barber’s mind after his team pulled out one of the biggest upsets of the tournament.


Barber isn’t the first one to call out the President this weekend. Georgia State head coach Ron Hunter joked that he hopes Obama makes better decisions in office than he did when he picked Baylor to beat Georgia State.


It ain’t easy being the President.


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News sport : N.C. State knocks off No. 1 seed Villanova, moves on to Sweet 16


Villanova’s NCAA tournament woes continue.


For the fourth straight season, the Wildcats have failed to make it beyond the Round of 32 – and this time they did it as a No. 1 seed, in a 71-68 loss to No. 8 seed N.C. State.



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Villanova struggled mightily from the field, shooting just 31 percent overall and 32 percent from three (9-of-28). Meanwhile, the Wolfpack used tough interior play and pesky defense – both on the interior and perimeter – to build and ultimately hold a lead. Trevor Lacey and Anthony Barber led the way for N.C. State with 17 and 13 points respectively while forwards Lennard Freeman (11 points, 12 rebounds) and Abdul-Malik Abu (13 points, 12 rebounds) were tenacious on the glass and each registered double-doubles.


On the other side, the Wildcats hit just 8-of-28 shots in the first half, but clung to only a four-point half-time deficit. The Wolfpack would make them pay in the second half and ran out to a lead that reached as high as 12 points.


But whenever it looked like the Wildcats, who came into the contest with a sparkling 33-2 record, would finally regain the advantage, the Wolfpack responded.


Villanova cut the lead down to three on a three-point play from JayVaughn Pinkston with 2:26 to go, but the Wolfpack countered with a clutch fall-away jumper from Lacey and an acrobatic layup from Barber to extend the lead back to seven.


After a Barber free throw, Nova’s Darrun Hilliard, who led all scorers with 27, responded with clutch back-to-back threes to cut it down to two. It wouldn’t be enough – even after N.C. State threw the ball away on its ensuing possession.


On the Wildcats’ next possession, down two, Dylan Ennis bricked an open three, ultimately sealing Villanova’s disappointing fate.


Though Hilliard had a big game and Pinkston chipped in with 13 points, Villanova’s other stars came up small. Josh Hart, Ryan Arcidiacono and Ennis all average double figures but combined for just 15 points on the night while shooting 0-of-11 from three. Additionally, big man Daniel Ochefu was held to only four points.


The biggest discrepancy was on the glass. As the Wildcats bricked three after three, the Wolfpack outrebounded them 45-32 and hauled in 13 offensive rebounds – six of which came from Abu.


If the Wolfpack can continue to get that physical inside play from Freeman and Abu, coupled with the steady play of Barber and Lacey, the Wolfpack could be a tough out moving forward. The Wolfpack will play the winner of Sunday’s showdown between No. 4 Louisville and No. 5 Northern Iowa in the Sweet 16 in Syracuse.


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News sport : Daniel Berger's albatross was an early jolt at Bay Hill


There had never been an albatross made in the Arnold Palmer Invitational -- that is, until Saturday.


Daniel Berger, who lost in a playoff for The Honda Classic to Padraig Harrington at the start of the Florida Swing, made a deuce on the seven-shaped par-5 sixth at Bay Hill. Curiously, the sixth is the same hole where John Daly made an PGA Tour record-worst 18 in 1998.


The albatross moved Berger from 1 over on the round to 2 under. He wound up shooting 4-under 68 to get to 7 under for the week and nine shots behind leader Henrik Stenson.




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News sport : Gabe York could be an underrated key to Arizona's title hopes


PORTLAND — All alone in the corner with no defender in 10 feet of him, Gabe York clapped his hands, whistled and did everything but wave pompoms to get point guard T.J. McConnell to notice him.


McConnell spotting him a half second too late isn't what's important. York having the confidence to demand the ball is.


On an Arizona team that features an all-conference point guard and four potential NBA prospects in its starting lineup, York is as important to the Wildcats' national title hopes as any of them. The undersized shooting guard is the best perimeter shooter on a team of explosive slashers and skilled big men, the guy most capable of shooting opposing teams out of the zone defenses Arizona is likely to see from now until its NCAA tournament run is over.


That's exactly what York did Saturday in second-seeded Arizona's 73-58 victory over 10th-seeded Ohio State in a round of 32 game in Portland. The 6-foot-3 junior scorched the Buckeyes for 19 points and sank four 3-pointers during a 19-8 second-half run that turned a back-and-forth game into a comfortable victory for the Wildcats.


"I'm definitely excited if teams want to keep playing that zone against us," York said. "I have the capability of doing this on a day-to-day basis and I have the confidence because of how I've played lately. It's just a matter of if I get those open looks."


If York is able to follow through on his words and consistently knock down outside shots the next two weeks, that would go a long way toward addressing one of Arizona's few weaknesses.


Defense is Arizona's trademark as it showed again Saturday by throwing multiple defenders at D'Angelo Russell and limiting him to a season-worst 3 of 19 shooting night. Rebounding might even be a bigger strength for this Wildcats team as evidenced by their 21 offensive boards against the smaller Buckeyes. But Arizona still occasionally struggles to score and the Wildcats are most susceptible to those cold spells when opposing teams go zone and outside shots aren't falling.


It happened against Oregon State in Corvallis when Arizona shot 4 of 17 from behind the arc in a 58-56 loss. It happened again in a loss to Arizona State a few weeks later when the Sun Devils mixed zone and man-to-man. Ohio State held Arizona to 10 of 31 shooting in the first half with a zone designed to wall off the paint, but York's outside shooting helped the Wildcats shred that zone in the second half.


"A huge part of our success in the second half was Gabe knocking down those threes," teammate Brandon Ashley said. "It made them space their defense out a little bit more and we were able to get the ball into the middle."


It's still exciting for York to play this big a role in an NCAA tournament victory because it wasn't that long ago he wouldn't have gotten off the bench in a game like this.


York didn't even play a minute in 20 of Arizona's games as a freshman including a season-ending loss to this same Ohio State team in the Sweet 16. That was so difficult for the former top 100 recruit from California's Orange Lutheran High School that York admits he considered transferring to a school where he could play a bigger role after that season.


"My freshman year, I don't even really like to think about it because I didn't play at all," York said. "I didn't really feel like I was part of the team. I did question whether I was good enough to play here before, but my mom, my brother and God, they got me through it and I pulled through."


For York, earning playing time was a matter of proving he could do more than just shoot.


He spent long hours the past two summers improving his playmaking ability off the dribble and working to become a more competent defender. Outside shooting still remains his greatest strength, but he is capable enough in other areas that he has earned the trust of the coaching staff and carved out a key role as a sixth man averaging about 25 minutes per game since mid-February.


In his last 10 games, York is an impressive 27 of 49 from behind the arc. He endured a rare scoreless night against Texas Southern in Arizona's opening round victory, but Sean Miller did not hesitate to play him 30 minutes on Saturday night.


The threat of York's outside shooting created space for Rondae Hollis-Jefferson to catch the ball in the middle of the zone or T.J. McConnell to find driving lanes and attack off the dribble. Once Arizona did that, it was a pick-your-poison dilemma for Ohio State and frequently York benefited from that.


"They didn't want to leave me and they didn't want to leave Rondae in the middle," Arizona guard Stanley Johnson said. "We'd run him to the same side of the floor me and Rondae were on and have three people in a two-person area. You have to choose me or him. They chose not to leave me. He was open and he knocked those shots down."


Between the streaky Johnson and sweet-shooting reserve guard Elliott Pitts, York isn't the only player Arizona has who's capable of knocking down outside shots.


Nonetheless, York is clearly Arizona's most consistent shooter, the guy most capable of making an opponent pay from the perimeter for zoning the Wildcats.


"Some of the shots I had today, I don't think I've been as wide open all year," York said. "If I get those shots again, I have to keep knocking them down."


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News sport : Kentucky advances with physical win over Cincinnati

And the beatdowns go on.


Headlined by a monstrous Willie Cauley-Stein dunk in the first half, Kentucky moved one game closer to an undefeated national title season with a 64-51 win over Cincinnati Saturday afternoon in the Midwest Regional. The Wildcats are the first team in NCAA history to start the season with 36 straight wins and will advance to next Thursday's Sweet 16 in Cleveland, where they will face the winner of Sunday's Maryland-West Virginia game.


Cincinnati didn't make it easy for Kentucky, though. The bruising game before a partisan Kentucky crowd at Louisville's Yum Center was more emblematic of a contest between two rivals that regularly play each other rather than the reality, which is that Kentucky and Cincinnati don't schedule each other in the regular season and hadn't met since 2005.


The Bearcats made this a game early on by being aggressive, and even led 24-21 with 3:34 remaining in the first half. But Cauley-Stein turned in arguably the best dunk of the tournament thus far a minute later, slamming the ball over Quadri Moore and Octavius Ellis while getting fouled. The ensuing free throw gave Kentucky a 26-24 lead and the Wildcats closed the half on a 10-0 run for a seven-point halftime lead.



While the second half was hotly contested with several hard fouls committed by both sides, Cincinnati couldn't shoot well enough for Kentucky — which only shot 37 percent itself —to ever doubt that it was in full control of the game.


Trey Lyles turned in a double-double for the Wildcats with 11 points and 10 rebounds. Aaron Harrison led Kentucky scorers with 13 points while Cauley-Stein had nine.


The loss ends an emotional and trying season for 23-11 Cincinnati. Head coach Mick Cronin left the team in mid-December due to an unruptured brain aneurysm and hadn't returned to the sidelines with assistant Larry Davis working in his place. Though there was talk Cronin might've been able to return for the regional in Cleveland, the Bearcats simply weren't good enough to advance and give him that chance.


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News sport : Idaho cancels rescheduled game against Florida, adds Missouri instead

For those who were hoping to see Florida make up its 2014 canceled game against Idaho, you might be waiting awhile.


The rescheduled contest was supposed to take place in 2017, but the Vandals postponed the game and instead scheduled a contest against Missouri in its place.


The original game was scheduled for Aug. 30, 2014, but the game was delayed because of poor weather and then ultimately canceled. As a result of the cancelation, Florida agreed to pay Idaho $970,000, the original payout for the game, and then the two sides agreed to a reschedule in 2017, which Idaho announced in a press release.


However, Missouri offered to pay Idaho $1.3 million for a Oct. 21, 2017 contest, and the Florida game was scratched for that year.


According to the Spokesman Review, there is hope the game might still be played, but it’s unknown when.


For more Florida news, visit InsideTheGators.com.


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News sport : UCLA's Tony Parker scores 28, zings coach Steve Alford (Video)

UCLA big man Tony Parker put up a career-high 28 points in the Bruins’ 92-75 victory over UAB in the Round of 32.


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Parker only scored three points in UCLA’s opening round win, but was the beneficiary of a bevy of point blank looks at the basket as the Blazers keyed in on UCLA’s outside shooting threats, especially sophomore guard Bryce Alford, the son of head coach Steve Alford.


After the game, Parker was asked about Alford’s ability as a facilitator and had a unique way of complimenting his teammate while simultaneously poking fun at his head coach.



“(Bryce) has that in his game. Coach Alford didn’t pass much so I think Bryce focuses on being a better passer than him,” Parker said. “That’s big time for us. He passed the ball really, really well for us today.”


Coach Alford’s reaction was what you would expect.




Oh, and for the record, Steve Alford is 11th all-time at Indiana University with 385 career assists, so he was quite the passer in addition to be the second leading scorer in Hoosiers history.


Parkers’ crack at his head coach wasn’t his only funny moment on Saturday. As Parker answered the final question in a post-game interview with CBS’ Allie LaForce, Parker complimented LaForce’s bracelet. (Thanks to SB Nation for the Vine)



Parker is clearly a jewelry connoisseur.



Smooth, Tony. Very smooth.


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News sport : Steve Nash retires from the NBA

Steve Nash has announced his retirement. The NBA legend and two-time MVP has not been able to play pain-free basketball since he injured his leg in the fall of 2012, and the disclosure of his decision ranks as more of a formality than surprise.


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It still stings, though.


Nash’s career as a starter was bookended by injuries. Traded from Phoenix to Dallas to work as the point man on Don Nelson’s up-tempo offense, Nash initially let down Mavericks fans as he struggled through Achilles and back injuries – inspiring first-year Mavs owner Mark Cuban to sign Howard Eisley to compete for Dallas’ starting job prior to the 2000-01 season. His three seasons with Los Angeles were a mess – a broken leg suffered in his first month with the team led to persistent nerve and back damage, as the point guard only played 65 out of a potential 246 games with the team.


In between those frustrating runs, however, he turned in some of the brilliant basketball of his era:



Nash announced his retirement via The Players Tribune, and his own Twitter account:



From Nash’s column, discussing his decision to formally announce the end to his pro career:



The greatest gift has been to be completely immersed in my passion and striving for something I loved so much — visualizing a ladder, climbing up to my heroes. The obsession became my best friend. I talked to her, cherished her, fought with her and got knocked on my ass by her.



Nash never played in an NBA Finals game, but he did lead a series of Suns and Mavericks teams to the long ends of the Western Conference playoff bracket. Combining well-honed economy of movement, a deft passing touch, knockout shooting and a willingness to play on the edge, Nash made eight All-Star Games and participated in 120 playoff contests. Rising in an era that saw countless preps-to-pros players make the leap into professional play, Nash entered the NBA at age 22 but still ranks 40th overall in all-time minutes played.


Former Mavericks personnel boss and coach Don Nelson was the first to take on Nash as a starter, trading a draft pick that would later turn into Shawn Marion for the Suns reserve in 1998 after Vancouver general manager turned down numerous requests to swap the Canadian-raised point man for Bryant Reeves. It was under Nelson’s watch that Nash emerged from his injury woes to become an All-Star, but it wasn’t until Mike D’Antoni rolled out the ball and insisted on his “seven seconds or less”-offensive philosophy that Nash turned into a dominant player.


“Mike D’Antoni changed the game of basketball,” Nash stated in his piece on the Players’ Tribune, and it’s hard to argue with the man. Encouraging a high tempo in an era that saw countless Larry Brown-types calling play after play and eschewing the three-point shot, D’Antoni’s Suns jumped from 29 to 62 wins in 2004-05, with Nash winning the first of his two MVP awards. Just a year prior, Nash hadn’t even made the All-Star team, and Dallas owner Mark Cuban passed on matching Phoenix’s free agent offer for the 30-year old point guard, in a move most applauded at the time.


Various injuries and outright bad luck prevented those Suns from ever making it to the championship stage, and Nash will finish his career as one of two two-time MVPs (Karl Malone acted as the unfortunate other) to never win a title. His prescient play, so far ahead of its time, and standout precision led to most applauding the Lakers’ move to send two first-round draft picks and two second-rounders to Phoenix for the chance to sign the 37-year old in 2012.


A series of unfortunate injuries kept Nash from ever creating something significant with his fellow 1996 NBA draftmate Kobe Bryant, and his official retirement was more or less set in stone last fall when the Lakers announced he would miss the entire 2014-15 season with ongoing back woes.


This doesn’t take away from what he’s created. Steve Nash might be the biggest reason why you enjoy NBA basketball in 2015. His combination of well-sprung ability, work ethic, and fearlessness was downright astonishing to watch in an era that seemed set in its staid ways. Nash, in his piece, noted that the game of basketball has given him quite a bit, but Steve Nash should never underestimate just how much he’s given back to the game he chose to adopt as his own.


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News sport : Cincinnati player ignores Kentucky warning, learns quick and funny lesson

Some people just have to touch the stove to see if it's warm, no matter what anyone tells them.


Cincinnati forward Gary Clark might be one of those people, judging by a quick sequence at the start of Saturday's game against top-ranked Kentucky.


Watch what Clark does just as CBS color analyst Jim Spanarkal shares interim coach Larry Davis' belief that none of his players should test Kentucky's height if two opposing players are defending the rim.



That's Willie Cauley-Stein and Karl Anthony Towns teaching Clark the lesson in a brilliantly-timed piece of comedy when you figure in Spanarkal's anecdote (which of course Clark couldn't hear, but you figure he heard the warning from Davis before the game).


Nonetheless, Cincinnati didn't look scared of the bigger, badder and undefeated Kentucky team early on, leading the Wildcast 22-21 with just under five minutes left in the first half.


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News sport : Chris Sale watched every 'Breaking Bad' episode while resting foot injury

Injured Chicago White Sox ace Chris Sale had a lot of time on his hands recently after suffering an avulsion fracture of his right foot back on Feb. 27. It was three weeks of non-baseball activities to be exact, which to a baseball player can feel like a three-year prison sentence.


Fortunately for Sale, he made a wise commitment early in his rehab which helped him get to the other side with his sanity mostly intact and a renewed perspective on quality television.



That's 62 episodes of AMC's award-winning series "Breaking Bad" 18 days, which averages out to 3.5 episodes per day.


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As someone who was also very late to the Walter White and Jesse Pinkman party, I know the overwhelming feeling of wanting to sacrifice sleep and a connection to the living world just to jump into the next episode. But that's a mighty impressive, almost unsustainable pace. One must applaud Sale for that level of commitment, and one must also tip their cap to series creator Vince Gilligan for presenting such an addicting episodic thriller. Once it grabs you, there's simply no getting away.


But it wasn't strictly TV watching for Sale. As noted by Colleen Kane of the Chicago Tribune, Sale is expanding his list of knock-knock jokes.


For example...



That might be a sign that Sale is losing his mind a bit, so it's probably a good thing his rehab has progressed to throwing off a mound. On Friday, Sale tossed 60 pitches and came away feeling great, according to general manager Rick Hahn.


“Sale had a good today,” Hahn said. “Sale had a really good day today. He threw a live bullpen session, four sets of 15 and was pretty much full bore in doing that. And he remains on track to not miss significant time."

“We are working with what we’re expecting internally in terms of timing of him coming back and so far he’s progressing as we had hoped.”

The injury will prevent Sale from making his third consecutive opening day start, but the hope is he'll be ready to jump in during the White Sox second turn through the rotation.


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In the meantime, maybe he can get started on the Breaking Bad spin-off series "Better Call Saul." It, too, has all the making of a gripping television classic.


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News sport : President Obama watches niece in Women's NCAA tournament game

Mar 21, 2015; College Park, MD, USA; The President of the United States, Barack Obama looks on before a game between the Princeton Tigers and the Green Bay Phoenix during the first round of the women's NCAA Tournament at Xfinity Center. (Derik Hamilton-USA TODAY Sports) Besides Kentucky, there’s another undefeated team in college basketball this season, and President Barack Obama was on hand to watch that team play on Saturday.


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President Obama and his daughter Malia were in attendance to watch his niece Leslie Robinson, a backup forward for the Princeton Tigers. The Tigers improved to 31-0 on the season with a 80-70 win over Green Bay in the first round of the Women’s NCAA tournament at the Xfinity Center on the University of Maryland’s campus.


Robinson is the daughter of former Oregon State head coach Craig Robinson, Michelle Obama’s brother. The First Lady spent time in Japan this week and was not in attendance.


According to ESPN.com, the president arrived at his seat in the Xfinity Center “with about five minutes remaining in warm-ups” and sat “several rows up from the floor” behind the Princeton bench.


Robinson, a 6-foot forward from Corvallis, Ore., did not see any action in the game. For the season, Robinson has played in 26 games and averaged 9.4 minutes per contest. She averages 3.0 points and 2.5 rebounds per game while shooting 37.9 percent from the field.


Princeton will face the winner of Saturday’s Maryland-New Mexico State game in the Round of 32.


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News sport : Off to the races: Angels hit four triples in one inning

Allow us to look beyond the caveat of "it's only spring training" and simply marvel at the odds-defying accomplishment of the Los Angeles Angels on Friday night.


In a span of five batters during the third inning, Erick Aybar, C.J. Cron, Johnny Giavotella and Collin Cowgill each tripled against Cleveland Indians starter Trevor Bauer, completing a feat that hasn't occurred during a regular season game since the New York Giants did it against the Pittsburgh Pirates on July 17, 1936.


After David Freese started the inning with a strikeout, Aybar got the unlikely rally started with a sharp grounder down the right-field line that rolled to the corner. Cron immediately followed with a towering drive to left-center that Michael Bourn couldn't corral. After a Chris Iannetta sacrifice fly, Giavotella continued the triples parade with a rocket shot to left-center. Cowgill then concluded the explosion with a drive to right-center.


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If you watch the video, you'll notice that all four plays were relatively close at third base. Cron, who's by far the slowest of the group, just beat the relay throw with a slide. Giavotella probably would have been out if third baseman Lonnie Chisenhall handled the throw cleanly. And Cowgill seemed dead to rights as well if not for a wide throw.


As it stands, the aggressive running paid off for all four, and helped ignite an 11-5 victory. The Angels can also claim a rare place in baseball history, even if the triples will be wiped away in two weeks time. In fact, the Angels came incredibly close to equaling or surpassing two long-standing triples records.


On September 15, 1901, the Chicago White Sox hit five triples in the eighth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers to set the single inning record.


On May 6, 1934, Carl Reynolds, Moose Solters, Rick Ferrell and Bucky Walters of the Boston Red Sox hit four consecutive triples against the Detroit Tigers, which is the only that's ever happened.


The odds were strongly against the Angels, but they nearly did the unthinkable.


Speaking of which, let's shift the focus over to Trevor Bauer and his unforgettable spring. As you might recall, if was just 10 days ago that Bauer was on the wrong side of another baseball rarity when he allowed back-to-back-to-back homers to Chicago Cubs phenoms Jorge Soler, Javier Baez and Kris Bryant. It's like baseball Yahtzee, and Bauer is htting all of the biggest scoring categories right away.


[Baseball is back! Check out Yahoo For Spring Training for great spring training pics.]


For most pitchers, that would be enough punishment to the rattle the confidence right out of them. However, Bauer seems to have a good sense of perspective and humor, and his manager Terry Francona usually knows what to say to keep things loose.



"He's come so far," said Francona. "We were kidding him that I sent [pitching coach Mickey Callaway] out to the mound just so [outfielders Michael Brantley and Michael Bourn] could rest. He gets it. The ball really did come out of his hand really well. He's throwing all his pitches."



It's OK to joke now. For Bauer's sake, though, here's hoping the worst of it is out of his system before this starts counting against the his record.


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News sport : 410-pound LaQuan McGowan catches another pass for Baylor (Video)

Art Briles wasn’t lying.


The Baylor head coach said earlier in the month that he’d use 6-foot-7, 410-pound guard LaQuan McGowan at tight end during spring practice and we finally got to see McGowan in action during the Bears’ “Friday Night Lights” scrimmage.


His 21-yard reception did not disappoint.



Here’s another angle:

This isn’t the first time we’ve seen McGowan’s receiving skills. He famously caught an 18-yard touchdown in the Cotton Bowl and he says the coaches are keeping him in more of a skill position role (tight end/fullback) for the 2015 season.

Hopefully we’ll see the big man in the end zone again once the season rolls around.


For more Baylor news, visit SicEmSports.com.


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