News sport : David Ortiz sounds off on his PED critics: 'Nobody has been tested more than me'


(Getty Images)

David Ortiz has made a career blasting baseballs a long way in the batter's box. Thursday, he came out and blasted any link he has to performance-enhancing-drugs, peeling back the curtain on MLB's testing process and what it has been like to live under suspicion for all these years.


In a lengthy, at times profane, essay published on the Players Tribune, Ortiz, 39, says he's been tested more than 80 times since 2004, hasn't failed one, and had sharp words for those still out there who doubt that he has played clean and doesn't deserve a spot in the Hall of Fame.


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It all goes back to 2009 when it was reported that he had failed a PED test in 2003:



"Some people still look at me like I’m a cheater because my name was on a list of players who got flagged for PEDs in 2003. Let me tell you something about that test. Most guys were taking over-the-counter supplements then. Now all of a sudden MLB comes out and says there’s some ingredient in GNC pills that have a form of steroid in them. I don’t know anything about it. To this day, nobody has any answers for me. Nobody can tell me what I supposedly tested positive for. They say they legally can’t, because the tests were never supposed to be public. "



This isn't the first time Ortiz has come out and defended himself, though this is by far the strongest. He seemed particularly irked by a Boston columnist's accusation that he fit the profile of a PED user and also annoyed by the frequency at which he's tested. "Nobody in MLB history has been tested for PEDs more than me," said Ortiz.


The reaction to the Red Sox slugger's story has been strong on both sides. It's a raw first-person read that's worth your time, so check it out.


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Israel Fehr is a writer for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter.






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News sport : Kentucky's Marcus Lee posterizes teammate with dunk

A lot of analysts are saying that only Kentucky can stop Kentucky this spring.


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But not even that is turning out to be true — quite literally as you can see what happened on Thursday when Devin Booker got in the way of a Marcus Lee alley-oop at Quicken Loans Arena.



Lee's dunk gave the top-ranked Wildcats an 18-2 lead over West Virginia in the Sweet 16 game in Cleveland, basically crushing any hope that West Virginia's Daxter Miles had of dealing Kentucky its first loss. The freshman guard made headlines on Wednesday guaranteeing that Kentucky would be "36-1" after the game.

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Kevin Kaduk is a writer for Yahoo Sports . Have a tip? Email him at kevinkaduk@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Bo Pelini in another great selfie, this time at NCAA Tournament

The tradition of taking a picture with former Nebraska coach Bo Pelini continued at the NCAA Tournament in Cleveland on Thursday night. And we're happy to report that Pelini has also carried on the tradition of making an awkward face for the photos.


Behold a selfie one fan took with the new Youngstown State coach (YSU is located just over an hour from Cleveland).



Remember, the coach just learned what a selfie was about a year ago, so maybe he's still getting used to people taking pictures of themselves.


We're also happy to report that Pelini's picture on Youngstown State's website is either the same picture he had from his time with the Cornhuskers or contains a very similar facial expression. You can decide for yourself, but our lives would be a little less bright if Pelini had gone with a traditional smile.


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







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News sport : Stacy Lewis hosted a special junior player ahead of the Kia Classic

World No. 3 Stacy Lewis went several extra miles this week for one of her biggest fans she met last fall.


Last October, producers from the syndicated TV show "The Doctors" contacted Lewis to see if she would help them for a segment they were doing on 10-year-old Marley Franklin, a young girl who fell in love with golf after receiving bone-marrow transparents to treat sickle-cell anemia. Franklin said Lewis was her favorite player. Lewis was more than happy to connect with Franklin, doing so over Skype.


But it didn't stop there. Through her sponsor Bridgestone, Lewis sent some equipment and apparel to Franklin. Lewis also invited Franklin and her family to this week's Kia Classic.


However, Lewis went even further, hosting Franklin and her family, as well as teeing it up with Franklin during the pro-am. Franklin got to shadow the two-time major winner, including attending the pro-am party and having a seat on stage for Lewis' pre-tournament news conference.


"Golf is very important to me," Franklin said on stage. "I love how it just makes me feel. I play almost like every day."


Franklin has been playing for two years now and is ranked 55th in the world in the Girls 10-11 age group -- quite an achievement for any player.


Even better, Marley's sister Maya, who donated the bone marrow used in the transplant, is starting to take up the game.


"Sometimes she'll mimic me putt," Franklin said, "and she'll be like, 'I made it. I'm going to beat sissy some day.'"




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News sport : Former Knick coach Mike Woodson brought the heat when asked about his ex-team

Assistant coaches rarely speak on record to members of the media, partially because it’s discouraged by most teams but mostly because assistant coaches don’t have to and they’d rather do anything else in the world besides spending time in front of a reporter’s recorder.


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Special occasions do allow for assistants to bend the rules a bit, such as the setup we saw in New York on Wednesday night when the Los Angeles Clippers visited the Knicks. Former Knicks head coach Mike Woodson was fired by Knick president Phil Jackson last spring, and Mike is currently an assistant on Doc Rivers’ Clipper staff. Woodson decided to go on record with a few statements about the current state of the Knicks – only after Rivers asked Woodson to act as the Clipper spokesman in the face of the media following the Clipper win.


And, because there is a slight difference of opinion involved and because New York and Los Angeles are involved, we’re going to relay Woodson’s inflammatory and downright slanderous thoughts. From Newsday:



"They've had a tough season so far and hopefully they can rebound this summer and put some pieces together and get back to winning basketball games."




[…]




"Had I stayed on board I probably would have pushed to keep Tyson [Chandler] and keep that core group together because that's what won the 54 games two years ago," Woodson, a Clippers assistant, said in his return to the Garden. "But people change and you've got to live with it and it's what it is.”



“It is what it is.” Hope you brought your preferred over the counter ointment of choice to this particular figurative rodeo, Phil Jackson, because your hind quarters were just laced by a flame that disagrees with the core temperature of your epidermis.


With Phil Jackson wobbling, Woodson went in for the Super Burn:



"I think when Phil came in he had his mind made up based on what he wanted to do and I can respect that," Woodson said. "There's nothing I can say bad about Phil. Phil has had a helluva career as a coach and he had other ideas in terms of the direction he wanted to go and I respect that."




FINISH HIM MIKE WOODSON LET THE STREETS RUN RED WITH THE, UM, BLOOD OF THE BLUE AND ORANGE:



"I've kind of moved on. Two years ago was a great run for our ballclub. A lot of things have changed since then. Hey, all I can say is I wish them nothing but the best and I truly mean that when I say that."



Though Phil Jackson predicted a playoff appearance for his Knicks prior to his first full year running the team, and though he probably wanted his Derek Fisher-led team to top the 37 wins that Mike Woodson managed in his final season in New York, even a competitor in Jackson knew that the writing was on the wall for these Knicks heading into 2014-15. Woodson’s 2012-13 Knicks squad, the one that won 57 games, probably overachieved, and the Jackson had just about figured out that he was going to punt 2014-15 (as we wrote last summer) when deciding Tyson Chandler’s future with the team, and the deal that sent Chandler to Dallas with Raymond Felton for Jose Calderon, Shane Larkin, Samuel Dalembert, and some second-round draft picks.


Dealing for a ball dominating point guard in Calderon didn’t seem in Jackson’s wheelhouse, but Calderon was always going to be a better fit than the reviled Felton was in Jackson’s preferred triangle offense, and the addition of a potentially solid-enough minutes sopper in Dalembert along with second-round draft picks and a flier on the young Shane Larkin seemed like an excusable move at the time.


Yes, Chandler has been terrific in Dallas this year; but even if he was terrific in New York this season it wasn’t going to move the needle much. Larkin hasn’t played well and Calderon has suffered through an injury-plagued year, all while New York has bottomed out to the tune of the NBA’s worst record. Even with that in place, and even with Calderon set to make $3.5 more than Felton next season and $7.7 million in 2016-17, the move doesn’t feel as nasty as the moves of Jackson’s predecessors.


Of course, Knick fans are tired of their intended saviors being compared to past general managers like Glen Grunwald and Isiah Thomas. Or even being compared with the benign one-year term of Steve Mills, or the relatively successful (if Isiah-addled) work of Donnie Walsh.


They want a president in Jackson to compare to winners in San Antonio and the like, and the initial returns have been miserable. New York’s draft pick future is still rather hazy, and even the team’s chances on the 2016 free agent market will be dimmed by the fact that seemingly every NBA team will have ungodly amounts of cap space that summer, with nobody rushing to play alongside a 32-year old Carmelo Anthony, already injured and with four years and over $102 million left on his contract.


If Phil Jackson falls flat on his face in New York, it won’t be because of the Tyson Chandler trade. In the meantime, as the Knicks ready for an uncertain future, let’s continue to bring the wicked heat and major headlines, as Mike Woodson did on Wednesday.


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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 : Brady Aiken, unsigned No. 1 draft pick, announces he had Tommy John surgery

(MLB.com) The wild story of prized pitching prospect Brady Aiken just got wilder: Aiken, 18, announced Thursday that he had Tommy John surgery this week, seven months after he failed to come to terms with the Houston Astros as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2014 amateur draft.


At the time, there was a dispute about the health of Aiken's elbow. The two sides had reportedly reached an agreement with a $6.5 million signing bonus. But after Aiken's physical, the Astros said they weren't happy with what they saw in his elbow. Believing he would need Tommy John surgery soon, the Astros reportedly lowered their offer to $5 million.


Aiken's camp scoffed, saying his arm was fine. The Astros never came back to their original offer, and Aiken went unsigned as the deadline to sign draft picks passed, the first No. 1 pick since 1983 to do so. Now we see who was right.


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Rather than enroll in college at UCLA (where he had a scholarship offer), Aiken opted to attend the IMG Academy, a private athletic training and education center in Florida, and prepare for the 2015 MLB draft. When he pitched in his first game with IMG last week, Aiken says he knew something was wrong.



Aiken announced all this in an essay for The Player's Tribune. Here's a passage in which he says he has no regrets about passing on the Astros' deal. One part even seems like a dig at the organization.



Since last summer, a lot of people have wondered how I could have turned down a multi-million-dollar signing bonus after being picked first in the Draft. Now, I know they’ll probably be wondering about it again. I can honestly say I don’t regret not signing. It was a very difficult decision, but it also was an informed decision based on circumstances only a few people know the truth about. My family and I planned for all the possible outcomes. We weighed the pros and cons, talked with friends and mentors and doctors whose opinions we value and discussed it over a number of family dinners. This wasn’t a decision we made lightly.




The money wasn’t the only factor to consider. I wanted to play somewhere I felt comfortable, with a support system I felt would lay the groundwork for a successful and long career. Making sure I had that in place was worth the frustration of not being able to get on with my career sooner.




My family was smart, and we accounted for all of the possible risks. Having gone through this process, I really encourage other players to take the time to be fully educated about what they are getting into and to plan for the unexpected. Having a solid plan helped me through the ups and downs. Even now, I know I made the decision that made the most sense for my future.



Rehabbing from Tommy John surgery is fairly common these days, so there's no reason to think Aiken won't get another chance to have an MLB career. Other teams drafted players last year who were in the middle of their Tommy John rehab, so it's hardly a Scarlet Letter that will end his career. But the last year certainly has delayed Aiken's big-league dreams.


Now, as watch Aiken try to comeback from this, we'll be left to wonder "what it?" — what if he had signed with the Astros and rehabbed his injury under their care, with their money?


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News sport : Happy Hour: Being cautious with cautions

Throughout the week you can send us your best questions, jokes, rants and just plain miscellaneous thoughts to happyhourmailbag@yahoo.com or @NickBromberg. We'll post them here and have a good time.


Well, have you recovered from the events at Auto Club Speedway?


While Kurt Busch has been the focal point of the "he got a bad draw with the final cautions" anger, Matt Kenseth shouldn't be overlooked either. The race was his to win until the first of the three cautions happened and it was no longer his after the axle issue leaving pit road.


The IndyCar Series season starts this weekend at St. Petersburg. It was supposed to start earlier in March but there was a bit of an issue with the race organizer and it didn't happen. The race begins after 3 p.m. ET, so ideally it will be still going on when Martinsville is over. That's a good move by the series, which has had way too many races start and end during NASCAR's television window recently.


Yes, there's a dedicated subset of fans that will watch open-wheel racing over NASCAR, but for the motorsports fan who watches all or most types of racing (more common than the IndyCar superfan), this is a great move.


It's also the first weekend in 2015 that NASCAR, IndyCar, Formula 1 and NHRA are all racing. Motorsports season is officially upon us, y'all.


Alright, let's get back to California. Our topics are predictable. Let's roll.


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I have been a staunch fan of NASCAR since the mid 90's hardly missed a race. I can't watch anymore. The crap and race manipulations NASCAR pulled at Fontana made me sick. Was a great race going on till 30 laps to go and the phantom cautions started happening. Kurt said it best "WWE." France owes every fan a public apology. Never happen so I can watch anymore. You and I both know the old fans are dropping like flies. Really to bad the drivers and crews are the best. I love watching them. - Dwight


This is the type of stuff that was bound to come from what happened on Sunday. Hell, it was happening right after the race. Go to a message board, social media outlet or wherever you can find NASCAR fans and you're going to find people incredibly frustrated about the outcome.


Of course, there's always going to be that emotion when a fan's not-favorite-driver wins. But the reaction had nothing to do with Brad Keselowski and the way that the last 25 laps of the race were presented to those watching. Is the anger there if NASCAR fans knew everything that was going on in terms of the location of debris, what it was, etc? Probably. But the guess is that it's significantly muted.



Yes. If NASCAR didn't care, Sprint Cup Series director Richard Buck would not have been available after the race to the media to explain the race management over the last 25 laps. NASCAR knew from their monitoring hub (Hi people in the NASCAR center!) and probably saw how the race was presented and knew there was a serious perception issue.


Here's the thing though: There's no reason that Buck should have to come in to the media center and explain debris cautions in the first place. None. And we'd bet there are people in NASCAR that would agree with that statement.


It hopefully was a wakeup call to the sport and it's television networks that there needs to be much more communication when it comes to the explanation of debris cautions for the sake of the sport's fans and the race presentation.


There's always going to be the vocal minority. Once you realize it exists and will perpetually exist, it's easy to accept. But you never, ever, want to risk the vocal minority becoming close to a majority.



The decision to race back to the line is defensible, but the context of what happened before it at Fontana really casts a shadow on it.


The crash at Daytona necessitated safety vehicles because there were cars that weren't going to drive away from it. That's a very good reason to throw the caution. At Daytona in 2013 and on Sunday, NASCAR correctly guessed that all cars involved would drive away and the race could end under green. It's a solid strategy and one we can support. Crashes on the last lap when all cars drive away = no caution. Safety vehicles needed = caution.


But here's where you can play devil's advocate for a second. The odds are pretty good that Greg Biffle's car left a piece of debris similar (or bigger) than the debris shown in turn four on the next-to-last caution, right? Spinning race cars with sheetmetal damage usually end up with things flying off of them.


It was easy watch the race and feel the sanctioning body was being, uh, overly cautious, when it came to debris. And then to see a spinning car not cause a caution is understandably jarring. The context didn't help matters at all. But given the rough standards that have been set by NASCAR in its explanations of last-lap cautions, the decision not to throw the yellow is an easily defenisible one when viewed independent of the cautions before it.




A solid, concrete policy of what is and isn't a debris cautions would be great. However is it something that's greater in theory than in reality?


Sometimes you can't identify the danger of things unless you're very near it. At Martinsville, that's not too hard, but at Daytona, are binoculars really going to help?


It's also worth pointing out that there can be differing standards of cautions when it comes to crashes too. Sometimes a car can hit the wall and carry on without a caution while you've got a moment where Marcos Ambrose bobbles off turn four at Vegas, doesn't spin, and the caution flies.


Reality sometimes doesn't allow for perfection. Remember baseball and QuesTec?


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I don't remember the exact requirements to make the chase beyond the top 16, or win plus top 30, but would Kurt possibly still be eligible if he just made the top 16? I don't see his recent pace continuing, and there is always the chance of a bad finish or DNF, but hypothetically could he make it still without a win. Just by looking at his current points he would only need to be consistent to really make up the 40+ point gap. Thanks, - Todd


It's all race winners in the top 30 + the top drivers in points without a win to fill the Chase field with 16.


Last year's Chase field had 13 winners, so it's reasonable to guess approximately three or so drivers will make the Chase via points. The three winless drivers were Kenseth, Ryan Newman and Biffle, who were sixth, eighth and 10th in the standings before the Chase began. Biffle, who was in 10th, had 753 points. That's about 29 points per race. For Busch, he'd need approximately 33 points per race to match Biffle's total from last year.


While he's ahead of that pace through two races, only two drivers (Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr.) had more than 33 points per race in the first 26 races last season. It's not impossible for Busch to get into the Chase via points, but it's not something to realistically think about either.



As of Sunday, we can no longer say we haven't been to Martinsville (as a fan, nonetheless). Will it involve a few $2 hot dogs? Never say never, but also don't say four or more either because that will be incorrect.


We had a great idea for apparel to wear to the track but with temperatures slated to be in the 50s, we may have to rethink that plan. Stay tuned. And no, it didn't involve camo.


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







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News sport : Bob Cousy saves his first Bill Russell comparison in 40 years for Hassan Whiteside

Since retiring from the NBA in 1963 and again after a brief return to action in 1970, Bob Cousy has seen plenty of incredible defensive-minded big men. The 86-year old, who winters in Florida, doesn’t have to hover over NBA League Pass every night to see all manner of rim protectors cabled to him on either national TV, or through local Miami Heat broadcasts.


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Those Heat have had an up and down year, as partially exemplified by the ascension or former journeyman center Hassan Whiteside. And just 41 games into Whiteside’s career with the Heat – that’s half an NBA season – Bob Cousy has seen enough.


In a good way. He's now comparing Whiteside to the legendary Bill Russell. From Bill Doyle at the Telegram & Gazette:



"I have never said this in the 40 years since I retired," Cousy said in a recent telephone interview, "but he is the first big guy, not (Patrick) Ewing, (Hakeem) Olajuwon, Shaq (O'Neal), who reminds me defensively and on the boards of Russell. He runs the floor well, he has excellent timing, he blocks shots and keeps them in play the way Russell did."



What.



"I don't get excited too often about these guys," Cousy said, "but this kid looks to me like a turn-around guy.




"This kid moves to every rebound, he just reacts to everything on the defensive boards and he reacts the way Russell did. He leaves his man and comes over to help. He'll block five or six shots a game and he catches them. The league hasn't caught up with him yet."




Cousy paused for a moment and added, "Maybe I'm overreacting."



And how did Whiteside respond to Cousy possible overreaction?



"That's a great honor," Whiteside said before the Celtics hosted Miami Wednesday. "Everybody knows that Bill Russell is probably one of the best shot blockers that ever lived. That's really a big honor that he thinks of me that way."



Whiteside, suffering from a laceration on his right hand, did not play against the Celtics and will be listed as “questionable” for Friday’s Heat game against the Atlanta Hawks. Like the left-handed Bill Russell, however, Whiteside blocks a goodly chunk of his shots with his left hand.


And, once again, he’s only 41 games into his season with the Heat, he may only finish the campaign with 50 games to his credit and 33 starts due to injury, suspension, and the fact that Miami didn’t even sign the guy until the third week of November, and didn’t play him until Dec. 1.


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After being selected with the 33rd pick in the 2010 NBA draft, the 6-11 center bounced around with the Sacramento Kings, five different D-League clubs, and professional outfits in Lebanon and China prior to finding a home with Miami. Whiteside does have a bit of a problem with his temper, something he’s copped to, but under the guidance of fellow basketball vagabond Michael Beasley the Heat hope to act as the stabilizing force that can turn Whiteside into a perennial All-Star.


Still, Bill Russell?


Blocks weren’t even kept as a statistic during Russell’s Hall of Fame career, and the NBA didn’t even differentiate between offensive and defensive rebounds during his run as the league’s best defender from 1956 through 1969. Still, Boston’s perpetual ranking atop the NBA’s defensive efficiency charts and all manner of black and white game tape show Russell absolutely dominating on that end of the court, acting as a modern NBA player in what was more or less an archaic style of game throughout most of Russell’s career.


As a result of this, and the speed in which the game was played in the 1950s and 1960s (Russell’s 1964 Celtics averaged 125 possessions per game, in comparison to the Golden State’s league-leading 99 possessions per game in 2015), Bill Russell put up some borderline-laughable rebounding numbers in averaging nearly 25 a game one year and 22 per contest on his career. It’s highly conceivable that Russell could have enjoyed some seasons with six or seven blocks per game averages:



How does Whiteside compare?


Not only has the game slowed down, but centers are encouraged to alter shots defensively rather than outright swatting them in the modern era, so as to not leave themselves out of position defensively or on the glass. Whiteside averages “just” 2.5 blocks per game, but he blocks nine percent of the shots taken against his Heat when he is on the floor – that number would lead the league by a wide margin had Whiteside played enough minutes this season, and it would rank him sixth all time in terms of yearly block percentage. Whiteside would fall behind players like Manute Bol and Shawn Bradley on that list, two centers that were asked to swat at just about everything, regardless of defensive positioning.


Whiteside’s defensive positioning allows the Heat to act as an average defensive team when he’s on the court, which doesn’t seem like much until you consider the fact that the Heat’s defensive numbers rank them amongst the worst teams in the NBA on that side of the ball when Whiteside is off the court. Whiteside’s 9.8 rebounds per game wouldn’t even rank him in the NBA’s top this season, but because Whiteside doesn’t lope after every block, the percentage of defensive rebounds and total rebounds he reels in tops the NBA.


“Tops the NBA” if he’d played enough minutes, that is, which is why Bob Cousy admitted to a possible overreaction after spying some of Hassan Whiteside’s 928 total minutes in 2014-15.


For Cousy to laud Whiteside ahead of defensive luminaries such as Hakeem Olajuwon, Dennis Rodman, David Robinson, Nate Thurmond, Kevin Garnett, Dikembe Mutombo or Ben Wallace? Don’t dismiss the Hall of Famer.


It’s a small sample size, and Whiteside has disappointed before, but the 25 year old has the potential to be a destructive force on the defensive end for another decade. His offensive game is limited to put-backs and lobs at this point and he barely makes half his free throws, but Whiteside has nailed 61 percent of his shots with the Heat (in a different era, Russell’s top career mark is 46.7 percent) and is far from a liability on that end in averaging nearly double-figure points in just 22 minutes a contest.


Bob Cousy may be overreacting, and perhaps he should have credited some centers from previous eras prior to 2015, but Bob Cousy also knows a stud when he sees him. If Hassan Whiteside can continue at his current rate, leading the NBA in both block and rebound percentage at unprecedented levels, he will most certainly have earned those comparisons to the great Bill Russell.


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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 : Vikings sign absolute behemoth Polish tackle from German Football League

There's a template for making it to the NFL: Grow up in the United States watching and playing football, move on to play college football to get noticed, get drafted or signed by a pro team.


It's not often you hear about a story like Babatunde Aiyegbusi.


The Minnesota Vikings signed Aieygbusi, an offensive tackle who played in the German Football League last season, seven days after he got his travel visa to the United States. Aiyegbusi is – are you ready? – 6-foot-9 and 351 pounds. He's the fifth Polish-born player in NFL history. Three of the other four are kickers.


Aiyegbusi never played college football. In 2013 he was playing in the Polska Liga Futbolu Amerykanskiego (the Polish American Football League if you need the translation). But when you're the size of an airport hangar and can move, you're going to get noticed if you're playing football on the moon.


According to an ESPN.com story, agent Jeff Griffin heard about Aiyegbusi from Kevin Curtis, a Texas Tech assistant coach who played safety in the NFL and NFL Europe. Curtis got a YouTube video of Aiyegbusi from a former coach in Europe, but Aiyegbusi couldn't play in college because of his professional experience. So Curtis passed it along to Griffin, and that started Aiyegbusi's journey.


I'll give you all the caveats before you watch this highlight video, that the competition is not what he will see in the NFL and he might be overwhelmed by the speed and size of defensive ends at the highest level and on and on ... but man just look at Aiyegbusi absolutely freaking maul his opponents. Just watch and have a laugh at this guy who looks like he was made on "Madden" push around guys half his size:



Ahhhh, you want more Babatunde highlights, don't you? I know I do:



Can Aiyegbusi (the Vikings say his full name is pronounced bah-BUH-tune-day ah-YEG-boo-see if you're curious, but "Babs" for short) make it in the NFL? Who knows. He's obviously raw.But the 27-year-old obviously showed the Vikings enough in a pro day workout at the University of Texas-San Antonio and a private workout in Minnesota this week to sign him.


He came to the United States on a 22-hour flight, arriving in Sn Antonio at 3:50 a.m. on Sunday, according to the Vikings web site and ESPN.com. Judging by his highlight films, the defensive linemen in Poland and Germany are hoping he makes it in the NFL, just so they never have to deal with him again.



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News sport : Tennessee OL arrested after allegedly stealing an Xbox from another student

Tennessee OL Coleman Thomas (utsports.com) Tennessee offensive tackle Coleman Thomas was arrested Wednesday on a felony theft charge after he was accused of stealing an Xbox and three video games from a dorm room.


According to the Knoxville News Sentinel, which obtained the police report, a student reported on March 13 that someone entered his room at Reese Hall on the University of Tennessee’s campus between 10:55 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. and stole his Xbox and games Call of Duty Warfare, NBA2K15 and NHL 15.


Police learned the stolen items had been sold to a local Game Stop store that day for $176. The transaction was traced back to Thomas.


The arrest report noted that the value of the items was $640.


Thomas is scheduled to be arraigned on April 7.


Thomas, a rising sophomore, did participate in the Vols first spring practice on Tuesday. He played in 11 of Tennessee's 13 games last season as a true freshman and started five games at right tackle. He worked out at center during spring practice. The school has not issued a release on what if any disciplinary measures will be taken, but it does practice Thursday afternoon.


For more Tennessee news, visit VolQuest.com.


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 : Danny Manning on one-and-dones: 'We may as well have them on our team'


[Note: this is the latest episode of Yahoo Sports' new Grandstanding podcast, in which Jay Busbee and Kevin Kaduk kick around every topic in sports with the help of notable sports figures. Subscribe to Grandstanding via iTunes right here, or via other podcast feeds right here. Thanks for checking it out!]


The NCAA tournament rolls on, and who better to join us than a guy who's seen it from every angle: player, champion, coach? Everybody welcome Danny Manning, Kansas alum and current Wake Forest head coach.



We start off with a postmortem for Kansas, where Manning won a championship and where his son now plays. (2:00 mark). From there, we talk about the relative strength of the ACC in this year's tournament (6:02 mark) as well as his perspective on Kentucky coach John Calipari's one-and-done style of recruiting (9:58 mark). "If we're going to play against them," he says, "we may as well have them on our team." We close with a look back at "Danny and the Miracles" and the lessons he's learned from coaches in his career (15:12 mark).



After Manning heads off into the Demon Deacon afternoon, we continue on with discussion that ranges from the strength of tourney weekend 1 vs. tourney weekend 2, second-favorite teams, '90s-era caps, losing your sports memory once you get older, and much more.


Thanks for listening to the Grandstanding podcast. Hit us up on Twitter (@kevinkaduk and @jaybusbee) Facebook (Kaduk here, Busbee here) or via the hashtag #grandstanding. See you next ep!


____

Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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News sport : 'Frustrated' or not, LeBron James, Kevin Love and the Cavs seem to fit awful well

The Cleveland Cavaliers destroyed the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night, slicing and dicing the NBA's third-stingiest defense to the tune of 111 points, 30 assists on 43 made field goals and 14 3-pointers, rolling up a 29-point lead on the road against the second-best team in the Western Conference. The dominant, leave-no-doubt win — which Grizzlies talismen Tony Allen deemed an "old fashioned beat down" and Zach Randolph said left him with "a sick feeling in [his] stomach" — improved the Cavs to 28-6 since Jan. 15, the day after their famed bowling trip, which marked their second game with a rejuvenated LeBron James rejoining the new-look starting lineup remade via midseason trades by general manager David Griffin.


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Cleveland's been an absolute wrecking crew over the past two-plus months, owning the NBA's best record, far and away the No. 1 offense in the league (112.4 points per 100 possessions, a full 2.5 points-per-100 ahead of the Golden State Warriors) and the league's second-best efficiency differential over that span (outscoring the opposition by 10.7 points-per-100, second only to the league-best Dubs).


And they haven't rolled up those marks against the league's weaker links. David Blatt's club has a 14-1 record against the West since Jan. 15, knocking off nearly the entire likely Western playoff bracket — the first-place Warriors, second-place Grizzlies, fourth-seeded Portland Trail Blazers, fifth-ranked Los Angeles Clippers (twice), No. 6 San Antonio Spurs, No. 7 Dallas Mavericks and No. 8 Oklahoma City Thunder — over that stretch. (Their lone loss to a Western playoff club in that span: the "you've got to make your free throws" overtime defeat at the hands of the Houston Rockets.)


After another feather-in-their-cap win, you'd have expected the primary storyline to be the Cavs peaking at the right time, playing their best ball of the season as the Atlanta Hawks falter to become, in the eyes of many, the favorite to represent the Eastern Conference in this June's NBA Finals. Instead, the trending topic was a reheated bit of alleged dysfunction, something a bit less exciting, a bit more junior-high-reminiscent, and a bit tougher to pin down. From Frank Isola of the New York Daily News:


Kevin Love's future in Cleveland is more uncertain not only by the day but by the latest social media postings from LeBron James. [...]

Love is viewed by some as an aloof player who alienated teammates in Minnesota and is now doing the same in Cleveland. [...]

several sources close to the situation in Cleveland claim that James has tried to make it work but that he’s frustrated by Love’s inability, and in some ways unwillingness, to get with the program. Remember, James pushed the Cavs to trade Wiggins to the Timberwolves to acquire Love, who could be one-and-done in Cleveland.

Isola's wondering about whether Love — who has a player option in his contract for the 2015-16 season, meaning he can opt out and become an unrestricted free agent this summer, which would seem to be a sensible decision for him to make financially, even if he does ultimately want to return to the Cavaliers — is on the way out in Cleveland seems cut from the same cloth as his prior wondering about whether Kevin Durant could soon be on the way out of Oklahoma City.


The New York Knicks, the team Isola has long and ably covered for the Daily News, stinks on ice, and needs talent, and will have a bunch of money to spend in free agency over the next couple of summers. As was the case with Durant, Love represents a super-starry name who could be available for the Knicks to pursue; ipso facto, here's a story about how things are falling apart in Cleveland, based on Instagram photos and MVP-race opinions, and how it could wind up benefiting the boys in orange and blue through a potential (and, probably, pipe-dream) pairing that's been bandied about for more than a year and a half.


It's possible that whatever weirdness exists in the relationship between James and Love — and there's certainly been enough smoke there over the course of the season to make you at least wonder about the presence of fire — could result in Love donning colors other than wine and gold next season. (All things, after all, are possible through the workings of GM LeBron.) It's hard, though, to see the relationship as so remarkably dysfunctional as to require a drastic shake-up, if only because, for whatever on- and off-court awkwardness there's been, the Cavs continue to crush the opposition when LeBron and Love share the floor. Consider the following:


• The Cavaliers have 11 five-man units that have played at least 50 total minutes this season. Ten of them feature Love alongside LeBron. Nine have outscored the opposition — the lone straggler being the early-season group that put Anderson Varejao and Dion Waiters alongside the new Big Three, long since kiboshed due to Varejao's season-ending injury and Waiters' trade to Oklahoma City — with six outscoring opponents by at least 10 points per 100 possessions and five blowing the competition away by at least 20 points-per-100.


• The most frequently used of those lineups — the Cavs' post-mid-January starting five, with James and Love alongside Kyrie Irving, Timofey Mozgov and J.R. Smith — has absolutely mopped the floor with the league, outscoring opponents by a staggering 20.2 points-per-100 over the space of 412 minutes and 28 appearances, making it the second-best big-minutes five-man group in the league (behind only the surging Spurs' starting five).


Lineups featuring LeBron and Love together have played 1,650 minutes together this season, outscoring opponents by 10.8 points-per-100, a tick above the similarly stellar mark for James-Irving lineups (+10.3 in 1,656 minutes).


• The biggest runs of the Cavaliers' win over Memphis — the late-second-quarter spurt that pushed Cleveland's lead to 13 at the half and the mid-third-quarter surge that put the game out of reach — came with LeBron and Love on the floor together.


That's due, in part, to Love becoming a valuable counter to a defensive strategy that stalled the Cavaliers' offense when they met up with the Hawks a few weeks back:




And it's due, in part, to Love — for all the struggling fits and false starts — finding a real comfortable rhythm working off James and Irving against the Grizzlies' front line, as broken down by Sports Illustrated's Rob Mahoney:


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Love played 32 minutes of seamless, proficient basketball—perhaps his most comfortable game of the season. His offense was encouraging in its variety. Love got the best of Memphis' defenders on cuts, deep post-ups, and pops off screens, avoiding those extended stretches of parked irrelevance on the weak side of the floor. [...]

Love serves a function that borders on irreplaceable. Short of James playing big minutes at power forward (something he is loathe to do), Cleveland has neither floor-spacing bigs nor particularly solvent small-ball options. Love, then, is the most effective complement to the creation of James and Irving, to the point that the Cavs suffer a losing margin (-0.7 points per 100 possessions, 7.5 points worse than otherwise) without him. Even if accepting that Love hasn't lived up to his billing, there's still no question that Cleveland is a better team for having him and learning more and more how to best utilize his skills.

And the Cavaliers most certainly made a concerted effort to utilize Love's skills on Wednesday, getting him involved en route to an efficient 22 points on 10-for-13 shooting, 10 rebounds, four assists, two blocks and a steal in 32 minutes. After the game, Irving and James both emphasized the importance of going to Love early and often, according to Dave McMenamin of ESPN.com:


“When we’re coming out like that, Kev’s being ultra-aggressive and he’s taking open shots and he’s knocking them down, we’re practically unguardable out there,” Irving said. “From a confidence standpoint that we have, just in our offense, I told Kevin in the game, ‘Man, you space out the floor so well for us.’ It’s a big piece that we need going forward. We need him to continue to be aggressive and be himself. I know he puts in a lot of hard work, as we all do, but we trust him making those decisions because me and Bron are going to get downhill, we’re going to be aggressive and Kevin is going to do his thing, as well. So, it’s a team thing. I love it.”

James, when talking about the impact the Cavs’ sometimes-forgotten forward can have, made sure to gesture his eyes across the locker room to where Love was icing his feet after a 10-for-13 shooting night that also featured two blocked shots against the Grizzlies giants.

“It was by design to get Kev involved,” James said. “It’s always by design to get him involved. Tonight, he was very aggressive. One of his first plays he got a dunk. I think that was his first basket, and when you get a dunk, it kind of sets the tone. I think he had three of them tonight. In order for us to do what we need to do at the end of the day and be great, the Big Three got to play at a high level and we did that tonight.”

They've been doing it just about every night for about two and a half months now, leaving the wreckage of opposing defenses in their wake. If this is what frustration and "not fitting in" look like, then man ... what the hell would a happy and seamless Cavaliers team be doing to the competition?


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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 : Dean Smith left $200 to all his ex-players for 'a dinner out'

When former North Carolina basketball player Dante Calabria checked his mailbox earlier this week, he discovered a surprising letter inside.


It included a $200 check with the note "enjoy a dinner out compliments of Coach Dean Smith."



(via Dante Calabria)

Every player Dean Smith coached during 36 years at North Carolina will receive the same gift, according to a picture of the letter Calabria tweeted Thursday. Smith died Feb. 7 at age 83.


The gesture from Smith adds to his reputation as the ultimate player's coach. He was beloved among his former players for always making time to give them fatherly advice or encouragement no matter how many years removed from their playing days they were.


Lee Dedmon, a center for the Tar Heels from 1967-71, told Yahoo Sports last month that Smith negotiated his first pro contract for him and later advised him on how to act when he learned he was to be cut. Dedmon was a merely decent player at North Carolina and a margin pro, yet he could count on at least one hand-written letter from Smith every year before the coach was beset by dementia.


"You knew that you could dial that office number and if you didn't get him that second, it would be just a few minutes and you could talk to him," Dedmon said. "That really helped me and helped a lot of players, I'm sure. Just to know that person was there. Just to know you had another father figure who would listen to what you were saying and give you an honest assessment."


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







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News sport : New nickname alert: How Kings rookie Nik Stauskas became 'Sauce Castillo'

On Tuesday night, away from the prying eyes of most of the NBA world — which is to say, during the broadcast of the matchup between the lottery-bound Sacramento Kings and Philadelphia 76ers — something beautiful happened. Luckily for us, Sixers fan/SPIN contributor Andrew Unterberger was there to witness it and relay it to the rest of us:


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Deadspin went back and pulled the closed-captioned footage from Tuesday night, and sure enough, the Kings were on that Sauce:



The birth of 'Sauce Castillo.' (Screencap via Deadspin)

Being a right-minded individual, I instantly loved the idea of calling Nik Stauskas "Sauce Castillo."


There haven't been very many positive experiences in this rookie season for Stauskas, whom the Sacramento Kings selected out of Michigan with the eighth pick in the 2014 NBA draft to provide an instant jolt of 3-point shooting and playmaking to their largely punchless backcourt, only to see him struggle mightily with his shot and confidence as the team has cycled through coaches, philosophies and rotations in a "circus" of a campaign. Talking about Stauskas hasn't been much fun since the season started. Sauce Castillo could change all that.


I felt like it was important to do what I could to make that happen.



As luck would have it, the closed-captioning gods were with us again during the Kings' Wednesday night win over the Phoenix Suns:



After a second straight night of Sauciness, Castillo chatter picked up. Kings fans, as is their wont, got pretty into the new nickname:




And local media began deploying the new moniker:




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... as did the Kings' radio play-by-play man and in-arena announcer:




... and, in a final show of acceptance, so did the Kings' official Twitter account:



This pleases me.



What remains unclear, though, is whether it pleases Stauskas.




Ultimately, though, that doesn't even really matter. If everyone else is on-board, Stauskas will remain Sauce.




This is a good thing, Nik Stauskas. It might even be the best thing that's happened to you as a pro. Embrace it. Steer into the skid. Drink deeply of the Sauce. It'll set you free.


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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 : Bob Cousy saves his first Bill Russell comparison in 40 years for Hassan Whiteside

Since retiring from the NBA in 1963 and again after a brief return to action in 1970, Bob Cousy has seen plenty of incredible defensive-minded big men. The 86-year old, who winters in Florida, doesn’t have to hover over NBA League Pass every night to see all manner of rim protectors cabled to him on either national TV, or through local Miami Heat broadcasts.


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Those Heat have had an up and down year, as partially exemplified by the ascension or former journeyman center Hassan Whiteside. And just 41 games into Whiteside’s career with the Heat – that’s half an NBA season – Bob Cousy has seen enough.


In a good way. He's now comparing Whiteside to the legendary Bill Russell. From Bill Doyle at the Telegram & Gazette:



"I have never said this in the 40 years since I retired," Cousy said in a recent telephone interview, "but he is the first big guy, not (Patrick) Ewing, (Hakeem) Olajuwon, Shaq (O'Neal), who reminds me defensively and on the boards of Russell. He runs the floor well, he has excellent timing, he blocks shots and keeps them in play the way Russell did."



What.



"I don't get excited too often about these guys," Cousy said, "but this kid looks to me like a turn-around guy.




"This kid moves to every rebound, he just reacts to everything on the defensive boards and he reacts the way Russell did. He leaves his man and comes over to help. He'll block five or six shots a game and he catches them. The league hasn't caught up with him yet."




Cousy paused for a moment and added, "Maybe I'm overreacting."



And how did Whiteside respond to Cousy possible overreaction?



"That's a great honor," Whiteside said before the Celtics hosted Miami Wednesday. "Everybody knows that Bill Russell is probably one of the best shot blockers that ever lived. That's really a big honor that he thinks of me that way."



Whiteside, suffering from a laceration on his right hand, did not play against the Celtics and will be listed as “questionable” for Friday’s Heat game against the Atlanta Hawks. Like the left-handed Bill Russell, however, Whiteside blocks a goodly chunk of his shots with his left hand.


And, once again, he’s only 41 games into his season with the Heat, he may only finish the campaign with 50 games to his credit and 33 starts due to injury, suspension, and the fact that Miami didn’t even sign the guy until the third week of November, and didn’t play him until Dec. 1.


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After being selected with the 33rd pick in the 2010 NBA draft, the 6-11 center bounced around with the Sacramento Kings, five different D-League clubs, and professional outfits in Lebanon and China prior to finding a home with Miami. Whiteside does have a bit of a problem with his temper, something he’s copped to, but under the guidance of fellow basketball vagabond Michael Beasley the Heat hope to act as the stabilizing force that can turn Whiteside into a perennial All-Star.


Still, Bill Russell?


Blocks weren’t even kept as a statistic during Russell’s Hall of Fame career, and the NBA didn’t even differentiate between offensive and defensive rebounds during his run as the league’s best defender from 1956 through 1969. Still, Boston’s perpetual ranking atop the NBA’s defensive efficiency charts and all manner of black and white game tape show Russell absolutely dominating on that end of the court, acting as a modern NBA player in what was more or less an archaic style of game throughout most of Russell’s career.


As a result of this, and the speed in which the game was played in the 1950s and 1960s (Russell’s 1964 Celtics averaged 125 possessions per game, in comparison to the Golden State’s league-leading 99 possessions per game in 2015), Bill Russell put up some borderline-laughable rebounding numbers in averaging nearly 25 a game one year and 22 per contest on his career. It’s highly conceivable that Russell could have enjoyed some seasons with six or seven blocks per game averages:



How does Whiteside compare?


Not only has the game slowed down, but centers are encouraged to alter shots defensively rather than outright swatting them in the modern era, so as to not leave themselves out of position defensively or on the glass. Whiteside averages “just” 2.5 blocks per game, but he blocks nine percent of the shots taken against his Heat when he is on the floor – that number would lead the league by a wide margin had Whiteside played enough minutes this season, and it would rank him sixth all time in terms of yearly block percentage. Whiteside would fall behind players like Manute Bol and Shawn Bradley on that list, two centers that were asked to swat at just about everything, regardless of defensive positioning.


Whiteside’s defensive positioning allows the Heat to act as an average defensive team when he’s on the court, which doesn’t seem like much until you consider the fact that the Heat’s defensive numbers rank them amongst the worst teams in the NBA on that side of the ball when Whiteside is off the court. Whiteside’s 9.8 rebounds per game wouldn’t even rank him in the NBA’s top this season, but because Whiteside doesn’t lope after every block, the percentage of defensive rebounds and total rebounds he reels in tops the NBA.


“Tops the NBA” if he’d played enough minutes, that is, which is why Bob Cousy admitted to a possible overreaction after spying some of Hassan Whiteside’s 928 total minutes in 2014-15.


For Cousy to laud Whiteside ahead of defensive luminaries such as Hakeem Olajuwon, Dennis Rodman, David Robinson, Nate Thurmond, Kevin Garnett, Dikembe Mutombo or Ben Wallace? Don’t dismiss the Hall of Famer.


It’s a small sample size, and Whiteside has disappointed before, but the 25 year old has the potential to be a destructive force on the defensive end for another decade. His offensive game is limited to put-backs and lobs at this point and he barely makes half his free throws, but Whiteside has nailed 61 percent of his shots with the Heat (in a different era, Russell’s top career mark is 46.7 percent) and is far from a liability on that end in averaging nearly double-figure points in just 22 minutes a contest.


Bob Cousy may be overreacting, and perhaps he should have credited some centers from previous eras prior to 2015, but Bob Cousy also knows a stud when he sees him. If Hassan Whiteside can continue at his current rate, leading the NBA in both block and rebound percentage at unprecedented levels, he will most certainly have earned those comparisons to the great Bill Russell.


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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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