News sport : NBA players' union investigating Hawks' arrests, Thabo Sefolosha's broken leg

Thabo Sefolosha of the Atlanta Hawks is seen escorted out of the 10th Precinct of the New York Police Department on April 8, 2015. (REUTERS/Andrew Kelly) The National Basketball Players Association will launch its own independent investigation into the circumstances surrounding Atlanta Hawks forward Thabo Sefolosha suffering a broken right fibula, an injury that will sideline him for the rest of the 2014-15 season, in the course of being arrested alongside teammate Pero Antic following the stabbing of Indiana Pacers forward Chris Copeland outside a New York City nightclub early Wednesday morning.


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A police report claims that New York Police Department officers asked Sefolosha, 30, and Antic, 32, "six times [...] to clear the area [in front of the nightclub 1Oak] to establish a crime scene before they were arrested," and that the players moved a couple of feet away, but did not "clear the area." At that point, according to Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the report states that "Sefolosha then charged officers in an 'aggressive manner.'"


Police officer Johnpaul Giancona wrote: “When I approached the defendant to place him under arrest for the above described conduct, I observed the defendant flail his arms, twist his body, kick his legs, and struggle against me making it difficult for me to place handcuffs on him and complete the arrest. It took four officers to place the defendant in handcuffs.”

In regard to Antic, the report states that as Sefolosha was being arrested by an officer, he “grabbed his left shoulder, making it difficult to assist in the arrest.”

TMZ released a video on Thursday that purportedly shows multiple NYPD officers encircling Sefolosha, with one officer seeming to grab Sefolosha by the back of the neck before the group brings him down to the street:



Officers then appear to handcuff Sefolosha on the ground, lift him back to his feet and walk with him away from Antic, seated on the sidewalk, surrounded by officers. He, too, gets handcuffed and brought to his feet before walking away. As VICE Sports' Dan O'Sullivan notes, the interaction between Sefolosha, Antic and the police seems to happen "at the intersection of West 17th Street and 10th Avenue," more than 100 feet from 1OAK, rather than the "couple of feet" that the police report indicated the players first moved.


Sefolosha and Antic were charged with three misdemeanors, including "including obstructing governmental administration." After being released from custody after arraignment pending a June 16 court date, the players issued a statement saying they planned to contest the charges. Their attorney, Alex Spiro, said they "should not have been arrested" and that he and his clients "fully expect the case to be dismissed."


Sefolosha appeared to be wearing some sort of padding or sleeve on his right ankle as he walked with "a pronounced limp as he was escorted to a police van to be transported for arraignment," according to Vivlamore, leading the Hawks to evaluate his right leg after his release. The prognosis of a fracture, along with ligament damage, came down Thursday, officially ruling the nine-year veteran defensive stopper out for not only the final four games of the regular season, but also the entire 2015 postseason. Sefolosha's absence represents a serious blow for a Hawks team that tops the Eastern Conference with a 59-19 record and has designs on competing for an NBA championship this June.


The police report and the video obtained by TMZ seeming to offer, if not conflicting, then at least not totally harmonious versions of the events. With plenty of unanswered questions remaining surrounding how Sefolosha sustained his injuries, the union representing NBA players has begun to make inquiries as to what exactly transpired out on the sidewalk on Wednesday morning, according to Kevin Arnovitz of ESPN.com:


"The players' union is concerned about the circumstances of Thabo Sefolosha and Pero Antic's arrest and is doing its own investigation of the situation," NBPA spokeswoman Tara Greco said. "The union was fully engaged in supporting all three players in court and in the precinct this week, and will continue to stay engaged as each situation evolves."

The police are facing new questions about their tactics during the incident, as Sefolosha suffered a season-ending broken fibula, which went untreated overnight and into Wednesday as Sefolosha languished in custody. [...]

Sources close to the situation say the players' association has been very active, as well. Sources say that representatives from the players' association appeared Thursday at the 10th Precinct in Manhattan with several inquiries into the incident. [...]

Privately, sources say, Hawks officials also have begun to raise questions about the specific circumstances that led to Sefolosha being held by police for several hours with a broken fibula.

Back with the team on Friday, Antic spoke with the media for the first time since the arrest, saying that he and Sefolosha were not trying to prevent bystanders from taking pictures of Copeland after the stabbing (“We didn’t have anything to do with what happened with that. We weren’t together [...] Whatever happened, happened way before"). He also reiterated that neither he nor Sefolosha did anything untoward in the incident, according to Vivlamore:


“The only thing I can say is we feel bad for the bad publicity that we brought to the Hawks organization, the Hawks family, not by our fault,” Antic said. “I just want to say I am going to be supportive of Thabo, my teammates and just think about the basketball right now and the good things we can do.” [...]

Antic was asked directly whether he and Sefolosha were wrongly arrested.

“The video speaks for itself,” he said. “It is a legal matter. We have great people who are great doing their job. We are going to let them do their job. We are going to try to do our job and do what we can because we have big goals for this season.

“I will say it’s a pure example of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. People know Thabo for so many years of being in the league. Thabo is one of the greatest guys. A few of the reporters here know me. I don’t have anything (in my past) so it is just a pure example, like I said, of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Prior to ascending to the NBPA's top position, union executive director Michele Roberts began her career as a public defender in Washington, D.C., before becoming a decorated trial lawyer, and she has been nothing if not active and vocal in supporting her constituency. Here's hoping that brand of advocacy can help shed some light on what transpired in the time before that bystander's camera started rolling, and in the hours between the players' arrest and their Wednesday morning perp walk.


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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 : Georgia lineman tweets photo of crab legs to Jameis Winston

It’s been almost a year since former Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston was cited for stealing crab legs from a Publix, but people haven't forgotten.


So when Georgia offensive lineman Brandon Kublanow, a starter at guard, saw that the team was being served crab legs for lunch on Friday, he couldn’t resist firing off this tweet.



Winston, who stole $32 worth of crab legs and crawfish, was suspended briefly from the FSU baseball team but was reinstated after completing community service and paying for the food.


Plenty of jokes were made at Winston’s expense after the incident, but now that he’s on the verge of being a first round pick in the NFL draft, he shouldn’t have a problem paying for seafood in the future.


For more Georgia news, visit UGASports.com.


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News sport : Fan wins Kings playoff tickets, ends up with season tickets after LA loss

Mercury Insurance ran a promotion in Southern California where Los Angeles Kings fans could win tickets to every 2015 home playoff game if they applied for a free auto insurance quote. The Kings have won two Cups in three years, and made the playoffs in the last five seasons. No big deal.


Only problem is, no one really expected the Kings to actually miss the playoffs. From Rich Hammond of The Orange County Register:



"We are, of course, professionals, and we plan for every contingency but that wasn’t one of them," Shane Smith, a marketing executive who helped run the contest, said Friday. "We had a backup plan. We just never seriously thought that we’d need to use it."



Last Saturday, a fan won her tickets, but little did any one reasonably expect that five days later, her they would be useless pieces of paper.


However, the Kings loss might be this fan's gain. Again, from Hammond:



Instead of playoff tickets, Russell will receive a pair of upper-bowl season tickets for the 2015-16 Kings season ... According to Mercury’s official contest rules, those season tickets are worth $1,397.50, while the maximum value for playoff tickets would have been $3,326. That assumed, though, that the Kings would play a maximum of 16 home playoff games, which was highly unlikely.



Not bad, eh?


Watching the playoffs live is a thrill, no doubt, but receiving a full slate of season tickets for free to watch a team like the Kings, in an expensive arena like Staples Center? That's quite the gain.


For all the conspiracy theorist out there, one conclusion to take away from this incident: playoff ticket drives and/or contests for a team on the bubble will inevitably jinx them. /removes tinfoil hat.


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Mbalula pays tribute to Kalamazoo

Steve Kalamazoo Mokone will leave a great legacy for SA football according to minister of sport and recreation Fikile Mbalula.


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Johannesburg - Steve Kalamazoo Mokone will leave a great legacy for South African football according to minister of sport and recreation Fikile Mbalula.


The ashes of Mokone, one of the greatest footballers South Africa has ever produced, returned to South Africa on Friday evening. Mokone died on March 20 in Baltimore in the United States, aged 82, and in accordance with his wishes his ashes will be scattered at a football stadium in South Africa.


“We respect his wishes, to not mourn his life but to educate a generation,” said Mbalula at OR Tambo international where the the widow of Mokone, Louise, was in attendance along with SA Football Association president Danny Jordaan.


“He said he was prepared to rest in peace with the knowledge future generations could learn from his life. He left us a great legacy.”


Mokone, born in 1932, moved from Durban Bush Bucks to Coventry City in 1955, and became the first black South African to play in Europe.


“Even in trying times he stood the test of time to triumph over adversity,” said Mbalula. “We are unashamedly in the presence of greatness, he opened the way for South Africa and Africa for players to go abroad.”


A stint at Heracles Almelo in the Dutch third division followed, where he had instant success and later in the 1990s a street in Amsterdam was named Kalamazoo in tribute to his exploits. Later he would join illustrious clubs Barcelona, Marseille, Dynamo Kiev, Torino and Cardiff City.


Jordaan paid tribute to the efforts of Mokone in the fight against apartheid. “The nation is welcoming home a long lost son,” said Jordaan. “The obstacles at the time did not stop him chasing his dream in football.”


Jordaan said Mokone was a key figure in opposition to the South African government through his sporting exploits. “Hendrik Verwoerd said in 1953 there is no place for a Bantu in the European community. Kalamazoo dismissed that notion, he debunked that pillar of apartheid.”


Jordaan said he was satisfied Mokone’s story would be told for future generations. “Those who played in the 1950s are forgotten heroes, nobody really writes about them. He was a hidden hero both on and off the field, also with his contribution to the fight against apartheid.” Louise thanked Safa and the minister for help to fulfill her husband’s last wishes.


“Thank you so much for this opportunity. My husband loved soccer, that was more important than eating,” she said. “I can assure you he is smiling from wherever he is. I’m so pleased I could follow his wishes to return to the land of his birth.”


ANA






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News sport : Mark O'Meara turns back the clock, turns up the heat

Tiger Woods, left, hugs, Mark O'Meara after their practice round for the Masters golf tournament Monday, April 6, 2015, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum) AUGUSTA, Ga. - It's been a good couple of days for Mark O'Meara, Masters champion and soon-to-be Golf Hall of Fame inductee.


O'Meara is so far under the radar that he only showed up in photos this year at the Masters while in the company of Tiger Woods. There's a reason for that: O'Meara hasn't made a cut at Augusta in a decade. He's played every year here with the exception of 2012, but simply didn't come through.


O'Meara is another of those guys who got hot once, exactly at the right time. He has only one top-3 finish and two top-5 finishes, his best being that 1998 win. But in Augusta, one green jacket grants you immortality.


This week, he finished Thursday at 1-over, leaving him in decent position but nothing spectacular. However, he crafted a fine round, birdieing 5 and 6 early, then 12 and 15 late. He finished out the round at three-under, good enough for a tie for fifth at the time he walked off 18. Sure, Jordan Spieth is about three miles ahead of him, but so what? For the first time in a decade, Mo has to free up a weekend to play at Augusta.


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News sport : Want to play Michigan State? Dantonio says team is 'game ready'

There's more than two weeks to go until Michigan State's spring game and coach Mark Dantonio already thinks his Spartans are ready for a game.


It's a bold proclamation, especially for a team awaiting its first scrimmage of the spring. We're more likely to hear statements similar to Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher's from earlier in the week than coaches ready for fall to begin. Dantonio credits the return of over half his team's starters from 2014.


"I know this, that we could go out and play a game tomorrow," Dantonio said via SpartanMag.com. "We're going to make mistakes, but we are game ready because we practice enough, we do enough things from a live stand point, we tackle enough. We do the things that we need to do. When we hit the field we are moving, and we have a lot of guys with experience back."


Two of the starting positions MSU needs to fill are at in the defensive backfield. Cornerback Trae Waynes, expected to be an early-round pick in the NFL draft, and safety Kurtis Drummond, a first-team All-American in 2014, are both gone.


However, Dantonio has liked what he's seen from the defensive backfield so far. It's got to be a nice confidence boost given that Michigan State is in what's perhaps the biggest game of the first few weeks. Oregon travels to Michigan State on September 12. In 2014, the Spartans lost 46-27 on the road to the Ducks.


"Jermaine Edmonson is playing very well, [Demetrious] Cox bounces out there [to cornerback]," Dantonio said. "Arjen [Colquhoun] has been solid. Both of those guys are having a good spring. Vayante Copeland is a guy that is playing very solid. He's got to get his weight down, and it's coming. But I think he has great things in store for him as a defensive back here at Michigan State. He's a great tackler, he has great ball skills. He's firm at the point of attack. He's sudden and explosive."


For more Michigan State news, visit SpartanMag.com.


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







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News sport : Former Michigan DE Frank Clark reaches plea deal

Michigan defensive end Frank Clark (57) celebrates with fans after Michigan defeated Northwestern 10-9 in an NCAA college football game in Evanston, Ill., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) Five months after being arrested for domestic violence, former Michigan defensive end Frank Clark has reached a plea deal following a pretrial hearing on Thursday.


According to the Detroit Free Press, Clark’s misdemeanor domestic violence charged was dropped to disorderly conduct and his assault charges were dismissed. Officially, Clark accepted a charge of “persistent disorderly conduct,” which is a fourth-degree misdemeanor in Ohio, and was ordered to pay a fine and court costs.


The charges stemmed from an alleged November incident at a hotel in Sandusky, Ohio, that involved Clark and his girlfriend. Witnesses told police that Clark hit the woman and a responding officer said that she had “a large welt on the side of her cheek” and “marks on her neck.”


Clark has maintained that he did not hit her.


Clark was arrested that night, put in jail and was released on bond a few days later. Former Michigan head coach Brady Hoke dismissed Clark from the team a day after his arrest.


In addition to pleading guilty to disorderly conduct, Clark was sentenced to three days in jail but was given credit for time already served. He was also ordered to undergo counseling, which he has already completed.


Clark is a pro prospect and participated in the NFL combine in February. According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the 6-foot-2, 270-pound Clark “has had eight visits with NFL teams and other private workouts, even with charges against him pending.”


In his four seasons at Michigan, Clark registered 116 tackles, 35 tackles for loss and 11 sacks.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


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News sport : Former UAB players remember past and hope to spark future with spring game

Josh Evans gets emotional when he talks about the role UAB football played in his life.


As one of the first players to join the program when it officially began in 1991 and the first UAB player to play in the NFL, Evans said the opportunity UAB gave him saved him from a life that would have either resulted in jail or an early grave.


“It was a couple of us and we could either be dead or in jail,” Evans told Yahoo Sports. “It was just the type of environment we were living in. And my coach, he gave us an opportunity. He got us to buy into this program. Just the environment we were in at the time. For me, I know that I’d be in jail or hell. For me, UAB really saved my life.”


Evans, who played 10 years in the NFL as a defensive tackle, is one of several formers players who will return to Legion Field in Birmingham this weekend for a spring game that both celebrates the football program’s past and encourages a future. UAB football was disbanded in December and while efforts are underway to get the program reinstated, this weekend’s flag football game might be the last organized contest UAB plays.


“A lot of the former students and alumni asked to put it together,” Justin Craft, a former player and head of the UAB Football Foundation, told Yahoo Sports. “It sounds like their purpose was just to get former players together since we‘re not having a spring game this year due to the cancelation of our football program, which obviously, we’re working hard to get back. It was just to get everyone together, reunite the players and give the alumni and students something to rally around and something to remember.”


More than 120 former UAB players are expected to participate on Saturday, including Carolina Panthers teammates Joe Webb and Darrin Reaves. The hope is to raise awareness about the program and show that despite the university’s decision to end it, the support is still there.


“I was devastated,” Evans said of hearing the news the program would be disbanded. “That program actually saved my life. It saved so many lives. So many guys benefitted from the program. I always talk about my senior class. We went on to produce mayors, lawyers and doctors. I mean, we had one of the more successful senior classes from ’91 to ’95. It just produced good men and it gave all of us an opportunity. And it was just devastating to see other kids won’t get that opportunity.”


UAB has never been known for its on-field success. It’s had just three winning seasons since becoming a Division I-A member in 1996 and has been to just one bowl game — a 59-40 loss to Hawaii in the 2004 Hawaii Bowl. However, the 2014 season was one of the most encouraging since that 2004 season. The Blazers finished 6-6, their first bowl eligibility in 10 years, and they were averaging nearly 22,000 people per game, which was more than double the attendance from the previous season. By all accounts, UAB was actually trending in a positive direction and not the negative one university president Ray Watts and the Alabama Board of Trustees tried to portray when they announced the end of the program in December.


Watts said in a press conference that a feasibility study showed that it cost more to run the football program than it was producing. The school also shut down the women’s rifle and bowling programs.


"As we look at the evolving landscape of NCAA football, we see expenses only continuing to increase,” Watts said in a statement in December. “When considering a model that best protects the financial future and prominence of the Athletic Department, football is simply not sustainable."


However, in the past month, outlets such as AL.com have uncovered that ending UAB football was actually decided before the 2014 season was a few games old and that the motives behind the decision may have stemmed from old grudges by members of the Board of Trustees.


No matter what success the football program was having on the field and the increased attention and support off it, football never stood a chance, which was most disheartening to people like Craft, a lawyer who has dedicated his efforts to bringing the program back.


“You know, the way that it happened, it was extremely difficult,” Craft said. “No one was given a chance to help. We really felt we were finally on solid ground with great leadership from (coach) Bill Clark. Our attendance was up over 100 percent. Donations were up, we were bowl eligible and it was just such a different vibe around the program. Kind of like what we had in the early years, in the late 90s and early 2000s when we were beating programs like TCU and Baylor and Mississippi State. It was a great vibe and it felt like we were turning a corner. And then all of a sudden out of the blue to have our president pull the plug and now to find out that it was premeditated and done without any input from the alumni or the business community was really disheartening.”


The UAB Football Foundation has helped create a task force, an idea that was actually sparked before the official disbanding announcement, to see exactly how much it would cost to bring back and ultimately sustain UAB football. A website called freeUAB.com was created to educate people about the process that led to the disbandment of the program and ways to help reinstate it. The UAB National Alumni Society has asked its members to attend a special meeting in May that will discuss releasing a statement calling for the immediate reinstatement of football, rifle and bowling.


Players like recently departed kicker Ty Long said he and his teammates who are working toward professional careers are constantly asked by NFL scouts about what happened at UAB. Long said he’s eager to share the story and hopes that the Blazers can continue to be represented in the NFL.


“For us guys trying for the next level, it’s hard for us,” Long told Yahoo Sports. “Everywhere we go, the scouts we talk to, one of the first questions is, ‘What happened?’ In some ways it’s always on our minds because we’re always asked about it. All we’re trying to do is keep playing as long as we can to keep the Blazers in the NFL. If we’re still playing, we’re still on people’s minds. That’s what we’re trying to do. Let no one forget about us.”


Former players know that one game on a spring Saturday isn’t going to change the perception of UAB football, but Craft hopes keeping it in the spotlight will continue to help the cause. He’s confident that with the support the program is already receiving, he and others can make a case to bring UAB football back for 2016.


As for Evans, he hopes this game becomes a mainstay and a way to give back to a program that gave him so much.


“I think we should do this every year,” Evans said. “We have no history at UAB because of everything that’s taken place. And we need to establish a history for ourselves as far as these games and start doing things through our alumni association. We need to get the ball rolling ourselves if we want football back and really get behind it.”


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News sport : Kasey Kahne credits Keith Rodden with early season success

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Kasey Kahne has little hesitation when asked what's sparked his team's improved pace in 2015.


"(Crew chief) Keith Rodden and just how he's kind of prepared the cars, got the cars back to where they need to be ... we're excited to go back to the race track," Kahne told Yahoo Sports on Thursday during a promotional appearance.


"I think Keith has so much to do with why our performance is better this year."


Rodden, a former lead engineer on the No. 5 car, returned to the team in 2015 to replace Kahne's longtime crew chief Kenny Francis atop the pit box. Rodden, who had also worked with Kahne before the two joined Hendrick, left the team before the 2014 season and became the crew chief for Jamie McMurray.


In 2013, Kahne won two races, finished 12th in the points standings and had an average starting position of 11.6. Last season, Kahne's first win came at Atlanta in August and snuck him into the Chase. However, he finished 15th in points and his average start dropped all the way to 17.2.


With Rodden back at Hendrick Motorsports, Kahne is the top-ranked Hendrick driver in the standings through six races and is fifth in points. His average start is back to just outside the top 10 and his average finish of 12.0, if it holds up through 30 more arduous races, would be the best of his career.


Kahne said he had a feeling his cars would be faster in 2015 in the offseason but wasn't sure until he got to Las Vegas.


"We had a great offseason as far as a team, all of us together. But until I got to Las Vegas, not real sure," Kahne said. "And then in Vegas we were easily the second-best car and from that point on I knew that we’ll have a really strong season."


It was quite a contrast from a year ago.


"I was scared in January of last year when we tested at Nashville and were four tenths off," Kahne said. "And then we went to the first track and were four tenths off and everything made sense. That was our speed and that was what we were bringing to the track and it was — I knew it right away and we never really got rid of that until later in the season. We got better, but we still didn’t get where we needed to be."


Though the Vegas race is not one of Kahne's two top-10 finishes in 2015. He ran up front for most of the race until he was involved in an incident with Carl Edwards on lap 194. Edwards ran out of real estate and shoved Kahne into the wall off turn four. Kahne then sent Edwards spinning the next lap.


Kahne battled back to finish 17th, his worst finish of the season.


The increased speed also brings renewed optimism. As the summer races ticked off last year, Kahne's chances of making the Chase started to teeter before that Atlanta win. Now, Kahne's confident a win isn't too far away.


"I know it’s right there," he said. "I know that we’re close and I’ve been looking forward to Texas for two weeks so maybe it will be this weekend. We’re definitely getting closer each week and we feel better about what we're bringing to the track.


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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 : Brewers minor-league team sets off on 55-game road trip

Johnny Cash has got nothing on the Biloxi Shuckers. The Double-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brwers is about to embark on a 55-game road trip through the Southern League, and by the end of it each of the players will be able to confidently say “I’ve Been Everywhere.”


Road trips are a part of life in the minor leagues but the first-year team is being forced to take to the road for 60 days because their brand new stadium is not done being built. Even the proposed June 6 home opener is not a sure thing.



The franchise moved from Huntsville to Biloxi in the offseason, lured partly by the promise of a $36 million stadium. It is expected to a beautiful facility -- eventually.


Due to various issues, including construction delays, it probably won't be ready for two more months.


In the meantime, there will be a lot of bus rides, hotels and trips to Applebee's. The expected toll: 60 straight nights in a hotel, 55 games, nine different cities and some frayed nerves.



The trip through the Southeast reads like the lyrics to the famous Cash song. Over the course of the trip the Shuckers will go to Pensacola, Mobile, Jacksonville, Pensacola, Huntsville, Jackson, Miss., Jackson, Tenn., Huntsville, Chattanooga, and Birmingham.


The trip dwarfs the longest known modern-day major league road trips. Both the 1991 Montreal Expos and 1992 Houston Astros went on 26-game road swings. The Expos took off because a beam collapsed at Olympic Stadium, and the Astros because the Astrodome was hosting the Republican National Convention. In 1899 the Cleveland Spiders went on a 50-game road trip, part of a season in which they set a major-league futility record by going 20-134, including 101 road losses. The Spiders were contracted out of the National League the next year.


More recently, the 2012 Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees played their entire 144-game schedule away from home. The New York Yankees’ Triple-A affiliate was forced to leave home due to stadium renovations but played 37 “home games” in Rochester, NY.


The Shuckers started the road trip with a 4-0 win in Pensacola on Thursday night.



You can catch a glimpse of the stadium construction in Biloxi with the live web cam on their website. Spoiler alert: June 6 seems like an ambitious date for the home opener. Good luck, Shuckers.


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News sport : Daily Dime: Stacking Cubs at Coors, trusting Taijuan Walker on the road

By now you should all know the Daily Dime drill. We examine daily prices for ten players, looking for bargains and busts. Let's get to work...


[Yahoo Sports Fantasy Baseball: Sign up and join a league today!]


Eight to play


Dexter Fowler, OF, at Col (Matzek), $3100 at FanDuel: Fowler is a career .299/.391/.433 hitter against left-handed pitching, and Rockies starter Tyler Matzek shouldn't scare anyone away. Matzek has been dominant against LHBs, but righty hitters have hammered him (.306/.374/.474 in 386 PAs). I'm using a multi-Cub formation in multiple lineups on Friday, featuring Fowler and Jorge Soler ($3700).


Taijuan Walker, SP, at Oak (Pomeranz), $7400: After a brilliant spring (27.0 IP, 2 ER, 26 Ks), Walker takes his first turn of the regular season in a friendly road park. The A's have hit well enough to open the year, but they don't field the game's most intimidating lineup. Walker is just the ninth-most expensive pitcher on Friday's slate, but he's a serious talent.


Wilson Ramos, C, at Phi (Williams), $3100: With Jerome Williams on the hill on Friday, it feels like a decent time to roster a batch of Nats. Ramos sat against Matt Harvey on Thursday afternoon, so he should be good to go in this one. It's always nice to find a catcher who does his hitting in the middle of the lineup.


Drew Stubbs, OF, vs. Chc (Wood), $3100: Cubs starter Travis Wood can't really be trusted at sea level, so he definitely can't be trusted at altitude. I'm assuming Stubbs will draw the start in this one; he's 5-for-12 in his career against the lefty Wood. (Not a meaningful sample, still a nice talking point.)


Joe Mauer, 1B, at CWS (Noesi), $3200: OK, so the Twins are off to a hilariously poor start, having scored only a single run over three games. But when Hector Noesi takes the hill, I'm always going to roster someone who gets to face him. That's just one of my guiding principles.


Jose Reyes, SS, at Bal (Norris), $3700: Fun fact about Reyes' history against O's starter Bud Norris: In 30 career plate appearances against the righty, Reyes has never struck out. Not once. He's 10-for-28 against Bud, for what it's worth.


C.J. Cron, 1B, vs. KC (Vargas), $2500: Cron is hitless in six at-bats to start the season, sure, but his history against the left-handed Vargas is tremendous, if limited (2-for-5, 2 HR, 2 BB). And yup, that's another way-too-small sample. If you need an extra-cheap option to sketch in a lineup, consider Cron, assuming he plays.


Pablo Sandoval, 3B, at NYY (Eovaldi), $3000: Panda has absolutely owned Eovaldi (8-for-11, 4 XBHs), and I'm expecting plenty of stats on both sides in this one. Sandoval is a heart-of-the-order hitter in a terrific lineup, and the price is right.


A pair to fear


Chase Utley, 2B, vs. Was (Gonzalez), $3400: This could be any Phillies regular, really, with the possible exception of Darin Ruf ($2400), if he plays. Philadelphia is facing Friday's most expensive pitcher, Gio Gonzalez ($9400); Utley has had almost no success against the Washington lefty (3-for-17, all singles).


Wilmer Flores, SS, at Atl (Stults), $2500: It seems as if a soft-tossing lefty should be a decent matchup for Flores, but he's done nearly all his damage against RHPs to this point in his career. When facing southpaws, Flores is just 13-for-91 with no homers and 24 Ks (0-for-2 vs. Stults). Stay away.






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News sport : Augusta National is trademarking "Tradition unlike any other"

When Jim Nantz calls the Masters a "tradition unlike any other," he's now using a phrase trademarked by Augusta National Golf Club.


The home of the Masters filed in September for a pair of trademarks related to the phrase, according to an ESPN.com report. Nantz is believed to have concocted the phrase in the run-up to his first Masters in 1986. One of the filings claims the club first used it in 1989.


Not only has the club filed a trademark for the phrase, but also the use case of putting the phrase on merchandise. Augusta National is selling Masters shirts this year printed with that phrase.


You might be wondering why Nantz has never trademarked the phrase himself. After all, everyone has adopted it; he could make millions like ring announcer Michael Buffer has with "Let's get ready to rumble." Not so fast. As part of the contracts arranged between Augusta National and its broadcast partners for the Masters, Augusta National retains ownership of the broadcasts and what's said on the air. In other words, it owns the rights to whatever Nantz -- or any other Masters broadcaster -- says during the tournament.


A club official said Nantz would not be prohibited from using the phrase. However, it's unclear what permission Nantz would have to use it during speaking engagements and other public appearances.




Ryan Ballengee is a Yahoo Sports contributor. Find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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News sport : Could Minnesota's top receiving threat in 2015 be Jeff Jones?

When Minnesota landed Jeff Jones, the top recruit in the state of Minnesota in the class of 2014, it was easy to see how he would become the focal point of the Gophers' offense in the near future.


However, the four-star running back may not be the heir apparent to David Cobb at running back in 2015. Instead, he may be Minnesota's top receiver.


Jones has been spending time at wide receiver during spring practice and has apparently looked like a natural in the slot. Coach Jerry Kill said he knew Jones had the ability to transition to wide receiver while recruiting him.


“I spend a lot of time when we’re recruiting people watching them play basketball games because you can tell if they’re athletic and those kinds of things,” Kill said via the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.


While Cobb and his 1,600+ rushing yards in 2014 are off to the NFL, don't expect Minnesota's offense to change too much from its run-heavy attack in 2015. However, if Jones can present a mismatch in the slot, he'll be a receiving option that, quite frankly, the Gophers didn't have in 2014.


Tight end Maxx Williams was the team's leading receiver in 2014. He's off to the NFL as well and had 36 catches for 569 yards and eight touchdowns. No Gophers wide receiver had more than 18 catches or two touchdowns.


Just think of how effective Minnesota's rushing game could be with a big-time receiving threat.


“He’s looking real good, and I think all the [defensive] backs agree,” quarterback Mitch Leidner said. “He runs some of the best routes on the team, and he’s relatively raw. He catches the ball real well.”


For more Minnesota news, visit GopherIllustrated.com.


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







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News sport : Closing Time: Miguel Castro takes the ninth, Trevor Bauer piles up Ks

Brett Cecil blew a save opportunity in a loss to the Yankees on Wednesday, delivering a messy stat line along the way: 0.1 IP, H, BB, K, WP.


[Yahoo Sports Fantasy Baseball: Sign up and join a league today!]


On Thursday, Toronto's closer became an ex-closer:



Apparently John Gibbons maintains a zero-tolerance policy regarding the blowing of saves, which of course is his prerogative. Seems harsh, but our role here is merely to react to various moves, not judge them. Cecil was dinged this spring (shoulder) and his velocity has dipped, so the flip isn't completely out of nowhere.


The advice here is simple enough: Go add Miguel Castro. Everything else can wait. Go. Do it.


Done? Great.


Castro currently owns the ninth for the Jays. He's a hard-throwing 20-year-old coming off an excellent spring, and he was terrific in the low minors last year (2.69 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, 8.7 K/9). He definitely has the traditional closing arsenal, with the 96-98 mph heat included. He earned an easy save on Thursday night in New York, tossing a 1-2-3 inning (Drew-Gregorius-Ellsbury) while protecting a three-run lead. After reaching the backstop with an errant slider, Castro was pretty much all fastballs.


Cecil actually set up Castro on Thursday, striking out two in a relatively quiet eighth. (Chris Young drew a two-out walk, then advanced on a wild pitch.) It sure seems weird that Toronto doesn't trust Cecil in ninth-inning save situations, yet he's approved to face an opponent's 4-5-6 hitters with a slim lead in the eighth. But, again, we're not here to judge. For the moment, Cecil is out of our fantasy plans, except in deep formats where you need to hold next-men-up.


It feels like we've been hyping and un-hyping and re-hyping Trevor Bauer for the better part of a decade, but he's actually still only 24 years old. On Thursday afternoon, Bauer spun 6.0 no-hit innings against the Astros, piling up 11 Ks. Highlights here .


Not a bad call, Pianowski.


Trevor Bauer, missing bats. (Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images) Terry Francona understandably lifted Bauer after the sixth with the no-hitter still in play, because the kid was headed for an obscene pitch-count. He issued five walks on Thursday, throwing just 65 strikes on 111 pitches. It may not have been the most efficient six innings you'll ever see, but it was impressive nonetheless.


If I had shares of Bauer, I'd probably try to cash-in right now, taking his strong outing (and excellent spring) to the trade market. I wouldn't simply give him away, mind you — this is clearly a talented young starter, figuring things out. But this time of year, we have plenty of fantasy managers with us who routinely overreact to huge single-game performances. Those folks generally aren't paying attention later in the season. If you can extract an ace-level price for Bauer today, do it.


A big part of the story for Trevor on Thursday, we should note, was the K-prone opposing lineup. Houston hitters fanned 16 times, raising the team total to 36 through just three games. This is what you get with Gattis, Carter, Springer and Co. If you're streaming in the days ahead, the Astros are scheduled to face Derek Holland, Yovani Gallardo and Colby Lewis over the weekend.


Please note the productive line delivered by Detroit lead-off man Anthony Gose: 3-for-5, 3 R, double, SB. He earned his at-bats with a strong spring, and he's off to a respectable start in April. (True, he's making noise against guys like Ricky Nolasco and Kyle Gibson, but there are no degree-of-difficulty points in fantasy.)


Nobody seems to own Mitch Moreland in Yahoo leagues, but he's got plenty of power and he'll be an almost-everyday presence in the Rangers lineup. Moreland homered off spring hero Kendall Graveman on Wednesday, finishing with three RBIs. He has an unobstructed path to playing time this season, which should lead to 25-or-so home runs.


Matt Harvey made most Nats look silly on Thursday, including lead-off hitter Michael Taylor. But Taylor still managed to finish his afternoon with two hits in five plate appearances, driving in two runs. The kid is now 4-for-13, playing reasonably well in relief of Denard Span (abdomen). Taylor should prove useful as a short-term play. He slashed .304/.390/.526 in the high minors last year, clearing the fence 23 times and swiping 37 bags.






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News sport : Michael Bennett on new Seahawks teammate Jimmy Graham: still overrated

Seattle Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett appeared on 710 ESPN Seattle’s “Justin and Gee” show on Thursday to address the trade rumors that he reportedly made to the team last month.


Bennett denied the rumors, but it turns out that he actually had something more interesting to say later in the interview. When asked about the Seahawks’ biggest acquisition this offseason, tight end Jimmy Graham, Bennett said he hasn’t changed his view of the former New Orleans Saints rival.


See, Bennett and Graham have some history, with Bennett calling Graham “soft” and “overrated” and saying that he didn’t like Graham “as a person or as a player.”



The fact that they are not teammates apparently has not changed much in Bennett’s mind.



"I still feel the same way. I mean, just because he's on my team I don't stop feeling that way," Bennett said.



Guess Bennett won’t be taking Graham around to his favorite oyster spots in town anytime soon.


The outspoken Bennett did say he’d try to soften his stance a bit because the two players would be sharing a locker room this season.



"Obviously, I'm going to be a better teammate to him because he's on my team. I can't do the things I was doing to him when we were playing him," Bennett said. "When he comes to our team, he's a part of our team. We have a different philosophy than they have with the Saints so the things that he was expected to do [with] the Saints are going to be different when he comes here. Obviously, we're a running team, so he's going to have to block and do all those things.




"I don't feel as harsh as I did at the time because he's my teammate now, but at the time he was on the opposite team, a team that we played that was pretty good and we battled with them a couple times, and I didn't really like that team."



Bennett and Graham are going to have to make it work, and though the fact they won't be sharing a huddle or a meeting room all that often will help keep a little distance between them, there's no doubt that they'll be locking horns at some point on the field during training camp practices.


And that's where the genesis of Bennett's overrated talk — that Graham isn't a great blocker for the position — might be proven or disproven. Head coach Pete Carroll likes to ride the razor's edge with his team, and it mostly has worked so far.


Right now, you'd have to think the majority of the Seahawks are on Bennett's side until further notice. Other teammates, including Bruce Irvin, have spoken out about Graham in the past, so the new tight end will have to do his best to endear himself to his fellow players there.


This will be a small but interesting test to his chemistry experiment in Seattle. Is there enough room in the petri dish for both players? The Seahawks are counting on it, having traded their starting center and first-round pick to land Graham, and Bennett apparently has no interest in being traded.


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






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