News sport : Cubs promote Addison Russell to big leagues

(Getty Images)

It looks like Kris Bryant's call-up was just the start of prospect mania on the North Side. The Chicago Cubs, eyeing a run in the NL Central, are calling up their next hotshot prospect, 21-year-old infielder Addison Russell.

The news was first reported by CBS Sports' Jon Heyman and confirmed by our Jeff Passan, who notes the Cubs (7-5 after winning Monday night) will initially move Russell out of his natural position to better fit their needs:

Russell ranked as Baseball America's No. 3 prospect coming into the 2015 season. Bryant was No. 1 and Byron Buxton of the Minnesota Twins was No. 2. Russell was the No. 5 overall prospect on MLB.com's list.

Russell was expected to reach the big leagues in 2015, but not exactly this fast. His acceleration is in part because second baseman Javier Baez didn't make the big-league roster out of spring training and has been away from the Triple-A team since the start of the season because of the death of his sister. The Cubs recently shifted Russell to second base in the minors, signaling a change like this might be in his future.

Part two of Russell's rocket ride to the big leagues is because of his prodigal talent — he's good defensively, hits for average and has impressive bat speed with surprising power. He hit .317 in spring training with the Cubs, and has posted a .318 average in Triple-A with a homer and nine RBIs in 11 games.

The Cubs acquired Russell in their trade last July with the Oakland Athletics, in which Jeff Samardzija was sent to the Bay Area. That trade made the Cubs rich with young talent. Now they're looking to cash in.

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News sport : NHL Three Stars: Wild blank Blues; Ducks spoil Winnipeg's whiteout party

No. 1 Stars: Zach Parise/Jason Pominville/Mikael Granlund, Minnesota Wild

The Wild went up 2-1 in their series versus the St. Louis Blues with a big 3-0 shutout Monday night. The Parise/Pominville/Granlund line combined for both Minnesota goals in the second period, which were scored in a span of 2:05. Devan Dubnyk earned his first career playoff shutout with 17 saves.

No. 2 Star: Jakob Silfverberg, Anaheim Ducks

The Ducks spoiled the first Stanley Cup playoff game in Winnipeg since 1996 with a 5-4 overtime victory. Silfverberg scored a goal and assisted on two others, while Andrew Cogliano had a trio of assists. Francois Beauchemin recorded two helpers, with his second coming on Rickard Rakell’s overtime winner:

No. 3 Star: Henrik Lundqvist, New York Rangers

King Henrik made 23 saves, including 12 in the final period as the Rangers edged the Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 to take a 2-1 lead in their series. Carl Hagelin opened the scoring in the first and Chris Kreider doubled New York’s lead in the second: 

Honorable Mention: Lee Stempniak's tally midway through the first period was the first Stanley Cup playoff goal scored in Winnipeg since 1996 ... Dubnyk, Ilya Bryzgalov and Darcy Kuemper are the only goaltenders to post a playoff shutout in the history of the Wild ... Kreider now has five career post-season game-winning goals.

Did You Know? 

Dishonorable Mention: Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin were held to a combined two shots … Pittsburgh has been outscored 4-0 in first periods through three games … St. Louis has lost nine consecutive playoff road games … Dustin Byfuglien, what are you doing?

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News sport : Chicago rides Jimmy Butler's 31 points to a 2-0 series lead over Milwaukee

CHICAGO – It came two days late and just as many dollars short, but the Chicago Bulls and Milwaukee Bucks finally came through with the sort of hash mark-heavy, ugly basketball we anticipated before their first round series even began. The Bulls prevailed by a 91-82 score in Game 2 of its first round series, but not before Milwaukee reminded them that this was supposed to be a defensive-minded run reminiscent of the chilly Central Division.

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Milwaukee held Chicago to 11 points in the first quarter, the fewest amount of points Chicago has scored in any playoff quarter in the team’s postseason history. Unlike the freewheeling Game 1, one that saw both teams combine for 59 points, the Bucks set the tone early by diving into its defensive sets quickly and forcing Chicago away from its ball movement. Derrick Rose, who set the tone with 23 points and seven assists in the opener, was forced into good but hurried looks both inside and outside – he missed his first nine shots from the field before hitting true in the third quarter.

The Bucks relented in a crucial second quarter, however, utilizing spacing as Milwaukee lost its edge. By the time Rose’s touch returned in the second half, Bulls All-Star Jimmy Butler was ready to dominate – he topped off an eight-point second quarter with seven more in the third, while Rose managed 12 points.

Following the win, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau credited Rose for his all-around work prior to his mini scoring burst, telling media that “once he gets lost in the game,” the 2011 NBA MVP can turn explosive again. Rose, who played a lengthy-for-him 38 minutes in the win, managed nine assists and seven rebounds on top of what turned into 15 points on 14 shots.

This was Jimmy Butler’s game, however.

The Chicago All-Star absolutely took over in the fourth quarter, despite entering the period after missing all six of his three-pointers and an uncharacteristic four free throws. Butler hit for 14 points as the Bulls outscored Milwaukee by six in the final period, nailing four of five shots on his way toward 31 points in total.

“They were literally telling me to shoot,” Butler explained after the game, as his team entered the fourth quarter with just 71 points to its credit, before deflecting the credit to his backcourt partner and an unselfish frontcourt that features Pau Gasol and Joakim Noah.

“I think I took a lot of bad shots that happened to go in,” Butler offered, “All because of [Rose] and Pau and Joakim I feel like I have a pretty easy job.”

Perhaps, as that frontcourt is to be lauded for its performance on the glass. Once again, Noah looked as if he could barely get off the ground, and yet he used savvy, timing and length to haul in 15 defensive rebounds and 19 in total, as Gasol managed 16 caroms on his own alongside four blocks.

Following the contest, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau seemed to deflect every question toward Gasol’s direction. Even in one of his worst shooting games (4-12) as a Bull, Gasol still cleared space on both ends. “I want us to play with intelligence and play together,” Thibodeau pointed out, and few NBA players try to encourage as much as the 34-year old future Hall of Famer from Spain.

Faced with his team’s 64-48 rebounding deficit, Bucks coach Jason Kidd was sanguine. “This is a learning experience for us,” he reminded. “They held serve here, now we have to go back home and do the same.”

This is true, with Game 3 in Milwaukee set to tip off on Thursday, but the Bucks are also staring own the off-ridiculed idea of “United Center North,” as scads of Bulls fans routinely make the short trip up Interstate 94 to dot the former Bradley Center with all manner of red apparel and Richard Daley-styled hard “a”- pronunciations.

Jimmy Butler, who went to college in Marquette and played his NCAA basketball in the same building Games 3 and 4 will take place, wordlessly laughed off any insinuation that the next two contests would serve as veritable home games for the Bulls.

Joakim Noah, however, wasn’t having any of it:

“I’ve never met anyone so excited for a shootaround” in Milwaukee, Noah offered, which should keep Chicago fans grinning as they move forward. On top of that nudge, the Bulls and Bucks managed to make it through two different playoff-styled post-foul scrums without any hint of a potential suspension – only Zaza Pachulia was ejected for a second technical, neither earned in the same would-be fight. These guys even know how to jaw professionally, it seems.

The idea of healthy amount of Chicago support in Wisconsin won’t carry the Bulls to a commanding 3-0 lead on its own, however. The Bucks have proven they can both limit the Bulls to miniscule scoring amounts and keep up in a shootout with Chicago.

It’s true that both of these hallmarks came in the two first quarters of this series, but Milwaukee was up three points with ten minutes to play in Game 2, and they seem a few O.J. Mayo (4-17 on the series) or Giannis Antetokounmpo (6-24) buckets away from holding serve. Both have been afforded good looks by an up and down Chicago defense, and both could be the difference in Milwaukee. Meanwhile, standout Bulls rookie Nikola Mirotic looks frustrated while playing at small forward, and he left Game 2 in the final minute with what was called a left quad strain.

“I feel,” Jason Kidd maintained after the game, “we’re getting better with each game and confidence is growing. I think as a team we’ve gotten better each time we took the floor. This is a learning experience for us.”

That much is true. Now this needs to turn into a growing experience for a Bucks team that could be facing the final few days of its season.

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News sport : Lee Stempniak scores Winnipeg's first Stanley Cup playoff goal since 1996 (Video)

That sound you heard earlier Monday night? It was probably eminating from MTS Arena in Winnipeg, where the Jets hosted a Stanley Cup Playoff game for the first time since 1996 when they faced off against the Anaheim Ducks.

Scoring the first playoff goal for Jets 2.0? That would be Lee Stempniak, who gave Winnipeg a 1-0 lead midway through the first period of Game 3 and caused the decibel levels to spike.

Nineteen years ago next Tuesday, Norm McIver scored the final goal in the history of Jets 1.0 before the franchise moved to Phoenix to become the Coyotes. Since the Atlanta Thrashers moved to Winnipe in 2011, Jets 2.0 failed to reach the playoffs until this season.

Despite the franchise history not connecting, the Jets and their fans brought back the whiteout tradition (even as the team wore their blue jerseys) and the arena looked like Winnipeg Arena of the 1990s. 

Fans got creative in their whiteout attire, like this guy, who dressed as the Queen:

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News sport : Reds manager Bryan Price unleashes 77 F-bombs in epic tirade against media

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If only Cincinnati Reds manager Bryan Price had a swear jar in his office. He might be able to pay star first baseman Joey Votto's $14 million salary after unleashing an epic, F-bomb laced tirade aimed at the local media before Monday night's game. The staggering final count: 77 F-bombs.

Price, the Reds' second-year manager, was none too pleased with beat reporters — particularly C. Trent Rosecrans of the Cincinnati Enquirer — after news went public that catcher Devin Mesoraco wasn't available to pinch hit Sunday because he wasn't with the team. Price said he didn't like the media reporting news that could help the Reds' opponents.

The Reds had lost four in a row before Monday's game, so Price had reason to be frustrated. Though, it seems a bit like he was taking it out on the media, saying things like: "I bend over backwards to be honest and direct with you f****** guys and you stick it right up my f****** a** — and the f****** team's a**." Keep in mind, the matter at hand is rather mundane in the grand scheme of things. We're talking about a pinch hitter in an April game.

Here's part of Price's rant, as transcribed by Rosecrans and the Enquirer:

Bryan Price: I just want an answer on how we benefit from them knowing that Devin Mesoraco isn't here.

C. Trent Rosecrans: I don't think you do and I don't know that that's my job.

BP: Your job is not to sniff out every f****** thing is about the Reds and f****** put it out there for every other f****** guy to hear. It's not your job. You want me to be candid with you? I've been candid with you. I f****** talk to you guys like men, I tell you what the f***'s going on with the team, I tell you how I'm feeling as candidly as I can and then this s***? You've got to watch this f****** s***? I've got to f****** read that on a f****** Tweet on our own people in here that we don't have a f****** player? How the f*** does that benefit the Reds? It doesn't benefit us one f****** bit. God **** we try to go out there and win f****** games and I got to come in here and then you guys f****** blow it all over the f****** place? Who we can play? Who we can't? I'll tell you what you want to know, I'm not going to f****** lie to you. I didn't tell you f****** s***.

CTR: You did not lie to me and I appreciate it.

BP: Ah, f***. I'm just, I'm f****** p****** up a rope in this f****** business. Because everyone has to know everything all the f****** time. That's not my f****** obligation, it's not their obligation. You know why f****** Billy Hamilton didn't f****** play? The other day? Because his f****** finger's hurt and he couldn't hit right-handed comfortably. Right? So that's something that I need to know and no one else needs to know. No one else needs to f****** know it, and all of a sudden it's out there. His f****** fingers are sore. It doesn't benefit us. It wasn't from you, but it doesn't benefit us one bit to f****** announce to the f****** other teams that we're playing to bring in lefties when they need to f****** get Billy out. There's no benefit. So, I'm f******, to be honest with you, I'm f****** sick of this s***. I'm sick of listening to this f****** s***, I'm sick of f****** the f****** second-guessing b*******, you guys can do whatever the f*** you want, but I'll tell you this — I'm not going to f****** tell you everything about this f****** club, because you f****** guys are going to out there and sniff it out anyway. I don't f****** like it one f****** bit. I bend over backwards to be honest and direct with you f****** guys and you stick it right up my f****** a** — and the f****** team's a**. And I'm sick of it. What do you got? If you don't got anything, get out and I'll do this f****** interview with Marty. You don't have anything? Just get out, please.

Bryan Price: He gets mad at umpires too. (Getty Images)At least Price ended with "please." That's one point for politeness against the -100 elsewhere within Price's tirade.

Price's main beef here is often a sticky one for those in the public eye. Some people expect the media to benefit them — especially on the local level. And while it's true a high-school baseball team gets covered differently than a pro team, the expectation that the local media should be writing stories that benefit the hometown is silly. It's about as silly as expecting a pitcher to throw the ball right down the middle so the batter has a fair chance to hit it.

Some media is on the team payroll — like the TV and radio broadcasters — but by and large, reporters aren't required to make the teams they cover look good. Nor should they be. 

Kudos to Rosecrans for handling things calmly in this situation. We've seen media remembers react much worse in "stressful" situations, so his ability to keep a level-head and not respond with F-bombs of his own is to be commended. He's clashed with the Reds before, particularly with star second baseman Brandon Phillips and took the high road there too.

If Price had an ulterior motive here, like kick-starting a losing team, that may have worked. His Reds beat the Brewers 6-1 on Monday night to end a four-game losing streak. The Brewers have now lost six straight, so maybe some F-bombs are needed in their clubhouse too.

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News sport : Dustin Byfuglien sucker punches Corey Perry after goal (Video)

Dustin Byfuglien totally learned from his crosscheck to the back of the head of J.T. Miller that he will never try to create any blunt force trauma to the noggin of an unsuspecting player ever again. Wait, no he didn’t learn.

Check out this sucker punch of Corey Perry after the Anaheim forward put the Ducks up 2-1 in Monday’s Game 3 against Winnipeg. Byfuglien was assessed a 2-minute minor for a rough.

Just dumb stuff again from Big Buff. Is Perry known as a guy who dives a bit? Yeah, he is. But when you’re hit to the back of the head and not prepared for it, of course you’ll drop. Not to make this all about Byfuglien and his in-game ability to be brain dead at points, but between the Miller crosscheck and now this, dude needs to learn a little. 

But there’s another day for that argument on Byfuglien. As of this moment, Perry is still in the game, as is Byfuglien, and there was discipline on the play in the game. 

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Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

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News sport : Wild blank Blues 3-0, take 2-1 series lead

Since Devan Dubnyk took over the starting job in Minnesota on Jan. 15, he hasn’t lost consecutive games in regulation. That streak has continued into the playoffs.

Behind Dubnyk’s 24 saves, the Wild took a 2-1 series over the St. Louis Blues with an impressive 3-0 victory Monday night.  

After a scoreless first period, the Wild blitzed Jake Allen with a pair of goals in 2:05 after some solid work by the line of Zach Parise, Jason Pominville and Mikael Granlund: 

The shutout was the result of a big bounce-back performance by the Wild, who lost Game 2 4-1, thanks to a Vladimir Tarasenko hat trick. The Russian sniper didn’t get a shot off Monday night as the Blues lost their ninth straight playoff road game.

Game 4 is Wednesday night back at Xcel Energy Center in Minnesota.

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News sport : Hagelin, Kreider help give Rangers 2-1 series lead over Penguins

The New York Rangers took a 2-1 series lead over the Pittsburgh Penguins Monday night with a 2-1 victory. 

For the third straight game New York scored the opening goal. Keith Yandle took advantage of the Penguins while on a line change midway through the first period and sprung the speedy Carl Hagelin:

The Rangers kept the Penguins’ big guns at bay, holding Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin to a combined two shots. Pittsburgh's only goal came via Patric Hornqvist during a third period press where they put 13 shots on Henrik Lundqvist, who ended with 23 saves.

New York had a 2-0 lead by that point, thanks to Marc Staal's perfectly placed shot wide of Marc-Andre Fleury, which bounced right to Chris Kreider, who was in front to bat it home:

Game 4 is Wednesday night back at CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh.

For the 16th time in their past 24 games the Penguins failed to score more than two or more goals. The disappearance of their offense was a key factor in their 4-9-2 finish to the regular season and a reason why they've dropped Games 1 and 3 against the Rangers.

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News sport : No NHL Las Vegas team yet, but expansion process could start in June

WINNIPEG – The NHL will not announce the awarding of an expansion franchise to Las Vegas when the board of governors meets there in June. But the league could announce the start of a formal expansion process if the board decides to proceed. It is unclear how long that process would take.

Potential Las Vegas owner Bill Foley has been running a season-ticket drive to gauge the viability of the market since Feb. 10. His stated goal has been to gather 10,000 commitments from everyday people and land a franchise that would begin playing in 2016-17 after a new arena is completed on the Strip.

Foley announced March 16 he had reached 9,000 commitments. He hasn’t announced anything since, but ESPN.com reported March 30 he had gathered more than 10,000 commitments and now was reaching out to large corporations, including casinos. 

“I know there’s been a lot of speculation about it,” Bettman said Monday before Game 3 of the Anaheim Ducks-Winnipeg Jets playoff series. “What I’m hearing is that the season-ticket drive has gone and is going extraordinarily well. When we get to the board meeting in June, I will report to the board as to where things stand based on the expressions of interest, and we’ll figure out then what if anything – if anything – we want to do.”

Asked directly if Foley had reached 10,000 commitments, Bettman said: “I’m not commenting on the count. Ultimately that will be for him at the appropriate time, but he’s doing well – very well.”

Why would Foley not announce he had reached his goal if he has? Perhaps to keep people making commitments, so he can say he has exceeded his goal when he makes a grand, final announcement.

The NHL did not know what to expect from the season-ticket drive and has been impressed by the response of the market. Despite some lulls, Foley has convinced people to commit real money without any guarantees in a city that has never had a major pro sports franchise.

No one expected Las Vegas to be like Winnipeg, which lost the original Jets in 1996 and sold out 13,000 season tickets in 17 minutes in 2011 when the Atlanta Thrashers were available to relocate.

“My guess is Mr. Foley in Vegas had some conversations with [Jets chairman] Mark Chipman about the mechanics of doing a season-ticket drive,” Bettman said. “Obviously the time frames are a little different. Here it took 20 minutes but everybody knew a team was coming. What they’re doing in Las Vegas to gauge interest is ask people to commit and give a deposit on a franchise that doesn’t exist.”

Bettman has said repeatedly the NHL has been listening to expressions of interest and has not started a formal expansion process. He reiterated that Monday. The next steps for Las Vegas are for Foley to complete his drive, Bettman to report to the board in June and the board to decide whether to start a formal expansion process. 

“He’s keeping us periodically updated on what’s going on,” Bettman said. “But again, let’s remember the origin of this. He wanted the opportunity to gauge the level of interest in professional sports in general and in a hockey team in particular in Vegas so he could decide whether or not it was worth continuing to pursue.

“From our standpoint, we were happy to let him do that, because as I think everybody knows, Las Vegas is not your typical market, and if – if – there’s going to be any movement for it, it’s good to know where things stood, because obviously if the market wasn’t going to support the ticket drive, he was going to lose interest and drop out.” 

There is no indication Foley or the NHL has lost interest in Las Vegas.

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News sport : Cubs/Pirates game delayed after fan gets hit in the head with a foul ball

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The Chicago Cubs/Pittsburgh Pirates experienced a brief delay Monday after a fan was hit in the head by a foul ball.

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The fan was moving through the first row when a foul ball off the bat of Starlin Castro went straight back to the protective netting and hit her in the head. The ball did not travel through the netting, but the force pushed it back far enough that the ball made contact with the woman's head. 

Video of the incident is below. If you would prefer not to watch it, please skip ahead. 

The game was immediately delayed so that the woman could be treated for her injuries. Medics brought a stretcher for the woman, and carried her off. 

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While the situation was scary, the woman appeared to be conscious as she was removed from the field. 

The game resumed after a 23 minute delay.

We'll keep an eye on the fan's condition as more information becomes available.

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News sport : North Carolina updates uniforms for 2015 (Photos)

North Carolina will have new football uniforms for 2015 that incorporate the school's argyle pattern.

The updated uniforms are part of a school-wide "refresh." According to Nike, the school's 28 teams will all have consistent lettering, logos and numerals in 2015 and beyond.

“We are excited to once again partner with Nike, one of the most recognizable brands in the world, to help us refresh and refine our marks and logos,” North Carolina athletic director Bubba Cunningham said in a statement. “The changes are subtle, but they celebrate our history and create consistency as we further seek to distinguish our brand.  This is our blue and we’re proud of it.” 

The new football uniforms have the argyle on the collar on the home uniforms.

Here's a sample of what North Carolina wore in 2014.

The new uniforms look nice. And clean, which is a big deal as far as we're concerned. Thankfully North Carolina wasn't inspired by TCU's new uniforms and went with an argyle pattern all over the football jerseys.

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News sport : Faldo, Watson will bid farewell to Open Championship at St. Andrews

The 2015 Open Championship in July will be the last for two of its greatest champions.

Three-time Claret Jug winner Nick Faldo announced Monday that he would join five-time winner Tom Watson in making the tournament at the Old Course at St. Andrews his farewell to the game's oldest major.

Both players will participate in the four-hole Champions Challenge, bringing together past Open winners in a pre-tournament exhibition on hole Nos. 1, 2, 17 and 18.

Faldo has played sparingly, even in the majors, since moving from inside the ropes to inside the broadcast booth. However, the 58-year-old six-time major winner will make a third-consecutive Open appearance. He shot 76-77 to miss the cut a year ago at Royal Liverpool.

That's not been the case for Tom Watson. Earlier this month, 65-year-old became the oldest player to break par in a competitive round at the Masters with an opening 1-under 71. He then made the cut the next week at the RBC Heritage at Harbour Town. However, Watson, who lost in a 2009 playoff to Stewart Cink at Turnberry that would have made him the oldest major champion by some 11 years, hinted that the 2016 Masters would be his last.


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News sport : San Jose Sharks summer more uncertain with a new coach

San Jose Sharks center Tomas Hertl, left, of the Czech Republic, battles with Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty during the first period of an NHL hockey game, Saturday, April 11, 2015, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Last week we said the Sharks were like the movie “Highlander” between Todd McLellan, Joe Thornton and Doug Wilson. 

In that case, McLellan, now the former head coach, got his head chopped off, and it’s between Thornton, the superstar player, and Wilson, the general manager, to duke it out for “The Prize.” Because in this case with the Sharks, in the end “there can be only one” guy remaining out of this trio. So, McLellan is Sunda Kastagir – the guy who loses before the final showdown between Connor MacLeod and the Kurgan. 

On McLellan’s conference call, he was already getting questions about possibly coaching Connor McDavid with Edmonton and his relationship with Maple Leafs president Brendan Shanahan. 

McLellan will find a new job, and it will happen quickly. He is this summer’s Barry Trotz. He gets to leave a less enviable position for a more desirable spot. It’s still amazing to me that San Jose is considered that much of a mess. That place was the ‘it’ location in the NHL for so long.

As for the Sharks, this is the first step in … who knows what. There’s still a majorly fractured situation between Thornton and Wilson. Thornton has a no-trade clause. Wilson won’t ask him to waive it. The two can’t coexist. Ugh. 

We asked McLellan about this on his teleconference Monday.

“Those are questions, the repair work, those are questions for the group that’s here. I can tell you, and til my last breath, I have a ton of respect for Joe Thornton,” McLellan said, predictably not taking any level of bait Thornton left for him in his goodbye interview. “As far as the repair work, that’s for Jumbo and Doug and whoever else to talk about. I would like the world to know that I have a ton of respect for this guy (Thornton).” 

If you’re not the guy making the change, you’re the one being changed. And as CSN Bay Area’s Ray Ratto shows, this wasn’t a mutual parting of ways with McLellan. It was indeed a firing. 

Meanwhile, Doug Wilson now gets to do something he hasn’t had to do in more than a decade -- redefine the franchise. His stance on the benefits of incremental change has to change, as the evidence that this team has dead-ended itself is now too overwhelming to ignore or wallpaper.

According to the San Jose Mercury News’ David Pollak, Wilson hasn’t been assured a return next season.

Question. Do you want the guy who helped cause this mess with a contending team responsible for solving the problem? 

There is precedence – David Poile was able to dig himself out of two straight non-playoff years (and contract debacles with Shea Weber and Ryan Suter) with Nashville. Now the Predators are back in the postseason and seem set up for a more sustainable future. General managers tend to have stronger plans than we give them credit – at least some of them do. 

Does a new coach change any problems? Not in San Jose, where this past year has not added up.

The pieces are there. Even if Thornton and Patrick Marleau are aging, they’re still effective. Expect 30-plus goals from Joe Pavelski again and Logan Couture to be solid. Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Brent Burns are both good assets on the blueline. Lose Antti Niemi’s contract – though Wilson didn’t deal him at the trade deadline when he could have grabbed a piece for him – use it somewhere else. Hey you’re not in bad shape! 

But is Wilson really the guy to do this? He should be praised – and deservedly so – for helping turn San Jose into a destination for players.

Buffalo says it’s Hockey Heaven and Detroit calls itself Hockeytown. But how about playing in front of a packed building one day, then going hiking in the redwood forest the next, or hitting up the beach? Remember Joe Pavelski on a putting green in the dead of winter in shorts in the EPIX Road to the Stadium Series shows? As someone who has been to San Jose, it’s a great mix of a passionate hockey fanbase and laidback lifestyle. 

We’ve heaped blame on Wilson a lot on this blog plenty for the disjointed state of a team that really should be better. McLellan said the team was “clearly in a rebuild” even though you can seriously beg to differ. No team with a still effective Thornton, Pavelski, Couture, Marleau, Burns or Vlasic is in a rebuild.

Nice to see McLellan sticking with Wilson’s message on the way out the door. Guess this was part of the mutual ‘see ya laters’ between the two.

They’re still a few moves away, not a full team-wide destruction. One day they’ll realize this. If not, it’s too late for the Sharks … and for no good reason.

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Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

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News sport : Royals fans upset about the subpar hot dogs served during Buck Night

There's nothing better than having a hot dog at a ball game. So, when a team offers hot dogs for just $1, it shouldn't come as a surprise that fans are willing to jump at the opportunity.

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Kansas City Royals fans are having some second thoughts about cheap hot dogs after their most recent Buck Night. The quality of $1 hot dogs being served were not up to standard, according to KCTV5.

(KCTV5)

The above photo shows a normal, full-price hot dog at Kauffman Stadium, and one of the $1 dogs served on Buck Night. One fan, Neal Ross, attempted to return his subpar dog, but was told he could not.

"They kind of told us, 'well they're a dollar, so you get what you get,'" Ross said.

This was far from the only picture KCTV5 received from disgruntled fans. 

As the above tweet states, a company called Aramark manages concessions for the club. Aramark released a statement following the event, claiming their health inspector found no violations with the hot dogs.

"Customer satisfaction is of the utmost importance to us and we take all guest concerns seriously. During Friday night's game, where we served 63,000 hot dogs, the Kansas City Health Department was onsite to inspect our buck night hot dog operations and found no violations. We are aware of the images posted to social media and are in the process of investigating and contacting those guests to get more information. As previously stated, we strive to ensure the food served at Kauffman Stadium is great tasting, of the highest quality and safe to eat."

This is not the first time the Royals, and Aramark, have been involved in this type of situation. In November, a food safety manager for both the Royals and Chiefs told ESPN's "Outside the Lines" about the subpar food practices taking place in both stadiums.

The employee, Jon Costa, claims he reached out to Aramark a number of times before going public with the story. Costa was fired a few weeks ago, according to the KCTV5 report. 

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Given the circumstances, and the fact that the club has been embroiled in similar controversy in the past, it's tough to imagine much coming out of this. Aramark may investigate the situation, but it's not as if the partnership between the company and the ball club will end.

At least fans in Kansas City have some fantastic options to eat away from the ballpark. Next time you're thinking about having a hot dog at the game, maybe consider hitting up your favorite barbeque joint away from the stadium instead.

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Chris Cwik is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at christophercwik@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : The Hawks pulled their Game 1 giveaway T-shirts because they didn't have Jeff Teague's name

Most NBA teams offer some sort of giveaway for fans who attend playoff games. Whether T-shirts, "We Don't Bluff" Growl Towels or foam horns, these freebies represent an effort to show appreciation for those who bought tickets to support the team's postseason push by providing them with a cool event-specific piece of memorabilia. They also help present a unified, color-coordinated backdrop for the on-court action and create a unique visual element that makes the home gym look especially cool for nationally televised postseason contests.

The Atlanta Hawks did a pretty great job of this last spring, when they gave fans who turned out for Game 6 of their opening-round series against the Indiana Pacers a T-shirt bearing their just-revived "Pac-Man"-style secondary logo. When it came time to deck out Philips Arena for Game 1 of the 2015 first round against the Brooklyn Nets, though, the Hawks found themselves facing a large-scale wardrobe malfunction. From Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal Constitution:

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The Hawks’ planned t-shirt giveaway for Game 1 of their playoff series had to be scrapped when it was discovered that the name of one of their starting players was missing from the apparel.
On Friday, Philips Arena workers placed the red t-shirts over each seat. On Saturday, they were all gone. They were not replaced by Sunday’s series opener against the Nets.
The t-shirts were emblazoned with the name of each Hawks player — but one.

This, of course, begs the question: Who got left off? Our answer comes via the eagle-eyed Jake Martinsek:

Something's missing. (Image via Imgur, @IAmMartinsek)

Yep, that right. Take a trip through the "True Believer" shirt design and you'll find the names of 14 Hawks — Pero Antic, Kent Bazemore, Elton Brand, DeMarre Carroll, Austin Daye (whose first name looks like it might be misspelled up there in the top left corner of the design), Al Horford, John Jenkins, Kyle Korver, Shelvin Mack, Paul Millsap, Mike Muscala, Dennis Schröder, Mike Scott and Thabo Sefolosha — but you won't find the name of one Jeffrey Demarco Teague. Kind of a tough break for the All-Star point guard, who led the team in assists and finished second among Hawks in points, steals and free-throw attempts this season. (It could be, as Martinsek suggests, that the absence of Teague's name got lost in the negative space of the design; then again, it looks like the roster list just cuts off after Scott and returns to the top, so it could just be that it was a slip-up from Jump Street.)

We don't know yet whether the Hawks plan to revisit the "True Believer" idea — which, misstep aside, looks pretty cool — with Teague's name included as a giveaway for fans at an upcoming Hawks playoff game. We've reached out to team reps to find out, but haven't heard back yet. It seems like it'd be a shame to scuttle the whole thing entirely, but then, I'm not the one who'd have to buy 18,440 more shirts (give or take a few) to make things right.

Despite not having every single one of their fans rocking an identical red T-shirt — and despite seeing Millsap scuffle a bit as he works his way back from a right shoulder injury, and Horford injure his hand late in the contest before coming back in with his fingers taped and iced — the Hawks beat the Nets, 99-92, on Sunday to take a 1-0 lead in their best-of-seven Eastern Conference playoff series. With attention now turning to Wednesday's Game 2, it's clear that the Hawks plan to raise the stakes in terms of in-arena entertainment and star power:

In addition the performance by Ludacris, the Hawks will also be selling a special (and hopefully quality-checked) Luda-themed T-shirt and CD pack at the arena on Wednesday. Maybe they can give Teague one on the house — you know, just as a sign of good faith.

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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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