Tags: Associated, caddie, heart, heart attack, Larry Mize, Masters, pga, PGA Tour caddie, Press, Scott Steele
PGA Tour caddie dies of heart attack (The Associated Press)
21 Oct
2012
2012
Tour Report: Caddy Scott Steele dies (PGA Tour)
20 Oct
2012
2012
Finally working with a guaranteed home and role, John Lucas III wins over the Toronto Raptors
18 Oct
2012
2012
A lot of people know John Lucas III as the guy who filled in for Derrick Rose for the Bulls last season. Others remember him for being the guy LeBron jumped over last winter in a vicious in-game dunk. Some know him as his father's son and many shrug their shoulders at the undersized point guard that they feel shoots too much.
Raptors coach Dwane Casey knows him as the spark plug off of his bench and already considers him to be an important part of the team. After a recent preseason victory against the Detroit Pistons, he was asked about what Lucas brings to the table and didn't attempt to temper his praise.
"John is…I love John," Casey said. "[...] he's the spirit of our team, the fiber of our team. He stands for everything right on the basketball floor. He's going to be a heck of a coach we'll see when he gets out of basketball and retires. He's a scorer. He's a born scorer."
Strong words from a coach after just three preseason games, but this is the way Lucas makes people feel about him. He's a charismatic locker room leader already, pulling younger guys aside and teaching them how to take criticism from the coaching staff while not taking the negatives to heart. Similarly, he'll pull reporters aside to answer their questions, and then after giving a smile, will wait for the recorders to be turned off so he can share some hilarious story from a career path that has taken him from the NBA to the D-League to Italy, Spain and China before returning to play for the Bulls last season.
It's easy to see why his teammates love him, even if he is the point guard who'll hoist up three shots in his first four minutes of being on the floor like he did in the Raptors' recent victory against the Wizards. He makes basketball more fun. If he continues to make his 3-pointers, he will also make the Raptors a better -- and deeper -- team this season.
When informed of the praise his coach had given him, Lucas said that the two have built a good relationship thus far.
"I just come in and play with my heart," Lucas said. "I don't care if I play five minutes, 10 minutes, I'm always into the game. I'm always tuned in. I'm just about winning. I think that's what coach likes about me. I don't care about my stats, I don't care if I had this many points, that many points. My whole thing is about winning. I want to get to the postseason. That's my mentality. I've always been like that. Losing is not an option for me."
For Toronto fans who often value effort as much as output (witness Reggie Evans having an entire arena chanting his name when he made a comeback from injury two seasons ago), Lucas is a player that appears to be a solid fit for becoming a fan favorite. In addition to leaving it all on the court, it's easy to see that the long and winding basketball journey he's had keeps him very appreciative of his opportunity to play in the NBA.
"I feel like you should always go as hard as you can because you've got fans that are paying to come watch you play and you're going to your job," Lucas said. "You can't disrespect your job. At the end of the day you have to go out there and play your heart out, not just for you, it's for you because of your pride, but also for the organization and your team and most importantly for the fans who support you. You should never let them down."
For Toronto fans already excited about the energy that rookie Jonas Valanciunas brings to the table, Lucas only gives another reason to enjoy tuning in to Raptors games this year. After plenty of dark moments in recent years, it's nice to see a fan base get rewarded with vibrant personalities that are easy to root for both on and off the court.
Joe Thornton expects to play full season in Switzerland, thanks to NHL lockout
12 Oct
2012
2012
During a public relations offensive, it's difficult to separate the truth from the spin.
The National Hockey League Players Association has been laying it on thick since the summer — the latest example being the "hey, look at the NHL players that just so happened to drop in on a youth hockey practice, wearing their #ThePlayers jerseys!" campaign on Twitter.
Part of the players' PR front from the start: Leaving for Europe en masse, to show the owners they're in this CBA battle for the long haul.
But after they arrived there, things have gotten tricky: When we hear Alex Ovechkin or Ilya Bryzgalov talk about staying in the KHL even when the lockout is settled, is that the from the heart or more union marching orders being parroted?
When Rick Nash of the New York Rangers left for Davos in the Swiss League, he said there was a chance he'd play there for the full season — just like he did in 2004-05.
His teammate, then and now, was Joe Thornton of the San Jose Sharks. In an interview with Berner Zeitung, Thornton became the latest NHL star to cast doubt on the season:
Q. Today (Thursday, Ed) should have started the NHL season. Got news on lockout ending?
THORNTON: No. I am in contact with some people, but there is nothing concrete. I'm now expecting to play the whole season in Switzerland.
"Expecting" could probably mean "prepared to", but either way the pessimistic message from Thornton is clear. The only question is whether it's from the heart, from the NHLPA handbook or perhaps it's a way to sell more Davos swag by convincing the locals they're not part-timers.
s/t Andreas Boos
Browns’ Haden on suspension: "A very dumb mistake" (Yahoo! Sports)
08 Oct
2012
2012
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -- The apology came from Joe Haden's heart. He knows he let down the Browns.
NEC Preview: Oft-overlooked Shane Gibson hopes to go from hidden gem to stardom
02 Oct
2012
2012
Enter the name of college basketball's second-leading returning scorer into a search engine, and the results may come as a surprise.
College Hoops Countdown, No. 23: NEC
• Oft-overlooked Shane Gibson hopes to go from hidden gem to stardom
• NEC Capsule Preview: Three-way battle for league title could hinge on LIU Brooklyn suspensions
For more news on the NEC, visit Rivals.com
The first Shane Gibson that pops up is a metal guitarist. The second Shane Gibson is a politician in the Bahamas. And the third Shane Gibson is a little-known author and social media strategist.
It gnaws at Shane Gibson No. 4 that he hasn't received more national recognition for scoring an efficient 22.0 points per game as a junior last season, but the Sacred Heart guard knows he has the power to change that. If he can not only build on last season's output but also transform Sacred Heart into a winner, he'll have a much better chance of earning league player of the year honors, making All-America teams or hearing his name called on NBA draft day.
"I think I'd probably have gotten more recognition last year if we had won some more games," Gibson said. "I've watched other guys and I've seen the attention they're getting, and I'm just like, 'Are they not seeing the numbers I'm putting up over here?' Hopefully with more team success, some of that comes this year."
Although it would be a surprise if Gibson can lead Sacred Heart to its first-ever Northeast Conference title or first-ever NCAA bid, the 6-foot-2 senior has a better chance this season than any of his previous years in the program. The Pioneers return four starters and their top two reserves from a team that went 14-18 overall and 8-10 in the NEC last season.
To give Sacred Heart the best chance to move up in the standings, Gibson has focused on improving his all-around game. He has strengthened his legs in the weight room this offseason to give himself more stamina on defense late in games. He also plans to expend more energy attacking the glass and to do a better job setting up his teammates, especially when double-teams come.
Whether it's Weber State's Damian Lillard, Murray State's Isaiah Canaan or Lehigh's C.J. McCollum, the mid-major guards who have intrigued NBA scouts recently have typically come from winning programs. Sacred Heart coach Dave Bike hopes Gibson gets the same consideration if he propel the Pioneers into contention in the NEC.
"I'm convinced he deserves to be looked at by the next level," Bike said. "If we can make a little noise and win a big game here or there, I think a kid's individual stock goes up, and probably rightly so. People want guys that make a difference in winning or losing. That's important. So it's important for him, it's important for us and it's important for the school."
Being overlooked doesn't faze Gibson because he's accustomed to being an underdog.
Growing up in a small Upstate Connecticut town near the Rhode Island border, Gibson had to work harder than prospects from bigger cities to get college programs to show interest in him.
Gibson did everything for his high school team, from contesting the opening tip, to leading the team in rebounds, to scoring despite frequent double and triple teams. In a game his senior season against fellow league title contender Windham High School, Gibson's team nearly lost even though he went off for 51 points.
"Shane was never one who could hide his emotion," high school coach Scott Desrosier said. "You could always see the frustration and disappointment on his face. When Windham whittled our lead to a few points late in the game, Shane said to the kids on the bench during a timeout, 'Hey listen guys, I'm not going to score 50 points and have us lose.'"
Stories of Gibson's scoring barrages eventually reached college coaches in the New England area, but most of them still didn't show much interest. Not only was Gibson considered undersized to play shooting guard in college, coaches also put little credence in his gaudy high school stats because they came against small-town competition.
Gibson did play on the AAU circuit, but it's hard to say if that helped him or hurt him. Since he filled the role of spot-up shooter off the bench for a talent-laden team, coaches who scouted him often pegged him as a catch-and-shoot player who couldn't create off the dribble.
Sacred Heart assistant coach Johnny Kidd was one of the first to recognize Gibson was more than just a dime-a-dozen shooter. After stumbling across Gibson at a small AAU tournament in Connecticut the summer before his junior year and watching him a couple more times during the high school season, Kidd came away convinced the Killingly High standout had the potential to be one of the best scorers in Sacred Heart history.
"I could just tell right away the type of skill level he possessed at a very young age," Kidd said. "Being in there early obviously gave us a lead, but I knew sooner or later word was going to get out. You can't hide forever. I don't care how small your school is or where you're from. People are going to find out."
Thankfully for Sacred Heart, Gibson remained mostly a secret until the summer before his senior year of high school. Even then, Central Connecticut State was the only other school to offer him a scholarship, making it a fairly easy decision for Gibson to reward Sacred Heart for its faith in him with a commitment.
Gibson has spent the past couple seasons making it his mission to leave opposing coaches in the New England area feeling queasy for overlooking him.
He took advantage of the chance to redshirt as a sophomore by building up his upper body so he had the strength to absorb contact and still finish at the rim. He blossomed the following season, averaging 17.2 points per game and earning all-league honors. And he became a more efficient scorer last season, shooting 51 percent from the floor and 43.3 percent from behind the arc to pile up the fifth-most points of any player in the nation.
"I told myself after high school I was going to prove everyone wrong and be the best player to ever put on a Sacred Heart jersey," Gibson said. "Now when I go to games and I see coaches from other teams, I'm trying to dominate their teams and let them know they should have paid more attention."
It's safe to say word is out in NEC circles after Gibson erupted for 20 or more points in 15 of 18 league games last season. Whether Gibson can rise from near-anonymity to stardom nationally, however, likely depends on if his team can do anything to merit attention.
Since Gibson came to Sacred Heart around the time of Davidson's memorable Elite Eight run in 2008, he and his friends used to joke he'd have to "pull a Stephen Curry" to achieve his dreams of a pro career. An Elite Eight run seems a bit ambitious for a school that's never even played an NCAA tournament game, but Gibson isn't one to back down from a challenge.
"I'm so competitive I feel like I can do anything," he said. "Some people may look at it as being cocky, but I just feel like I'm extremely confident. My whole life I've been doing things people said I couldn't do."
Tour Report: Poulter: ‘It’s a passion I have’ (PGA Tour)
01 Oct
2012
2012
Read Krys Barch’s epic NHL lockout rant, a ‘Jerry Maguire’ moment for the players
29 Sep
2012
2012
Krys Barch played 304 games in the NHL for the Dallas Stars and Florida Panthers before signing with the New Jersey Devils in July. He has 669 penalty minutes and 31 points. He is not one of those players fortunate enough to land million-dollar deals overseas during the NHL lockout; nor is he the type of player, at 32 years old, that would be handed a gig in a North American minor league.
On Saturday night, through his Twitter feed (@KrysBarch), Barch let out all of his frustrations. About his lot in life. About the owners. About the work stoppage, and what the uncertain future means for his family. Even about relocation to Canada.
We've cleaned up some of the grammar and punctuation, but the words are his. Check out what one blue-collar NHLer thinks of the state of the League:
"I sit here from Gand Bend, Ontario putting a pen to my heart and writing on paper what bleeds out. My name is Krys Barch. I have played approximately 5 1/2 years in the NHL and have worked for every second of it. I haven't been a 1st round pick, bonus baby or a son of a hall of famer. I have made it through sweating, bleeding, cut Achilles, broken hands, concussions, broken orbital bones, 8 teeth knocked out, etc, etc, etc.
"I sit in front of a fire, 8 OV deep and starting a bottle of Porte that will assist in the translations of my emotions to words! No different than a truck driver, farmer or line worker, I have a shot and a beer. Not to deal with the days ahead but to ease the nerves from what my body has endured the days before.
"I sit here with both my boys sleeping and my wife due with our 3rd. My thoughts racing on what I can conquer tomorrow to get our family ahead. Sometimes, wondering if I should have existed when a word and a gun solidified and solved all problems. I feel the Wild West would more simplified than the world we live in now when an employer who makes billions of dollars and a league with record revenues can tell me that I can't do the things that my heart tells my me to do!
"All what my heart tells me to do far surpasses what my body has endured. As I write this I dive deeper and deeper into my bottle of Porte giving wider views to the depths of my heart. As my pen warms from the fire, Neil Young and a fall Canadian night, I wonder how this work stoppage effects the owners?
"I wonder if the owners of Boston, New York, Washington, etc, etc, have endured any of the injuries that I or any other player in the NHL have endured. Still they probably sit their smoking the same brand of cigar, sipping the same cognac, and going on vacation. To one of five houses they own. While we sit here knowing they want to take 20% of our paychecks. One half to 3/4 of my peers will have to work for the next 50 years of their lives.
"Congratulations to the lucky select few that I have played with who have made salaries that they can choose to do whatever they want when they are done. But I have played most who do not!
"If the NHL wants to teams in the south or struggling markets than the players along with the financially well to do teams need to start working together. Or they need to start to move teams to the North where they will make money. The system allows the owners to continually take money from the players contract after contract where eventually over 40 some years the owners will have 80% of revenue. The only way to stop the work stoppages long into the future is fix the root cause of the problems.
"The lockout is a procedure to take from the players to pay for the NHL mistakes. Let not allow the NHL to make any more mistakes.
"Let the league and the players to come together to fix the mistakes that have been made and make sure non are made in the future. Let's get a deal where the owners, players, and fans benefit from. We're we can be sitting around in beautiful Canadian falls around a fire playing and watching the game we love.
"Here's to the truth and our next conversation. As always speaking from my heart! Goodnight! Like me or hate me I speak what comes from my heart!"
Ladies and gentlemen, Krys Barch. We're sure Lou Lamoriello is down with this unfiltered speech ...
[Nicholas J. Cotsonika: Collusion question goes to the heart of NHL lockout]
While his rant had some troubling moments — talks of guns and alcohol always give us pause in an emotional tirade — his agent Scott Norton said that Barch was "safe, just speaking his mind!"
Brandon Prust of the Montreal Canadiens was one of the first players to respond to Barch's "Jerry Maguire" moment on Twitter:
Hundreds of NHL players could likely write the same screed as Barch did, with the same concerns and worries. Some fans will sympathize with it; others are likely to see it as privileged athletes whining about their plight. (Barch hasn't exactly made a million a season, but he also hasn't exactly been washing dishes at an Applebees.)
Either way, it confirms one big difference between this lockout and the last: Social media is an undeniable, and uncontrollable, X-factor.
Especially for the "shot and a beer" crowd.
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