SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The Giants sure are tough to eliminate this postseason.
Cardinals forced to make another trip out West (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
49ers make just enough plays, hold off Seahawks (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Two of the NFL's top defenses dueled it out in a low-scoring game just as everybody expected - and San Francisco's offense did just enough to give the 49ers a narrow lead in the NFC West.
Dallas Mavericks reinstate Delonte West, finally bringing end to interminable suspension
2012
I think we all remember where we were when we found out that veteran combo guard Delonte West had been suspended indefinitely by the Dallas Mavericks for conduct detrimental to the team following a postgame outburst in the Dallas locker room. I sure know I do.
There was a bit of a chill in the air as I checked my email after sunrise in the Northeast and read the news, though it's my understanding that it was comparatively warmer in the Western United States. Baseball's postseason was in full swing, a tense presidential campaign had captured the nation's headlines and the astronomy world was abuzz at the discovery of a new planet illuminated by four suns. Ah, I remember it like it was yesterday.
That is, of course, because it was yesterday.
[Fantasy Basketball '12: Play the official game of NBA.com]
And on Wednesday morning, just one day after Mavs coach Rick Carlisle declined to identify a timeframe for West's indefinite suspension, the Associated Press reports that the saga is over:
President of basketball operations Donnie Nelson said the ban was lifted after the eight-year veteran met with Nelson and Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle on Tuesday.
After Monday night's preseason win over Houston, Carlisle told reporters West was suspended without offering any details.
What a long, strange trip it's been. I'm sure you feel like a changed person for having gone through all this, dear reader; I know I do.
It's good to know the resolution of the incident, but the wire report is disappointingly light on detail. Luckily, Dwain Price of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram is here to flesh things out a bit:
West spoke about the meeting at this morning's shootaround.
"We're on the same page," West said. "We're a real family over here.
"Uncle Ricky handled the situation. We went and had a talk and we went right back to the bar-b-cue."
For his part, Carlisle came out and started his interview with the media by asking: "How are all my nephews doing?"
I'd like to note for the record that if Delonte refers to Carlisle as anything other than "Uncle Ricky" or Carlisle greets media members as anything other than "all my nephews" from here on out, I will be extremely disappointed in them both and saddened at their inability to recognize things that are important in this world.
One thing both seemed to find important is discretion — neither Carlisle nor West discussed specifics on the incident leading to the suspension, though the coach referenced "an outstanding issue" they needed to talk about and how West "needed to refocus, and he's in the process of doing that."
"It's going to be work, it's going to be daily work for him to do that and I've got to help him and our organization is going to help him, too," Carlisle said, according to Price.
As we noted Tuesday, West struggles with bipolar disorder, although it's unclear if that's the "outstanding issue" to which Carlisle referred or if it played any role in the locker-room outburst.
For now, though, it sounds like the incident's water under the bridge or over the dam (wherever you'd prefer to put your water). Carlisle told the media that West will be in uniform and available to play when Dallas hosts the Phoenix Suns in a preseason matchup at American Airlines Center on Wednesday night, and if West sounded disappointed in anyone, it was not Uncle Ricky:
"I don't know why anybody didn't come see me while I was in lockdown," West said [to the media]. "Y'all are my friends now.
"Y'all didn't come visit and put nothing on my commissary or nothing. That's all right."
Hey, Delonte, if you expect the writers to put something on your commissary, the least you could do is let them know when you and Uncle Ricky are going for barbecue. We've all got to eat, you know?
Seahawks visit 49ers in key NFC West matchup (Yahoo! Sports)
2012
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Last October, the San Francisco 49ers were all alone in first place and already on their way to winning the NFC West title in commanding fashion in coach Jim Harbaugh's first season.
Dallas Mavericks suspend guard Delonte West indefinitely, according to report
2012
With former MVP and offensive linchpin Dirk Nowitzki reportedly considering surgery as he continues to struggle through swelling in his right knee, the last thing in the world the Dallas Mavericks need right now is another problem to deal with as they prepare for their regular-season opener at Staples Center against the Los Angeles Lakers on Oct. 30. Unfortunately for Mavericks fans, the bad news kept coming on Tuesday morning, as Tim MacMahon of ESPN Dallas reports:
Dallas Mavericks guard Delonte West has been suspended for conduct detrimental to the team, Mavs coach Rick Carlisle said.
Carlisle did not specify a timetable for West's suspension.
Sources told ESPNDallas.com that West's suspension stems at least in part from an outburst in the locker room after the Mavs' 123-104 preseason win Monday over the Houston Rockets. He had 2 points, 2 assists and 1 rebound in 16 minutes during the win.
West tweeted later Monday: "Sorry moma..." and "I showed off on ur birthday again..."
[Fantasy Basketball '12: Play the official game of NBA.com]
Those tweets appear to have been deleted from West's Twitter account.
The suspension is the latest of several disciplinary incidents in which the hard-nosed 29-year-old combo guard has been involved over the course of his eight-year NBA career. The NBA suspended West, then a free agent, for 10 games during the summer of 2010 after pleading guilty to weapons charges on which he was arrested in September 2009. Last season, West was fined by the league for sticking his finger in the ear of Utah Jazz swingman Gordon Hayward during an April game, an incident that Carlisle called "unacceptable" at the time, stressing the importance of West channeling his commendable competitiveness into positive performance rather than destructive, distracting incidents.
West's behavioral aberrations have, in the past, at times been attributed in part to his struggles with bipolar disorder, although it's unclear if that played any role in this alleged "outburst," the nature of which remains vague.
West missed 21 games last year with a fractured right index finger, but was a valuable member of the Mavs' backcourt rotation when available, averaging 9.6 points, 3.2 assists, 2.3 rebounds and 1.3 steals in 24.1 minutes per game in 44 appearances (including 33 starts) for Carlisle. After returning to the team on a one-year, veteran's minimum contract this offseason, West figured to serve as a key backup at both guard spots behind the newly imported O.J. Mayo and Darren Collison.
West's ball-handling and play-making were expected to be especially important at the point, now that fellow combo-guard backup Rodrigue Beaubois has been sidelined by a sprained left ankle. The suspension could mean more time on the ball for rookie Jared Cunningham, whom the Mavs chose out of Oregon State with the 24th overall pick in the 2012 NBA draft.
Monday night preview: Who owns the AFC West, the Chargers or Broncos?
2012
It's early, of course, but the AFC West already looks like a two-team race. The San Diego Chargers lead the division, with the Denver Broncos one game back and nipping at the lightning bolt. The Oakland Raiders and Kansas City Chiefs aren't far behind, but with two wins between them, they're excluded from the conversation for now.
Peyton Manning's arrival in Denver promised to alter the structure of the division, but it didn't happen immediately. Manning's played nearly as big as his reputation, and between commercial appearances, he's found time to amass a quarterback rating of 101.0 ‒ second best in the league.
Wins haven't accompanied the numbers, though. The Broncos, having played a tough schedule, are under .500. As long as the Broncos get this one Monday night, though, they're not out anything ‒ they'd be 3-3 and tied for the division lead, with their top adversaries owing them a return trip to Denver.
[More NFL: Tom Brady's trash talk backfires after game vs. Seattle Seahawks]
But the Chargers have made some changes, too. The defense is stronger this year than it was last year, and it will have to be if they want to keep Manning in check. After early injuries and struggles, talented running back Ryan Mathews had the best game of his career last week against the Saints. If he can keep contributing at that level, it completely transforms the Chargers offense.
Another big factor Monday night will be the absence of Jared Gaither, San Diego's starting left tackle. He hasn't practiced, and likely won't play. When he's been out of the lineup, it's been bad news for Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers ‒ they have no experienced backup, and Denver will look to exploit that with beastly pass rushers Von Miller and Elvis Dumervil. It's a matchup that favors the Broncos.
Vegas sees the game pretty evenly, with the Chargers being just one-point favorites at home. The prediction here is that Denver pulls away in the second half and evens up the race at the top of the AFC West.
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MAC Preview: New Ohio coach Jim Christian is back in his comfort zone
2012
When Jim Christian led Kent State to six consecutive 20-win seasons from 2002 to 2008, his name came up in connection to so many jobs that it always seemed as though he was eager to leave the MAC.
• New Ohio coach Jim Christian is back in his comfort zone
• MAC Capsule Preview: Akron hopes to avenge its league tourney title game loss to Ohio
For more news on the MAC, visit Rivals.com
The new Ohio coach returns to the league after four trying seasons at TCU with greater appreciation for how good he has it.
One coach in the MAC was the best man in his wedding and many others are guys he has coached with and against for years. Recruiting comes easily to him because he knows the high school and AAU coaches in the region so well. And the community in Athens feels very comfortable and familiar to him, especially having his wife's family a mere two hours away.
"It feels like coming home to be honest with you," Christian said. "When you're in one area for seven years, you feel comfortable coming back. It's a perfect fit between the program, the location, everything. It has been a really easy adjustment."
Whereas Christian's job at TCU was to rebuild a long-struggling program with minimal pedigree, fan support or recruiting advantages, he takes over a thriving program at Ohio. He must only sustain the success the Bobcats enjoyed under prior coach John Groce, a challenge very similar to the one he took on at Kent State a decade ago after Stan Heath left for Arkansas.
Just like Kent State had a winning tradition buoyed by a deep NCAA tournament run the year before Christian became coach, Ohio has won 19 or more games seven of the last eight years and is six months removed from taking North Carolina to overtime in the Sweet 16. Christian inherits a team with five starters returning, a fan base that has purchased season tickets this offseason at a record pace and an administration more invested in basketball than perhaps any other program in the MAC.
"The similarities with Kent [State] are amazing," Christian said. "I'm not trying to fix something. They won 29 games last season. I'm only trying to keep what John built going."
Christian had something similar going at Kent State not long ago, but he was eager for a new challenge after four MAC east division titles and five postseason appearances in six years. It made it easier for Christian to leave that the president who hired him left the school in 2006 and the athletic director who was one of his closest friends planned to retire at the end of the 2009-10 school year.
"There was a lot of changes going on," Christian said. "Not that the people they hired weren't going to be great, but there was such a closeness between the administration and the basketball program that it was going to be hard to duplicate that. If it wasn't for those things, you probably wouldn't have thought about [leaving] at all."
Christian is adamant he doesn't regret his four years at TCU, but he does concede it was a very difficult job.
Football is so important at TCU that basketball becomes an afterthought among donors and fans until at least January -- and maybe longer if the team isn't winning. The Horned Frogs drew between 4,000 and 4,500 fans per game during Christian's tenure, less than half the average in the Mountain West.
While Christian believes recruiting will get easier for TCU basketball as a member of the Big 12, he found it difficult in the Mountain West because the Horned Frogs were the lone Texas school in the league. He also admits he made some mistakes in recruiting his first couple years on the job that set the rebuilding process back a bit.
Christian's teams went 11-37 in the Mountain West his first three seasons at TCU before a bit of a breakthrough in year four when the Horned Frogs won 18 games and finished 7-7 in a league that produced four NCAA tournament teams. Nonetheless, with the core of that team graduating and with TCU moving to the Big 12, the program was going to enter rebuilding mode again, something Christian may not have been able to survive five years into his tenure.
"It was a great learning experience for me," Christian said. "When you inherit a situation that hasn't had a lot of success, every decision you make in recruiting, if you miss, you're going back a year. It took us a while. In the beginning, I'd say I felt a little uncomfortable. Toward the end, I figured out who the type of people you want to deal with are and who you don't. Where you can get guys and where you can't.
"But moving forward, I think it's so much better to walk into an established program where there's a culture of winning and an expectation of winning, where the university wants your particular sport to be the front porch of the university."
That was the opportunity Christian felt presented itself when he received a phone call from a mutual friend prior to the Final Four last spring gauging whether he had any interest in the Ohio job.
Immediately intrigued, Christian agreed to meet with Ohio athletic director Jim Schaus. Christian was confident the community and recruiting base would be a good fit, but he needed to determine whether he'd have the administrative support he believed he needed to keep growing the Ohio program.
During their conversation at the Final Four, Schaus assured Christian he'd have charter flights for road games that weren't drivable and ample money to hire a quality staff and to create a favorable schedule. As a result, Christian quickly accepted a contract worth a reported $425,000 per year, less than than the $600,000 per year he made at TCU yet enough to make him the highest paid basketball coach in the MAC.
"It became a no brainer for me after having conversations with Jim at the Final Four," Christian said. "You could tell the growth of the basketball program was a collaboration between John Groce and his staff and the administration. It wasn't haphazardly done. As a head coach, that was all you could ask for."
Initially some players were disappointed that a member of Groce's staff didn't get the job, but Christian said that dissipated quickly once he assured them he wasn't planning to drastically change what they had been doing. No key players left the program since they all saw the potential for a big season with MAC player of the year candidate D.J. Cooper, promising shooting guard Walter Offutt and three other starters back from last year's 29-win team.
Christian's knowledge of MAC history has made it easy for him to motivate his new team. He pointed out that Ohio hasn't won a MAC regular season title since 2000 and that none of the MAC's five previous Sweet 16 teams ever returned to the NCAA tournament the following year.
Those are goals Christian looks forward to pursuing this winter at a school where he already feels very comfortable.
"I think it's a lot different than it is when you have to try to build from scratch," he said. "Both are rewarding if you can turn the corner and do it, but obviously one is a lot easier than the other."
Sorry-looking broom jinxes Cincy’s sweep chances
2012
If you're wondering why the Cincinnati Reds couldn't close out an NLDS sweep over the San Francisco Giants on Tuesday night, look no further than this woman who showed up with Charlie Brown's Christmas tree in broom form. Or at least it's what I believe to be a broom. There's no way that sorry-looking thing could clear a small stoop, let alone the NL West champion San Francisco Giants, no matter if their putrid offense struck out 16 times.
Some of you might be wondering why I'm bristling over a fan's choice of prop at Great American Ballpark. But the baseball gods can be a fickle sort and they do notice when you pull out a broom with the score tied in the 10th inning and your opponent holding runners on second and third. Heck, they're even capable of immediately issuing a correction, even if that means making the best defensive third baseman of his era blow the game with an error.
If the Reds end up losing this series, we know who to blame.
Big BLS H/N: @cjzero, Bay Area Sports Guy
Make sure you have all your bases covered this postseason ...
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Ivy League Preview: Harvard is still a title threat despite cheating scandal
2012
Yahoo! Sports is breaking down each league for the upcoming college basketball season working backward from No. 31 to No. 1. Here's a look at our No. 16 league, the Ivy League.
Before a cheating scandal caused senior co-captains Kyle Casey and Brandyn Curry to withdraw from school a month before the start of practice, Harvard would have been a slight favorite to repeat as Ivy League champs.
Now the Crimson will have to rely heavily on the talented but unproven prospects coach Tommy Amaker has stockpiled recently to have any chance of returning to the NCAA tournament for a second straight year.
The most difficult player for Harvard to replace is probably Curry, a pass-first point guard with a knack for making good decisions with the ball in his hands. True freshman point guard Siyani Chambers will likely inherit the position from Curry because the Minnesota native is the lone true point guard left on the roster.
Casey is more well-known than Curry after averaging 11.4 points and 5.5 rebounds last season, but the 6-foot-7 forward is actually easier for Harvard to replace. Between gifted but raw Kenyatta Smith, promising reserve Steve Moundou-Missi and a trio of decorated freshmen, the Crimson have a wealth of inexperienced but talented big men ready to take on a greater role.
If Harvard's young players come of age quickly, then it won't be easy for senior-heavy Princeton or up-and-coming Columbia to pry the Ivy League crown away. The Crimson do have plenty of proven firepower at wing with slashing sophomore Wesley Saunders and shooters Laurent Rivard and Christian Webster likely to shoulder much of the scoring burden. No team will be better equipped to capitalize if Harvard slips than Princeton, which brings back four starters from a team that went 10-4 in the Ivy League and appeared in the CBI postseason tournament. The offense will flow through first-team all-league forward Ian Hummer, but he'll need backcourt firepower to emerge to make the Tigers a complete team.
It's hard to see anyone besides Princeton or Harvard claiming the Ivy League crown, yet improving Columbia can't be counted out. The Lions appear ready to take a big leap up the Ivy League standings thanks to the return of all-league guard Brian Barbour and burly 6-foot-9 center Mark Cisco.
MAKING A LIST
Best shooter: Laurent Rivard, Harvard
Best playmaker: Brian Barbour, Columbia
Best defender: Ian Hummer, Princeton
Coach on the rise: Kyle Smith, Columbia
Coach on the hot seat: none
Three must-see games: 1. Harvard at UMass, Nov. 13 (Fun intrastate clash is part of ESPN's 24-hour marathon); 2. Princeton at Syracuse, Nov. 21 (Can the Tigers solve Syracuse's trademark zone?) 3. Manhattan at Columbia, Dec. 29 (Nice home test against the MAAC favorites for Columbia)
FACTS AND FIGURES
New coaches: Mike Martin, Brown (Had been an assistant at Penn)
Regular-season winner last season: Harvard
Tourney winner last season: N/A
League RPI rank in each of past 3 seasons: 2011-12: 13th ; 2010-11: 15th, 2009-10: 22nd
Last NCAA tourney win by a league team: 2010, Cornell beat Wisconsin and Temple as a No. 12 seed
More conference previews from Yahoo! Sports:
Patriot League (No. 17): C.J. McCollum bypassed the NBA and returned to Lehigh to fulfill a promise to his parents; Expect another spirited two-way battle between Bucknell and Lehigh
MAAC (No. 18): Mitch Buonaguro enters important year optimistic Siena can climb back into contention; Next step in Manhattan's stunning turnaround could be league title
Southern Conference (No. 19): Trading soccer for hoops has paid off for College of Charleston star and Great Britain Olympian Andrew Lawrence; Davidson is loaded for another run at a league title, NCAA bid
WAC (No. 20): Will the beleaguered WAC survive as a basketball league beyond next season?; WAC Capsule Preview: Utah State hopes to rebound from frustrating 2011-12 season
Sun Belt League (No. 21): In likely his final season at North Texas, Tony Mitchell wants to leave a legacy; Middle Tennessee State vies for the NCAA bid it narrowly missed last year
Summit League (No. 22): In the small town of Brookings, S.D., Nate Wolters is a reluctant superstar; South Dakota State looks like the clear favorite
NEC (No. 23): 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
Big Sky (No. 24): New stars must emerge for Weber State to succeed without Damian Lillard; Montana remains the favorite despite Will Cherry's injury
Big West (No. 25): With San Diego State on its way, Big West teams are investing in hoops to avoid being left behind; Revamped Long Beach State takes aim at another Big West title
Atlantic Sun (No. 26): Humble, unassuming Torrey Craig leads South Carolina Upstate's resurgence; Which team will capitalize on Belmont's departure?
Big South (No. 27): Unwanted in high school, guards Saah Nimley and Arlon Harper are now powering Charleston Southern's resurgence; Coastal Carolina hopes home is sweet this March
Southland Conference (No. 28): Pat Knight's epic rant had unintended benefits for Lamar; Oral Roberts assumes the role of instant favorite in its new league
America East (No. 29): Stony Brook basketball draws inspiration from baseball team's College World Series run; Early departures drain league of some of its top talent
MEAC (No. 30): Rush of publicity from Missouri win has long-lasting impact at Norfolk State; Savannah State seeks NCAA bid to cap remarkable turnaround
SWAC (No. 31): Mike Davis prefers challenge of winning at Texas Southern to torture of taking a year off; Balanced league will crown new champ this year
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SoCon Preview: Davidson is loaded for another run at a league title, NCAA bid
2012
Yahoo! Sports is breaking down each league for the upcoming college basketball season working backward from No. 31 to No. 1. Here's a look at our No. 19 league, the Southern Conference.
Davidson may not have a star the caliber of Stephen Curry, but next season's Wildcats will probably be deeper and more well-rounded than the team the future NBA lottery pick took to the Elite Eight 4 1/2 years ago.
Five starters and a handful of key reserves return after the program won 25 games last year, rolled to the Southern Conference title and pushed Final Four-bound Louisville into the final minutes in a opening-round NCAA tournament game in Portland.
The headliners are the two forwards, 6-foot-7 junior De'Mon Brooks and 6-foot-10 senior Jake Cohen. Brooks is an efficient scorer in the paint who averaged 15.7 points and 6.2 rebounds per game last season, while Cohen flashed the league's best inside-outside game, scoring 14.3 points, grabbing 6.1 rebounds and flummoxing opposing defenders with his ability to score from the perimeter or down low.
Although interior depth is a bit of a concern for the Wildcats, perimeter talent is another one of their strengths. Nik Cochran is a veteran point guard who can shoot the deep ball or attack the rim off the dribble, JP Kuhlman is a slasher who can also handle the ball and Chris Czerapowicz is a shooter with good size for his position.
Davidson's schedule is challenging enough that an at-large NCAA bid is conceivable with enough non-league wins, but the Wildcats may have to rely on the Southern Conference's automatic bid. If so, there are a handful of teams that will pose a significant threat.
The best team in the league besides Davidson is probably Charleston, which pairs the guard tandem of Andrew Lawrence and Anthony Stitt with double-double threat Trent Wiedeman and promising sophomore Adjehi Baru. The all-around play of Eric Ferguson makes Georgia Southern dangerous, while UNC Greensboro is improving but probably a year away from being the class of the league.
MAKING A LIST
Best shooter: Jack Isenbarger, Elon
Best playmaker: Andrew Lawrence, Charleston
Best defender: Eric Ferguson, Georgia Southern
Coach on the rise: Wes Miller, UNC Greensboro
Coach on the hot seat: Jeff Jackson, Furman
Three must-see games: 1. Davidson vs. Duke, Jan. 2 (The Wildcats will benefit from facing the Blue Devils in Charlotte instead of Cameron Indoor); 2. Louisville at Charleston, Dec. 4 (Scheduling coup for the Cougars getting a top-five team to visit); 3. Wake Forest at UNC Greensboro, Dec. 22 (Can Wes Miller beat the team he rooted for as a kid?)
FACTS AND FIGURES
New coaches: Doug Wojcik, Charleston (Had been head coach at Tulsa); Bennie Seltzer, Samford (Had been an Indiana assistant)
Regular-season winner last season: Davidson (South); UNC Greensboro (North)
Tourney winner last season: Davidson
League RPI rank in each of past 3 seasons: 2011-12: 23rd; 2010-11: 19th, 2009-10: 20th
Last NCAA tourney win by a league team: 2008, Davidson as a No. 10 seed reached the Elite Eight
More conference previews from Yahoo! Sports:
WAC (No. 20): Will the beleaguered WAC survive as a basketball league beyond next season?; WAC Capsule Preview: Utah State hopes to rebound from frustrating 2011-12 season
Sun Belt League (No. 21): In likely his final season at North Texas, Tony Mitchell wants to leave a legacy; Middle Tennessee State vies for the NCAA bid it narrowly missed last year
Summit League (No. 22): In the small town of Brookings, S.D., Nate Wolters is a reluctant superstar; South Dakota State looks like the clear favorite
NEC (No. 23): 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
Big Sky (No. 24): New stars must emerge for Weber State to succeed without Damian Lillard; Montana remains the favorite despite Will Cherry's injury
Big West (No. 25): With San Diego State on its way, Big West teams are investing in hoops to avoid being left behind; Revamped Long Beach State takes aim at another Big West title
Atlantic Sun (No. 26): Humble, unassuming Torrey Craig leads South Carolina Upstate's resurgence; Which team will capitalize on Belmont's departure?
Big South (No. 27): Unwanted in high school, guards Saah Nimley and Arlon Harper are now powering Charleston Southern's resurgence; Coastal Carolina hopes home is sweet this March
Southland Conference (No. 28): Pat Knight's epic rant had unintended benefits for Lamar; Oral Roberts assumes the role of instant favorite in its new league
America East (No. 29): Stony Brook basketball draws inspiration from baseball team's College World Series run; Early departures drain league of some of its top talent
MEAC (No. 30): Rush of publicity from Missouri win has long-lasting impact at Norfolk State; Savannah State seeks NCAA bid to cap remarkable turnaround
SWAC (No. 31): Mike Davis prefers challenge of winning at Texas Southern to torture of taking a year off; Balanced league will crown new champ this year
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