Shawn Horcoff: Gary Bettman’s ‘blatant lie’ about caring for NHL fans

16 Oct
2012

You can understand Shawn Horcoff's frustration with the NHL lockout.

The Edmonton Oilers forward is 34 years old. He's scheduled to make a base salary of $6.0 million in 2012-13, and his annual wage tumbles to $4 million and then $3 million the final two years of his 6-year contract — and that's before whatever type of rollback the NHL ends up winning in this round of CBA talks.

Horcoff's deal is kind of creative accounting the owners and GMs perfected since the salary cap was implemented, and are now attempted to eliminate in this work stoppage. So he feeds from one hand and gets punched in the face by the other. It's rather jarring, we imagine.

So Horcoff, who has been an active member of the NHLPA, isn't a fan of the lockout. Or the NHL's brass. Or Gary Bettman and Bill Daly in particular, as he revealed to Craig Custance of ESPN.com on Monday:

"It's the same thing every time with the owners. [Commissioner Gary Bettman's] first defense is to cancel games and test the players. There's been no effort to negotiate on his stance. Their negotiation is 'The players have to come down to us or we're not moving at all,' " Horcoff told ESPN The Magazine. "Gary has forced the players' hand into this situation and frankly, he's [ticked] us off. I think at the start, that first offer they gave out, that was a big, big mistake on Gary's part."

Well, yeah. There's no question about that, given that the players still believe the NHL's offer includes a 24-percent rollback. It could be argued that the NHL's initial offer — made with an eye towards starting the talks — set the CBA negotiations back weeks, maybe months.

But Horcoff also doesn't buy that the NHL actually cares about the paying customer in this dispute.

From ESPN:

"I sit there and read Gary and Bill's comments about, 'We feel sorry for the fans.' Well, I find that really hard to believe," Horcoff said. "I think it's a blatant lie, personally. I don't feel they feel sorry for the fans at all. Gary feels like no matter what, [the fans are] going to come back and couldn't care less if they're frustrated with this. He's going to do what it takes to get the best deal and couldn't care less what they feel."

There are a few ways to read Gary Bettman's affinity for fans, or lack thereof. Does he take us for granted? Of course, as does the rest of the NHL, blind to the damage this work stoppage is doing to its core audience.

Does Gary Bettman care about what fans think? Not about him, for sure. But he does have a general interest in the fans' likes and dislikes about the game? Sure; why else hire Frank Luntz to find out what we believe during the lockout?

But to Horcoff's point: Does Gary Bettman feel sorry for the fans?

Probably as much as the players do.

s/t Kukla

Tags: , , , , , , , rollback, Shawn Horcoff,
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Tracy Porter, Jared Gaither headline Broncos, Chargers inactive lists

15 Oct
2012

Denver Broncos cornerback Tracy Porter did not appear on the team's injury report at the end of the week, but was downgraded to "out" after coming down with an illness. Porter did not accompany the team on their trip to San Diego and will be replaced in the starting lineup by either Tony Carter or Chris Harris.

For the San Diego Chargers, they'll be without left tackle Jared Gaither, who is out with a groin injury. Signed to a four-year, $24.5 million contract extension in March, Gaither missed the first four weeks of the season with a back injury. Undrafted rookie Michael Harris will make his fourth start of the season at left tackle.

Denver: QB Caleb Hanie, RB Knowshon Moreno, TE Julius Thomas, G C.J. Davis, DT Sealver Siliga, LB Steven Johnson, CB Tracy Porter

San Diego: TE Ladarius Green, OT Jared Gaither, NT Antonio Garay, LB Jonas Mouton, CB Shareece Wright, S Brandon Taylor, K Nate Kaeding

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Reds sign Dusty Baker to two-year extension – Joey Votto | CIN

15 Oct
2012
The Reds finalized a two-year contract extension with manager Dusty Baker on Monday afternoon.
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Ball Don’t Lie’s 2012-13 NBA Season Previews: The Atlanta Hawks

15 Oct
2012

For the first time in two years we'll have an orthodox, full-length NBA season to look forward to. No lockout nonsense, and precious little obsession as to whether or not LeBron James will ever win the big one. He's won it, already, and our sanity as NBA followers is probably better off as a result. However big that shred of sanity is remains to be seen, following yet another offseason that once again proved that the NBA is full of Crazy McCrazytons that appear to take great delight in messing with us continually.

As a result of that offseason, and the impending regular season, why not mess with Ball Don't Lie's triptych of Kelly Dwyer, Dan Devine and Eric Freeman as they preview the 2012-13 season with alacrity, good cheer, and bad jokes.

We start, as one often should, with the Atlanta Hawks.

Kelly Dwyer's Kilt-Straightener

It's amazing how a deal sending away a well-regarded former All-Star, one that works hard and attempts to live up to his billing, can change a team's outlook and up the positivity surrounding it. Oddly, in the Hawks' instance, the deal that sent Joe Johnson to Brooklyn has us giddy about Atlanta in ways that go beyond the eventual cap space that they're probably not going to be able to do much with.

For such a genuinely cheerful, talented, hard-working and suitably humble man; we really are taking the "addition by subtraction" to a ridiculous regard as we approach a Joe Johnson-less Atlanta Hawks team. It wasn't as if Joe was endlessly stopping ball movement with this team, despite his "Iso Joe" reputation, and it's not like he was at fault for the absolutely ridiculous fee the Hawks paid for him in 2005 in their sign-and-trade acquisition of Johnson from the Suns, or the thrice-what-he's-worth contract Johnson signed with the team in 2010.

Joe did stop the ball, though, as Louis Williams often will with the Hawks this season. The goodness behind this is the fact that Williams scored better per-minute than Joe last season, his efficiency wasn't quite on Johnson's level (though not far off), and he dished more and turned the ball over a remarkable 1.5 times per 36 minutes of play. Decades worth of influence that goes into us giving the short shrift to a shooting guard in a point guard's body, especially in comparison to a sturdy and orthodox-wing like Joe, has to be thrown out the window. The Hawks have made an upgrade, at nearly one-quarter the price; creating cap space for the summer of 2013 while matching Johnson's scoring and passing exploits along the way.

On top of all this, nearly matching the return of Al Horford to the starting lineup, is the spark that comes from realizing that Larry Drew is a real comer amongst his coaching brethren.

We don't blame you if you declined to tune into Hawks contests from night to night on your League Pass feed, the cast of characters was more or less the same and the middle-East outcome was right in line with previous years. Unlike previous years, though, the Hawks were working without an All-Star big man in Horford, and the effort was consistent from game to game. This was especially telling in the team's jump to sixth overall in defensive efficiency last year, a startling number considering the foul-happy ways of Zaza Pachulia and Ivan Johnson, and the amount of minutes handed to slow-footed bench types like Tracy McGrady and Vladimir Radmanovic.

Working with one-year deals on the most middling (and, frankly, anonymous) of playoff teams, the Hawks still repeatedly outworked its opponents; even dealing with the typical Josh Smith trade rumors and Johnson's slightly declining efficiency.

The offense was middling, almost literally as it finished 16th out of 30 NBA teams, but the acquisitions of Kyle Korver and Anthony Morrow help in this regard. As will Williams, should he continue on his current arc, and the return of Horford. And, remember, this is supposed to be a rebuilding year, as Atlanta awaits all that cap space.

Why the typical win expectation, then?

So much has to go right, again. Josh Smith has to go right, for once, and avoid bombing away in a contract year. Williams has to bring the same sort of drive this season as he did in last season's contract year. Korver has to continue to hide his defensive shortcomings with Horford and Smith behind him, as opposed to the all-world defensive talents of Omer Asik and Taj Gibson (if you're laughing at that, you clearly don't have League Pass), and Jeff Teague has to keep confidence and retain those defensive smarts amongst all the noise. Devin Harris has to gun for wins, and not one last career-turning contract.

Toughest? This roster, above all, knows that most of the rotation is due for a new contract in the summer of 2013; and there's a significant difference between Devin Harris and Josh Smith playing for a contract, and Tracy McGrady and Kirk Hinrich playing for a new deal. That's not a shot at Devin and Josh, or relaying an expectation that we have of them to play selfish ball. It's just natural, as a player in his athletic prime who is due some new cash in July, to worry and press and deal with conflicting emotions. And as great as Larry Drew was in 2011-12, he'll truly have his work cut out for him this season.

There is hope, for once. Thank Danny Ferry for that scratch of the record in the summer, and Drew for his work in fall, winter, and hopefully deep spring.

Projected record: 45-37

Fear Itself with Dan Devine

It is tonally appropriate that the NBA season tips off just before Halloween -- because on any given night, each and every one of the league's 30 teams can look downright frightening. Sometimes, that means your favorite team will act as their opposition's personal Freddy Krueger; sometimes, you will be the one suffering through the living nightmare. In preparation for Opening Night, BDL's Dan Devine considers what makes your team scary and what should make you scared.

What Makes You Scary: Change, options and artillery. The offseason trade of former focal point Joe Johnson to the Brooklyn Nets means that the Hawks now officially belong to their big men, which could result in a more interesting and dangerous Atlanta offense than the one that has finished 20th and 16th in the league in offensive efficiency (points scored per 100 possessions) in two years under head coach Larry Drew.

Josh Smith put up should-have-been-All-Star numbers last season, leading the league in Defensive Win Shares and posting a career-high Player Efficiency Rating. Now, the beastly power forward is in a contract year, which could convince him to finally stop trying to convince us he's a good jump shooter (although the "call me Midrange Shawty" thing is troubling) and merely find satisfaction in being a monster down low. After missing nearly four months with a torn pectoral muscle, Al Horford is healthy and eager to build off his postseason cameo against the Boston Celtics, which reminded us he's one of the most gifted centers in the game. And following a breakout sophomore season, point guard Jeff Teague will now reportedly have the freedom to push the ball, drive the lane and attack the basket, potentially opening the door to a drive-and-kick game that activates the slew of shooters that Atlanta imported during the offseason.

While the Hawks will likely run much of their offense through Smith and Horford -- at least, they should, given their fantastic combination of low-post prowess and estimable passing gifts -- what could make them most deadly starts with the 24-year-old Teague, all quick-twitch and giddy-up, running more screen-and-rolls and collapsing opposing defenses off the dribble. Because once defenders commit to cutting off his penetration, he'll be able to find the likes of Kyle Korver (43.5 percent from 3-point range last season), Anthony Morrow (37.1 percent, in a "down" year), Lou Williams (36.2 percent), Devin Harris (36.2 percent), DeShawn Stevenson (a year removed from a 37.8 percent mark in Dallas), Anthony Tolliver (40.9 percent in Minnesota two years ago) or first-round pick John Jenkins (who shot a scorching 43.8 percent from deep in his three years at Vanderbilt) behind the arc, forcing defenses to stretch to contest or die trying. After so many years of stagnant, slow-down, clear-out isolation offense, it's that fluidity, those options, that potential barrage that enchants the mind's eye when thinking about what this Hawks team could look like.

Atlanta was by no means averse to bombing last season -- they took the league's 10th-most 3-pointers and finished eighth in makes -- but if Drew takes the restrictor plate off last year's ninth-slowest offense, makes good on his promise to move away from all those Johnson isos and lets his young point guard run amok some, I expect both of those numbers to go up this season. And on the nights when the shots are falling, opening up interior space for Smith and Horford to use their strength, speed and touch to terrorize opposing big men, Atlanta will be really tough to stop.

What Should Make You Scared: That there's no one on the wing. Danny Ferry's first two major moves upon becoming the Hawks' new general manager -- shipping out Johnson and career underachiever Marvin Williams -- both made sense. But they also carved a clearly defined hole at small forward that opponents should be able to exploit.

Johnson gave the Hawks a legitimate All-Star scorer for seven years, but his bloated contract locked the team into a capped-out stasis in which significant roster overhaul was virtually impossible; shedding the final four years and $89.3 million owed him was essential. While Williams' deal wasn't especially onerous (two years, $15.8 million left), his seven years of consistently lukewarm, fringe-average-or-worse play had eradicated any confidence that he'd develop into a force; it was time to exorcise the ghosts of 2005.

But their exits, while logical, leave a void at small forward, where Williams started and Johnson often played in sort-of-small-ball lineups. In fact, with 2011-12 reserves Tracy McGrady, Jerry Stackhouse and Vladimir Radmanovic all set to play elsewhere this year, too, the Hawks are basically starting from scratch at the three, and looking over Atlanta's present roster, the potential replacements look … dicey. Both swingman Korver and tweener-type Tolliver can be useful players, but both are much better suited to reserve roles than heavy minutes. Tough injury luck prevented training-camp invitee Damion James from taking advantage of chances to start in each of his two seasons with the New Jersey Nets, but when healthy, he hasn't shown much; ditto for fellow third-year swingman James Anderson, formerly of the San Antonio Spurs.

Given the dearth of options at the three and the influx of backcourt talent in trade, free agency and the draft this offseason, the most likely solution for Drew seems to be deploying more three-guard lineups while relying on his All-Star frontcourt to clean up any defensive messes that might result. But even assuming health and continued brilliance from Horford and Smith, the myriad matchup problems that will come with relying on small units featuring combinations of Teague, Lou Williams, Harris, Stevenson and Morrow could cause Atlanta's defense (sixth-best in the league last year in points allowed per 100 possessions a year ago) to slip. If the slide's too precipitous for the speed/fluidity/shooting gains to overcome, the first year in the new era of Hawks basketball could result in the franchise's first lottery trip in six years.

Eric Freeman's Identity Crisis

There is no more important asset for a basketball team than talent, and yet the more loaded squad does not always win. What we've seen in recent seasons isn't only that the best team wins, but that the group with the clearest sense of self, from management down through the players, prevails. A team must not only be talented, but sure of its goals, present and future, and the best methods of obtaining them. Most NBA teams have trouble with their identity. Eric Freeman's Identity Crisis is a window into those struggles, the accomplishment of realizing a coherent identity, and the pitfalls of believing these issues to be solved.

This summer, Danny Ferry began what should be a useful rebuilding process for the Hawks. In shipping out Joe Johnson, his massive contract, and Marvin Williams, Ferry cut salary and broke up a stagnant team in need of change. That he managed to keep the team fairly competitive (at least on paper), all while opening up options for the future, speaks well of his skills and foresight.

Sadly, one of those options, hometown boy Dwight Howard, went off the market soon after Ferry made his moves, and that's where things get a little tricky as this newest incarnation of the Hawks takes flight. Ferry has created a lopsided, frontcourt-heavy team in need of reinforcements, no matter if they make the playoffs or not. Although the Hawks have the cap space to add those pieces, they also have very little chance of adding an elite star. It's nice to imagine Atlanta nabbing free agent Chris Paul and undoing the long-discussed failures of the 2005 draft, but that's a long shot.

All of this is to say that while the Hawks are clearly hoping for some better tomorrow, they're also poorly positioned to enter that upper echelon and simultaneously compete for a playoff spot. As long as Al Horford and Josh Smith are around, the Hawks are going to be fairly good. At the same time, those players will ensure that the team doesn't lose so much that they get a good draft pick. So, even as Ferry has made moves with the hopes of remaking the Hawks into a championship contender, he hasn't yet done much to help them escape the NBA's gooey middle tier.

Cap space can be useful, but it only translates to championships if the franchise that owns it has other qualities likely to attract a superstar. In the contemporary NBA, with superstars taking control of their futures with increasing regularity, a team like the Hawks looks increasingly unlikely to succeed in that pursuit. Ferry, via his experience with LeBron James as general manager of the Cleveland Cavaliers, has presumably learned this lesson already. If he has, he knows this rebuilding process has many more steps, and that one of his two stars might need to figure into it.

[Fantasy Basketball '12: Play the official game of NBA.com]

Tags: , , , Joe Johnson, Josh Smith, Korver, , , ,
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Eagles could move on from turnover-prone Michael Vick following Super Bowl XLVII

14 Oct
2012

The Philadelphia Eagles lost to the Detroit Lions on Sunday, blowing a 10-point lead in the final five minutes of the fourth quarter to lose 26-23. It was the Eagles' third loss in four games, dropping them to 3-3 on the season. Contributing to the loss was the play of quarterback Michael Vick, who completed 28-of-46 pass attempts for 311 yards and two touchdowns, but was also intercepted twice, fumbled once and took two of his three sacks of the night on back-to-back plays in the Eagles' one and only possession of overtime.

Vick now has a passer rating of 77.7 on the season, he's accounted for 13 of the team's 17 turnovers — including five lost fumbles, which explains why he's been carrying a football around the team's facilities — and only three quarterbacks have taken as many sacks (17). Vick has been under constant pressure, but the turnovers and overall subpar performance this season leads one to wonder how much longer Vick will be the Eagles' starting quarterback. Head coach Andy Reid has continually backed Vick, so even though the Eagles are entering the bye, a change right now appears unlikely. But a change of some kind could be coming.

As noted on Sunday morning by ESPN's Adam Schefter, the Eagles will have a brief window to break free from the Vick contract. Here's how:

Vick is currently scheduled to earn $15.5 million in base salary in 2012, the third year of a five-year, $80 million contract he signed on Aug. 30, 2011. (Vick's contract was reported as a "six-year deal," but the sixth and final year voids if Vick has 35 percent playing-time in any season. Vick played in 77.17 percent of the snaps last season.) Currently, $3 million of Vick's contract is guaranteed "for injury only." If Vick is on the Eagles' roster on the second day of the 2013 waiver period, which begins on the day after the Super Bowl, the $3 million that is currently guaranteed "for injury only" will become fully guaranteed.

Should the Eagles release Vick before that date, they'll save $15.5 million in cash and free up $12.7 million in salary cap space. 2012 third-round pick Nick Foles is currently No. 2 on the depth chart and would presumably get the first crack at the starting job, though competition could be added in free agency or next year's draft.

Fantasy football advice on Yahoo! Sports:


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The Vent: Explaining the issues to the owners and players; actual apathy looks like this

14 Oct
2012

THE VENT is a forum for rants, raves, pleas and laments from hockey fans across the world about the NHL lockout. It runs every Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. If you've got a take on the lockout and need to let it out, email us at .)

Since this lockout began swirling back in the summer, we've been given a number of articles explaining the issues to fans. But has anyone stopped to explain the issues to the players and the owners? Michael F. takes up the task.

Someone needs to sit both sides down and explain the facts of the real world to them so they can have actual productive discussions and get things resolved.

The Owners: The basic fact is that no one pays for admission to see the owner wave to the fans from his luxury box a la Ted Leonsis. We, the fans, pay to see the players on the ice. You've agreed to deals with the players currently in the NHL, now you want to change the terms of those deals, whether through a roll-back of salaries or retaining funds through escrow. Either way, it's money you agreed to but are now apparently unwilling to pay.

Get over it. You want a deal like football and basketball, where the players receive 50% of the revenues from the sport. Fair enough. But you shouldn't expect to take the money back from players in one big step. Use Adam Proteau's model to step the revenue sharing down one percent per year, essentially extending the current salary cap levels on an absolute basis, assuming a reasonable growth rate, for seven years until the player's share reaches 50%, then allowing growth from there.

Keep in mind, a nice chunk of your revenues is tied up in a long-term TV deal that isn't going to be increasing over the course of the next ten years, so don't count on revenues continuing to increase at the same rate they have. The economy, in case you haven't heard, has not been in the best condition over the last few years. You can't continue to raise ticket prices 5-10% per year indefinitely and expect fans to keep purchasing them. If you double or triple ticket prices over the course of the next CBA, as some of you have over the course of the last one, you'll drive fans out and there aren't that many willing to pay inflated prices to sustain your revenue at the elevated levels you've been enjoying over the past CBA.

Also, most players have careers lasting five to seven years, so locking them into a five year rookie contract and not giving them the chance to test the market until after most of them are out of the league is unfair to the players. Three years rookie contracts (with performance bonuses), plus unrestricted free agency after seven years in the league. If you want something to make both the owners who make money and the players happy, look at the 30 highest paid players in the league. Average their annual salaries out and remove that much from the salary cap. Then allow each team to designate one player's contract which doesn't count against the salary cap.

The stipulation - the player has to have been drafted by the team and stay within the organization. If the player is traded, the exemption for that player is gone, although the team may apply it to another "home-grown" player for that season.

The Players: As stated, you're the reason the fans show up. We know you do things on the ice that most people cannot, but as some of you have learned during this lockout, there aren't that many high playing jobs as a hockey player out there. You have something that no other sports league players have - guaranteed contracts. Recognize that.

Also recognize that league revenues are more dependent upon the gate than any other sport. Demanding ever higher contracts and keeping the salary cap at an ever increasing rate is good for your wallets, but potentially bad, ultimately for the game. There are currently 30 teams in the NHL, which means a lot of jobs for a lot of players. Driving half of those teams into bankruptcy ends up being a Pyrric victory as you get the terms you want, but have fewer jobs today and down the road.

Look at Adam Proteau's model. With the current rate of revenue growth in the NHL, stepping down the player's share keeps the amount available for player salaries constant for seven years, as it reduces to 50%. At that point, the salary cap will start increasing noticeably again, assuming revenues continue to grow. You keep the same contracts you've signed and make the money you've negotiated for, without a rollback. You should fight to keep the current rookie contracts and free agency periods, but be willing to bend on maximum contract length. While ten years would be great, settle for seven years maximum contract length.

The Fans: Don't be afraid to throw a BS flag on the owners. We've seen ticket prices steadily increase to the point where they are becoming unsustainable over the long haul. I know owners like Ted Leonsis like to point to the health of the franchise by noting the renewal rate for season ticket holders. If we keep buying the tickets and then selling them off, they think things are great and keep things rolling forward.

We love the game, but hate that there have been two work stoppages in seven years over money issues. Let's bring the point home to the owners that we're tired of things. The first step would be, following the end of the lockout, to organize a boycott of stadium vendors (concession stands, team store, etc) for one game a month. Sure, not everyone will participate or get the message, but if even one in five get something to eat on the way to the game instead of at the game, revenues will drop significantly enough that the owners will understand the fans are getting tired with the constant ticket price increases, overpriced food, drink and jerseys.

This league can't exist without its fans and they have to show respect to the people that make both the owners and the players possible.

We'll assume reader "NT" believes you catch more flies with honey, which is why his vent reads like a love letter right up until the end, when he threatens to find someone else:

I'm not going to pretend that I know exactly what is going on. I'm not a lawyer, I'm not an owner of a professional franchise, and most importantly I'm not a professional athlete. I learned the game by playing it in the mid 90's and watching Eric Lindros. I'll never forget locking my friend in the bathroom all night during the '97 Stanley Cup final because the Flyers scored a goal when he went to pee. It didn't work.

Let this be known: I love hockey. I've lived in a few cities since then and I don't consider myself a fan of a particular team. I live in Boston now and I was elated when the Bruins won the cup. Do I like Milan Lucic? No. Do I really love the aura of Brad Marchand? No. I just love the game. I'm not sure why but I do.

So what is this all about? The players don't want to see their salaries cut after they made the league a ton of money. The owners don't want to lose money. That makes sense. Everyone wants something and some people are actually losing money. What doesn't make sense is that these people are arguing over semantics and not the real issues. Everyone knows where this is going. Can't anyone figure out how to make this work? Its not complicated. Is the NHL really going to leave us for another winter?

After the last lockout I sat down with a friend of mine and LISTENED to the first NHL game that was broadcast in over a year. Listened to it. We didn't care who was playing. We sat in a cold room in upstate New York and listened on a snowy night. We cared that much. Hockey was our outlet. It was what we loved more than anything in the world and to see it come back was that important to us.

I've been reading these vents and a lot of them talk about how hockey is their "spot" or whatever... that this is the thing that keeps them centered in life. Woman at home? No problem! Hockey! Not me. I love the sport and God knows how many hours I spend thinking about it. I don't think about my favorite players or who scored the most goals or anything like that... I just think about the game. I can't stop. I have a serious hockey problem. But (and I know I shouldn't start a sentence with that for the record) I have my life and it will continue with or without hockey. I'm not a fan that spends a lot of money on the game. I go to maybe a game a year because with my salary and all of my expenses I just can't afford it. I'm not in the demographic that the NHL is trying to hit. I am, however, a lifelong fan. I think that that fact should be enough. From complete O-Pee-Chee card sets to Loge seating I think I've done my part.

That same friend from before told me something recently that makes some sense (in my mind anyway). Paraphrasing "The NHL is like that really beautiful woman who you date who keeps cheating on you. You always come back because you think no other girl you date will be like her. But you know what... there is another fish in that pond."

I'm saying this with the utmost sincerity: I'm available.

Thomas R. thinks the NHL should be very, very afraid of him because his apathy isn't due to internalized frustration -- it's just regular apathy.

I live in the center of the Dallas/Fort Worth area, and I'm the fan the back to back to back lockouts risk long term.  The passionate hockey fans like a friend of mine who's one of the success stories of the NHL going south, they'll be back.  Me?  I go to a couple of games a year with the afformentioned friend and watch some Stars games on TV, but as a casual fan, I'll just fill up the time with something else, and never need to worry about it.  If the NHL wants to cancel games down here, they should remember that most of us are within an hour's drive of the NFL, MLB, the NBA, the NBA Developmental league, Double A baseball, Single A baseball, Major League Soccer, a major Nascar/Indycar race track, and 4 universities playing Division 1 sports, including 3 who play Division 1 football.  We'll find something else to do and never miss you.

And finally, Molly gives us another limerick:

There once was time when I was happy
But I can't watch Marchand play scrappy
The League is in Ruins
I can't watch the Bruins
Without hockey I just feel crappy

Pretty much sums it up.

Tags: cap, , , Michael F., , , salary cap,
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Mets could begin talks with Wright next week – David Wright | NYM

13 Oct
2012
The New York Daily News reports the Mets could begin formal contract negotiations with David Wright next week.
Tags: , , , , , , York
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Ten intriguing questions leading up to Midnight Madness festivities

12 Oct
2012

Unlike last year when Kentucky and North Carolina towered over the rest of the nation as the season began, there's no prohibitive favorite this winter.

As Midnight Madness approaches Friday night, Indiana, Louisville, Kentucky, Michigan and Kansas are just a few of the dozens of teams who believe they have legitimate national championship aspirations.

In what promises to be a wide-open season in college hoops, there are plenty of storylines worth following. Here are 10 of the biggest:

1. Is this the year NC State unseats Duke and North Carolina atop the ACC?

The last time neither Duke nor North Carolina won or shared the regular season ACC crown was ten years ago when Wake Forest captured the 2002-03 title. NC State has the chance to break that streak exactly thirty years after Jim Valvano led the Wolfpack to the most unlikely of national titles in 1983.

Thanks to the return of Lorenzo Brown, C.J. Leslie and Scott Wood from last year's Sweet 16 team and the addition of a top-five recruiting class, NC State is suddenly the trendy pick to win the ACC. It also helps that defending champ North Carolina has to replace four first-round picks and that Duke isn't quite as talented as usual with no big-time point guard and Mason Plumlee, Ryan Kelly and Seth Curry playing starring roles.

A word of caution to the Wolfpack faithful, however: Let's not forget that last year's NC State team lost 12 games and snuck into the NCAA tournament as one of the final at-large teams. There's no question NC State will be better, but an outright ACC title and Tobacco Road bragging rights is a huge leap. 

2. Are these Kentucky freshmen as good as those Kentucky freshmen?

Those Kentucky freshmen, of course, are Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Marcus Teague and the rest of the group that led the Wildcats to the national championship last spring. And these Kentucky freshmen are the group that will team with NC State transfer Ryan Harrow and returner Kyle Wiltjer to attempt to replicate that feat this season.

The headliner from Kentucky's fourth straight No. 1 recruiting class is Nerlens Noel, a shot blocking specialist who could provide some of the defensive presence Davis did last season despite John Calipari's refusal to entertain such comparisons. Shooting guard Archie Goodwin is a big-time scorer, versatile small forward Alex Poythress defends, rebounds and gets to the rim and 7-foot Willie Cauley-Stein was the most pleasant surprise of summer workouts.

This group of Kentucky freshmen will certainly be good enough once again to propel the Wildcats into SEC title and Final Four contention. But to expect them to propel Kentucky to another national title and produce the two top picks in next year's NBA Draft? That's probably asking a bit much.

3. Can embattled UCLA coach Ben Howland save his job?

It's amazing that Howland's job security is a legitimate question only four years removed from his third consecutive Final Four appearance at UCLA, but that's how rocky the past few years have been for the Bruins. In the last four years, they have missed the NCAA tournament twice and failed to win more than one game in either of their two trips.

To jumpstart the program this season, Howland landed one of the best recruiting classes in the nation featuring high-scoring wing Shabazz Muhammad, pass-first forward Kyle Anderson, skilled big man Tony Parker and sweet-shooting Jordan Adams. The problem is neither Muhammad nor Anderson have been cleared to play this season by the NCAA even though practice is set to begin.

If UCLA has Muhammad and Anderson for most of the season, it can overcome its defensive deficiencies, challenge for the Pac-12 championship and play into the second week of the NCAA tournament at the very least. If one or both were unable to play, suddenly the Bruins look very unproven again on the perimeter and probably have to rely on the Wear twins and Joshua Smith to try to eke out an NCAA bid.

4. Can a player from a non-power conference win national player of the year?

In the past decade, BYU's Jimmer Fredette and Utah's Andrew Bogut are the only two Wooden Award winners to hail from outside the six BCS leagues. That suggests it's a long shot for a player from another conference to make a run, but there are definitely some more intriguing candidates than usual this year.

Creighton's Doug McDermott, the nation's leading returning scorer, is a fixture on most preseason All-American teams. Murray State guard Isaiah Canaan, the centerpiece of last year's final remaining unbeaten team, has also received some early All-American buzz. And guys like UNLV's Mike Moser, Lehigh's C.J. McCollum, San Diego State's Jamaal Franklin and North Texas' Tony Mitchell also have the talent to play their way into consideration.

The key for any of them to have a realistic chance is they have to put up huge numbers and their teams have to be nationally relevant in February and March. Of the above group, McDermott, Moser and Franklin have the best chance to make that happen, though the rest should not be counted out.

5. Can new UConn coach Kevin Ollie do enough to keep his job?

No first-year coach finds himself in a more difficult spot this season than Jim Calhoun's hand-picked successor.

Since UConn would only commit to giving Ollie a one-year contract that expires days after the Final Four, the former Huskies guard will have a mere six months to prove he's worthy of keeping the job in the long run. Worse yet, the Huskies are ineligible for the postseason because of poor APR scores and they're nowhere near as talented as usual as a result of a mass exodus of transfers and NBA defections.

The strength of the Huskies is the backcourt trio of Shabazz Napier, Ryan Boatright and freshman Omar Calhoun. If UConn is going to finish above .500 in Big East play and give Ollie some ammunition with which to push for a longterm contract, the Huskies need the three guards to excel, enigmatic forward DeAndre Daniels to tap into his potential and center Tyler Olander to exceed his limited potential.

6. Will the West Coast enjoy a hoops revival this winter?

The inability of schools West of the Rocky Mountains to produce a single Sweet 16 team last March was an embarrassing feat for the conferences in the region. Neither the WCC nor the Mountain West had strong NCAA tournaments after solid regular seasons, while the Pac-12 simply did not have a single elite team last season.

If the West Coast is going to emerge from this down period, it needs to start with the Pac-12, which looks to be improved this season thanks to an influx of promising freshmen. Arizona has top 10 potential if Xavier transfer Mark Lyons and elite recruiting class mesh with a handful of key returners. UCLA could also return to the elite if Shabazz Muhammad and Kyle Anderson get eligible. And Stanford, Cal, Colorado, Washington and USC each appear capable of making the NCAA tournament, though many of these teams might be a year away from doing real damage.

Beyond the Pac-12, the Mountain West and WCC have a few teams that could have a Sweet 16 run or better in them. UNLV has its most talented team since the Jerry Tarkanian era, Gonzaga boasts a deep frontcourt and a promising sophomore guard duo and San Diego State adds a handful of promising newcomers in the frontcourt to complement Xavier Thames, Chase Tapley and Jamaal Franklin on the perimeter.

7. Which small-conference school will make it big?

One of the best parts of following college basketball each winter is the emergence of a formidable mid-major program from a league outside the top 10.

Last year, Murray State became a national darling after it started 23-0, Harvard cracked the top 25 and made its first NCAA tournament in decades and Ohio took North Carolina to overtime in the Sweet 16. It's always challenging to project which schools will make that leap into the spotlight prior to the season, but here are a few that are definitely worth watching.

Creighton boasts a preseason All-American in McDermott, good size and outside shooting among its supporting cast and a renewed emphasis on correcting the issues on defense that sometimes cost them a year ago. Drexel has CAA player of the year candidates Frantz Massenat and Damion Lee and ample motivation after being one of last year's final teams left out of the NCAA tournament. And don't sleep on Davidson, which is definitely deeper and maybe even better than the team Stephen Curry led to the Elite Eight in 2008.

8. Can Syracuse or Pittsburgh win the Big East in their final seasons there?

Take a good look at the Big East this winter. It won't be the same the following year. Flagship programs Syracuse and Pittsburgh are playing their final seasons in the Big East this year, as perhaps is Notre Dame, which will also leave for the ACC as soon as it can buy its way out of its contract.

The departing team with the best chance of challenging preseason favorite Louisville is probably Syracuse despite the departure of first-round draft picks Dion Waiters and Fab Melo and senior standouts Kris Joseph and Scoop Jardine. Expect the Orange to rely on their trademark defense early in the season as they wait for a backcourt of versatile senior Brandon Triche, athletic sophomore Michael Carter-Williams and redshirt-freshman Trevor Cooney to jell.

Pittsburgh endured a rare down season last year because the transfer of Khem Birch and the injuries to Tray Woodall forced other players to play out of position and made their defense uncharacteristically weak. With Woodall healthy, transfer Trey Zeigler eligible immediately and top recruit Steven Adams bolstering the frontcourt, the Panthers have a great chance for a bounce-back season and a top four Big East finish.

9. Can Indiana hang its first Final Four banner since 2002?

Last year, Indiana emerged from a lengthy rebuilding process by upsetting Kentucky in December, contending in the Big Ten and advancing to the Sweet 16. Thanks to the return of future lottery pick Cody Zeller and the arrival of a decorated recruiting class, Indiana appears ready to take another step.

The strength of the Hoosiers is a versatile frontcourt featuring Zeller, skilled forward Christian Watford and bruising freshmen Hanner Mosquera-Perea and Peter Jurkin off the bench. Promising freshman Yogi Ferrell, sweet-shooting Jordan Hulls and defensive standout Victor Oladipo are the likely perimeter starters, though Will Sheehey will see playing time and oft-injured Maurice Creek may yet make an impact as a senior if he can stay healthy.

Indiana will be a formidable offensive team with its array of shooters and interior scorers, but there are three big questions about the Hoosiers: Can Ferrell thrive at point guard as a freshman? Can Tom Crean keep everyone happy despite a limited amount of minutes to go around? And can the team improve defensively? If the answer to those is yes, this may be the national title favorite. If not, the Hoosiers may not quite live up to expectations.

10. Which freshmen can make the biggest impact this season?

There are some obvious answers here. Kentucky will go as its freshman class develops. UCLA and Arizona cannot make big leaps without their freshmen making immediate contributions. But there are other freshmen who also will have to play well right away for their teams to meet expectations.

The only way Oklahoma State goes from the middle of the Big 12 to league title contention is if freshman point guard Marcus Smart provides the immediate scoring and leadership the Cowboys have lacked at that position. Pittsburgh also is counting on New Zealand native Steven Adams to solidify its frontcourt and help propel the Panthers back into the Big East's top tier.

Further down the recruiting rankings, a brilliant freshman season from Semaj Christian is probably undermanned Xavier's best hope of a surprising top six finish in the Atlantic 10. The Musketeers lost the core of last year's team and fellow freshmen Jalen Reynolds and Myles Davis, but Christian is a capable heir apparent to Tu Holloway.

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LaRoche, Nationals have discussed extension – Adam LaRoche | WAS

12 Oct
2012
Buster Olney of ESPN.com reports that the Nationals have discussed a contract extension with Adam LaRoche.
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Braves GM Frank Wren extended through 2014 (Yahoo! Sports)

12 Oct
2012
ATLANTA (AP) -- The Atlanta Braves have extended general manager Fran Wren's contract through 2014 and promoted two other officials.
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