Thursday, June 30, 2011

PBT: There's no quick fix to NBA lockout

The lockout just started, and I?m pretty much done with it.

So how does this thing get resolved?

Sadly, it?s going to take some time, but a couple of factors need to come together.

There needs to be pressure on both sides to strike a deal. No real contract negotiations ? whether you are talking with teacher?s union, longshoremen, truckers or professional athletes ? really get going until there is pressure on one or both sides to compromise and reach a deal. You would think that the lockout would be pressure, but it?s not really. All that happens now is rookies do not get to prove themselves at Summer League and players who have been rehabbing post surgery with the team?s trainers are out of luck. But that is not real pressure.

Losing money is real pressure. That is not happening now in the dead of the offseason (well, some sponsorship and other money may be lost, but it is not yet serious). The real pressure comes when owners are threatened with not getting revenue from games, or when the players are threatened with not getting paychecks (the first NBA player payday would be Nov. 15, so we are into what would be the season a few weeks before that happens). Basically, losing actual NBA regular-season games ? and with that the momentum for the league this season brought ? is pressure.

The real threat of losing money doesn?t hit the owners and players until the middle of August. That is when you start thinking about things needing to be cancelled. That is when negotiations will get serious (in the short term, before then, expect the two sides to drift farther apart). If the two sides are not making progress toward a deal by the middle of September, then we should be worried. Then games ? and maybe a lot of games ? are at risk.

The players need to decide how much they are willing to give back. Until this ends, we will keep talking about compromise. And there will be compromise, neither side is going to get everything they want.

But the players are going to exit these negotiations more poor than they entered. Even if the owners decided suddenly tomorrow to accept the players? proposal, the players would be giving back $500 million in the next five years. That may be well short of what the owners want ? David Stern called it ?modest? ? but that is a lot of money in real dollars.

The owners are going to push hard for more ? much more. There are some hardline owners driving the boat right now and while at some point the more veteran, level-headed owners may change the course of that ship, they are not coming all the way back to the players. The players are talking about how unified they are, but they cannot hold out as long as the owners.

At what point is the pain the players are going to feel from a lockout worse than the pain they would feel from taking the deal on the table? That will be the day the lockout ends. But this may be a more unified group of players than the ones that held out long enough to reduce the 1998-99 season to 50 games. (And that was a deal hailed as a huge win for the owners at the time.)

Will the fear of killing the momentum the league generated in the last 12 months mean a deal can be reached before games are lost? That is the hundreds of millions of dollars question. Both sides give lip service to how the fans will be hurt by the lockout and how they don?t want to alienate the fans. But that has yet to translate to meaningful actions by either side.

We can only hope that concern, combined with the fear of lost money (by both sides) and some level heads, solves this situation before games are lost.

But even in the best of scenarios, it?s going to be a while before we see any resolution.

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Red Sox designate Mike Cameron for assignment

The Boston Red Sox have designated outfielder Mike Cameron for assignment, according to The Boston Globe.

Cameron, who served mainly as the righthanded-hitting portion of platoon with J.D. Drew in left field, hit .149 with three homers and nine RBIs in 33 games (94 at-bats) this season.

Cameron, 38, signed a two-year, $15.5 million contract with the Red Sox prior to the 2010 season and was penciled in as their starting center fielder. However, injuries limited him to just 48 games last season. And he began this season as a part-time player.

In his 17-season major league career, Cameron is .249 hitter with 272 homers and 950 RBIs. He is a three-time Gold Glove winner and was an All-Star in 2001.

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Sources: Optimism waning as talks sputter

Updated: June 30, 2011, 6:12 PM ET

Optimism is waning after four consecutive days of negotiations concluded Thursday between NFL owners and players and was described as trending "backwards," player sources told ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen.

Player sources said owners have reneged on a simplified formula that would have given players 48 percent of all revenue.

Player sources reaffirmed that a setback in talks occurred when owners last week went "retro" on the formula that will divide the estimated $9.3 billion in annual revenue. Whereas the players believed the two sides had reached an understanding on a simplified formula in which they would receive 48 percent of all revenue, sources say owners re-introduced its previous formual by asking for $400 million-to-$500 million in expenses credits off the top.

Players calculate that under the owners' proposal, it would leave them with approximately with a 45 percent take on revenue, an "unacceptable" amount that one player source said "sets us back to March 11 ... before the lockout."

A management source said the owners have not reneged on any revenue split, claiming "it's a negotiation, which is always subject to change"

Player sources contend the owners' terms changed when the two sides convened a day after owners met June 21 in Chicago. A source said the players went into Thursday's negotiating session with owners at the table, hoping to "get them back on track. They wouldn't move. It's disappointing."

Indianapolis Colts veteran center Jeff Saturday was spearheading a conference call Thursday afternoon with player leadership after talks concluded.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and NFL Players Association head DeMaurice Smith were joined by U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur Boylan and a handful of owners -- John Mara of the New York Giants, Clark Hunt of the Kansas City Chiefs, Jerry Jones of the Dallas Cowboys and Robert Kraft of the New England Patriots -- and players including Saturday, Brian Waters of the Chiefs and Domonique Foxworth of the Baltimore Ravens at a Minneapolis law firm for Thursday's talks.

The latest round of negotiations between the two sides -- the fifth since they began hopping from city to city for clandestine meetings -- kicked off Tuesday with Goodell, Smith, their attorneys and staffs.

This location is significant because Minneapolis is where the players have filed a still-pending federal antitrust suit against the owners. The two sides met here for six days of court-ordered mediation under Boylan in April and May.

The July 4 holiday weekend has been floated by some of the members of their respective parties as a rough target for a deal, and that time has nearly arrived.

Owners and players are seeking a deal that would divide revenues for the $9 billion business -- the biggest hurdle to clear -- and guide league activities for years to come.

Goodell and Smith took questions from rookies at an orientation in Sarasota, Fla., Wednesday, but they didn't offer specifics.

Smith invited Goodell to the orientation symposium for NFL rookies -- put on by the players' association after the NFL canceled the event -- and the pair flew to Florida on Tuesday night. After a joint breakfast Wednesday, they talked for an hour with 155 rookies before returning to Minnesota.

Smith and Goodell certainly seem closer than when the lockout began March 12 and the hope is that it leads to a new deal soon. Training camps are scheduled to open in three weeks with the Hall of Fame exhibition game on Aug. 7.

Since players don't get their regular paychecks until the regular season and revenue for the league revolves heavily around Sunday games, the financial urgency arguably hasn't arrived.

Rookies need to start learning their playbooks, though, and teams need free agency to arrange their rosters. Plus, a 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel is still weighing a final decision on the legality of the lockout.

Information from ESPN senior NFL analyst Chris Mortensen and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Clinical Murray brushes Lopez aside

LONDON | Wed Jun 29, 2011 4:46pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Andy Murray reached his third successive Wimbledon semi-final by brushing aside the negligible challenge of weary Spaniard Feliciano Lopez 6-3 6-4 6-4 on Wednesday to set up another last-four showdown with Rafa Nadal.

The fourth seed -- desperately seeking his first grand slam title -- was never remotely threatened by the unseeded Spaniard, who seemed drained of energy following his grueling fourth-round victory over Lukasz Kubot when he came from two sets down to win in five.

Murray, bidding to become the first British men's singles champion at Wimbledon for 75 years, said: "I've played a little bit better every year here.

"I've been beaten in the semis for the past two years and this time I want to go further."

Coming into a near-empty Center Court as the dust settled on Roger Federer's five-set defeat by Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, the one-sided match struggled to produce much atmosphere despite Murray again carrying the hopes of the host nation.

SUCCESSIVE ACES

Murray looked a little tentative at first but Lopez, who knocked out number eight seed Andy Roddick in the third round, was unable to take advantage as the Scot dropped only four points on his own serve en route to a 40-minute 6-3 success.

Murray did not have to do anything extraordinary as the Spaniard, one of the few players to use serve and volley tactics on a regular basis in this year's tournament, mixed up the occasional eye-catching winner with a string of unforced errors.

The Scot broke in the fifth game of the second set after finding an impossible angle with a lovely two-handed backhand and won that set too at a canter.

Not until the eighth game of the third set did Lopez force his first break points but Murray saved both and went on to finish with a flourish by sending down three successive aces after only two hours of action.

"It was good. I got off to a good start in all of the sets and that helps against someone like Feli because he serves well," Murray said.

"Normally against the big servers, they like to put pressure on you toward the end of the set but because I got ahead early in all of them, I was able to dictate the points from the back of the court and played a good match."

Murray, into his third grand slam semi of the year, has won only four of his 15 matches against Nadal who triumphed in last year's semi-final here in straight sets.

"I believe I can win against him," Murray said. "I had chances last year -- I was up a break in the third set and had breakpoint on my serve in the second set. I think there was only one break in the first set. We both played good tennis.

"But I just have to have a better game plan. Sometimes it comes down to strategy. Sometimes it comes down to having more experience. Yeah, just have to go out there and play well and serve well and believe and I'll have a chance.

"I know how difficult it's going to be. I know what the task is. So I'll be ready for it."

(Editing by Ed Osmond)

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Gators' errors in 11th put Gamecocks on verge of CWS repeat

OMAHA, Neb. -- Christian Walker, cleared to play with a broken wrist a half-hour before the game, scored from first base on two throwing errors in the 11th inning and defending champion South Carolina beat Florida 2-1 in Game 1 of the College World Series finals Monday night.

In a finish that looked a lot like their 13-inning victory against Virginia on Friday, the Gamecocks (54-14) performed defensive magic late, throwing out two runners at home plate in the bottom of the ninth and another in the 10th.

"In close games like that you just try to keep fighting," said left fielder Jake Williams, whose perfect throw home kept Florida from scoring the winning run in the 10th. "You try to make the plays you can make and get someone to move them over and get them in. You've got to do little things in close games like that and hopefully come out in the positive. We've been able to do that."

Game 2 in the best-of-3 finals between the Southeastern Conference rivals will be Tuesday night.

Walker, who fractured his left wrist in the victory against Virginia, singled up the middle to start the 11th. Florida catcher Mike Zunino threw into center field as Walker stole second. Walker took off for third and was awarded home after Bryson Smith's throw from the outfield bounced away from Cody Dent and into the stands.

South Carolina coach Ray Tanner didn't put Walker into the lineup until after he had a good showing in batting practice. Walker is batting .355 to lead the Gamecocks.

"I knew it was going to take a lot of pain for me not to play," Walker said. "For the last half of yesterday, I didn't think I was going to be able to play."

John Taylor (8-1) got the victory and Matt Price earned his 19th save. Nick Maronde (0-1) took the loss -- Florida's first in 47 games in which it had led after the seventh inning.

The Gamecocks reached the finals on Friday with a 3-2, 13-inning victory against Virginia in which Adam Matthews scored the winning run after Cavaliers reliever Cody Winiarski botched two throws after fielding bunts.

South Carolina survived bases-loaded predicaments in the 10th, 12th and 13th innings on Friday and did it again Monday in the ninth.

Taylor walked Zunino leading off, and Brian Johnson ripped a single after initially trying to move Zunino over with a sacrifice. Taylor intentionally walked Josh Adams to load the bases and set up forces all around.

Tyler Thompson's grounder sent second baseman Scott Wingo diving to his right to make the stop. Wingo got up and threw home, with catcher Robert Beary picking up the low throw in time to get Zunino.

Then Daniel Pigott sent a soft grounder to Wingo. Wingo threw home again, and Beary went to first to finish the double play.

"We were able to get a couple of at-'em balls to keep them from taking the lead, and Jake throws out a guy at the plate," Tanner said. "We were just very fortunate to be able to win tonight."

Dent singled leading off the bottom of the 10th against Taylor and moved up on Nolan Fontana's sacrifice bunt. Taylor intentionally walked the left-handed Preston Tucker to get a righty-righty matchup against the slumping Zunino.

Zunino drove a hot grounder into left for what looked like the game-winning hit. But Williams picked it up and came up throwing. Beary caught the ball on a line in plenty of time, then shuffled to his right to tag out Dent and start a celebration in the Gamecocks' dugout.

"They're the defending national champs for a reason," Florida coach Kevin O'Sullivan said.

The loss spoiled a brilliant performance by Florida starter Hudson Randall, who has now allowed one run or fewer in 10 of his 19 starts this season. He left with two outs in the eighth after having allowed only three hits.

Randall retired 10 consecutive hitters from the fourth to seventh innings and 18 of 19 during one stretch before the Gamecocks got to him, tying it on Wingo's single up the middle.

Wingo, the Los Angeles Dodgers' 11th-round draft pick, slapped Randall's 2-2 pitch right back at the pitcher to break an 0-for-9 slump. Randall swiped at the ball with his glove and then pumped his right fist in frustration as it rolled into center field and Peter Mooney scored.

Randall said the ball tipped his glove.

"I just didn't get it down in time," he said.

Florida manufactured its run in the third after South Carolina starter Forrest Koumas walked Thompson to start the inning. Thompson went to second on a groundout and to third on Koumas' wild pitch before scoring on Dent's sacrifice fly.

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Braves pound Felix, complete sweep of Mariners

SEATTLE (AP) -- Freddie Freeman knocked around Felix Hernandez for three hits and two RBIs, and the Atlanta Braves beat Seattle 5-3 on Wednesday to complete an impressive three-game sweep that included victories over the Mariners' best starting pitchers.

The Braves won for the eighth time in 10 games and picked up their 25th road victory of the season. They handed losses to Hernandez, rookie star Michael Pineda and Erik Bedard during their rare trip to Seattle.

Freeman started a two-out rally in the fourth inning, punching a single into left against Hernandez (8-7) and scoring on Brooks Conrad 's grounder back up the middle. Freeman capped the Braves' three-run fifth with a two-run single to right.

Derek Lowe (4-6) pitched six crisp innings for Atlanta, yielding one run and four hits to earn his first win since May 6 at Philadelphia. The right-hander was 0-3 with a 5.29 ERA in his previous nine starts.

Eric O'Flaherty followed Lowe with a perfect seventh, including Ichiro Suzuki swinging meekly at a third strike. Jonny Venters gave up a two-run homer to prized rookie Dustin Ackley with two outs in the eighth - the first extra-base hit by a lefty against Venters this season.

Craig Kimbrel then finished for his 23rd save in 28 chances, including all three games in the sweep.

Before Wednesday's game, Seattle manager Eric Wedge talked about how it was a perfect setup having his ace on the mound with the Mariners needing a win to stop its recent slide.

Wedge wasn't around to see Hernandez get knocked around for 10 hits, the fourth time in his last five starts the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner has allowed eight or more hits. Wedge was ejected by home plate umpire Paul Emmel in the second inning after he became upset when Jack Cust was called out on a low third strike.

Hernandez was cruising at that point, retiring 11 of the first 12 batters - including six strikeouts. But the Braves eventually got it going at the plate.

Freeman, Dan Uggla and Conrad had consecutive singles - none sharply hit, but all well placed - to give the Braves a 1-0 lead. Then Hernandez lost control in the fifth, throwing a pair of wild pitches that allowed Nate McLouth to score following a leadoff walk. Jordan Schafer singled and Jason Heyward also walked in the inning ahead of Freeman's two-run single.

The Braves added another run in the seventh when Brian McCann continued his hot hitting with an RBI single.

Surprisingly, Hernandez remained in the game until he walked McLouth with two out in the eighth on his 127th pitch - his second-highest total of the season. Each of the 10 hits he allowed were singles.

Seattle's scuffling offense continued to struggle. Lowe had allowed 13 earned runs in his previous three starts but the Mariners only got to him for Josh Bard 's RBI single in the fifth.

Bard was promoted from Triple-A Tacoma earlier in the day when backup catcher Chris Gimenez was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a strained oblique.

NOTES Along with Bard, Seattle also selected C Jose Yepez from Tacoma and placed LHP Bedard on the 15-day disabled list with a sprained left knee. Bedard lost Monday night's series opener against the Braves. ... Lowe had been receiving the second-lowest run support in the National League before Wednesday. ... Atlanta's Alex Gonzalez snapped an 0-for-19 skid with a single in the seventh inning.

---

Tim Booth can be reached at http://twitter.com/tjbooth7

� 2011 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Rutgers athletic department needs fees, funds to stay afloat

By Steve Berkowitz and Jodi Upton, USA TODAY

Last year, Rutgers used nearly $27 million in university and student-fee money to balance its athletics budget. It was not unusual: Since 2006, Rutgers has spent more than $115 million to cover athletics spending, a USA TODAY analysis finds.

  • Since 2006, Rutgers has used more than $115 million to cover athletics shortfalls, highest for any public school in DI through the period.

    By Andrew Burton, Getty Images

    Since 2006, Rutgers has used more than $115 million to cover athletics shortfalls, highest for any public school in DI through the period.

By Andrew Burton, Getty Images

Since 2006, Rutgers has used more than $115 million to cover athletics shortfalls, highest for any public school in DI through the period.

Also last year, Rutgers said it would withhold scheduled negotiated raises for its employees because of state funding cuts, a move expected to save $30 million.

The battle between academics and athletics is brewing nationally. Subsidies account for $1 of every $3 spent on athletics at NCAA Division I schools. Since 2006, athletics budgets at 219 Division I public schools have increased 22%, and subsidies ? the part of the budget that comes from student fees and university money ? have increased 26%.

But no athletics program has matched Rutgers' subsidies; $115 million is the highest for any public school and nearly twice the subsidy of the next highest school among the power conferences ? those whose football champions automatically qualify for the Bowl Championship Series.

The university is trying to close the gap. In October, it launched a seven-year, $1 billion fundraising campaign that includes a goal of raising $100 million for athletics. Last week, it sold the naming rights to its football stadium to a New Jersey-based computer services company for about $6.5 million over 10 years. Athletics director Tim Pernetti, a former sports television executive, declares he is "as bullish as anybody" about the windfall the athletics department hopes to receive when its conference, the Big East, negotiates new media rights deals to replace those that expire in 2013.

Meanwhile, Rutgers' employee unions are awaiting arbitration rulings concerning the raises, which they had voluntarily deferred but that the university maintains it was not obligated to pay because of inadequate funding, after the state cut funding by tens of millions of dollars.

"A student doesn't come to Rutgers to attend a football game. They come here to get an education ? and then maybe attend a football game," says Patrick Nowlan, executive director of the Rutgers teachers' union.

"From our perspective, the core mission of the university is to teach, do research and then provide service to the public of the state of New Jersey, and ancillary enterprises such as athletics should not be the top priorities. They should not be priorities when you, as a university administration, are arguing that you don't have resources, you don't have enough funding from the state."

His union, the Rutgers American Association of University Professors-American Federation of Teachers, represents faculty and teaching and graduate assistants, including more than 3,500 on the university's main campus in New Brunswick where total enrollment is nearly 40,000.

Rutgers has reduced the proportion of its athletics budget that depends on subsidies since 2006. But even with six teams eliminated after the 2006-07 school year, the budget has grown so much in the past five years that the actual subsidy has increased from $21.7 million to $26.9 million, after adjusting for inflation to 2010 dollars.

Still, Rutgers' percentage of total revenue coming from subsidies in 2010 (42%) was the highest among BCS public schools. Two other Big East schools had the next-highest percentages of revenue coming from subsidies: South Florida (36%) and Cincinnati (33%).

Schools from BCS automatic qualifying conferences with the greatest amount of 2009-10 athletics revenue allocated from institutional or government support or student fees:
School, conference Amount
Rutgers, Big East $26,867,679
Connecticut, Big East
$14,578,029
South Florida, Big East
$14,185,037
Maryland, ACC $13,749,781
Tennessee, SEC
$13,552,020
Cincinnati, Big East
$13,457,464
Virginia, ACC
$12,160,103
California, Pac-10
$12,098,974
Oregon State, Pac-10

$10,960,616
Arizona State, Pac-10
$10,349,536
Note: Amounts not adjusted for inflation

Sources: Individual schools, USA TODAY research in conjunction with Indiana University�s National Sports Journalism Center

Rutgers declined to make executives of its central financial office available for an interview. In response to a question from USA TODAY about how the university determines the amount of institutional and student-fee money that goes to athletics, Rutgers' media relations office said via e-mail:

"Requests for funding for the Rutgers athletics department, whether through student fees or other institutional resources, are reviewed annually by the university's administration. These requests, along with those from other units throughout the institution, are considered in the development of a comprehensive working budget for the university, traditionally adopted in July by the Board of Governors. ? Members of the Rutgers community are invited to comment on budgetary matters at a number of meetings and public forums throughout the year, including an annual open hearing on tuition and fees, usually held in April."

Pernetti says that in fiscal 2010, the amount of student fee money allotted to the athletics program (a little more than $8.4 million) remained fixed throughout the budget cycle. He says that, for university-wide budget reasons, determining institutional support was "a constant, ongoing process" and the amount was "modified several times during year." In the end, Pernetti says, because of "revenue not meeting certain expectations, what we did was university support (was) increased in order to balance the budget."

"The view of what that is can be several different things," he adds. "With athletics being the big window into everything we do here at Rutgers, and being that we've been able to do it in a positive way, it is an investment in the branding and marketing of the entire place, not just the athletic department."

Pernetti focusing on new revenues

Even at 24 teams, Rutgers is robust in its sports offerings ? five teams more than the median for schools in the NCAA's Football Bowl Subdivision, according to the NCAA. Among FBS football teams, Rutgers' was ranked No. 1 in 2009 and No. 2 in 2010 in the NCAA Academic Percentage Rating, a measure of classroom performance.

The football team also has made bowl appearances in five of the past six seasons. The women's basketball team has made the NCAA tournament each of the past nine seasons, finishing as national runner-up in 2007, when Hall of Fame coach C. Vivian Stringer guided the team through racially charged comments about the team by national radio personality Don Imus.

The program also has had its share of controversy. In the summer of 2008 The (Newark, N.J.) Star-Ledger reported finding hundreds of thousands of dollars in athletics spending that didn't appear in the budget, as well as previously undisclosed enhancements to football coach Greg Schiano's contract.

(Schiano was the Big East's highest-paid football coach in 2010 with university compensation of $1.9 million, according to a USA TODAY survey of coaches' pay. Stringer, with university compensation of just less than $1 million in 2010-11, was No. 4 in the nation among coaches in her sport whose schools have appeared in at least four of the past five NCAA tournaments; she is due a $50,000 increase, beginning July 1. Pernetti said Stringer is covered by school president Richard L. McCormick's announcement Sept. 3, 2010 that, amid its pay freeze, the school would proceed with increases for a range of employees, including those with "individual, non-union contracts.")

The Star-Ledger's reports prompted an examination of the athletics program by a university special review committee and an audit by the state comptroller of Rutgers' contracting and selected management practices. The university committee issued a report in November 2008 that was critical of McCormick's oversight and some of then-athletics director Robert Mulcahy's actions. Three weeks later, McCormick dismissed Mulcahy. The comptroller's report, in January 2011, was not limited to athletics and included 18 recommendations, most of which the university agreed with.

Meanwhile, the school made a $102 million renovation to Rutgers Stadium. Part of the project was to be financed with private funds, but the school was left with the entire bill. This will require millions in debt service payments annually by the athletics department.

To replace Mulcahy, the university hired Pernetti, 40, a former Scarlet Knights football player who had been an executive for ABC Sports and then CBS College Sports Network. Pernetti, also the color commentator on Rutgers football radio broadcasts from 2001 to '08, began the new job April 1, 2009.

Asked whether he senses tension on campus about the subsidy, he said: "The answer is I don't see it. At the same time, I think that general tension on our campus and I think other campuses across the country has been there for decades. ? What I can tell you is that there is a ? I wouldn't say concern ? but a focus on this item within our business and I work closely with our president and his administration and our board ? We've made clear that it's our No. 1 priority to generate new revenues and figure out a way to stabilize and reduce university support."

?An ultimately destructive cycle?

To some, the race for new revenue occurs on a track for only a select few college athletics programs ? and on a relentless treadmill for the rest. In 2010, 22 Division I public school athletics departments generated enough money to cover expenses.

"On the one hand, some schools may brag about the fact that they're self-sufficient and generating all this revenue, but to me it exposes another troubling aspect of all of this ? That just means we're going to keep increasing expenditures," says University of Maryland System Chancellor William E. Kirwan, co-chair of the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics. "Coaches are going to be paid more. Assistant coaches are going to be paid more. Fancier facilities are going to be built, etcetera, etcetera, and it just absolutely continues what I think is an ultimately destructive cycle."

For now, with the end of another fiscal year near, Rutgers and Pernetti are trying to total how 2011 will end.

"I anticipate that we will be running a deficit this year in athletics," Pernetti says. "The magnitude is not something I can really say yet because there's a lot of variables in place."

Does "running a deficit this year in athletics" mean the university will need to provide late-fiscal-year assistance to balance the books?

"If you're saying, 'Is it similar to '09-10 where there was an increase in university support?' The answer would be yes."

Revenue at Rutgers

While Rutgers� athletics program has been generating increasing amounts of revenue from media rights contracts, ticket sales donations and other sources, it also has been receiving increasing amounts of money allocated from institutional and state funds and student fees.

Year

Total allocated revenue

Total generated revenue

Total all revenue

Percent allocated

Expenses

2010

$26,867,679

$37,335,576

$64,203,255

41.8%

$64,203,255

2009

$25,732,550

$32,781,313

$58,513,863

44.0%

$58,354,222

2008

$22,237,281

$29,775,210

$52,012,491

42.8%

$51,748,813

2007

$20,297,056

$23,589,440

$43,886,496

46.2%

$44,819,848

2006

$20,192,299

$20,999,959

$41,192,258

49.0%

$41,824,257


Note: Amounts not adjusted for inflation

Sources: Rutgers University, USA TODAY research in conjunction with Indiana University�s National Sports Journalism Center

Contributing: Christopher Schnaars

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Dodgers win court approval for $60 million bankruptcy loan

WILMINGTON, Delaware | Tue Jun 28, 2011 5:38pm EDT

WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) - The Los Angeles Dodgers were cleared on Tuesday to borrow $60 million to make payroll, but the team spent its first full day in bankruptcy battling with Major League Baseball.

The team needs the money to pay salaries, including those of its players, while it tries to sort out its long-term finances against the backdrop of team owner Frank McCourt's bitter divorce and the demands of the league.

The Dodgers on Monday became the sport's third team in three years to file for bankruptcy. But unlike the Chicago Cubs and Texas Rangers before it, the team did so with the league as an adversary, not an ally.

The bankruptcy apparently caught off guard the league and McCourt's former wife, Jamie, who is fighting a California court battle for half of her ex-husband's stake in the team.

"This was sprung on all of us," attorney Laura Davis Jones, who represents Jamie McCourt, told the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Delaware.

The bankruptcy court judge said he would approve the team's request to borrow $60 million. The Dodgers will return to court on July 20 to seek approval to borrow up to an additional $90 million.

The Dodgers are incorporated in Delaware, whose bankruptcy court has a reputation for being friendly to debtors. The hearing in one of the courthouse's smallest courtrooms drew dozens of dark-suited attorneys, and kicked off with Judge Kevin Gross announcing: "Batter up."

The teamed has blamed Major League Baseball for the bankruptcy by rejecting a television deal that would have provided an urgent injection of cash as millions of dollars in debt and deferred compensation came due later this week.

An attorney for the Dodgers told the judge that the team and league were "at loggerheads," which drew a swift rebuttal from the league's attorney.

"Nothing could be further from the truth. Major League Baseball views the Dodgers as one of its cherished crown jewels," said league attorney Tom Lauria. "If there is anyone we are at loggerheads with, it is Mr. McCourt."

The league accused McCourt of "having siphoned off well over $100 million of club revenues" and bringing the team to the brink of missing payroll, according to court papers filed on Tuesday. A spokesman for the Dodgers did not immediately respond to a request for a comment.

On June 20, the league vetoed the Dodgers' proposed $3 billion, 17-year television contract with News Corp's Fox Broadcasting Co, saying it ran contrary to the best interests of the team, the game and fans.

The Dodgers plan a second attempt to sell the TV rights in bankruptcy, according to court papers.

The bankruptcy hearing was put on hold while attorneys for the league and the team spent 90 minutes in a conference room to work out differences over the emergency $60 million loan to be provided by a unit of JPMorgan Chase & Co

The lender has agreed to provide a total of up to $150 million.

Providers of bankruptcy loans often are able to use the loans to gain leverage over bankrupt companies, and the league offered to provide its own loan at a lower rate of interest than the 10 percent the Dodgers agreed to pay.

Lawyers for the Dodgers told the judge that the team's financial problems are short term.

The team has payroll to meet this week, as well as a one-time $10.5 million deferred compensation payment. It also is required to set aside $18 million under its collective bargaining agreement with the baseball players union.

Unlike most bankrupt companies, the team's assets exceed its liabilities, which should give the Dodgers room for financial maneuvering. But the McCourts' divorce battle further complicates the bankruptcy, as does the team's soured relations with Major League Baseball.

Forbes magazine in March ranked the Dodgers as baseball's third-most valuable team, worth $800 million -- more than twice what McCourt paid. Only the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox are worth more, Forbes said.

The case is In re: Los Angeles Dodgers LLC, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 11-12010.

(Reporting by Tom Hals; editing by Carol Bishopric)

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PFT: Onus on owners to get deal done

Roger Goodell, Jerry Jones, Jerry Richardson, Pat Bowlen, Mark MurphyAP

We painted earlier today a fairly rosy picture of the current status of the labor negotiations, based on the four straight days of talks with no players or owners present ? and the decision of the two key figures in the labor dispute to behave like old friends, not mortal enemies, via their trip to Florida for Roger Goodell?s appearance at the seminar for the rookies organized by DeMaurice Smith.

Since then, we?ve learned from a source with knowledge of the dynamics on both sides of the table that the process remains, relatively speaking, far from over.� And the blame for the delay is being placed on the owners.

Per the source, a deal could have been done a week or two ago, but the owners have been playing games with some of the numbers, possibly relying upon the emergence and strengthening sense that the players are ready to get a deal done in order to squeeze the players on some of the smaller issues.

So what?s going on this week, featuring four days of talks without owners and players?� It could be that Goodell and Smith have opted to take full charge of the process in the hopes of ironing out all of the things on which the parties agree, and then to generate a list of the things on which they still disagree.� Then, the owners and players can return next week and knock out the remaining list of issues to be resolved, with Goodell and Smith pushing hard for their respective constituents to be fair.

If that?s the case, those issues need to be identified worked out by the end of next week, in order to then allow the various approvals to be obtained in time to have meaningful free agency before the first of the training camps open.� Even then, a one-week lag between striking a deal and obtaining approval from the court in Minnesota would leave the Bears and Rams roughly a week to sign their rookies and free agents before opening camp in advance of the Hall of Fame game.

Though we?ve got no problem with the two sides trying to get a good deal, we?re hoping that the sense of trust and friendship that has emerged between Goodell and Smith will infect the entire process, and that the owners won?t take advantage of the perception of inevitability in order to take advantage of the players as to various details that could derail a deal.

That responsibility on the owners ultimately lands on the lap of Goodell, who now must show true leadership in persuading the folks to whom he answers to not push so hard on the minor issues to possibly prevent a deal from being finalized.

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South Carolina beats Florida in 11th on two throwing errors

By Andy Gardiner, USA TODAY

OMAHA � The late-inning magic that has enveloped South Carolina at the College World Series appears as if it will never end.

  • South Carolina pitcher Matt Price celebrates after closing out the game against Florida in Game 1 of the College World Series in Omaha.

    By Ted Kirk, AP

    South Carolina pitcher Matt Price celebrates after closing out the game against Florida in Game 1 of the College World Series in Omaha.

By Ted Kirk, AP

South Carolina pitcher Matt Price celebrates after closing out the game against Florida in Game 1 of the College World Series in Omaha.

The defending national champion Gamecocks conjured up yet another miracle escape to defeat Florida, 2-1 in 11 innings Monday, in the opening game of their best-of-three championship finals. They worked free of a bases-loaded, none out jam in the bottom of the ninth, threw the winning run out of the plate in the 10th, and then won in the 11th with a player not expected to be in the lineup.

First baseman Christian Walker fractured the hamate bone in his left wrist on a swing late in USC's bracket final victory over Virginia on Friday. He initially was not in South Carolina's lineup Monday, but was a late addition.

Walker had two hits, the biggest a one-out single in the 11th. He then scored on an attempted steal of second base after wild throws first from Florida catcher Mike Zunino and then center fielder Bryson Smith.

"I knew it was going to take a lot of pain for me not to play," Walker said. "For the last half of yesterday, didn't think I would be able to. I'm almost speechless about it. I can't thank (the medical personnel who treated him) enough."

South Carolina has now won four extra inning games in Omaha over the last two years and has had four walk-off victories, one in which the Gamecocks were down to their final strike. They faced three bases-loaded situations in extra innings against Virginia in this year's bracket finals. Each time they found a way to win..

"We fought, we battled, we didn't give it away," said USC coach Ray Tanner. "But we escaped a couple of situations where they had the game in hand. We were just very fortunate to win tonight."

Second baseman Scott Wingo, who won South Carolina's CWS opener against Texas A&M with a bases-loaded single in the ninth inning, tied Monday's game with a two-strike single in the eighth. His threw a runner out at the plate in the ninth and then began a home-to-first double play that ended that threat.

In the 10th inning, left fielder Jake Williams threw a strike on the fly to cut down Cody Dent at the plate when he tried to score from second on Zunino's base hit.

"We had our opportunities in the bottom the ninth inning and that was probably the most pivotal part of the game," Florida coach Kevin O'Sullivan said. "We needed to do something there and we didn't. It was a frustrating game for us, but South Carolina is defending national champion for a reason."

The fourth seeded Gamecocks (54-14) are one game away from becoming the sixth school to win consecutive championships. Their 15-game NCAA tournament winning streak tied the record set by Texas in 1983-84, and their 10-game CWS winning streak equaled the mark shared by Southern California and LSU.

Senior lefthander Michael Roth (13-3, 0.98 earned run average) is expected to start for South Carolina. He was one of the heroes of last year's title run and has an ERA of 0.63 in two starts in Omaha this year.

No. 2 Florida (53-18) now must try to avoid being swept for the second time in the championship series. The Gators went 0-2 against Texas in the 2005 finals. Freshman Karsten Whitson (8-0, 2.43 ERA) will start on the mound.

Florida faced a similar situation in the super regionals when it lost the middle game to Mississippi State on a walk-off homer in the ninth. It came back to win the decisive third game with a late rally.Brian Johnson, who is expected to pitch in relief Tuesday, said the Gators will draw on that experience.

"It's far from over," he said. "We'll put this behind us."

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Bankruptcy filing leaves Los Angeles Dodgers in limbo

By Bob Nightengale, USA TODAY

Frank McCourt's quest to hold onto ownership of the Los Angeles Dodgers took another turn Monday when the team filed for bankruptcy protection in Delaware.

  • Frank McCourt filed for bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court on Monday. Frank McCourt filed for bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court  on Monday.

    By Kevork Djansezian, Getty Images

    Frank McCourt filed for bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court on Monday. Frank McCourt filed for bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court on Monday.

By Kevork Djansezian, Getty Images

Frank McCourt filed for bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court on Monday. Frank McCourt filed for bankruptcy protection in a Delaware court on Monday.

McCourt says Major League Baseball's refusal to approve a new television contract with Fox is interfering with the club's operations and its ability to pay the bills.

But, according to three high-ranking officials with direct knowledge of negotiations, the proposed deal ? worth $3 billion according to McCourt and about $2 billion according to MLB? is no longer on the table. Instead Fox, a national broadcast partner of MLB's, does not want to interfere while legal proceedings are pending. The officials request anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the proposal publicly.

Under the proposed deal, McCourt would have immediately secured $385 million from Fox, and planned to use $173 million of the upfront cash to settle a divorce agreement with his former wife, Jamie, and pay off creditors.

Among the 40 largest unsecured claims facing the Dodgers, worth about $75 million, include: former Dodgers outfielders Manny Ramirez ($20.9 million) and Andruw Jones ($11.07 million), Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully ($152,778) and draft pick Zach Lee ($3.4 million), according to to the bankruptcy filing.

"We have consistently communicated to Mr. McCourt," Commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement, "that any potential solution to his problems that contemplates mortgaging the future of the Dodgers franchise to the long-term detriment of the club, its loyal fans and the game of baseball, would not be acceptable. ?

2002: Frank McCourt's bid to buy his hometown Boston Red Sox is denied. The Red Sox were instead sold to current owner John Henry.
Jan. 29, 2004: Frank McCourt and his wife, Jamie become the fourth owners in Dodgers history.
Oct. 14, 2009: Frank and Jamie McCourt announce their separation after almost 30 years of marriage.
Oct. 22: Jamie McCourt is fired from her position as Dodgers CEO, one day after the team is eliminated from the playoffs.
Oct. 27: Jamie McCourt files for divorce. In her divorce petition, she asks for ownership of half the team.
Aug. 30, 2010: The McCourt divorce trial begins.
Dec. 7: The judge says the post-nuptial marital property agreement that Frank McCourt claimed gave him sole ownership of the Dodgers is invalid.
March 31, 2011: On opening day at Dodger Stadium, Giants fan Bryan Stow is brutally beaten by two Dodger fans in the parking lot.
April 15: Frank McCourt takes a $30 million loan from FOX to meet payroll on April 15.
April 20: Commissioner Bud Selig announces that MLB would oversee day-to-day operations of the Dodgers.
June 17: Frank and Jamie McCourt reach an agreement on their divorce settlement, which is dependent on whether MLB will approve a 17-year TV contract with Fox.
June 20: MLB rejects the TV deal with Fox..
June 27: Frank McCourt files for bankruptcy protection.
- Courtney Lofgren

"The action taken today by Mr. McCourt does nothing but inflict further harm to this historic franchise."

McCourt's legal action comes three days before he was in danger of missing a June 30 payroll and having the franchise taken over by MLB. According to the bankruptcy filing, he has obtained approval for a $150 million loan from a hedge fund but needs approval from the bankruptcy court today to finalize the deal. MLB will argue that the loan should be ruled invalid, according to two of the officials, because it violates their bylaws of ownership receiving loans from a hedge fund.

McCourt, who said in a statement that Selig "turned his back on the Dodgers, treated us differently, and forced us to the point we find ourselves today," said the interim financing would enable him to remain in control of the club through bankruptcy proceedings. It also would buy time, perhaps three or four months, to secure additional financing.

"This appears to be quite a desperate act," said sports attorney Chuck Greenberg, whose group bought the Texas Rangers in bankruptcy court last July. "The Rangers bankruptcy was filed to facilitate the sale of the franchise. The Dodgers' bankruptcy was filed in an apparent attempt to thwart the commencement of a sale process.

"If you study the history of sports franchise owners filing for bankruptcy in hopes of retaining their team, they lose every time."

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Phils' Lee 2-hits Red Sox for 3rd straight shutout

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JUNE 28: Starting pitcher Cliff Lee #33 of the Philadelphia Phillies delivers a pitch during...

(Photo by Drew Hallowell/Getty Images)

Game Information

StadiumCitizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
Attendance45,714 (104.7% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time2:37
Weather82 degrees, clear
Wind5 mph
UmpiresHome Plate - Derryl Cousins, First Base - Ron Kulpa, Second Base - Jim Wolf, Third Base - John Tumpane

Research Notes

Cliff Lee has been so good this month on the hill that he's outdone the opposition at the plate all by himself.

LeeCliff Lee became the fifth pitcher to go 5-0 with an ERA of 0.21 or better in a calendar month since the end of World War II.

ESPN Stats & Information

Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA -- Cliff Lee has a simple explanation for his brilliant pitching.

"I'm making pitches, staying out of the zone, using my breaking ball and getting lucky," Lee said, downplaying his recent success.Lee tossed a two-hitter for his third consecutive shutout and the Philadelphia Phillies beat Josh Beckett and the Boston Red Sox 5-0 Tuesday night.In a series hailed as a potential World Series preview, Lee (9-5) and the Phillies dominated the opener.Domonic Brown and Shane Victorino each hit a two-run homer for Philadelphia, which improved its major league-leading record to 50-30.Lee didn't allow a hit until Marco Scutaro led off the sixth with a line-drive single to left-center. He ran his career-best scoreless streak to 32 innings with his ninth career shutout and fourth this year."It's been a good run, no doubt about it," Lee said. "I've had a few in my career, but I don't look back and compare them. I want to throw a shutout every time out there. I never want to give up a run."Beckett (6-3) gave up five runs and five hits in six innings, his worst outing of the season. Beckett entered with a major league-best 1.86 ERA and left at 2.20. He hadn't pitched because of the flu since tossing a one-hitter against Tampa Bay on June 15.Darnell McDonald led off the eighth with a double to left, putting Lee's shutout bid in jeopardy. But shortstop Jimmy Rollins made an outstanding play on Jason Varitek's hard one-hopper up the middle for the first out. Lee then fanned Mike Cameron looking at a slow curve and retired Scutaro on a grounder to third.Lee finished with five strikeouts and two walks. He has been sensational since a slow start. The lefty was 4-5 with a 3.94 ERA through May. Since then, he's 5-0 with a 0.21 ERA in five starts this month.Lee threw a two-hitter against Florida on June 16 and blanked St. Louis on six hits June 22. He needed 112 pitches to get through this one."He's one of the best pitchers in the game, and he's riding a hot streak. That is a bad combination for any team to face," Red Sox manager Terry Francona said. "I haven't seen all of his starts, but from what I have seen, he's been quite impressive. He's working counts, and he's throwing strikes when he has to. He's really got it going right now."The most popular player on the Phillies, Lee received several ovations from the 180th straight sellout, including postseason play, at Citizens Bank Park.Brown gave the Phillies a 2-0 lead when he connected with two outs in the second. The lanky rookie ripped a 2-2 pitch into Philadelphia's bullpen in right-center.Brown came in slumping. He was 4 for 34 in his previous 10 games and got a scolding from manager Charlie Manuel after not hustling out a grounder Saturday night against Oakland. Brown was booed by fans for not running hard that game, but heard loud cheers as he circled the bases and again when he went out to right field."It was definitely a wake-up call. I wasn't thinking about it until I talked to Charlie," Brown said. "Not hustling and not running balls out isn't my style. It was out of frustration. I just knew I needed to do better. I came in early and went straight to the video room."Brown got things started in the fifth with a leadoff double to left. He advanced to third on Carlos Ruiz's deep fly to right-center and scored on Lee's sacrifice fly to make it 3-0. Lee, a good-hitting pitcher, has five RBIs in his last eight games.Victorino put the Phillies up 5-0 in the sixth. He drove a 3-1 pitch into the seats in right for his ninth homer.Game notes
Lee's previous best was a 27-inning scoreless streak during his Cy Young Award season with Cleveland in 2008. ... Lee has four complete games this season, second in the NL to teammate Roy Halladay's five. ... The last time the Red Sox had just two hits was June 9, 2010, against Cleveland. Their previous low this season was four hits, done five times. ... Boston's Dustin Pedroia was 0 for 3, snapping an 11-game hitting streak. ... The Phillies placed Ryan Madson on the disabled list before the game, leaving them without three closers. Jose Contreras and Brad Lidge are also out. ... The Red Sox activated relievers Bobby Jenks and Franklin Morales from the DL before the game and optioned Scott Atchison and Tommy Hottovy to the minors. ... The Red Sox are 26-18 against the Phillies, including 18-7 since 2004. ... Beckett had allowed only four homers this season. ... The last time the Phillies reached 50 wins in fewer than 81 games was during their NL pennant-winning season in 1993. They started 50-21 that year. ... Red Sox slugger David Ortiz, who hasn't started in NL parks because the designated hitter isn't used, expects to be in the lineup Wednesday. Francona wouldn't reveal his plans.

Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press


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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Nadal skips Davis Cup tie v U.S., blasts schedule

MADRID | Mon Jun 27, 2011 11:08am EDT

MADRID (Reuters) - Rafa Nadal will miss Spain's Davis Cup clash with the United States next month to rest, complaining the tournament risked losing its prestige due to "inconsiderate" scheduling.

Spain captain Albert Costa instead called up Marcel Granollers as a replacement Monday, the world's 48th ranked player joining David Ferrer, Feliciano Lopez and Fernando Verdasco in the side.

"I won't be there. The priority is to be healthy and I have to stop," the world number one told sports daily AS Monday.

"I can't be everywhere. After finishing the first part of the season I need to rest. I need 15 to 20 days to be in good shape for the second half of the season.

"I should have a check-up on my knees, and see how everything is going with the treatment we did, which is what has allowed me to carry on. The idea is to do what I did in 2010 to arrive the same or even better prepared for the U.S. Open."

Nadal, who is defending his Wimbledon title in London at present, went on to criticize the hectic tennis schedule.

"The International Tennis Federation (ITF) continues to get it wrong by insisting with the format and calendar for the Davis Cup," he said.

"There is zero consideration toward us, the players. If the best players don't attend, the competition loses prestige. The ITF should ask themselves why this happens."

Spain, the four-times Davis Cup winners, play the United States in a World Group quarter-final in Austin, Texas on July 8-10. The U.S. Open runs from August 29 to September 11.

(Writing by Mark Elkington; Editing by Alastair Himmer and Sonia Oxley; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

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Los Angeles Dodgers file for bankruptcy

NEW YORK | Mon Jun 27, 2011 12:31pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Los Angeles Dodgers filed for bankruptcy protection, blaming Major League Baseball for rejecting a television deal with Fox Network to give the storied baseball team an urgent injection of cash.

Monday's filing marks a dramatic attempt by Dodgers owner Frank McCourt to keep the league and MLB Commissioner Bud Selig from seizing the team, which McCourt has owned since 2004.

In a court filing, the team said it had been "on the verge of running out of cash" but that the Chapter 11 filing will allow it to meet payroll, sign players, pay vendors and continue playing baseball.

McCourt has been struggling to meet payroll and other financial commitments, having been heavily in debt and locked in a bitter divorce battle with his estranged wife Jamie. The bankruptcy could lead to new ownership for the Dodgers.

"The filing preserves the status quo and prevents baseball from invoking its powers to take control," said Jack Williams, a professor at Georgia State University College of Law in Atlanta who specializes in sports law. "Major League Baseball will have a major, if not the predominant, voice in the ultimate ownership structure for the team."

On June 20, the league vetoed the Dodgers' proposed $3 billion, 17-year television contract with News Corp's Fox, saying it would not be in the best interests of the team, the game and fans.

Selig criticized the use of part of a $385 million upfront payment to fund McCourt's divorce. McCourt has said the payment was crucial to the Dodgers' financial health.

"We brought the commissioner a media rights deal that would have solved the cash flow challenge I presented to him a year ago," McCourt said in a statement. "Yet he's turned his back on the Dodgers, treated us differently, and forced us to the point we find ourselves in today."

Patrick Courtney, a spokesman for Major League Baseball, had no immediate comment.

NO WORLD SERIES SINCE 1988

Monday's filing punctuates a stunning fall for one of baseball's marquee teams, whose roots date to 1884 when it played in New York as the Brooklyn Atlantics.

The team became the Dodgers permanently in 1932, and broke Major League Baseball's color barrier when Jackie Robinson began playing in 1947. It moved to Los Angeles in 1958 and has played at Dodger Stadium since 1962.

This year, the team has a 35-44 record and has seen home attendance decline sharply. The Dodgers have won six World Series championships, but none since 1988.

Baseball took over day-to-day control of the Dodgers in April amid worries about team finances, and security concerns that followed a brutal Opening Day beating of San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow in the Dodger Stadium parking lot.

Monday's filing comes less than a year after the Texas Rangers baseball team emerged from bankruptcy, owned by a group that includes Hall of Fame pitcher Nolan Ryan.

Other U.S. sports teams to file for court protection in recent years include the Buffalo Sabres and Phoenix Coyotes in the National Hockey League.

A call to the office of Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa was not immediately returned.

MANNY RAMIREZ, ANDRUW JONES ARE CREDITORS

The Dodgers said they have arranged $150 million of financing from lenders led by affiliates of JPMorgan Chase & Co's Highbridge Capital Management LLC so the team can operate normally while in bankruptcy, court records show.

The Chapter 11 filing in the U.S. bankruptcy court in Delaware shows between $500 million and $1 billion of assets and between $100 million and $500 million of liabilities.

Four other entities also filed for protection from creditors, including one that owns Dodger Stadium.

According to Monday's filing, the team's largest unsecured creditors include former Dodger outfielders Manny Ramirez and Andruw Jones, owed $21 million and $11.1 million, respectively.

Ramirez retired this year after learning he had violated baseball's drug policy a second time. Jones plays for the New York Yankees.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Scott Gordon scheduled a one-day trial in August to decide whether the Dodgers belong to Frank McCourt, or whether the McCourts should split the team.

The McCourts' lawyers on June 17 said the pair had resolved all issues in their divorce except for the Dodgers' ownership.

"Baseball has every incentive to ensure continuity," Williams said. "It is in the best interests of all the other teams to ensure that the Dodgers remain highly competitive, so the league can put the best product on the field."

The case is In re: Los Angeles Dodgers LLC, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware, No. 11-12010.

(Writing by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by John Wallace)

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Joe Posnanski: Thoughts on Lorenzo Charles

Lorenzo Charles' last-second dunk gave N.C. State an improbable win over Houston for the 1983 national title. (Rich Clarkson)

First an apology: This will be more about me than it will be Lorenzo Charles. These are the feelings coursing through me. Lorenzo Charles died on Monday, a shocking thing. He was driving a bus for Elite Tours and the crash happened on Interstate 40, near Raleigh, N.C., where he was beloved. Charles had lived a basketball life ? he was an excellent college basketball player, of course. Then he played in basketball leagues all around the world, and he coached for a while before settling back in Raleigh and driving busses. He also made a famous shot. Buck O?Neil, who lived to be almost 95, always said that we should save our tears for those who die young. Charles was just 47 years old.

I met him only once. But I thought about him often. It had something to do with growing up. And that?s what I think about now.

When I was a freshman in high school, our family moved from Cleveland to Charlotte. That kind of move is the stuff they make saccharine family movies about. Charlotte was a different place from now. Emptier. There was no NBA team in Charlotte then, no NFL team certainly, a Double-A baseball team and no obvious connection to the America I knew. Everything felt barren to me. The sports in town were NASCAR (before it went national) and pro wrestling (before it went national). ESPN was still featuring Australian Rules Football, and the Internet was only available to museum directors. There seemed no place to turn.

This was bad for me because I had a thoroughly unhealthy obsession for sports in those days. I was a catatonically shy kid, easily embarrassed, thoroughly uncertain. The sports world was the only one that made any sense to me at all. And for me the sports world meant professional sports in Ohio ? the Cleveland Browns, the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Cleveland Indians, the Cleveland Barons for a time. I only knew about college football because of Woody Hayes. I can say with some confidence that the only college basketball player I had ever cared about before the move was Ohio State?s Clark Kellogg ? mainly because they called him ?Special K.?

My first day at East Mecklenburg High in Charlotte ? it may not technically have been my first day but that?s how my memory chooses to organize the story ? I was asked if I liked Carolina or State (there were NO Duke fans in 1981). I had no idea what that even meant. The question, of course, revolved around Atlantic Coast Conference basketball. Everything did. I was in a place where they literally would cancel classes when the ACC tournament was happening, a place where conversation began and ended with last night?s game and identity was wrapped up in the college team for which you cheered.

I chose Carolina because ? I had to choose one. I did not know that North Carolina was one of the best teams in the history of college basketball. Nobody knew that a freshman on that roster named Michael Jordan would become the best player in the history of the sport. Anyway, off the top of my head, I can still recite the rotation of that team: Jimmy Black played point, Michael Jordan was shooting guard, Matt Doherty the small forward (famous, locally, for his shot fake), James Worthy played big forward, Sam Perkins was the center and the Tar Heels had Jim Braddock come off the bench to run the point, Buzz Peterson in to shoot, Cecil Exum electrified the crowd in garbage time ?

I remember that team so vividly because I remember everything about ACC basketball in those days vividly. It became my life. I watched every game available on television (on Jefferson-Pilot). I memorized the names on every ACC roster. It felt like I cared more about whether Vince Taylor at Duke or Vince Hamilton at Clemson made shots than I cared about my own life. I feel sure that if we had moved to England at that particular moment, I would have become Britain?s most obsessive soccer fan (sometimes I read Nick Hornby?s soccer writing and feel like, though the names are unfamiliar, he is writing from inside my chest). I feel sure that if we had moved to Birmingham at that particular moment in our lives, I would have been an insane Alabama or Auburn fan. I feel sure that if we had moved to Indonesia, I would have gone nuts for badminton. I was often lonely and scared and quite sure that I was going to be a failure. In other words: I was a teenager. I threw all of my doubts, my fears, my hopes, everything, into those winter nights and ACC basketball.

It just so happened, without my even realizing it, that I had landed smack in the middle of the golden age of college basketball. Think about this: Michael Jordan had just started playing for the great Dean Smith at North Carolina. Ralph Sampson ? a 7-foot-4 force of nature ? was the center at Virginia. A young Bob Knight disciple from West Point named Mike Krzyzewski�had just started coaching at Duke. A young and brash coach from the Bronx, Bobby Cremins, had just started to coach at Georgia Tech. Maryland?s Lefty Driesell�? a legendary�character ? had just recruited a promising young player named Len Bias. Wake Forest had a feisty team featuring good players whose names that still sound like childhood to me ? Anthony Teachey, Delaney Rudd, Mike Helms ?

And up in Raleigh, an absurdly charismatic coach named Jim Valvano�was creating a stir. I could never summarize the many sides of Valvano, but he was like a movie star who owned every scene. His North Carolina State teams were brash and unlikely and featured three guards ? Sidney Lowe, Dereck�Whittenburg�and Terry Gannon ? who would shoot jump shots more or less�the second they crossed half court. That was staggering to watch. One of the guards would shoot from 28 feet away, and it seemed ridiculous, and the next time down one of them would shoot from 32 feet away, and the next time ? Wolfpack�games felt like a games of H-O-R-S-E.�State also had a terrific forward named Thurl�Bailey who could do a little bit�of everything and a center named Cozell McQueen who was famous for his Yogi Berra like pronouncements ? when asked why he chose N.C. State, he supposedly said that he just wanted to get out of the South.

And the team had Lorenzo Charles, a 6-foot-7 forward with a broad smile and a body that was born to block out.

While I chose North Carolina as my team ? and watched the Tar Heels�win the NCAA championship my first year in town ? I had no deep feelings for the rivalries. I had not grown up around it, and so had not learned that to love Carolina meant hating Duke, or that to cheer for Wake Forest meant rooting against everyone else. In high school, I kind of liked every ACC team. I rooted for the LEAGUE ? it felt like the league was playing for me. I would feel both good and bad when Maryland beat Clemson or when Virginia knocked off N.C. State or whatever. The games mattered more to me than they should have; I would sit in classes and daydream about them, scribble down starting lineups and stare at them and play imaginary games in my mind.

I was 16 years old when N.C. State went on its magical run in the 1983 NCAA tournament. That whole season felt magical to me. The ACC, in an effort to�add a little enthusiasm to the game, instituted crazy rules ? a 30-second shot clock, an absurdly short three-point line (17-feet-9 inches) ? and that did not just supercharge the game, it made the game almost unrecognizable, like something out of a video game. The rules should have played right into N.C. State?s hands with those amazing shooters, but the truth is that the Wolfpack�weren?t very good that season.� Whittenburg, the star shooter,�broke his foot. The team lost five-of-six at one point.�N.C. State�was only 17-10 with an 8-6 conference record. I remember the Pack�got absolutely blitzed by North Carolina and Wake Forest in back-to-back games in January. When the ACC tournament began, I?m not sure N.C. State was even a bubble team ? it was just out of the NCAA tournament.

Then ? it happened; the most dramatic and unlikely run of victories in the history of college basketball.�N.C. State�beat Wake Forest by a point in the first round of the ACC tournament,�won it when Lorenzo Charles made a free throw with three seconds remaining. He had two shots for the win, and I remember he missed the first one very badly to the left. When asked how he made the second, he said: ?I aimed more right.? N.C. State went on to the next round.

In the second round, N.C. State beat North Carolina in overtime;�Whittenburg, who had returned but was still limping a bit, scored 11 points in that overtime. It didn?t hurt that Michael Jordan had fouled out of the game. Then, in the ACC final, N.C. State players collapsed around Virginia?s Ralph Sampson ? the Gulliver?s Travels comparisons were made, I recall ? and somehow won. That qualified the Wolfpack for the NCAA tournament. It was already something of a sports miracle. And it was only beginning.

In the first round, N.C. State beat Pepperdine�in double overtime ? and in one of the most unlikely victories I?ve ever seen. Pepperdine�led by six with less than a minute left in the first overtime, led by three in the second overtime (and remember there was no three-point shot in the NCAA tournament then). But the Waves players could not make a clutch free throw. Those were the days when every non-shooting foul�was a one-and-one, which meant ridiculous last minute�comebacks were more possible. Valvano?s teams relied on the heat of the moment. They relied on teams missing those free throws when it mattered most. It would not be the last time.

N.C. State beat UNLV�by a point the next game ? again the Wolfpack�trailed late (by 12 in the second half) and again relied on the kindness of missed�free throws to spark a comeback. The legend is that when the Wolfpack�trailed by a dozen that Valvano called timeout and said: ?OK, we?ve got them right where we want them.?

The Wolfpack then won its one easy game of the run ? a 19-point victory over Utah ? before facing Ralph Sampson and Virginia one last time. I?ve always thought Ralph Sampson would make for a great book. When he went to Virginia, he was unlike anything anyone had ever seen. He was 7-foot-4, but he saw himself as a point guard. He was brilliantly coordinated, could shoot the outside jump shot, could block shots, could handle the ball, could pass the ball ? if anything, it seemed like he had too many gifts and was blunted by the overwhelming array of choices. As a freshman, it seemed like he would change the face of basketball. He was on the cover of Sports Illustrated six times during his college career. But, in the end, the career was defined by sadness. Individually, yes, he won the Naismith Award as college basketball Player of the Year three times (something only Bill Walton has achieved). But he could not lead Virginia to the championship.

And here, in his last chance, N.C. State once again swarmed around him, and with 23 seconds left in the game and Virginia leading by a point, Charles found himself under the basket with the ball. Sampson could only foul, and once again the game was in the hands of Lorenzo Charles. He was only a sophomore then, and he had played a supporting role all year. But he had emerged during the run. He had become a scoring and rebounding force. When he would be asked about his transformation in later years, he would shrug and say that it just happened that way. He made both free throws, and N.C. State went to the Final Four.

Every one of these games lit up my life. I was not an N.C. State fan, not exactly, but somewhere along the way I began to see myself in that N.C. State team ? the absurd underdog, the unlikely heroes, the team of misfits with the magnetic coach and a run of luck that seemed like something out of Disney. I have never understood why Disney had not made a movie about that team. They beat Georgia in the Final Four in a game without much drama, and then they played Houston in the championship game nobody thought they could win. It had been weeks, of course, since N.C. State had played a game anyone thought they could win, but the odds were especially stark against Houston. Those Cougars seemed unbeatable. They featured two future Hall of Famers (Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon). They did not just win games, they thundered. They were so dunk-happy they became known as Phi Slamma�Jamma. The Cougars had just beaten Louisville in a Final Four game so thrilling and powerful that in my memory it is just a series of cartoonish dunks ? players jumping over buildings, players stretching out their arms from one side of the court to the other like Mr. Fantastic and so on. There was no way N.C. State could beat Houston.

Of course, N.C. State did win the game. Houston ? and coach Guy Lewis never heard the end of this ? seemed to want a slower pace, and this suited the Wolfpack�just fine. Houston?s players also missed 9 of 19 free throws. It had to be this way. This was destiny. The game ended with perhaps the most famous sequence ever in college basketball history. The Wolfpack�was scrambling to get a shot. The ball ended up in the hands of Whittenburg�out near halfcourt. He tried a desperation shot (though Whittenburg had shot from out there before a few times). The shot was short, but the only one who seemed to realize it was the 6-foot-7 sophomore from Brooklyn with the broad smile, Lorenzo Charles. He was standing under the basket in what he would call ?the wrong place for a rebounder.? But it was the right place for the moment. He was the only player who jumped ? everyone else seemed lost in the moment. He caught the ball. He dunked it.

Two seconds later, Jim Valvano was running all over the court looking for someone to hug.

Outside our apartment window, I heard car horns blaring. Telephones rang up and down the street. And I felt about as happy as I had ever been. I?m not going to tell you that moment changed me or inspired me or anything like that. I can only say that the happiness consumed me. When you?re a little kid, it seems to me, everything seems possible. And as you get older, you find that it isn?t exactly true ? you can?t really fly, Santa Claus might not land on your roof, Superman is not a career path. And the disappointments keep coming: You might not become president, you might not sing in front of a sellout crowd at Madison Square Garden, you probably won?t play centerfield for the Dodgers or quarterback for the Cowboys or point guard for the Celtics, you probably won?t be the host of The Tonight Show. Those years of growing up can be a cold splash of reality. Wonder becomes myth. Magic becomes magic TRICKS. Possible becomes impossible.

But when Lorenzo Charles dunked the ball ? the possible lived again.

And that?s what I think of now. Lorenzo Charles was too young to die. His friends talk about what a good person he was. They mention that smile that I remember so clearly. And again on television, they play video of the shot. Countless people through the years told Lorenzo Charles what that shot meant to them. When I met him, before a game, I heard someone else tell their own story about that shot, how he remembered it, how it affected his life. And I remember Lorenzo Charles nodded and said, ?I still can?t believe it happened.?

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