Friday, September 30, 2011

NBA players, owners to continue talks Saturday

Friday's meeting was attended by a host of NBA stars, including Carmelo Anthony.

Brian

NEW YORK (AP) -- One down, two big issues to go for an agreement that would end the NBA lockout.

It may not happen this weekend, but players and owners both say they are working to get there soon enough that the season can start on time.

"All I'll say is there was a sense of urgency in the room today," NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said after the sides met for more than four hours Friday.

"I think the sense today from both sides is we really need to push this weekend. Time is of the essence, and I don't think there was any disagreement about that by both parties."

All-Stars LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade and Kevin Durant joined the players' association executive committee for what president Derek Fisher called an "engaging" meeting with the owners' labor relations committee.

Afterward, Commissioner David Stern indicated that the union will OK the owners' plan for enhanced revenue sharing. However, the salary cap structure remains an obstacle, as does the division of revenues between the sides.

A person familiar with what happened during the meeting said the normally mild-mannered Wade angrily expressed frustrations with the process Friday, directing most of his comments toward Stern and saying he felt disrespected by the commissioner at one point during the meeting. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the sides agreed to keep details of the day's dialogue private.

Players and owners will return Saturday morning and are committed to talking through the weekend, knowing additional cancellations are likely necessary next week if they're not close to a deal. A week of preseason games have already been lost, and the Nov. 1 regular season opener would be in jeopardy without progress this weekend.

Some may have been made in regards to the league's plan for enhanced revenue sharing among owners - which players had long argued as a way for the league to address its losses.

Stern emphatically denied that he would threaten to cancel the entire season this early even if things don't go well this weekend. Still, he repeated that there would be danger in not making progress soon.

"Both sides agreed that the consequences of not making a deal lead us to the prospect of possibly at some point in the not distant future losing regular-season games," Stern said. "And we agreed that once you start to lose them and the players lose paychecks and the owners lose money, then positions on both sides will harden and those are the enormous consequences that I referred to in terms of trying to make a deal."

There were 21 players and 10 owners in the meeting. Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, Elton Brand, Baron Davis and Andre Iguodala were among the other players who stood behind Fisher at his news conference after the session.

"We feel it helps the process for our teams to hear directly from a lot of times their star players, their franchise players, the guys who mean the most to our game," Fisher said.

Players have been frustrated that owners have shut them out of their plans for expanded revenue sharing. Stern had said the plan couldn't be finalized until the collective bargaining agreement was done, so the league would first know how much it would be paying out to the players.

But Stern said the players know everything the league knows and insisted "that will not be the issue that separates us." He has said the plan is for the revenue sharing pot to triple next season from this year's $54 million and added Friday that the goal was to quadruple it by year three.

The salary cap remains an obstacle. Players have stressed they will fight any attempt to impose a hard cap system instead of the current soft cap that allows teams to exceed it through the use of certain exceptions.

Owners this week relaxed their insistence on the hard cap, instead proposing a system where there would be four levels of the luxury tax, and the more a team spent, the higher that tax. (There is currently a $1 for every $1 over the tax threshold.) But Fisher, without getting into specifics, said that system still wouldn't work for the players.

"I think the idea was if you removed the name 'hard cap,' that that would be good enough in itself. But we still believe the mechanisms ... still in just about every sense would be a hard cap for teams," he said. "There would be very few, if any, teams that would be in a position to spend over that particular number, so that's how we feel about it at this point. It doesn't mean that the negotiation is over, but it's definitely not anywhere close to where we'd be able to agree to it."

The division of revenues is the last of what Stern called the "Big Three" items. Owners are seeking to reduce the players' guarantee from 57 percent in the previous deal.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Red Sox win dubious distinction for biggest collapse

Thu Sep 29, 2011 2:06pm EDT

(Reuters) - Untimely injuries, ineffective pitching and the failure of big-name players to perform when it mattered most are to blame for the epic collapse that kept the Boston Red Sox out of the postseason.

The Red Sox and Atlanta Braves were each within striking distance of the postseason during the ninth inning on the final night of Major League Baseball's 162-game regular season schedule on Wednesday, but failed to close the deal en route to the worst collapses in the annals of September swoons.

Boston earned the dubious distinction of most awful final-month crash, a black mark of misery compounded by their status as preseason favorites after an off-season spending spree gave them a $161 million payroll that was third highest in the major leagues.

Losers of 20 of their last 27 games, the Red Sox came apart from a combination of injuries, a depleted starting rotation and shoddy execution as the mounting pressure of failure wore on the boys from Beantown, who fell in their final game to the last-placed Baltimore Orioles.

"We'll go down in history as one of the worst collapses in history, so it definitely doesn't feel good to be part of that," said left fielder Carl Crawford, who failed to snag Baltimore's game-ending hit after a desperate, sliding stab at Robert Andino's sinking liner.

The Braves, who held an 8-1/2 game lead in the first week of September, crashed first to the Philadelphia Phillies in 13 innings and would have gone down as the biggest flameout ever, but Boston outdid them with a ninth-inning reversal that made them the first team to squander a nine-game September lead.

Crawford's near miss in the outfield symbolized the futility of the 2011 Red Sox season.

The fleet-footed outfielder was signed to a seven-year, $142 million free agent deal, and along with a trade for slugging first baseman Adrian Gonzalez, Boston looked set to batter their opposition.

Crawford, however, failed to deliver up to expectations, his stats line of a .255 batting average, 11 home runs and 56 runs batted in made him a Boston bust.

Adding to the sting of their dismal finish was being overtaken by the financially-challenged Tampa Bay Rays, who lost Crawford among a host of other players from their 2010 roster due to the economics of a small market club whose $41 million 2011 payroll was second lowest in the major leagues.

Injuries chipped away at Boston's vaunted roster, with third baseman Kevin Youkilis sorely missed down the stretch, but it was the decimation of their pitching staff that hurt most.

The Red Sox lost Daisuke Matsuzaka in early June to elbow surgery, and even more damaging finished the year without Clay Buchholz, whose season ended in late June due to a back injury. Buchholz, 17-7 in 2010, was 6-3 before he was sidelined.

Boston soldiered on but once September hit, even top of the rotation stalwarts Josh Beckett and Jon Lester faltered.

The other pieces of the rotation failed miserably.

Last year's free-agent acquisition John Lackey posted a mind-numbing earned run average of 6.41, while aged knuckleballer Tim Wakefield pitched to a 5.12 ERA. Young starters called up from the minors failed to stop the slide.

"We're going to have to live with that one," Red Sox manager Terry Francona lamented after the last loss. "We needed to take care of business today and we didn't."

(Writing by Larry Fine in New York; Editing by Frank Pingue)

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League and players feel urgency in labor talks

Thu Sep 29, 2011 4:50pm EDT

(Reuters) - Talks aimed at ending the National Basketball Association's (NBA) lockout resume Friday with both sides warning that time for a deal is running out amid concerns over the economic impact of the labor dispute.

The regular season is slated to begin November 1 but with no deal in place for a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA), the league risks postponing or cancelling regular season games for only the second time in its history.

"There are enormous consequences at play here on the basis of the weekend," NBA Commissioner David Stern said.

"Either we'll make very good progress and we know how good that would be. Or we won't make any progress and then it won't be a question of just starting the season on time. There will be a lot at risk."

National Basketball Players Association President Derek Fisher, who plays for the Los Angeles Lakers, agrees.

"We realize the calendar, watch, clock, whatever, is running out in terms of starting the regular season on time," he told reporters. "If we can't find a way to get some common ground, really, really soon then the time of starting the regular season at the scheduled date is in jeopardy big time.

"We still have a great deal of issues to work through so there won't be any magic that will happen this weekend and make those things go away," he said.

NBA owners contend the league lost $300 million last season with 22 of 30 teams in the red. They want the league's share of basketball-related income increased from 50 to 57 percent, along with a firm salary cap and shorter contracts.

The players offered to reduce their share to 54.3 percent.

The three-month long dispute is similar in many ways to the recent conflict between the National Football League and their players.

North American sports' use of a centralized CBA inevitably brings forward a whole host of negotiating points - almost a guaranteed recipe for disputes.

But there are those in the game who worry that the NBA is more vulnerable than the NFL to the negative effects of a lockout.

"Face it, whether you're an NFL season-ticket holder and have to buy 10 games, it's on weekends and Monday nights - it's predictable, it doesn't change your lifestyle," Jeff Van Gundy former New York Knicks and Houston Rockets head coach told the Star-Ledger newspaper Thursday.

"Even the fans of the worst (NFL) teams don't complain; they're coming back, because it's a weekly tradition. But the season-ticket holder in the NBA is different.

"People split the package. It's a major time and financial commitment. I'm not trying to be gloom and doom here. It's just that people don't have the disposable income they used to have, and it's not like they're pining for NBA basketball.

"I just worry at some point - I know at some point - that some sport will go too far."

So far, training camps that were scheduled to open October 3 have been postponed indefinitely and 43 preseason games slated for October 9-15 have been canceled.

The only previous time the league had to cancel part of its schedule was in 1998 when a six-month dispute reduced the season by 32 games to 50.

(Reporting by Simon Evans in Miami; Editing by Frank Pingue; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

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NFL upholds Pryor's 5-game ban, cites 'integrity'

Updated: September 30, 2011, 5:06 PM ET

The NFL upheld Terrelle Pryor's five-game suspension on Friday, a ruling that will trigger a non-injury grievance on Pryor's behalf by the NFL Players' Association, a union source told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell told Pryor of the decision on Friday afternoon.

"I believe it is a fair conclusion that he intentionally took steps to ensure that he would be declared ineligible for further college play and would be able to enter the NFL via the supplemental draft," Goodell said in a news release. "Taken as a whole, I found that this conduct was tantamount to a deliberate manipulation of our eligibility rules in a way that distorts the underlying principles and calls into question the integrity of those rules."

Goodell heard the Oakland Raiders quarterback's appeal Sept. 15 during a hearing that lasted 80 minutes and included Pryor's agent, Drew Rosenhaus, and a group of attorneys but did not include Pryor, a league source told Schefter then.

Pryor and Rosenhaus previously had said they would not oppose the penalty the NFL imposed as a condition of making him eligible for the supplemental draft.

Members of the NFLPA executive committee had pushed for the union to appeal the suspension.

The Raiders drafted Pryor in the third round of the supplemental draft. He is behind both Jason Campbell and Kyle Boller on the Raiders' quarterback depth chart and does not count against the Raiders' roster while serving his suspension.

Meanwhile, the Raiders will be without cornerback Chris Johnson in Sunday's game against New England, a blow to a secondary that might also be without starting free safety Michael Huff.

Johnson injured his hamstring early in last week's win over the New York Jets and hasn't practiced this week. Coach Hue Jackson said Friday that neither Johnson nor wide receiver Louis Murphy would play against the Patriots.

Several other players are questionable, including Huff. The veteran safety suffered a concussion in the first half of the Jets game and has also been held out of practice.

Oakland was forced to scrap most of its man-to-man coverages when both players went down against New York and went to more zone calls.

Pryor may be activated by the Raiders after their game at Houston on Oct. 9.

Pryor opted to give up his final season with the Buckeyes soon after coach Jim Tressel was forced out of his job for failing to notify administrators about players -- including Pryor -- trading memorabilia for cash and tattoos at a Columbus, Ohio, tattoo parlor.

The quarterback originally was barred from entering the supplemental draft, then was approved by Goodell, with the proviso he must sit out five games.

Goodell said Pryor left Ohio State "in order to avoid the consequences of his conduct while in college -- conduct to which he had admitted and for which he had accepted a suspension -- and to hasten the day when he could pursue a potentially lucrative professional career in the NFL."

"In my judgment, allowing players to secure their own ineligibility for college play in order to avoid previously determined disciplinary consequences for admitted conduct reflects poorly not on college football -- which acted to discipline the transgressor -- but on the NFL, by making it into a sanctuary where a player cannot only avoid the consequences of his conduct, but be paid for doing so," Goodell said.

Information from ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Ditka calls controversial Payton book 'gutless'

Updated: September 30, 2011, 1:28 PM ET

Former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka dismissed the author of a controversial new book on Walter Payton as "totally gutless."

Jeff Pearlman's book, which includes allegations of Payton, who died in 1999, being suicidal, abusing pain medication and being unfaithful to his wife, is titled "Sweetness: The Enigmatic Life of Walter Payton" and will be released Oct. 4. An excerpt of the book will appear in the Oct. 3 issue of Sports Illustrated.

"I think it's ridiculous to me," Ditka said Thursday on "Carmen, Jurko & Harry" on ESPN 1000. "What's the point? What's the point? The point is one thing only -- to sell books. That's all it's about. It's a bunch of crap, first of all.

"If you're going to wait 12 years after somebody's passed, come on. This is the sign of a gutless individual who would do this. Totally gutless who would hide behind that, and that's what he's done."

Payton retired after the 1987 season as the then-all-time leading rusher in NFL history, and according to the book, he was depressed and suicidal in the mid-1990s. Pearlman cites a letter from Payton to a friend, in which Payton said he imagined himself killing those around him and then turning a gun on himself.

"I learned a long time ago people can point the finger, say anything they want to say," Ditka said. "What gives [Pearlman] any credibility? What's his expertise? I know he's an author, and the only way he would know anything is to get information from other people. Who's to say the other people he got information from gave authentic information? He didn't get it from the horse's mouth. He didn't get it from Walter. I have a lot of questions about the authenticity of the book."

Pearlman was on "The Waddle & Silvy Show" on ESPN 1000 Friday and was played the audio of Ditka's response to the book.

"No. 1, I think it's utterly, utterly ridiculous and such an impulse, mindless, inane response," Pearlman said of Ditka. "First of all, yeah, I did it for the money. I took three years working on this book. Three years of my life devoted to this project. Who did I talk to? I talked to 678 people for this book. I interviewed as many people as humanly possible.

"I sat down with (Payton's son) Jarrett. I sat down with (Payton's daughter) Brittney. I sat down with (Payton's brother) Eddie. I sat down with his agent. I sat down with everyone I could possibly sit down with. I sat down with Mike Ditka at his bar in downtown Chicago.

"I understand the emotional reaction. I really do. He's emotional about it. This is a player he loved. I get it. I understand it. I also understand that Sports Illustrated ran a five-page excerpt with snippets from different parts of his life after his career was over. The book is 460 pages long."

Count former Bears linebacker and Payton teammate Ron Rivera among those who will not read the book.

"It's unfortunate somebody wrote a book and throws that kind of light on somebody who's not here to defend himself," Rivera, who was a teammate of Payton's from 1984 to 1987, said Thursday on "The Waddle & Silvy Show." "I think it's a shame.

"He was a tremendous person, and most certainly was a very good friend to me."

Rivera, who returns to Soldier Field on Sunday as coach of the Carolina Panthers, credits Payton with helping him start his coaching career.

"I feel real bad that somebody would throw those things out there, and probably because I don't think they're true," Rivera said.

"The time I spent with Walter after our careers had ended as football players and being around each other, he was always tremendous. He was always good and always good about where he was, who he was and the people that were there with him. He really is an icon in my eyes. And he always will be."

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Vick does walkthrough, says he will play Sunday

PHILADELPHIA -- A badly bruised hand isn't going to keep Michael Vick off the field.

Vick practiced Wednesday and said there's a "100 percent" chance he starts when the Philadelphia Eagles (1-2) host San Francisco (2-1) on Sunday.

The star quarterback was initially diagnosed with a broken, non-throwing hand after getting hurt in a 29-16 loss to the New York Giants three days ago. But tests on Monday revealed he had a contusion on his right hand.

"Even if it was broke, I think I would have probably padded it up and went back out there," Vick said after a morning walkthrough. "You got to take precaution, but this is what I love to do."

Vick hasn't finished two of Philadelphia's three games -- both losses. He suffered a concussion in a 35-31 loss at Atlanta on Sept. 18.

"I just want to be there for my teammates and hold myself accountable for my responsibilities and what I have to do as a quarterback," he said. "So regardless of what I have to go through, I just want to be there."

Coach Andy Reid said he wants to make sure Vick can take snaps without any problems.

"Ball handling, obviously is very important, in particular under the center, that's where the problem would be," Reid said. "Shotgun, you can get away with it, but under the center you've got to be able to squeeze and right now that's not 100-percent. So, we've got to see. I don't know how fast it'll come back. I can't tell you that."

Vick said he did everything at practice despite a little soreness.

"I'm very encouraged," he said.

Vick again apologized for criticizing the officials and saying he takes too many late hits without getting the benefit of a roughing-the-passer penalty.

"I think I was frustrated because I got hit late and I hurt my hand on that play and I couldn't finish the game because of that," Vick said. "That was one of the reasons I was frustrated. I don't want any special treatment. All I want to do is go out and play my game. If they feel there's a need to make a call, then they'll make it. If not, then I won't say anything about it."

Vick got a laugh out of the New York Post cover that had his face attached to a baby's body wearing an Eagles bib and holding a bottle.

"My kids were killing me about that. That was a good one," Vick said. "I guess when you sit on the podium and you make excuses like that, then you're going to be labeled a crybaby, so maybe I did deserve it."

Though still early, Vick and the Eagles find themselves in last place in the NFC East, as the Giants, Redskins and Cowboys are all 2-1.

Notes

The Eagles are making more changes at linebacker. After reshuffling all three of their starters last week, the Eagles have benched rookie Casey Matthews and replaced him with rookie Brian Rolle at the weak side. Matthews, a fourth-round pick, started the first two games in the middle before moving to the weak side. Rolle was a sixth-round pick out of Ohio State. "I guess the coaches felt the need for a new body in there," Rolle said. "I just look forward to the challenge and I'm going to have fun and make plays. I'm ready for it. I felt like I was ready out of college."... WR Jeremy Maclin missed practice with a hamstring injury and is day to day. ... WR Riley Cooper was cleared after sustaining a concussion against the Giants, and practiced.

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Bears great Dan Hampton snubs Obama's White House invitation

A lack of sentimentality and a dislike of President Obama mean that Chicago Bears great Dan Hampton will snub a 25-year anniversary celebration at the White House of the team's Super Bowl championship.

"It's my own personal choice," the Hall of Fame defensive lineman told The Mully and Hanley radio show. "I don't choose to go."

Hampton said he was bothered that the invitation wasn't extended to players' wives and children and added, "Secondly, I'm not a fan of the guy in the White House, and third, it was 25 years ago. Let it go."

The reason the Bears are getting the White House treatment this year is that they never got a presidential celebration after winning the 1986 Super Bowl. It was called off because the Space Shuttle Challenger had exploded two days before, killing the entire crew.

Said Hampton: "It basically just rolled off our backs, and now, 25 years later to say, 'Let's put the band back together.' No, I'm not in."

Hampton spent all 12 seasons of his NFL career with the Bears, and was a four-time Pro Bowl selection.

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New Orleans Saints team report: Colston cleared to play

METAIRIE, La. ? Coach Sean Payton confirmed that wide receiver Marques Colston has been cleared to play at Jacksonville, though Payton said he doesn?t anticipate him getting 50 snaps in the game.

Colston came back faster than expected from the broken collarbone he suffered in Week 1. Among other things, he credited a hyperbaric chamber that he slept in at his home for helping the speedy recovery.

Having Colston on the field will force the Jaguars to ?pick their poison? against the versatile Saints offense. If they choose to leave him in single coverage against a linebacker or small corner, the Saints will take advantage.

Otherwise, his presence should draw some attention away from fellow playmakers like tight end Jimmy Graham, receivers Lance Moore, Robert Meachem and Devery Henderson, and pass-catching tailback Darren Sproles. Graham could be the biggest beneficiary of that bunch because he and Colston are similarly built.

Notes: Middle linebacker Jonathan Vilma returned to practice on a limited basis Thursday, a good sign that he might be able to return from an unspecified injury Sunday at Jacksonville.

Vilma, who joined the Saints in 2008, missed his first game because of injury with the team last week. Experienced backup Jo-Lonn Dunbar was solid in his place, but the Saints would love to have Vilma back, both for his playmaking and his leadership.

The 6-1, 230-pounder is a bit undersized for his position, which occasionally gets him stuck in traffic. But he has great speed and instincts, which allow him to make a ton of tackles. He?s also good for some timely interceptions, forced fumbles and fumble recoveries ? like the one he landed on against Chicago in Week 2 while he was playing through his current knee injury.

Perhaps most important, Vilma is an extension of coordinator Gregg Williams on the field, making the calls to get his teammates lined up and adjusted. If Vilma can play extensively at Jacksonville, Dunbar can slide over to the strongside linebacker spot, where he started eight games last season.

The Saints are banged up at that spot, with both Will Herring and Martez Wilson questionable for Sunday. But even if those guys are healthy, Dunbar might be the best man for the job based on how he has been playing lately.

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Where collapses rank among worst ever

It didn't take long for the shock to set in for Mike Aviles of the Red Sox and Martin Prado of the Braves.

AP (2)

Wednesday night was not only one of the most thrilling nights of baseball in recent memory, it was also one of the most significant. Not one but two of the most severe regular-season collapses in the game's history were completed.

The dominoes fell throughout the night, each one more thrilling and improbable than the last. First the Cardinals' Chris Carpenter twirled a shutout to force the Braves to win to avoid elimination for the National League wild card. During the later innings of that game, the Braves blew a one-run lead in the ninth with the NL's saves leader and likely Rookie of the Year on the mound. Then the Rays, who had trailed 7-0 in the eighth inning and were down to their last strike, got new life via a game-tying home run from a pinch-hitter who had nine hits and one homer in 90 previous plate appearances on the season.

Roughly an hour later, the Phillies eliminated the Braves in the 13th inning. With the Rays in extra innings in Tampa, the Red Sox took a 3-2 lead into the bottom of the ninth in Baltimore and got to within one strike of forcing the Rays' to win or go home, only to blow the lead and the game over the course of Jonathan Papelbon's next four pitches. Just three minutes later, as the Red Sox entered the visitor's clubhouse in Camden Yards where the Rays' game was playing on the televisions, Evan Longoria hit just the second playoff-clinching walk-off homer in the final game of the regular season in baseball history. The first? Bobby Thomson's immortal "Shot Heard 'Round the World" in 1951.

When the dust cleared, the Cardinals and Rays were in the playoffs as the 2011 wild cards, and the Braves and Red Sox were facing the reality of having just become the first teams ever to blow leads as big as 8 � games in September.

On the morning of Aug. 26, the Braves were up 9 � games in the National League wild card race and 10 � games on the Cardinals, who were a game behind the Giants at the time. Former Baseball Prospectus statistician Clay Davenport calculated Atlanta's odds of making the playoffs at that point by simulating the remainder of the season a million times and gave them a 98.99 percent chance, or barely more than a one-percent chance of failing to make the playoffs.

On the morning of Sept. 4, the Red Sox had a nine-game lead in the American League wild card race with 24 games left to play. Davenport calculated their chance of making the playoffs at 99.78 percent, giving them less than a quarter of a one percent chance of missing out on October play.

Only four teams in baseball history had higher postseason odds than the Braves and failed to make the playoffs. One of those four teams was this year's Red Sox, and only two teams ever had better odds than them and still went home at the end of the regular season.

With the help of Davenport and this 2007 Baseball Prospectus article by Nate Silver, which was built off Davenport's data, I was able to compile the following list of the 18 teams with the highest playoff odds at any point during the season who ultimately failed to make the postseason:

Year Team Peak Odds Peak Date
1995 Angels 99.99 Aug. 20
2007 Mets 99.80 Sept. 12
2011 Red Sox 99.78 Sept. 4
1951 Dodgers 99.74 Aug. 12
2011 Braves 98.99 Aug. 26
1993 Giants 98.25 Aug. 7
2003 Mariners 97.91 June 18
1969 Cubs 97.90 Aug. 19
1942 Dodgers 96.90 Aug. 15
2010 Padres 96.71 Aug. 26
1978 Red Sox 96.54 Aug. 12
2005 Indians 96.50 Sept. 24
1983 Braves 96.39 Aug. 10
1964 Phillies 96.15 Sept. 17
2009 Tigers 96.04 Sept. 30
2002 Red Sox 95.84 June 6
1908 Giants 95.46 Sept. 18
1921 Pirates 94.57 Aug. 22

Not all of those collapses were created equal, however. In fact, one could argue, not all of those teams collapsed, even though they all failed to make the playoffs. Consider, for example, the 1942 Dodgers, who had a 9 � game lead in the National League on the morning of August 16. The Dodgers played .595 ball the rest of the way and finished the season with an eight-game winning streak, but the second-place Cardinals went 37-6 (.860) over the same stretch and won the pennant by two games. Yes, the Dodgers had fallen off from the .705 pace they had established prior to August 16, but it was the Cardinals' comeback, not the Dodgers' mild cooling off, that caused the pennant to switch hands that year.

Though those 1942 Dodgers had the best post-peak-odds winning percentage of the 18 teams above, five others posted winning records after their peak. The 1993 Giants played .569 ball after August 7, won 14 of their last 17, and finished with 103 wins, but the Braves, buoyed by the mid-season addition of slugging first baseman Fred McGriff, went 39-11 (.780) over the same span and won the NL West by one game in the final season prior to the introduction of the wild card.

The 1978 Red Sox played .542 ball after August 12 and won the final eight games of their original regular season schedule, but lost a one-game tiebreaker at home to the Yankees, who went 34-12 (.739) leading up to the infamous Bucky Dent game.

The 1908 Giants and 1951 Dodgers were just one game over .500 after achieving their peak odds, but it still took exceptional performances from their rivals to capture the National League pennant. The 1908 Cubs went 14-2 (.875) to overtake the Giants, a run capped by a pennant-clinching win in the replay of the infamous Merkle's Boner game, and went on to win what remains their last World Series title. The 1951 Giants, meanwhile, went 37-8 (.822), including taking two out of three in a playoff against the Dodgers, to claim the pennant on Thomson's home run.

The last of the above teams to post a winning record after their playoff-odds peak was the 2002 Red Sox, but they don't fit the narrative of a collapse because their peak playoff odds came in early June, when the season was barely a third over, the result of them jumping out to a 40-17 (.702 start) in a year in which the wild card was in play. Ditto the 2003 Mariners, who peaked on June 18 after starting 48-22 (.686) and building up a 7 � game lead in the AL West.

Strike those seven teams from the above list and we get this list of the 11 greatest choke jobs in regular season history:

Year Team Peak Odds Peak Date
1995 Angels 99.99 Aug. 20
2007 Mets 99.80 Sept. 12
2011 Red Sox 99.78 Sept. 4
2011 Braves 98.99 Aug. 26
1969 Cubs 97.90 Aug. 19
2010 Padres 96.71 Aug. 26
2005 Indians 96.50 Sept. 24
1983 Braves 96.39 Aug. 10
1964 Phillies 96.15 Sept. 17
2009 Tigers 96.04 Sept. 30
1921 Pirates 94.57 Aug. 22

By peak odds, the 2011 Red Sox and Braves suffered the third and fourth greatest regular season collapses in baseball history. However there are two other ways to look at that list. The first is to rank the teams by their post-peak-odds winning percentage to see which won least often after peaking. Here is that version:

Year Team Peak Odds Peak Date WPct. After
2005 Indians 96.50 Sept. 24 .143
1964 Phillies 96.15 Sept. 17 .200
2009 Tigers 96.04 Sept. 30 .200
2011 Red Sox 99.78 Sept. 4 .250
2007 Mets 99.80 Sept. 12 .294
1995 Angels 99.99 Aug. 20 .316
2011 Braves 98.99 Aug. 26 .333
1969 Cubs 97.90 Aug. 19 .375
2010 Padres 96.71 Aug. 26 .378
1921 Pirates 94.57 Aug. 22 .378
1983 Braves 96.39 Aug. 10 .396

The other version is to rank them by the difference between their pre-peak and post-peak winning percentages, to see which declined the most:

Year Team Peak Odds Peak Date WPct. Change
2005 Indians 96.50 Sept. 24 -.451
1964 Phillies 96.15 Sept. 17 -.405
2009 Tigers 96.04 Sept. 30 -.338
2011 Red Sox 99.78 Sept. 4 -.359
1995 Angels 99.99 Aug. 20 -.301
2007 Mets 99.80 Sept. 12 -.278
1921 Pirates 94.57 Aug. 22 -.277
2011 Braves 98.99 Aug. 26 -.265
1969 Cubs 97.90 Aug. 19 -.256
2010 Padres 96.71 Aug. 26 -.230
1983 Braves 96.39 Aug. 10 -.209

Those two lists are fairly similar and create some distance between this year's Red Sox and Braves. Before we get into that, however, it's worth noting how late the '05 Indians' and '09 Tigers' playoff odds peaked. The Tigers had a three game lead on the Twins in the AL Central with just four games left to play, but lost the first three of those four games, the first to the Twins, who went 4-0 over the same span, to fall into a tie. Then, after pulling out a win in the season finale to force a one-game tiebreaker in Minnesota, lost that game in 12 innings.

The Indians were just 1 � games up in the wild card race with seven left to play, but the first four of those games came against the last-place Royals and Devil Rays. Also, over the last three the two teams that were tied for second in that race, the Yankees and Red Sox, who were tied atop the AL East, played each other. The Indians went 1-6 over their last seven games while Yankees and Red Sox both went 5-3 over the same span to finish two games ahead of the Indians, with the Red Sox claiming the wild card.

As shocking as those collapses were, they were also very sudden and didn't see the team in question suffer through an extended period of losing, so I'm almost tempted to eliminate them from the above lists as they were somewhat different animals. If I did, the 2011 Red Sox's collapse would rank as the second-worst collapse in major league history after that of the 1964 Phillies. That year, Philadelphia blew a 6 �-game lead in the National League with 15 games left to play by going 3-12, including a 10-game losing streak to finish a game behind the eventual pennant winning Cardinals.

That "Philly Phlop" is among the most famous collapses in major league history, and what the Red Sox did this year ranks right there with it in terms of winning percentage and far outstrips it in terms of postseason odds per the first list on this page. The Braves collapse doesn't quite measure up to those two, but still ranks seventh on both of the lists above and fourth according to the comeback-free postseason odds list above. Using the lists above, however, one could argue that what we just saw from the Red Sox was the worst regular season collapse in major league history, and given the way it played out Wednesday night, it has a very good chance of being remembered as such.

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Dustin Johnson not bitter to lose caddie to Tiger

Updated: September 29, 2011, 4:22 PM ET

KINGSBARNS, Scotland -- Dustin Johnson doesn't begrudge Tiger Woods for hiring his caddie, saying such decisions are part of the business of golf.

Joe LaCava left Johnson on Sunday to become Woods' third full-time caddie.

"I spoke to Tiger about it. There's no hard feelings at all," Johnson said Thursday after shooting a 1-under 71 in the first round of the Dunhill Links Championship. "We had a great conversation. He just did what he did."

LaCava was the longtime caddie for Fred Couples but joined Johnson this summer. Johnson, one of the most talented American players, was looking for a caddie. Johnson won The Barclays last month with LaCava on the bag.

"I liked Joe. I still do. But you've got to make decisions and you can't get mad at him for the decisions he made," said Johnson, who was in the locker room after the final round of the Tour Championship when he found out LaCava had been hired by Woods.

"He got offered a job so he took it. You can't blame the guy. If he wants to go and caddie for him, it's fine by me."

Johnson will have Keith Sbarbaro, vice president of his club maker, TaylorMade, on his bag for the rest of the year. Sbarbaro has caddied for Johnson in tournaments in South Korea and Germany this year.

"He's a real good buddy of mine," Johnson said.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

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Indians pick up manager Acta's option for 2013

Updated: September 29, 2011, 6:12 PM ET

CLEVELAND -- Manny Acta's second season managing the Indians was stressful. Next year, he can relax a little.

One day after Acta led Cleveland to a second-place finish in the AL Central, general manager Chris Antonetti announced the club has exercised its 2013 option.

Acta kept the Indians in contention for much of this season before injuries overwhelmed the young club, which finished 14 games behind AL Central champion Detroit. A rash of injuries torpedoed a 30-15 start, but the Indians still managed to finish 80-82 -- an 11-game improvement over Acta's first season.

"When we reflect on the successes we've had and the progress we've made, it began with Manny and his coaching staff and the tone they set in spring training," Antonetti said Thursday. "I feel much better about where we are today than where we were a year ago, and I think a lot of that has to do with Manny's leadership."

Acta is 149-175 in two seasons with Cleveland.

"I'm very happy that I know I will be here for at least two years," he said. "This is a place I want to be."

Following a tough 2� seasons in Washington that ended with being fired, Acta was hired by the Indians before the 2010 season. He chose Cleveland over Houston despite playing, coaching and managing in the Astros' system. Acta picked the Indians because he felt they were closer to contending, and he's helped them get there.

"I made the decision based on some facts, and over the last two years they have been confirmed," he said. "That was based on our farm system, our young players who are making an impact at the big league level and our chances of being competitive and eventually winning. I've seen it in two years."

Acta's staff will look considerably different next season. On Wednesday, bench coach Tim Tolman disclosed he has Parkinson's disease and will not be back, and pitching coach Tim Belcher stepped down to spend more time with his family. Both will remain with the Indians in other roles.

Acta said replacing Tolman, who worked with him in Washington, and Belcher will be difficult.

"Those are the two guys I relied on the most during the game," said Acta, who was ejected from Cleveland's season finale in Detroit. "It's not going to be easy. We're going to work hard to bring two guys in to help me."

Antonetti said the remainder of Cleveland's coaching staff will return. Sandy Alomar Jr., who has coached first base the last two seasons, will move to the bench in 2012. Hitting coach Bruce Fields, third-base coach Steve Smith and bullpen coach Scott Radinsky also will be back.

Antonetti said Radinsky will be considered for the pitching coach vacancy.

Alomar is reportedly a candidate to replace Ozzie Guillen as manager of the Chicago White Sox. Antonetti wouldn't say whether the White Sox have asked for permission to talk to Alomar, but added the Indians will not stand in his way.


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

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Yahoo! SportsYahoo! Sports - Top NewsUNC tops Washington after frantic finish (AP)Texas Tech hires Gillispie as coach (AP)Mason seeks another run, faces No. 1 OSU (AP)Kyle Busch sweeps Bristol again (AP)Amid controversy, Duke takes on Michigan (AP)Injured Nets PG Williams out 3 games (AP)Lakers C Bynum gets 2-game ban for foul (AP)Surging Rangers score 4 in 3rd, top Pens (AP)Heat PG Chalmers out up to 2 weeks (AP)Peavy shut down with rotator cuff woes (AP)

10 Copyright (c) 2011 Yahoo!, Inc. All rights reserved. en-us 126 15 http://sports.yahoo.com http://l.yimg.com/a/i/us/sp/b/ysp_logo_rss.gif http://sports.yahoo.com Latest news and information from the world of sports. Getty Images http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=11o9utuq0/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/ncaab/recap?gid=201103200413 CHARLOTTE , NC - MARCH 20:  Harrison Barnes #40 of the North Carolina Tar Heels reacts in the first half while taking on the Washington Huskies during the third round of the 2011 NCAA men's basketball tournament at Time Warner Cable Arena on March 20, 2011 in Charlotte, North Carolina.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

North Carolina's Roy Williams woke up Sunday morning feeling ill. The Hall of Fame coach then had to endure one stomach-turning play after another in a dramatic and confusing finish that left the Tar Heels in a familiar spot: the NCAA tournament's round of 16. Tyler Zeller scored 23 points, Harrison Barnes added 22 and North Carolina survived a closing minute that included numerous...


]]> Sun, 20 Mar 2011 13:24:20 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:ncaab,article,ap-201103200413.wafnav.recap:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=1224vbnfh/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/ncaab/news?slug=ap-texastech-gillispie Texas Tech hired Billy Gillispie as the new men's basketball coach, two seasons after he was fired at Kentucky. Gillispie will be introduced Wednesday at a news conference, school athletics spokesman Blayne Beal said Sunday. Gillispie replaces Pat Knight, who was fired this month. In 2009, Kentucky fired Gillispie after the Wildcats went 40-27 in his two seasons and missed the NCAA tournament... Sun, 20 Mar 2011 13:10:16 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:ncaab,article,ap-texastech-gillispie:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=129u9575h/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/ncaab/news?slug=ap-ncaa-georgemason-ohiostate The magical March run, the one that changed everything for George Mason, the one that made every mid-major program and player puff their chests with pride and forever tilted college basketball's axis, just celebrated its fifth anniversary. Given little chance, the underdog Patriots of the Colonial Athletic Association knocked off three elite schools on their way to the Final Four. Sat, 19 Mar 2011 15:52:19 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:ncaab,article,ap-ncaa-georgemason-ohiostate:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=11v6kotrg/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/nascar/news?slug=ap-nascar--bristol Kyle Busch can't be beat at Bristol Motor Speedway. Sun, 20 Mar 2011 13:26:16 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:nascar,article,ap-nascar--bristol:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=121dsclo1/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/ncaab/news?slug=ap-ncaa-michigan-duke Duke guard Nolan Smith played a role in propelling his Hall of Fame coach past a handful of career milestones. "Every time people tell me he's close to something else, it's not really a surprise," Smith said Saturday, "because he's always close to something." Next up for Mike Krzyzewski is his first attempt at career victory No. Sat, 19 Mar 2011 13:02:23 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:ncaab,article,ap-ncaa-michigan-duke:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=11ta70q50/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-nets-williamsout New Jersey Nets guard Deron Williams will miss at least three games because of an injured right wrist. Nets coach Avery Johnson said the wrist will be re-evaluated after Williams sits out those games. "It's something that we know: rest -- not surgery -- is required," Johnson said. "We'll treat him. Sun, 20 Mar 2011 10:08:18 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:nba,article,ap-nets-williamsout:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=122phb6qq/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-lakers-bynumsuspended Los Angeles Lakers center Andrew Bynum has been suspended two games for his flagrant foul on Minnesota's Michael Beasley. The NBA announced that Bynum will miss Sunday's game against Portland and Tuesday's meeting with Phoenix. Bynum was ejected after committing a flagrant foul during the fourth quarter of the Lakers' 106-98 win over the Timberwolves on Friday night. Sun, 20 Mar 2011 12:48:19 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:nba,article,ap-lakers-bynumsuspended:1 (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic) http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=11keut4ce/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/nhl/recap?gid=2011032016 Pittsburgh Penguins ' Chris Kunitz (14) brings the puck up the ice ahead of New York Rangers ' Brandon Prust (8) in the second period of the NHL hockey game, Sunday, March 20, 2011 in Pittsburgh. The Rangers won 5-2.

Marian Gaborik and Ryan Callahan scored power play goals 11 seconds apart as part of a four-goal third period and the New York Rangers extended their winning streak to a season-high four games with a 5-2 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday. New York took advantage when Pittsburgh's Matt Cooke took a 5-minute elbowing penalty 4:36 into the third.


]]> Sun, 20 Mar 2011 13:26:21 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:nhl,article,ap-2011032016.nyrpit.recap:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=11q30qa2k/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-heat-chalmers Miami Heat point guard Mario Chalmers is expected to miss up to two weeks after spraining his right knee. Chalmers was injured against the Denver Nuggets on Saturday. Tests performed on his knee Sunday confirmed the original diagnosis. It's a blow for the Heat, with the playoffs opening in less than a month, though not as severe as it could have been. Sun, 20 Mar 2011 12:38:17 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:nba,article,ap-heat-chalmers:1 http://us.rd.yahoo.com/sports/rss/top/SIG=11r5k4eak/*http%3A//sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-whitesox-peavy Chicago White Sox pitcher Jake Peavy has been shut down with what doctors believe is rotator cuff tendinitis. Peavy met with the team doctors Sunday, and they prescribed anti-inflammatory medication a day after he pitched 5 2-3 innings against Oakland. He also had been battling flulike symptoms late last week. Sun, 20 Mar 2011 13:02:32 PDT top urn:newsml:sports.yahoo,ap:20050301:mlb,article,ap-whitesox-peavy:1 Sun, 20 Mar 2011 13:26:21 PDT

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Live blog: Big homers by Teixeira, Hardy and Uggla

Welcome to USA Today's coverage of the wild-card races. The Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays entered the day tied for the final playoff spot in the AL, while the Atlanta Braves and St. Louis Cardinals are also deadlocked and seeking the last berth in the NL.

BOX SCORES: �MLB scoreboard
TIEBREAKER: �Times set for potential wild-card games

If any of the berths are not decided, a one-game playoff would be played Thursday.

The Daily Pitch will keep you posted on all the significant developments of the night: (Note: All times ET):

Boston at Baltimore: Probables: Jon Lester (15-9, 3.49 ERA) vs. Alfredo Simon (4-9, 4.85 ERA)

N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay: Probables: Dellin Betances vs. David Price (12-13, 3.35 ERA)

Philadelphia at Atlanta: Probables: Joe Blanton (1-2, 5.03 ERA) vs. Tim Hudson (16-10, 3.23 ERA)

St. Louis at Houston: Probables: Chris Carpenter (10-9, 3.59 ERA) vs. Brett Myers (7-13, 4.31 ERA)

***

8:06 p.m.: Hardy's towering homer to left puts Orioles ahead 2-1 in third.

8:04 p.m.: Uggla's two-run homer gives Braves a big lift right after Bourn gets caught stealing.

7:55 p.m.: Teixeira grand slam puts Yankees up 5-0 and evokes a small ovation from Red Sox fans watching the game and the scoreboard at Camden Yards.

7:50 p.m.: Red Sox start peppering Simon, laying off the breaking ball and jumping on his fastball. Pedroia RBI single puts Boston ahead 1-0 in third.

7:40 p.m.: Ben Zobrist had made just five errors in 130 games at second base this season before booting that routine Cano grounder that allowed the Yankees to score in the first.

7:29 p.m.: The same way shutdown innings have a big psychological impact on teams to keep momentum, responding right away after falling behind has the same effect, so it was important for the Braves to tie the game in the bottom of the first.

7:25 p.m.: Jon Lester was 0-3 with a 10.54 ERA in his last three starts, but he looks sharp in the first inning despite allowing an opposite-field double to J.J. Hardy.

7:19 p.m.: Ryan Howard slices a single to left field to put Phillies up 1-0 in first inning. Bad omen for a team like Atlanta that has to be doubting itself.

7:18 p.m.: Simon works around walk to David Ortiz by getting Adrian Gonzalez to ground out.

7:01 p.m.: Hudson is 9-3 w/ a 1.99 ERA and .194 opp. avg. in his past 16 home starts, including 4-0 w/ a 1.00 ERA in his past 5.

6:44 p.m.: 6-foot-8 prospect Dellin Betances to start for the Yankees against Rays.

6:38 p.m.: The Rays have made up nine games on the Red Sox in the standings since Sept. 3. The Cardinals have made up 10 1/2 on the Braves since Aug. 25.

6:35 p.m.: Alex Rodriguez was scratched from the Yankees lineup with a sore right knee.

6:25 p.m.: Red Sox sticking with rookie C Ryan Lavarnway behind plate (2 HRs on Tuesday)

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Mariners and Athletics to open 2012 MLB season in Tokyo

Wed Sep 28, 2011 3:48pm EDT

(Reuters) - Major League Baseball (MLB) will open its season in Tokyo, Japan, for the first time in four years when the Seattle Mariners and Oakland Athletics hold a two-game set to start the 2012 campaign, the league said on Wednesday.

The series, set for March 28-29 at the Tokyo Dome, marks MLB's fourth season-opening trip to Japan and first since the Boston Red Sox and Athletics played in 2008.

MLB said the games are being held in Japan to help assist with the rebuilding efforts in Japan following the devastating earthquake and tsunami earlier this year that left thousands dead and billions of dollars in damage.

"Opening Series 2012 will be an excellent opportunity to bring the game of baseball to fans across the globe and to celebrate the many contributions to the game by Japanese players," MLB Commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement.

"Most importantly, with the shared love of baseball between our nations, I believe that we can use this event to further assist the ongoing relief efforts throughout Japan."

Over 875,000 fans have attended 21 MLB opening games in Monterrey, Mexico (1999), Tokyo (2000, 2004, 2008) and San Juan, Puerto Rico (2001), according to MLB

The two games in Japan next year are expected to draw sellout crowds, with the Mariners and their hugely-popular Japanese outfielder Ichiro Suzuki returning home.

Japanese slugger Hideki Matsui, who will be a free agent at the end of the 2011 MLB season, could re-sign with Oakland.

(Writing by Steve Keating in Toronto; Editing by Frank Pingue)

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Eagles' Vick says he'll play entire game vs. 49ers

Eagles QB Michael Vick hasn't finished the past two games after being concussed in Week 2 and bruising his non-throwing hand in Week 3.

He's vowing to play all 60 minutes this Sunday vs. the 49ers even as the swelling in his hand continues to go down.

"I'm not coming out of the game this week regardless," said Vick, who participated fully in Wednesday's practice. "They're going to have to cart me off the field."

Philadelphia may need vintage Vick to halt a two-game slide that currently has them in the NFC East basement.

"I just want to be there for my teammates and hold myself accountable for my responsibilities and what I have to do as a quarterback," he said. "So regardless of what I have to go through, I just want to be there."

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Bucs could lose S Grimm to knee injury

TAMPA ? All of a sudden, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers could use a player like Tanard Jackson, the free safety who became eligible last Thursday for reinstatement from an indefinite league-mandated suspension.

The team lost Jackson?s replacement, second-year pro Cody Grimm, to a right knee injury during Sunday?s win over the Falcons, and the sight of Grimm walking around on crutches with his knee in a brace didn?t suggest he?ll be back anytime soon.

Grimm is scheduled to undergo an MRI Monday, and there?s a chance he could have suffered his second season-ending injury in as many years. Should that prove to be the case, the Bucs will probably lean on special teams standout Corey Lynch to fill in.

Lynch filled in a year ago when Grimm went down in Week 12 with a broken leg and performed admirably. He did the same Sunday, breaking up a pass during a crucial fourth quarter defensive stop. The Bucs will also get Larry Asante into the mix.

Asante probably has better ball skills that Lynch, but Lynch has a knack for making big plays. There?s also Jackson to consider.

He could be allowed back at any time, but with his future and the state of his conditioning unknown, he seems like a long shot to regain his starting role. ?

Weakside linebacker Geno Hayes was also knocked out of Sunday?s game. Hayes suffered what the Bucs referred to as a ?head? injury?the team did not say concussion?on the same play in which Grimm was injured.

Hayes left the game late and never returned. He was replaced by Adam Hayward, who has filled in well as a spot starter in the past and played a big part in the team?s pressure packages against the Falcons on Sunday.

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Vick does walkthrough, says he will play Sunday

PHILADELPHIA -- A badly bruised hand isn't going to keep Michael Vick off the field.

Vick practiced Wednesday and said there's a "100 percent" chance he starts when the Philadelphia Eagles (1-2) host San Francisco (2-1) on Sunday.

The star quarterback was initially diagnosed with a broken, non-throwing hand after getting hurt in a 29-16 loss to the New York Giants three days ago. But tests on Monday revealed he had a contusion on his right hand.

"Even if it was broke, I think I would have probably padded it up and went back out there," Vick said after a morning walkthrough. "You got to take precaution, but this is what I love to do."

Vick hasn't finished two of Philadelphia's three games -- both losses. He suffered a concussion in a 35-31 loss at Atlanta on Sept. 18.

"I just want to be there for my teammates and hold myself accountable for my responsibilities and what I have to do as a quarterback," he said. "So regardless of what I have to go through, I just want to be there."

Coach Andy Reid said he wants to make sure Vick can take snaps without any problems.

"Ball handling, obviously is very important, in particular under the center, that's where the problem would be," Reid said. "Shotgun, you can get away with it, but under the center you've got to be able to squeeze and right now that's not 100-percent. So, we've got to see. I don't know how fast it'll come back. I can't tell you that."

Vick said he did everything at practice despite a little soreness.

"I'm very encouraged," he said.

Vick again apologized for criticizing the officials and saying he takes too many late hits without getting the benefit of a roughing-the-passer penalty.

"I think I was frustrated because I got hit late and I hurt my hand on that play and I couldn't finish the game because of that," Vick said. "That was one of the reasons I was frustrated. I don't want any special treatment. All I want to do is go out and play my game. If they feel there's a need to make a call, then they'll make it. If not, then I won't say anything about it."

Vick got a laugh out of the New York Post cover that had his face attached to a baby's body wearing an Eagles bib and holding a bottle.

"My kids were killing me about that. That was a good one," Vick said. "I guess when you sit on the podium and you make excuses like that, then you're going to be labeled a crybaby, so maybe I did deserve it."

Though still early, Vick and the Eagles find themselves in last place in the NFC East, as the Giants, Redskins and Cowboys are all 2-1.

Notes

The Eagles are making more changes at linebacker. After reshuffling all three of their starters last week, the Eagles have benched rookie Casey Matthews and replaced him with rookie Brian Rolle at the weak side. Matthews, a fourth-round pick, started the first two games in the middle before moving to the weak side. Rolle was a sixth-round pick out of Ohio State. "I guess the coaches felt the need for a new body in there," Rolle said. "I just look forward to the challenge and I'm going to have fun and make plays. I'm ready for it. I felt like I was ready out of college."... WR Jeremy Maclin missed practice with a hamstring injury and is day to day. ... WR Riley Cooper was cleared after sustaining a concussion against the Giants, and practiced.

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Pro Football Hall of Fame candidates announced

Bill Parcells has a 172-130-1 record as a head coach of four different teams, and won two Super Bowls with the Giants.

AP

CANTON, Ohio (AP) -- Retired coaches Bill Cowher, Bill Parcells and Marty Schottenheimer are among the modern-era candidates for the 2012 class of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Cowher is eligible for the first time, as are players Keyshawn Johnson, Tiki Barber, Drew Bledsoe, Stephen Davis, Rod Smith, Will Shields, Troy Vincent and Mike Vanderjagt.

Parcells and Schottenheimer previously were eligible under different requirements.

In 2008, the Hall of Fame made it mandatory for coaches, like players, to be retired five consecutive seasons. Before that, coaches were eligible immediately upon retirement, allowing Parcells to be a nominee in 2001, 2002, and 2003, and Schottenheimer in 2000. This is their first year of eligibility under the new provision.

Altogether, 103 men are eligible; voting will take place in February the day before the Super Bowl in Indianapolis. From the original list of nominees, the selection committee will choose 25 semifinalists in November. That group of semifinalists will be further reduced by a mail ballot to 15 modern-era finalists and announced in early January.

The final list of candidates also will include two senior nominees: former Pittsburgh Steelers defensive back Jack Butler and former Detroit Lions guard Dick Stanfel.

Between four and seven enshrinees will be announced on Feb. 4, and will be inducted in August.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Bears great Dan Hampton snubs Obama's White House invitation

A lack of sentimentality and a dislike of President Obama mean that Chicago Bears great Dan Hampton will snub a 25-year anniversary celebration at the White House of the team's Super Bowl championship.

"It's my own personal choice," the Hall of Fame defensive lineman told The Mully and Hanley radio show. "I don't choose to go."

Hampton said he was bothered that the invitation wasn't extended to players' wives and children and added, "Secondly, I'm not a fan of the guy in the White House, and third, it was 25 years ago. Let it go."

The reason the Bears are getting the White House treatment this year is that they never got a presidential celebration after winning the 1986 Super Bowl. It was called off because the Space Shuttle Challenger had exploded two days before, killing the entire crew.

Said Hampton: "It basically just rolled off our backs, and now, 25 years later to say, 'Let's put the band back together.' No, I'm not in."

Hampton spent all 12 seasons of his NFL career with the Bears, and was a four-time Pro Bowl selection.

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NHL: Can't prove Simmonds slur

Wayne Simmonds "expressly denied" making an anti-gay slur toward Sean Avery.

Christopher Szagola/US Presswire

NEW YORK (AP) -- Wayne Simmonds of the Philadelphia Flyers escaped punishment by the NHL on Tuesday night because the league doesn't have conclusive evidence he directed a homophobic slur at the Rangers' Sean Avery.

Colin Campbell, the league's senior executive vice president of hockey operations and former disciplinarian, said because of "conflicting accounts of what transpired on the ice, we have been unable to substantiate with the necessary degree of certainty what was said and by whom."

Video replay appeared to catch Simmonds making an anti-gay slur against Avery during a preseason game in Philadelphia on Monday night. Avery confirmed that Simmonds made the remark, but Simmonds didn't reveal if he did. However, Campbell said in his statement that Simmonds "expressly denied" making it.

Campbell added that none of the on-ice officials heard any slurs by either player, thus making the NHL unable to take disciplinary action now. He said the league reserves the option to "revisit the matter" should new information be found that conclusively shows a slur was made.

Last week, Simmonds -- who is black -- was involved in another controversy when someone threw a banana on the ice from the stands as he was taking a shootout attempt during a game in London, Ontario.

"All players, coaches and officials in the National Hockey League deserve the respect of their peers, and have the absolute right to function in a work environment that is free from racially or sexually-based innuendo or derision," Campbell said in the statement. "This is the National Hockey League's policy and it will remain so going forward."

Earlier Tuesday, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation called for Simmonds to apologize for the slur and pressed the NHL to educate its fans about such remarks.

"Hate speech and anti-gay slurs have no place on the ice rink," GLAAD acting president Mike Thompson said in a statement. "The word that Simmonds used is the same word that is hurled at LGBT youth on the playground and in our schools, creating a climate of intolerance and hostility.

"He should not only apologize for this anti-gay outburst, but the Philadelphia Flyers and the NHL have a responsibility to take action and educate their fans about why this word is unacceptable."

GLAAD said it has talked to the Flyers and the NHL about what specific steps can be taken. The organization added that it has worked with sports leagues such as the NBA, Major League Baseball, and the WWE to address issues of homophobia in sports.

"It also is important to emphasize that the National Hockey League holds, and will continue to hold, our players to higher standards with respect to their conduct both on and off the ice," Campbell said. "While we recognize that the emotion involved in certain on-ice confrontations may lead to the use of highly charged and sometimes offensive language and commentary, certain lines cannot be crossed.

"We have for many years emphasized to our clubs and players that commentary directed at the race or ethnicity of other participants in the game (or even non-participants), or that is otherwise socially or morally inappropriate or potentially hurtful -- including as it may relate to sexual orientation -- is absolutely unacceptable and will not be tolerated," he added.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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LeBron, Wade to headline Oct. 8 game in Miami

SI.com

Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade and LeBron James are planning a charity exhibition game for Oct. 8.

AP

Miami Heat stars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh are planning to host about 20 NBA players for a charity game in early October.

An official announcement is expected Wednesday, but Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun Sentinel reported Tuesday that the All-Star exhibition is set for Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. ET on the campus of Florida International University, where Basketball Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas is a coach.

It will be the first time James, Wade and Bosh take the court together since last season's NBA Finals, but it will be just the latest in a series of exhibitions with NBA players this offseason while the league is in a lockout. James has appeared in several of those contests, including one on Sunday in Philadelphia, and New Orleans point guard Chris Paul is set to host one in his hometown of Winston Salem, N.C., on Oct. 1.

According to ESPN, the NBA players set to compete in the charity event are the Heat trio and teammate Mario Chalmers, Paul, New York's Carmelo Anthony and Amar'e Stoudemire, Oklahoma City's Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, Boston's Rajon Rondo, Washington's John Wall, Atlanta's Jamal Crawford and Joe Johnson, Memphis' Rudy Gay, Houston's Jonny Flynn, the Clippers' Eric Bledsoe, Dallas' Caron Butler, Philadelphia's Lou Williams, Portland's Wesley Matthews, Golden State's Dorell Wright and free agent Eddy Curry.

Also possibilities are Cleveland's first-round draft picks, Kyrie Irving and Tristan Thompson.

ESPN also reported that the teams will be split based on those who endorse Nike and those who work with Nike's Jordan Brand division. Therefore, Wade, Paul and Anthony (Brand Jordan) would play against James, Durant and Bosh.

Comedian Kevin Hart is listed as a coach for Wade's team, while rapper Rick Ross will lead James' team.

Team Philly upsets Team Melo in exhibition
Source:SI
LeBron James notched 43 points and 22 rebounds, but an unheralded Team Philly squad upset Team Melo 131-122 to win Sunday night's showcase at The Palestra.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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