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Blackhawks' Seabrook returns to lineup [Apr. 25th, 2011|08:59 am]
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Chicago defenceman Brent Seabrook seemed OK and said he felt good after taking a blow to the head in Game 3 of the Blackhawks' best-of-seven Western Conference quarter-final with Vancouver.

But he hasn't played since.

In the aftermath of a crushing hit from Canucks Cheap NHL Jerseys forward Raffi Torres last Sunday, Seabrook missed the next two games — both lopsided Chicago victories that have cut Vancouver's once imposing series lead to 3-2 entering Game 6 on Sunday (CBC, CBCSports.ca, 7:30 p.m. ET).

Seabrook was back on the ice skating in practice Saturday and will suit up Sunday.

"He's a big guy physically. He's able to — I don't know if the word is fight back — but withstand that type of hit," Blackhawks head coach Joel Quenneville told reporters following a team meeting Sunday. "I think there are processes you go to go through, but at the same time we know that the one thing you don't have to worry about is his toughness. It's there."

Asked if he had any more symptoms from the apparent concussion that sidelined him, Seabrook replied: "Nope." "I'm optimistic I can go tomorrow," he said. "We'll see."

Chicago's play improved greatly as the Blackhawks seemed to rally behind Seabrook after he absorbed the blow that many of his teammates thought merited a suspension.

Fellow defenceman Duncan Keith has scored four goals in the last three games, picking up the slack with Seabrook gone on both ends of the ice.

Big presence
"The fact that he gets to play again is going to help us out in a lot of ways," Quenneville said of Seabrook. "He assumes a lot of quality ice time in all situations, as well as gives us some size and some presence back there. He's got a big shot offensively, so it's nice to have him back there."

Chicago was charged up, twice forcing Vancouver goalie Roberto Luongo to be pulled during decisive five-goal victories in Games 4 and 5.
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Seabrook said he starting feeling OK on Friday.

"It was very frustrating, obviously. I wanted to be out there with the guys," Seabrook said. "I was talking with them and asking for another chance to get in the lineup and they've done an unbelievable job. They played two great games. Hopefully [Sunday] is a better day for me and I can get back in there and help the guys out."

The six-foot-three, 218-pound Seabrook has five goals and 18 assists in 42 career playoff games. He has not scored in the three games he has played in the Canucks' series and is a minus-1. During the regular season, Seabrook had nine goals, 39 assists and had 227 hits.
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In changing the tenor of the series, Chicago has found its power play, been able to open up the ice, and solved Luongo over the last two games. And rookie Corey Crawford - who has worked in summer goalie camps with Luongo - has outplayed the Vancouver star, including a Game 5 shutout when he made 36 saves.

"It's a team game. I'm worried about tomorrow night more than just what happened the last couple of games," said Luongo, who has given up 10 goals in 40 shots the last two games and has had trouble with the Blackhawks for three straight playoffs.

Playing at the United Center, though, he said is something he enjoys, despite some of the struggles.

"It's fun. I love it when the crowd yells at me, even when I got pulled," Luongo said.

Time to tighten up
Vancouver must help Luongo by slowing down Chicago to get open paths in mid-ice.

"If you look at our last two games, you think, 'Wow they're not competing, they're not doing this or doing that,'" Canucks forward Henrik Sedin said. "Anything can be created when you give a team that much room in the middle of the ice. They're coming with speed against our D-men, and a lot of times it's three against two or three against one."

Duncan Keith, Seabrook's good friend and running mate on defence, has been the main catalyst. Keith has scored four goals over the last three games and had four points in Thursday night's victory at Vancouver.

Keith made a somewhat surprising admission on Friday, explaining his slow start and sluggish performance at times this season — one year after winning the Norris Trophy.

"I played a lot of games the year before and there's things I probably could have done differently in the summer to prepare for this season," Keith said. "I like to work out and train a lot and feel good going into the season. I'm not making any excuses, but I didn't feel excited coming back to start the season. That's just being honest."

Sometimes he's played well, others not so much.

"I felt like I had really good stretches and then there were times where, I would, I don't want to say lose focus, but not really as interested for whatever reason," he added.

Now he's really into it and so are the Blackhawks. And the play has become increasingly chippy between the heated rivals. Chicago's Dave Bolland, who returned for Game 4 after missing 17 games with a concussion, was irate over a hit near his head from Vancouver's Dan Hamhuis on Thursday.

The Canucks are taking the approach that, even though they don't have to win Sunday night as the Blackhawks do, it will be like a Game 7.

"It puts us all in the same frame of mind as the other guys," Luongo said. "Obviously, you may have a little bit of a comfort level at 3-0, but there is no more room for mistakes. We want to make sure we are playing as desperate as the other side."
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Panthers get 3 compensatory draft picks [Mar. 30th, 2011|10:00 am]
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The Carolina Panthers were awarded three compensatory picks Friday for April’s draft after losing Julius Peppers to free agency before last season.

A total of 23 teams were allotted selections, beginning with a third-rounder (97th overall) to Carolina, which also has the top overall choice after going 2-14 in 2010. Peppers had cheap NHL jerseys an All-Pro season with Chicago, and Carolina also lost quarterback A.J Feeley to St. Louis.

Tennessee, Baltimore, the New York Giants, Minnesota, San Diego, Philadelphia, and San Francisco each got two additional picks.

Overall, 32 compensatory choices were given. Teams getting one apiece were Super Bowl champion Green Bay, Kansas City, Miami, Tampa Bay, Oakland, Seattle, New Orleans, Buffalo, Cincinnati, Denver, Cleveland, Arizona, Dallas, Washington and Houston.

The Titans lost defensive end Kyle Vanden Bosch and tight end Alge Crumpler, but they added DE Jason Babin as a free agent and he went to the Pro Bowl. Tennessee was awarded a fourth-rounder (130th overall) and a seventh (250).
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Green Bay’s compensatory spot came because it lost DE Aaron Kampman to Jacksonville without adding any significant free agents last year. The Packers were given a fourth-round pick one spot behind Tennessee’s.

Baltimore will pick at the 164th and 165th spots in the fifth round. The Ravens lost defensive linemen Justin Bannan and Dwan Edwards.

The Giants got two slots in the sixth round after losing quarterback David Carr and defensive tackle Fred Robbins. Running back Chester Taylor and guard Artis Hicks left Minnesota, bringing the Vikings a sixth-rounder (200) and a seventh (235).

San Diego’s compensatory picks (201 and 233) came for the departures of tight end Brandon Manumaleuna and wide receiver Kaseem Osgood. Philadelphia will have two extra picks in the seventh round for losing Babin and safety Sean Jones. San Francisco’s two compensatory seventh-round selections came for losing wide receiver Arnaz Battle and tackle Tony Pashos, but signing Carr.

Since 1994, the first year compensatory draft picks were awarded, 555 have been handed out. Baltimore has gotten the most, 31, and Cleveland the least, two.

Of teams in the league since ’94, the Jets have received the fewest, five.
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Michael who? Notre Dame moving on without Floyd [Mar. 23rd, 2011|09:16 am]
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PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pittsburgh Penguins forward Matt Cooke (FSY) apologized for an illegal hit that earned him the stiffest suspension of his NHL career, saying he needs to "change" the way he plays.

Cooke told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and the Post-Gazette late Monday in Detroit that he "made a mistake" when he landed an elbow to the head of cheap NHL jerseys New York Rangers defenseman Ryan McDonagh (FSY).
"I realize and understand, more so now than ever, that I need to change," Cooke told the newspapers. "That's what I wanted my message to be."
The oft-penalized left wing was suspended by the NHL for the remainder of the regular season and the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs, which means he'll sit a minimum of 14 games.
"I made a mistake. I'm the one that's accountable for that. I take full responsibility for it," Cooke told reporters. "I'm sorry to my teammates, my management, my coaching staff and my organization. It's something that, moving forward, I'll make different."

Cooke is the fourth player suspended for the remainder of a season, joining former Islanders forward Chris Simon (FSY), former Canucks forward Todd Bertuzzi (FSY) and former Bruins defenseman Marty McSorley (FSY).

Cooke will end up forfeiting $219,512.20 in salary during the suspension.
The suspension is the fifth of his career and fourth since joining the Penguins in 2008. He was also suspended four games last month for hitting the Blue Jackets' Fedor Tyutin (FSY) from behind.
"They aren't the same. They're different plays and ... I want to change," Cooke said. "In the game against the Rangers, I had a chance to hit (Brian) Boyle in the middle of the ice and I didn't. I had a chance to hit (Bryan) McCabe, and he turned, so I didn't hit him. It's a learning process. It doesn't just stop with being suspended.
"It also doesn't just stop with words," he said. "My actions will prove it."
Penguins general manager Ray Shero supported the penalty the NHL gave Cooke, saying in a statement that the suspension was warranted because "head shots have no place in hockey."
NHL disciplinarian Colin Campbell said the length of the suspension was determined in part because Cooke was a "repeat offender" and because he "unnecessarily targeted the head of an opponent who was in an unsuspecting and vulnerable position."
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"This isn't the first time this season that we have had to address dangerous behavior on the ice by Mr. Cooke," Campbell said, "and his conduct requires an appropriately harsh response."
Cooke said that he hopes to win back the support of Penguins management and his fellow players, though he acknowledged that won't be accomplished merely with an apology.
"I'm fortunate that Ryan McDonagh wasn't hurt. I don't want to hurt anybody. That's not my intention. I know that I can be better," Cooke told the Pittsburgh newspapers. "As I just said, my actions will speak louder than words. That's what matters most."
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NFL locks out players, 2011 season in jeopardy [Mar. 16th, 2011|09:18 am]
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Welcome to The NFL Lockout.

As far back as May 2008, it became a possibility.

As recently as a week ago — when owners and players agreed to extend the deadline for a new collective bargaining agreement — Commissioner Roger Goodell made it sound avoidable.

And yet here we are: America's most popular sport — water-cooler fodder for six months of Mondays; generator of more than US$9-billion in annual revenues; responsible for the two most-watched programs in U.S. TV history, the 2010 and 2011 Super Bowls — is stuck in a holding pattern, thanks to its first work stoppage in nearly a quarter of a century.

The owners imposed a lockout on the players Saturday, essentially shutting down operations. That came hours after talks broke off and the union dissolved cheap NHL jerseys itself, meaning players are no longer protected under labour law but instead are now allowed to take their chances in federal court under antitrust law. Nine NFL players, including superstar quarterbacks Tom Brady, Peyton Manning and Drew Brees, and one college player headed for the pros filed a class-action lawsuit in Minnesota and asked for a preliminary injunction to block a lockout, even before it went into effect.

“I know this sort of gives us a bad name — as well as the owners — in some fans' eyes,” said Minnesota Vikings defensive end Brian Robison, one of the plaintiffs in the case that forever will be known as Brady et al vs. National Football League et al. “Some fans are more upset with the owners, and some are more upset with the players.”

The lockout, a right management has to shut down a business when a CBA expires, means there can be no communication between the teams and current NFL players; no players — including those drafted in April — can be signed; teams won't pay for players' health insurance.

They took the term “lockout” rather literally at the Tennessee Titans' headquarters in Nashville, where a metal chain secured the main gate to the parking lot's front entrance, an extra bit of security normally not seen there.

The NFL has enjoyed labour peace since a 1987 strike by the players, but now next season could be jeopardized, depending on what happens in court.

Fans really will be upset if regular-season games are lost. No Sundays on the couch or at a bar, scanning television screens for the latest “Did you see that?!” plays. No fantasy football leagues or office pools.
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So what happened?

With so much at stake, why did everything fall apart?

Despite 16 days spent in face-to-face talks at the office of a presidentially appointed federal mediator, how did it come to this?

In terms of the key bargaining issues, there really was one that stands out: Put simply, owners and players couldn't figure out a mutually palatable way to split all those billions of dollars that come from TV contracts, ticket and merchandise sales, sponsorship deals, etc.

By Friday afternoon, when mediator George Cohen declared “no useful purpose would be served” by asking the parties to keep negotiating, it appeared the NFL and union were about $185-million apart on how much owners should get up front each season for certain operating expenses before splitting the rest of the revenues with players. That's a far cry from the $1-billion that separated the sides for months.

There also was a significant standoff on the union's insistence on seeing years of detailed financial statements for all 32 teams. The players' point, basically, was: If you say you need more money from us up front, prove it by showing us what you bring in and what you spend and what you're left with.

But this wasn't merely about numbers.

It also was about trust and respect: Each side has accused the other of bargaining in bad faith.
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The origin of pragmatism in soccer [Mar. 2nd, 2011|09:36 am]
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For around three decades after the foundation of the Football League in 1888, the game remained unchanged. Teams played with two backs, three halves and five forwards, and soccer was all about getting the ball out to the winger so he could cross cheap NHL jerseysfor the center forward. Pattern-weaving -- working the ball in neat triangles between midfield and attack - was seen as the ideal and soccer was largely formulaic.
Then came the First World War which, in terms of soccer, had two major, related, effects. Firstly, it led to serious challenges to the established social order, most notably from socialism -- and understandably so, given the established order had contrived mass slaughter in the Flanders mud for little discernible gain. And secondly, the extermination of a large part of a generation created opportunities where previously there had been none. Suddenly there were vacancies in managerial positions, and thanks to Forster's Education Act of 1870, which had made schooling compulsory to the age of 12 in Britain, there were large numbers of working-class men equipped to fill them.

Herbert Chapman came from just that background. The son of a Nottinghamshire miner, he worked in the pits after leaving school, while attending a course on mine management in the evenings. After his unspectacular playing career had ended, he put the skills learned on that course to practical effect, not in the mines but as manager of Northampton Town. Chapman immediately upset the authorities by introducing a counterattacking style. He didn't care about the way the game "should" be played; he cared about winning matches.
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After the First World War, that pragmatic attitude became far more prevalent, as the public-school mores that had prevailed were swept aside by a new generation who cared nothing for tradition and everything for winning. It is, after all, much easier to espouse lofty aesthetic ideals if putting your dinner on the table doesn't depend on it. The result was the widespread adoption of an offside trap that became so stifling that the Football Association had to amend the offside law so that only two defending players were required to play a forward onside rather than three, as had previously been the case.
That in turn led Chapman, by then at Arsenal, to commit the ultimate heresy; he disposed of the 2-3-5, withdrawing his center-half into a defensive role, and pulling back his two inside-forwards, so 2-3-5 became 3-2-2-3, the W-M formation. "Commanding the play in midfield or packing the opponents' penalty area is not the object of the game ..." wrote Bernard Joy, a center-half who went on to become a journalist who pioneered the discussion of tactics in newspapers. "We at Arsenal achieved our end by deliberately drawing on the opponents by retreating and funneling to our own goal, holding the attack at the limits of the penalty box, and then thrusting quickly away by means of long passes to our wingers."
Traditionalists hated it, but Chapman was highly successful, winning two league titles and an FA Cup before his death in 1934; Arsenal went on to win the league that season and the next. "Breaking down old traditions," a piece on his death in the Daily Mail explained, "he was the first manager who set out methodically to organize the winning of matches."
Which, with the benefit of three-quarters of a century of hindsight, sounds a perfectly reasonable thing to do. Yet isn't that precisely what Tony Pulis, Sam Allardyce, Alex McLeish and the various other maligned exponents of direct football do? Don't they look at the resources they have, and work out how best to deploy them, not in terms of how pretty the soccer they will play will be, but in terms of the results they will achieve?
One of soccer's greatest fallacies is that it is an entertainment. As Alan Durban, the famously dour former Stoke City manager, once said after a goalless draw at Arsenal, "If you want to see clowns, go to the circus." When soccer began it was about teams wanting to test themselves against each other and find out who was the best. It's that ethos that drives millions to play in amateur leagues across the world. It turned out that people wanted to watch those matches, and that an income could be derived from it, but those spectators were incidental to soccer's prime purpose, which was to win.
Now, with the mass televization of soccer, it could be argued that there is a financial imperative to play attractive soccer, because teams who please aesthetically generate larger crowds, but that is a different issue. There are also those who would argue that, in all fields of life, it is better to play the game beautifully than to win, and to an extent that is a negotiation in which most people are involved most of the time. But that again doesn't make it somehow morally better to win playing rapid pass-and-move soccer than something more direct.
Barcelona plays beautiful soccer -- that is hard to deny -- but if all teams played like that, soccer rapidly becomes predictable. Watching, say, Stoke at its best, pounding an opponent with crosses and long balls can generate a similar visceral charge. And as Spain showed in the World Cup, holding possession with long chains of passes can be just as defensive as packing men in defense and playing without the ball as Jose Mourinho's Imternazionale did against Barcelona last season.
Soccer's great strength is its diversity, and the fact that, unlike rugby, basketball, field hockey and others, the rules are robust enough not to have required significant tinkering to try to force teams to play a particular way. That should be celebrated, but certain terms have taken on a curious moral weight. Describe a team as, say, "reactive" and it's taken as a slight rather than an observation. Yet so long as a team is not cheating or intimidating, it is entitled to play as it wants, and the variety of possible styles should be celebrated.
As Jimmy Hogan, probably the greatest English coach there has ever been, said when he was described as an advocate of "short-passing football," -- "I don't care whether a pass is long or short, forwards or backward. I just care if it is right."
Jonathan Wilson is the author of Inverting the Pyramid; Behind the Curtain; Sunderland: A Club Transformed; and The Anatomy of England.
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Blake Griffin, mourning friend's death, keeps up All-Star schedule [Feb. 19th, 2011|11:47 am]
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Nothing has slowed, even the slightest, for Clippers rookie power forward Blake Griffin during this All-Star Weekend break (if you can call it that) from his regular-season schedule.

Commercial spots, photo shoots and nonstop cheap jerseysinterviews during the Clippers' two-week trip gave way Thursday to Griffin practicing for Friday night's rookie-sophomore game and appearing on ABC's "Jimmy Kimmel Live."

Questions were raised whether Griffin would curtail or eliminate any of his planned All-Star activities after the death Wednesday of his close friend and former high school teammate Wilson Holloway, who had been battling Hodgkin's lymphoma.
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But Griffin took part in his scheduled appearances Thursday and the Clippers said he would continue with the rest of his events, on and off the court. After the rookie-sophomore game, Griffin will compete in the slam dunk contest Saturday and play in the All-Star game Sunday.

Clippers rookie guard Eric Bledsoe also is in Friday night's game and can compete with his former Kentucky teammate John Wall for the right to throw alley-oop passes to Griffin.

James Harden of the Oklahoma City Thunder is taking the spot of Sacramento Kings guard Tyreke Evans on the sophomore team because Evans has an injured left foot (plantar fasciitis).

The Clippers travel to Oklahoma City on Monday to play the Thunder on Tuesday, marking Griffin's homecoming. The funeral for Holloway is scheduled for Monday afternoon in Oklahoma City. It was unclear whether Griffin would attend the service, the Clippers said.

Griffin, 21, learned of Holloway's death a few minutes after the Clippers beat the Timberwolves in Minneapolis on Wednesday night. A distraught Griffin was consoled by Clippers Coach Vinny Del Negro and Baron Davis in a subdued locker room.
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