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UCLA DL Eddie Vanderdoes suffers torn ACL

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Sep 25, 2014; Tempe, AZ, USA; UCLA Bruins defensive lineman Eddie Vanderdoes (47) against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Sun Devil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY SportsUCLA took a big hit to its defense in Saturday’s season opening over Virginia.

After multiple reports emerged Sunday, the Bruins confirmed that junior defensive lineman Eddie Vanderdoes suffered a torn ACL. He is expected to be out for the season.

According to the Associated Press, UCLA is “uncertain” when exactly the injury occurred, but Vanderdoes ended up leaving the game in the third quarter. Head coach Jim Mora said after the game that Vanderdoes’ knee “locked up on him” early in the game.

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Before leaving the game, the 6-foot-5, 305-pound Vanderdoes led the Bruins with eight tackles, including two for a loss, against the Cavaliers.

Vanderdoes was an honorable mention All-Pac-12 selection last season with 50 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss and two sacks in 12 starts. He also played in 13 games with seven starts as a true freshman in 2013, registering 39 tackles.

Playing alongside nose tackle Kenny Clark, Vanderdoes was a key cog on one of the best defensive lines in the Pac-12. The loss is a significant one for the Bruins,

With Vanderdoes out, sophomore Matt Dickerson is likely to see increased playing time.

Coming off the home win over Virginia, the Bruins play UNLV on the road Saturday night.

For more UCLA news, visit BruinSportsReport.com.

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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!


NASCAR's thorny throwback problem: the Confederate flag

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DARLINGTON, S.C.—NASCAR billed Sunday’s Bojangles Southern 500 as a “throwback” weekend, and virtually every race team responded in kind. Retro-paint-scheme cars evoking memories of Richard Petty’s classic red-and-blue STP ride, Ricky Craven’s orange Tide car, and the Days of Thunder Mello Yello, among others—28 of the 43 Cup cars in all—decorated the track and NASCAR’s social media, drawing universal acclaim.

Oh, but those were not the only colors not forgotten. All over Darlington, in numbers unseen at any other NASCAR track in decades, flew Confederate battle flags. This was the first Southern 500 in Darlington in more than a decade, and South Carolina’s Confederate faithful welcomed back the race with a showing of battle flags unprecedented in recent NASCAR history.

That's the thorny position in which NASCAR finds itself—wanting to embrace the past, but not all of the past; wanting to keep its old-school fans in the fold, but wanting those fans to stop acting like your surly uncle after a few too many beers on Thanksgiving. It’s like trying to walk a tightrope that’s rolling, and every step you take—or don’t take—enrages someone to their core.

***

Let’s take half a step back to see how we got here. NASCAR itself was born of rebellion, its roots in bootleggers who combined a daredevil spirit and mechanical alchemy to evade The Law. As you surely recall from high school history class, South Carolina saw the first shots of the Civil War, when Confederate soldiers fired on Fort Sumter near Charleston. South Carolina’s NASCAR fans are the most rebellious of an already rebellious bunch, and they’ve embraced that designation at the track that’s hosted some variant of the Southern 500 for most of the last 65 years. See, for instance, a sample program from 1976:

Southern 500 1976 program.

Darlington represents everything iconic about NASCAR—it’s a wicked, historic track that’s a bucket-list win for drivers—but it also serves as a cautionary tale. The track opened in 1950, but in 2004, NASCAR gave Darlington’s coveted, traditional Labor Day date to California, and later Atlanta. The Track Too Tough To Tame had to content itself with other, lesser dates until this year. NASCAR tried to be too much to too many people at the expense of tradition, and a vocal segment of the fanbase didn't much care for the change.

Sunday marked the return of the Southern 500 to its rightful spot on Labor Day weekend, and NASCAR made sure to throw an all-out throwback fiesta. Everything from the cars’ paint schemes to the announcers’ leisure suits to the primitive TV graphics sought to reconnect 2015 with 1975 and 1965. It’s like everybody was doubling down on this whole embracing-history thing.

Everybody.

***

For all the Confederate symbology, Civil War gunfire didn’t get within a hundred miles of Darlington—the closest battle was at Rivers Bridge, part of the late-war Carolinas Campaign in February 1865. Shortly afterward, the nearby city of Columbia, 70 miles west of Darlington, surrendered to General William Tecumseh Sherman, setting in motion one of the last great arguments of the war. Devastating fires that consumed much of the city in the wake of surrender became the source of much debate: were they set by retreating Confederate soldiers? Were they set by freed slaves, federal prisoners, or vindictive Union occupiers? Were they just a flat-out accident? As with so much else here, everyone chooses a different truth.

Despite the South’s persistent image, the Confederate battle flag isn’t a constant presence either on cars or, as of this summer, government buildings in South Carolina. The racially-motivated church shootings this summer in Charleston prompted the entire region to rethink its attachment to the flag, and South Carolina governor Nikki Haley—who was in attendance at Sunday’s race—and the state Legislature removed the flag from state grounds. Driving into Darlington, like driving through most of the South in 2015, you saw few, if any, Confederate flags.

Make the turn off Route 401 onto Race Track Road, though, and boom. The moment you saw campsites, you saw Confederate flags—dozens upon dozens of them. They flew on 20-foot-high poles, they flew nailed to 2x4s sticking out of the back beds of pickup trucks, they flew on plastic window clips. They were everywhere, in large part because everyone outside Darlington says they shouldn’t be.

Track officials at Darlington, like Daytona earlier this summer, offered a flag exchange for anyone wishing to trade in their Confederate flag on an American one. The exchange was slated to take place at one of the track’s entrance gates, but four different guards at Gate 39A had no idea that the promotion even existed. The fifth pointed me toward a still-full box of American flags tucked in the corner of a small guardhouse.

“Haven’t seen one given away yet,” the guard said. “I doubt if you do [at all].”

“I was wondering what those were for,” said another.

***

Darlington removed all official images of the battle flag from its premises. You couldn't buy shirts with images of the battle flag at the track. But you could buy them elsewhere, and a large number of shirts featuring the flag looked suspiciously new, like never-been-washed, just-bought-this-week, still-got-the-creases-in-them new. A cynical mind might say that these shirts had been opportunistically whipped up for exactly this weekend.

NASCAR fan at Darlington.Several shirts combined images of the flag, moonshine Mason jars, guns, and slogans (“Southern Strong,” “Southern Tradition”) into a full-service good-ol’-boy package that probably would’ve whistled “Dixie” if you squeezed them. Others paired the Confederate flag with certain iconic drivers' cars in a way that almost surely flaunted copyright law. And still others just reduced the flag to a cartoon, like the battle-flag suspenders, floppy hat, and red-and-blue dyed beard of a fella by the name of Dennis Dease, pictured at right.

Walk around the track, the infield and the campgrounds beyond, and you’ll find that the people tailgating beneath those Confederate flags aren’t a seething, gnashing inbred mob spitting racial invective. Most of them say they have a specific perspective on American history. 

Certainly, they have lines as well-honed as any politician—“heritage, not hate” is the current favored one, closely followed by “I’m not a racist.” But there’s nuance within. Some are fine with the flag’s removal from official grounds; others believe it’s a sign of creeping political correctness that’s infecting our entire society. (Not surprisingly, these are fans of Donald Trumps campaign for president.) They share one overarching goal: to be able to fly, in their own way and in their own space, a symbol they consider integral to their own history. They worry that NASCAR is trying to blot out that history.

“We want to go as far as we can to eliminate the presence of that flag," NASCAR chairman Brian France said in June shortly after the Charleston shootings. "I personally find it an offensive symbol, so there is no daylight how we feel about it and our sensitivity to others who feel the same way. We're working with the industry to see how far we can go to get that flag to be disassociated entirely from our events."

“If that happened, pffft,” one fan said, dragging his finger across his throat. “That’s it. I’m done. Never coming to another race.”

“I mean, it wouldn’t be cool to take it away, because of freedom of speech and all that,” said a young fan. “But would I stop coming to races? No, probably not. Only if it was part of a protest or something.”

The word “boycott” probably isn't advisable in this situation, and you're glad it didn't come up.

***

This is not to say that all flag supporters are a noble band of freedom fighters, standing strong against a monolithic, uncaring politically correct dictatorship. There’s also a special breed of white Southerner that combines willful ignorance with thin skin into a state best described as arrogant victimhood. You can still see their work tucked away in dusty corners of small-town gas stations, on license plates bearing the flag and slogans like LEE SURRENDERED, I DIDN’T and FORGET, HELL, or on T-shirts featuring the battle flag and IF THIS FLAG OFFENDS YOU, READ A HISTORY BOOK. The shirt might be trying to slide on a technicality (the so-called "battle flag" combines traditional Confederate flags into a style that, technically, wasn't ever used by the Confederacy) or it might just be endorsing a very narrow interpretation of history, one in which the Southern cause starts and stops with the nobility of Southerners fighting with honor and valor for sovereignty and traditional values.

At Darlington, there were minorities amid the sea of white fans, wearing Jeff Gordon and Dale Jr. memorabilia, looking every bit as at ease here as anyone else. Sure, a NASCAR race is not as racially diverse as, say, an NFL game, but there’s a growing minority population … a population that might, just might, be seeing some signs of real, inclusive change.

“I’ve seen it my whole life,” said one African-American race fan, speaking of the flag. “I know what it represents to me.”

The fan declined to give her name, and she was not alone. This is worth noting: virtually everyone at the track—fans, workers, security, local media, track officials—has an opinion on the flag’s presence, and virtually none of them want to be quoted on the record. Sometimes it’s a matter of personal preference, of wanting to keep an apolitical public presence, and sometimes it veers a bit more in the paranoid direction.

“You see what they’re doing to police,” said one flag supporter who also wouldn't give his name. “I don’t want to have to kill nobody. I’m dead serious.”

***

The problem for flag supporters—really, the problem for everybody—is that a symbol doesn’t just mean what you want it to, and an alliterative t-shirt slogan doesn’t change that. One person’s heritage is, in fact, another’s hate.

That, then, is why the flag supporters are fighting a losing battle in the public eye. If you’re an Alabama fan, say, you can’t conceive of anyone willingly donning an Auburn jersey. But colleges, cities, bands, and other rallying points of group unity didn’t pursue and perpetuate decades of human subjugation. Defenders of the flag have chosen to counter that aspect of the debate by simply declining to acknowledge that it’s part of the equation.

Here’s the thing, though: one of the South’s patron saints already blazed a trail through this particular thicket. Dale Earnhardt Sr. his own self once cut the rebel flag off an AMERICAN BY BIRTH, SOUTHERN BY THE GRACE OF GOD bumper sticker after hearing it offended an African-American family friend. The heritage remained, the hate got ditched.

But that particular statement didn’t make the news at the time, because it happened away from the public eye. Dale Earnhardt Jr. pushed the flag issue forward earlier this year when he unloaded on the flag in the wake of the Charleston shootings. "I think it's offensive to an entire race," Earnhardt said before this year's Sonoma race. "It does nothing for anybody to be there flying, so I don't see any reason. It belongs in the history books and that's about it."

***

Nuance dies a quick death in the NASCAR infield, but rumors ran fast enough to win the Southern 500.

Early in the weekend, whispers spread through the infield that NASCAR and NBC were looking to take down Confederate flags. That was enough to spur some outrage and misguided free-speech complaints (being private property, Darlington could forbid anything from the Confederate flag to Kyle Busch banners if it so desired). The track and NASCAR decided to enforce the already-in-place rule that all flags must come down while cars are running; it's up to you to decide whether that enforcement was to protect spotters' sight lines or present a less inflammatory image to television viewers. By the time the race started, virtually all flags of any kind were down in the infield; only a few holdouts waved the flag during the Southern 500's opening laps.

Absent an outright ban—which would whip up opportunistic anti-P.C. fury among even Americans who don’t know Jimmie Johnson from Jimmy Johnson—the flag won’t ever come down completely. But its presence, already waning in most of the South, will continue to recede. Anti-flag demonstrators will move on to other causes, and flag supporters, without the opposition to push against, won’t keep bringing the flags to races to make the same point, year after year. The farther the flag recedes from public spaces, the more it becomes a historical abstraction.

Hell, even Dale Earnhardt flags are dwindling in number. If Earnhardt flags can fade from NASCAR infields … anything can.

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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports and the author of EARNHARDT NATION (Harper, 2016). Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.

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Diesel, Northern Illinois' beloved husky mascot, dies at 13

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Diesel, Northern Illinois’ beloved former Siberian husky mascot, passed away Sunday night after a recent cancer diagnosis. He was 13 years old.

The news was announced in a post on his official Facebook page.

"Dear family and friends. Thank you for the outpouring of support and for visiting during the home opener yesterday. We are very sorry to tell everyone that Diesel's time had come today and he is no longer with us,” the post says. “He was a very lucky dog because he had all of you as friends. Thank you for the last decade of great memories. Please give your pets a big hug from us. We love you all and Go Huskies!"

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According to the DeKalb Daily Chronicle, Diesel was diagnosed with B-cell lymphoma in August. He retired as the school’s mascot in 2013 after nine seasons and became well known on the national stage when he was captured high-fiving an NIU cheerleader on an ESPN broadcast.

The school’s athletic department confirmed the dog’s death on Monday morning.

“NIU athletics would like to extend its deepest sympathies on the passing of ‘mascot emeritus’ Diesel,” it said on its Facebook page. “For nine years he visited every stadium in the Mid-American Conference (except UMass), four MAC Championship games, and NIU road games throughout the Midwest. Diesel was a fan favorite to the Huskie faith and fans of opponents alike.”

Diesel, who was given the “mascot emeritus title” upon retirement, spent his last home game as the team’s mascot at Huskie Stadium during NIU’s 2013 season finale on Nov. 26, where he was honored alongside the team’s seniors. He later attended the Huskies' Orange Bowl contest against Florida State.

Even after his retirement, Diesel made appearances at NIU tailgates and even made it to Saturday’s game against UNLV, a 38-30 Huskies victory.

Upon Diesel’s retirement, his successor, Mission, was introduced and put under the care of NIU’s ROTC program. 

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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!

Dunk History: Paul George's 360 windmill causes stir on press row

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As the summer wears on, with training camps and preseason play still off in (what feels like) the distant future, we turn our attention to the past. Join us as we while away a few late-summer moments recalling some of the most scintillating slams of yesteryear, the most thunderous throwdowns ever to sear themselves into our memories. This is Dunk History.

Today, Marcus Vanderberg revisits Paul George's dunk of the year from 2014 against the Los Angeles Clippers.

No cheering in the press box.Paul George’s 360-windmill was the dunk of the year in 2013-14. (AP Photo/AJ Mast, File)

It’s the first rule that’s drilled in your head when you decide you want to become a sports journalist.

And 99 percent of the time, it’s a rule that all journalists follow (cough, boxing media, cough).

But once in a blue moon, you find yourself covering a sporting event where an athlete does something so phenomenal that it nearly forces your inner-fandom to come out.

Paul George’s 360-windmill slam was that moment for me.

The Associated Press Sports Editors Diversity Fellowship program is what brought this Los Angeleno to Bankers Life Fieldhouse in the middle of January during that ever so brief stretch when the Indiana Pacers were the team to beat in the Eastern Conference last year.

Remember those days?

Lance Stephenson was doing Lance Stephenson things on the court and not picking fights with his teammates off the court (just yet). Roy Hibbert’s fragile self-esteem was still somewhat intact. And George, the 2012-13 Most Improved Player, was showing signs that he was making the transition from an above-average shooting guard to a potential superstar in the making.

Technically myself and the three other fellows weren’t “working” journalists on the night as the Pacers played host to the Los Angeles Clippers — but the same rules apply whenever you are credentialed to a sporting event.

No cheering.

The Clippers were on the second night of a 10-day road trip and in the middle of a modest five-game winning streak. But on the second-leg of a back-to-back and going against an Indiana squad that was 20-1 at home, Doc Rivers’ squad had their work cut out for them.

Indiana’s smothering defense set the pace early and quickly built a double-digit lead before halftime behind a motivated Hibbert, who blocked all five of his shots in the first quarter. Offensively, George was the star of the show this snowy Saturday night: 36 points on 12 of 17 shooting from the field, 5 of 6 from three-point land and a perfect 7 of 7 from the free throw line.

The last two of those 36 points would come in spectacular fashion following a careless turnover by Clippers guard Darren Collison late in the fourth quarter:

As soon as George crossed half court and all five red jerseys were in the distance, you knew something special was set to take place.

(Credit goes out to veteran forward Hedo Turkoglu — who has never been known for a.) his speed, b.) his ability to hustle) and c.) his defense — for at least pretending he had a shot of running down George.)

The closer George got to the rim, the more I started to squirm in my seat.

The fan in me was ready to rise out of my press seat as George was elevating to the rim.

The journalist in me was just picturing the scolding Marc Spears and Adrian Wojnarowski would give me if word got back to them that I stood up and made a fool of myself.

The end result was one of those halfway rises that I played off as if I was just readjusting how I was sitting and this super lame tweet:

That’s how you get 2,000 followers on Twitter — with great insight like tweeting out a player’s name and providing no context behind it.

Considering it was the first time George attempted the 360-windmill in a game that mattered, it’s remarkable how easy and effortless he made it look. If he botched the dunk, George would have been the talk of social media for all the wrong reasons. The dunk would make another appearance later that summer during a game in The Drew League — just weeks before George’s gruesome leg injury he suffered during a Team USA scrimmage.

George returned to the court just nine months later for the final six games of the regular season. While we won’t know until this upcoming season if the George of old is truly back, here’s hoping we haven’t seen our last in-game 360-windmill slam.

That’s something we can all cheer for.

Marcus Vanderberg is a deputy editor for Yahoo Sports.

NFL preview week: Ten coaches on the hot seat in 2015

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Only seven NFL head coaches were hired before 2010 as the annual Black Monday meat grinder chews up an average of three to six coaches in a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately league.

After four head coaches left their gigs a year ago (three were fired; Doug Marrone opted out of his deal), we see as many as 10 who could be in trouble heading into 2015 without producing more positive results.

Here are the 10 NFL coaches on the proverbial hot seat:

Jay Gruden — The Washington Redskins head coach has been embattled, as most Redskins coaches seem to be, from the day he took the job. He appears to be a headstrong, driven, offensively gifted mind, but that might not matter too much now — not with the layers of dysfunction reaching epic levels, even by Redskins standards. The RG3 power struggle was not won by Gruden; yes, he found a way to bench the quarterback he so clearly didn’t want running his team. But Gruden needs to be right about Kirk Cousins (gasp — he of the 2-7 starting record) or both RG3 and Gruden might be part of the annual Redskins housecleaning efforts.

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Gus Bradley — Look, Bradley seems to have desire and likeability in spades, and he knows defense. On top of that, there’s a patient owner in Shad Khan and a GM in Dave Caldwell who seem to have bought into the long-view future. That’s all well and good, but three-year plans are a tough sell on any fan base, much less one that has endured seven straight seasons without a winning record. Bradley has a cringe-worthy 7-25 mark and hasn’t proven to be enough of a game manager or quarterback developer (yet) to ensure his safe passage into 2016. Even if patience and promise still remain here.

Lovie Smith — You wouldn’t think the Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach in his second year with the team would be in too much trouble, not with a career 83-77 mark (including his 2-14 Tampa debut) and not with a rookie quarterback who could start 16 games. If Jameis Winston shows promise, Lovie’s handpicked quarterback surely will give him a stay of execution at least for another season. But another 2-14 season might be too much for any ownership of a team that hasn’t won a playoff game since — yep — the Super Bowl victory in January of 2003.

Chuck Pagano (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images)Chuck Pagano — It would appear odd that a team that was one game away from the Super Bowl would have a coach on the hot seat the following season, especially as the Colts boast an offensively gifted roster and stare a fairly cakey schedule in the face. But there appears to be a latent tension between Pagano and owner Jim Irsay over his contract, with Pagano turning down a one-year extension offer in the offseason and now heading into final year of his original four-year contract. Lame duck? Betting on himself? Whatever the case, Pagano has said it’s not a Super-Bowl-or-bust season, even if others wonder if Irsay — who once fired Jim Caldwell a year removed from a Super Bowl appearance — might want to go in a different direction if the Colts don’t end up in Santa Clara.

Tom Coughlin — Hot seat? Not exactly, perhaps. Coughlin likely has earned the right to walk away when he’d like, but that’s not to say that if the Giants struggle again this season (they have not made the playoffs the past three seasons) that Coughlin might not be strongly urged to step aside before he reaches the age of 70. There only have been a handful of septuagenarians who have been head coaches, and unless Coughlin can summon a magical run a la 2007 or 2011, there might be some pressure for Coughlin to step down and wait for his call for the Hall. As for the Giants, stow away the name of Brian Kelly; the Notre Dame coach is said to be a favorite of some high-up Giants brass and could be a prime replacement candidate, especially if the Irish have a big season.

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Jeff Fisher — There’s s sense in NFL circles that Fisher has found a way to walk between the raindrops with the Rams, showing little progress — records of 7-9, 7-9 and 6-10 — in his three seasons. He’s the NFL’s 14th-winningest coach and a respected member of the NFL’s competition committee, but that only goes so far. Owner Stan Kroenke has designs, we think, on moving the team to Los Angeles next year, and if the Rams don’t win — a tall order in a tough division if St. Louis fans bail and reduce any home-field advantage — Kroenke might have a hard time selling a retread coach (even one with L.A. ties) on the new community. This is a tricky situation to navigate.

Ken Whisenhunt — An uncertain ownership and front-office situation clouds the picture for Whisenhunt, who is coming off a 2-14 debut season in Nashville. He easily could be given a pass for inheriting a mess in 2014 and having to endure some likely growing pains with rookie quarterback Marcus Mariota learning on the job. But Whisenhunt still could be vulnerable if a new general manager with no ties or loyalty to him is brought in. Another 2-14 season might be too tough to stomach for a franchise that is trying to re-stoke excitement as it heads in yet another new direction.

Joe Philbin — Most arrows are pointing up in Miami. But that’s exactly what could make Philbin (23-25 in four seasons) vulnerable if the Dolphins don’t match expectations this season. Owner Stephen Ross has been publicly supportive of Philbin to this point, but Ross will want a better return on his investment with all the money he has spent the past few seasons on Branden Albert, Ndamukong Suh and an extension for Ryan Tannehill. With the New England Patriots potentially vulnerable with Tom Brady’s pending four-game suspension, the Dolphins need to strike now.

Jim Tomsula (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)Jim Tomsula — This could be a one-year experiment. One-and-dones might be rare, but they are a little more common than many realize: Not counting interim replacements, there have been five (Bobby Petrino, Cam Cameron, Rob Chudzinski, Al Groh, Hue Jackson) who have lasted one season or less. The shakiness of the entire San Francisco 49ers organization is undeniable, and Tomsula’s public appearance hasn’t helped him appear to be a strong, steadying force. That won’t matter if he wins games and fields a competitive team this season, but it’s hard not to think he could be made an easy scapegoat and pushed under the bus for a sexier new candidate in 2016.

Marvin Lewis — Hasn’t Lewis spent most of his Cincinnati Bengals existence on such lists? Such is his lot in life, having rebuilt the franchise from the dregs and yet sporting an 0-6 playoff record he wears like a scarlet “A.” Four of the past five seasons, Lewis’ Bengals have been good enough to make the postseason but not good enough to advance beyond their first game. Part of that is on Andy Dalton, and part of it has been on ownership, which gave Dalton an extension and offered few viable long-term alternatives at quarterback. But Lewis, one would think, would have to win a postseason game this year to have a chance to continue coaching this talented team he helped build.

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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!

San Jose Sharks: Puck Daddy’s 2015-16 NHL Season Preview

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(The 2015-16 NHL season is nearly upon us! Why bother watching this team? What will make or break the season? Find out as we preview all 30 teams as camps begin!)  

Last Season

40-33-9, 89 points, fifth in Pacific Division, missed playoffs

2014-15 Season, In One Tweet

Did They Get Better, Worse Or Are They About The Same?

After a head-scratching summer in 2014, GM Doug Wilson improved his squad heading into the 2015-16 season. Joel Ward was brought in on a three-year deal to help provide some secondary scoring. After scoring 19 and 24, respectively, in each of the past two seasons for Washington, he should help just fine. 

Shoring up the defense, Wilson reunited Paul Martin with Larry Robinson after the pair spent time together in New Jersey. The 34-year old Martin spent the last five seasons in Pittsburgh and signed a four-year deal. He’ll be a solid veteran presence in a defensive group that features of a mix of youngsters and veterans.

Troy Grosenick’s extension means he and Alex Stalock will battle for the backup job behind Martin Jones, who was acquired in June after going from LA to Boston to San Jose in the span of a few days. That was after the Sharks sent long-time no. 1 Antti Niemi’s negotiating rights to the Dallas Stars, where he eventually signed.

Also saying bye-bye were defensemen Taylor Fedun and Matt Irwin, along with Scott, who would sign in Arizona.

Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

Five Most Fascinating Players

1. Martin Jones, G 

Wilson has faith in the gamble he’s taking by giving Jones a three-year deal and the no. 1 job. The 25-year has all of 29 starts in two seasons with the Los Angeles Kings under his belt. He performed fine in spot duty while giving Jonathan Quick a breather, but will he be able to handle the workload of 60-65 games and the pressures that come with being a starter?

2. Brent Burns, F/D 

Wilson and new head coach Peter DeBoer both said that Burns will start on defense, likely with Martin. But with his experience up front, will we see the bearded one back at forward, if needed? He’s coming off a career year with 17 goals and 60 points.

3. Joe Thornton, F

Have “Jumbo” and Wilson moved on from their spat last spring when Thornton said the GM should “shut his mouth” and “stop lying” after comments made about why the team went captain-less? Thornton still has two years left on his deal and at age 36 is coming off a 65-point season, his lowest during a full slate since 2000. Same goes for Patrick Marleau. Both have been leaders for the team for a decade, but declining production and a need to look toward the future could reignite trade rumors again.

4. Logan Couture, F

At 26, Couture represents the next phase of Sharks star players. When Thornton and Marleau are gone, and Joe Pavelski is beginning to age out, Couture will be hitting his prime years. He posted 27 goals and a career best 67 points last season.

5. Joel Ward, F

With Thornton and Marleau’s production in decline, Ward was brought in to help out an offense that watched its goal total shrink from 239 to 224 last season. With 78 goals in the last two seasons, Pavelski doesn’t appear to be slowing down any time soon, and with Ward in the fold his 20ish goals could help provide some offensive balance up front.

Potentially The Best Thing About This Team

They made enough improvements over summer, and coupled with the continued development of youngsters like Melker Karlsson (13 goals), Tomas Hertl (31 points), Matt Nieto (27 points), the Sharks could take advantage of some Western Conference teams primed to take a step back this season.

Potentially The Worst Thing About This Team

The goaltending could hinder any sort of step forward. Grosenick and Jones are inexperienced as starters and Stalock struggled last season. The Sharks paid a first-rounder for Jones, only adding to the pressure he faces as he handles the no. 1 reins for the first time in his career. If Thornton and Marleau continue to drop off offensively and no one is there to back them up, it could be another frustrating year. 

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Dream 3-on-3 OT Group

Pavelski, Thornton and Martin would make a pretty balanced line to cover the scoring, playmaking and defensive roles. Three fully healthy Tomas Hertl’s would be pretty fun, too. 

Coach Hot Seat Rating (1-10, 10 being scorching hot)

One. DeBoer will get some time with the Sharks as their “transition is over,” according to Wilson. Going by his history, DeBoer’s teams excel in his first year behind the bench. In Florida, he led them to a 93-point season, only missing the playoffs due to a tiebreaker with the Montreal Canadiens. With the Devils, he guided them to the Stanley Cup Final. An improved Sharks roster should help DeBoer’s streak of first-year success continue. 

Awkward Old School Video Break

When was the last time you saw a Pat Falloon highlight?

Their Best Case Scenario Is …

They take advantage of some regressing teams in the West and slip back into the playoff picture with their strong core, improved secondary scoring, and solid defense. In the process, they find their new no. 1 goaltender for years to come in Jones.

Their Nightmare Scenario Is …

Jones can’t handle the responsibility of a no. 1, Thornton and Marleau continue their offensive decline and no one can help Logan Couture and Joe Pavelski.

Prediction

The Sharks find their way into a wild card spot in the West. Wilson had a better summer in 2015 than in 2014. The hope now is for San Jose’s young players to take their next step. Their possession numbers were middle of the pack. If those can improve, along with the penalty kill (78.5-percent), they can slip in.

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Pitt RB James Conner out for season with knee injury

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It turns out the injury to Pitt running back James Conner was more serious than initially thought.

Panthers head coach Pat Narduzzi said after Saturday’s win over Youngstown State that Conner was “fine.” However, Narduzzi announced Monday that Conner will miss the season due to a torn MCL in his right knee.

The injury, which occurred during the second quarter, will require surgery.

“Even with all of his success last year, James attacked his preparation for this season like he was fighting to earn a starting spot,” Narduzzi said. “He is a tremendous competitor and teammate. After he was injured on Saturday, James was constantly in the ear of his teammates, encouraging them and coaching them on the sideline. Our entire program shares his disappointment but we will also be behind him every step of the way in his recovery.”

[Check out Dr. Saturday on Tumblr for things you won’t see on the blog]

Conner rushed for 1,765 yards and 26 touchdowns in 2014 and won the ACC Player of the Year award. The 6-foot-2, 240-pound junior rushed eight times for 77 yards and two touchdowns on Saturday before injuring the knee.Pittsburgh running back James Conner (24) runs past Youngstown State safety LeRoy Alexander (3) for a touchdown in the first quarter of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Sept. 5, 2015 in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)

“I greatly appreciate everyone’s support and well wishes,” Conner said. “This is a temporary setback and I’m going to work even harder to bounce back. Even though I won’t be able to play this season, I’m going to be right beside my teammates and help them every way I can to have a great season.”

With Conner out, Pitt turned to redshirt freshman Qadree Ollison and he responded with 207 yards and a touchdown in the 45-37 win – his first career collegiate game.

Coming off Saturday’s win, the Panthers will face Akron on the road Saturday evening.

For more Pittsburgh news, visit Panther-lair.com.

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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!

Daily Dime: Max, Sale, Braun, Bogaerts

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Check the lineups, check the weather. And if you have a moment, come beat me in a free Labor Day contest.

Max Scherzer, SP, vs. NYM (Niese), $58: This should be a fun series, the surging Nationals agains a Mets team that’s a little dazed and confused after a poor series with the Marlins, not to mention all the Matt Harvey drama. Mad Max is also a healthy -208 favorite, as he’s lucky enough to pitch on #NieseDay.

Chris Sale, SP, vs. CLE (Bauer), $50: My first instinct was to fade Sale for Monday, as the Indians are a contact-heavy team and the price is usually prohibitive. But when I see Sale at a modest $50 at home in a -190 spot, I change the tune. Trevor Bauer’s presence also builds the Chicago case, as he’s struggling through a horrible second half (6.15 ERA, 1.52 WHIP).

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J.P. Arencibia, C, at DET (Wolf), $10: I’m going to punt at catcher more often than not. Arencibia clocked a couple of homers last week, and he should find something to hit against retread Randy Wolf.

Ryan Zimmerman, 1B, vs. NYM (Mets), $16: It might sound a little costly, but Zimmerman is a .674 slugger against lefties, and no one is afraid of Jon Niese. Zimmerman is also the second-best hitter in roto over the last week, on a .500 binge with four homers. (Evan Longoria also looks terrific at the same tag, if you want to look away from Zim.)

Ryan Goins, 2B, at BOS (Porcello), $10: He’s not in a friendly lineup spot, though any Toronto position can be a good one. Goins has been sneaky-valuable over his last 29 starts, turning in a .304/.423/.457 line with three homers and a couple of bags. Not bad on a budget. 

Xander Bogaerts, SS, vs. TOR (Buehrle), $13: Say whatever you want about Boston’s pitching and free-agent dalliances, but this is not a bad lineup. Only three teams have outscored the Red Sox in the second half, and Bogaerts is one of the key triggers, slotted in the No. 3 position.

Derek Dietrich, 3B, vs. MIL (Davies), $9: He’ll take his hacks and miss plenty of the time, but every so often we see a deep connection (10 homers, .508 slugging). We’ve spent money elsewhere in this lineup, so we need a few working-class heroes. Zach Davies is someone to attack on the opposing mound. 

Chris Young, OF, vs. BAL (Chen), $8: The veteran outfielder is on the roster for one obvious thing - he crushes left-handed pitching (.323/.392/.591). The ownership level might be high, but that doesn’t mean it’s not a good call.

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Ryan Braun, OF, vs. FLA (Nicolino), $17: A reasonable price, the platoon advantage, a hot bat (.421 last week), and perhaps some hidden incentive. Braun stole four bases last week, which makes me wonder if he has sights on a 30-30 season. He’s not going gentle into that good night, no matter that the Brewers are out of the race.

Brandon Guyer, OF, at DET (Wolf), $9: The Bill Burr lookalike (thanks, Panda) has an .820 OPS against left-handed pitching, and he’s been terrific over the last month (.343/.425/.529). He’s also set for the leadoff position Monday. 


Kansas State QB Jesse Ertz out 'for quite some time'

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FILE - In this April 26, 2014, file photo, Kansas State quarterback Jesse Ertz throws downfield during the second half of an NCAA college spring football game in Manhattan, Kan. Ertz has won a four-way competition to start at quarterback Saturday in the season opener against South Dakota. Ertz beat out junior Joe Hubener and freshman Alex Delton, who were listed as co-backups on the depth chart released Tuesday. Junior college transfer Jonathan Banks was also in the mix but chose to redshirt rather than sit deeper on the chart. (AP Photo/Topeka Capital-Journal, Chris Neal, File)Jesse Ertz’s stint as Kansas State’s starting quarterback in 2015 did not last long.

Ertz left the Wildcats’ season-opening win over South Dakota Saturday after only a few plays. Head coach Bill Snyder said during the Big 12 coaches teleconference Monday that Ertz is “going to be out for quite some time.”

“We will miss him,” Snyder said per Kansas.com. “We feel badly about the loss and he will be there. He has been a wonderful individual for us, very representative of our value system, of our team and really developing as a leader.

“I am quite confident he will stay invested in what we are doing and will be very helpful to all of his teammates. We will move on.”

Snyder did not offer specifics about the injury. Ertz previously suffered a torn ACL as a high school senior.

[Check out Dr. Saturday on Tumblr for things you won’t see on the blog]

Ertz, a redshirt sophomore, was making his first career start for the Wildcats when he suffered what appeared to be a knee injury on the first play of the game. He remained in for one additional snap – a handoff – and then was helped off the field by two trainers.

After being examined on the sideline, Ertz was taken to the locker room on a cart.

“I feel dramatically bad for him,” Snyder said after the game. “We will see how it plays out. I have no idea right now, but anytime anybody gets hurt, they work so hard and for it to take them out of a game you work so hard for to play, our prayers will be with him. Hopefully it is something where he can get back on his feet real quick.”

Ertz beat out Joe Hubener and freshman Alex Delton to win the starting job during preseason practice. Hubener, a junior, came on in relief of Ertz Saturday and led the Wildcats to a victory. Hubener threw for 147 yards and a touchdown in the 34-0 win, but completed only 50 percent (9/18) of his throws. He also ran for 38 yards on nine carries.

Hubener, a former walk-on, will make his first career start for the Wildcats on Saturday on the road against Texas-San Antonio. Hubener played in seven games for K-State in 2014, completing 9-of-17 passes for 235 yards and a touchdown. He also added 142 yards and three touchdowns rushing. 

For more Kansas State news, visit GoPowerCat.com.

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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!

Barack Obama says Tom Brady is an example of why we need unions

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President Barack Obama addressed a major union rally in Boston on Labor Day, and what better way to warm up the crowd than to talk about Tom Brady and the importance of unions?

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The NFL Players Association was instrumental in fighting Brady's four-game suspension in federal court. A judge overturned the suspension (and it means nothing Judge Richard Berman and Patriots Robert Kraft ended up at the same party this past weekend with many other people after the judgment, so just stop it). The union proudly won a high-profile case for one of its biggest members.

And according to NECN's Alison King, Obama noted that connection.

I'm guessing the crowd reacted favorably to that. And if nothing else, we have now learned that anything and everything, from a president's speech on down, can be tied back to deflate-gate.

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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdown.corner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Yahoo Fantasy Freak Show Podcast

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Christine Michael heads to Dallas. James Jones, back with the Pack. The Patriots threw us another backfield curveball. The Browns and Titans have streamlined their backfields, at least for the time being.

Before you get into that last-second draft, you need to check in with Liz Loza and Scott Pianowski on the Labor Day edition of the Yahoo Fantasy Freak Show. Your sleeper success is our reward.  

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Give it a listen, make it a habit

And dig our iTunes and RSS feeds.

Edmonton Oilers’ leadership conundrum with Ference, Hall

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The power dynamics within the Edmonton Oilers could be downright fascinating.

When’s the last time we’ve seen a team with a core leadership group that hasn’t led them anywhere, a veteran captain who may end up being a healthy scratch and a rookie who might earn the captaincy within three years if the hype’s correct? 

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So we’re all up to speed: Defenseman Andrew Ference was named Oilers captain in 2013 after Shawn Horcoff shuffled off to the Dallas Stars. He was 34 years old, bringing a ring and three Stanley Cup Final appearances to a dressing room that couldn’t locate the playoffs if given a GPS and Sherpa.

Taylor Hall was 21 when Ference was given the captaincy, even though there was strong support to give him the honor despite his inexperience. But it was Dallas Eakins’ call, and the call was a veteran backliner instead of a star winger.

Said Hall to the Edmonton Sun:

“I thought about it, I heard some rumours and that kind of thing. It’s Dallas’s choice,” Hall said. “Andrew came in here and displayed a lot of things that we need in this room. He’s a good guy and I think I might have been a little too young for the role. I’m very comfortable of where I am now in my career, how I play and how I am in the room. I’m fine without the ‘C’ on my shoulder." 

… “For now, I’m completely fine with not having that. A guy like Andrew that’s married, it’s good for the team, it’s good for the community, it’s good for the spouses and that kind of thing. I’m completely fine with the role that I have.”

Since then, the Oilers have shuffled through two (or three) coaches to bring in former San Jose Sharks coach Todd McLellan, and Ference had a discussion with him immediately to talk about the captaincy and its future. As he told the Edmonton Journal:

“The way I look at it is, who would be the same person with or without it?" Ference, 36, said. "It shouldn't change who you are as a person. Some guys who have the captaincy can elevate their role and how they feel, but how they act and who they are? That shouldn't change. Doing the day-in, day-out leadership stuff should be the same with or without it. That's the sign somebody's ready for the captaincy."

McLellan has said that Ference is the Oilers’ captain “right now” and reiterated that anyone ascending to the captaincy is going to have to show him they’re worthy:

"I haven't experienced a lot of the individuals, the way they carry themselves, the way they react in certain situations. Are they verbal leaders? Are they physical leaders? Are they both? How do they react in successful situations? How do they react to failure? How do they interact with their teammates? I can't answer any of those questions as a coach right now."

So who should take the Oilers captaincy?

Logic would dictate it’s Hall. He and Jordan Eberle were alternate captains during that crap-burger of a season for Edmonton. (I know … “which one?”)

I’ve long been a fan of the torch-passing from veteran grunts acting as stop-gaps to young stars as a way to signal a new phase for a franchise: Ovechkin getting the captaincy from Chris Clark, Toews getting the ‘C’ from Martin Lapointe and so on. It’s clear the Oilers are inching toward contention, assuming them don’t make a Herculean leap with Connor McDavid at center.

And that’s the other intriguing part of this: McDavid is pegging to be a star of greater magnitude than Hall, Eberle, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins or any of the team’s other young guns. Stardom doesn’t always equate to leadership, but McDavid was a captain with the Erie Otters and the makeup of this kid seems to point to him being a natural leader.

Honestly, this is why I give the ‘C’ to Hall this season. Establish him as the captain. Let him take the leadership role and run with it. Because if maturity is an issue for Hall – and, frankly it is, or else Ference wouldn’t be the captain – giving him that responsibility forces him to mature. So does rooming him with McDavid – it’s going to be on Hall to show him the NHL ropes and to do something that’ll no doubt be difficult for him, which is protect him from the toxic direness that’s been the Oilers B.C. (Before Connor).

So I’d move to the ‘C’ to Hall. But I’m not the coach. Todd McLellan is the coach, and the last time he was faced with a question about the captaincy, he basically gave everyone an ‘A’ and called it a day. So it’s possible Ference, Hall, Eberle, McDavid and the rest of the Oilers get to be captains this season.

Well, except for you, Nail. If you can’t take care of Connor you can’t get a ‘C’.

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Matt Garza was shut down by the Brewers, and he's not happy about it

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Matt Garza (AP Photo)

The Milwaukee Brewers would prefer to end their disappointing 2015 season quietly and move on.

Matt Garza doesn't do really do quiet though.

The Brewers, fourth in the NL Central at 60-76, removed the 31-year-old right-hander from the rotation following his start Saturday to give some of their younger pitchers an opportunity to pitch in the majors.

[On this week's StewPod: Listen to our September MLB predictions]

Predictably, Garza is furious with the decision and didn't hold back when asked about it.

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

"It's (expletive)," he said. "It's not my decision. I didn't get much say. It's completely taken out of my hands. That's it. I didn't have any say at all.

"It is what it is. It's just (expletive)."

"I told them what I felt," Garza said. "Had my agent call up top and tell them how I felt, and that's that. I've played with guys who have gone through similar-type situations, just a rough year, and never once have I seen a guy shut down.

"They do things differently here, I don't know. But I'll be here for the next two-three years, so it is what it is."

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Garza still has two years left on a four-year, $50 million contract he signed with the Brewers in 2014. After a solid first year in Milwaukee, Garza has not replicated that success in 2015, going 6-14 with a 5.63 ERA in 27 starts. Offered a chance to pitch out of the bullpen for the rest of the season, the veteran starter rejected that proposal, effectively ending his season.

These are some of the battles big-league teams have to fight in September. Just because they're out of the playoff race, they still have to make moves that not everyone's going to like.

More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:

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Israel Fehr is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter.

Ohio State flag spotted covering Virginia Tech logo on Mount Hokie (Photo)

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Ahead of Monday night’s Ohio State road matchup at Virginia Tech, Buckeyes fans are making their presence felt across in the state of Virginia.

According to Tidewater News, an Ohio State flag was spotted covering the Virginia Tech logo on the side of Mount Hokie near Capron – about four hours east of VT’s campus in Blacksburg.

[Check out Dr. Saturday on Tumblr for things you won’t see on the blog]

The banner reportedly was first spotted “sometime Friday afternoon.”

Though the Buckeyes are coming off a national championship, their lone loss of the 2014 season came at the hands of the Hokies on Sept. 6 at Ohio Stadium.

After the 35-21 loss, Ohio State reeled off 13 straight wins, including a Jan. 12 victory over Oregon to capture the first-ever College Football Playoff title.

For more Virginia Tech news, visit HokieHaven.com.

For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.

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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!

Mets say they have a plan for how to use Matt Harvey down the stretch

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Matt Harvey (AP Photo)Matt Harvey proclaimed in an article for The Players' Tribune that went up Sunday that he "will pitch in the playoffs," for the New York Mets.

How exactly is that going to happen with all the talk of a doctor's imposed limit of a 180 innings?

Well, we've got a better idea now, though we still don't know for sure. And that's OK, because neither do the Mets.

[Play a Daily Fantasy contest for cash today!]

Mets general manager Sandy Alderson confirmed Monday that Harvey won't exceed the 180 innings range, and that the team has plan to make sure he's available to start in the postseason. However, the plan has yet to be finalized because the Mets need to make sure it works for Harvey and his agent, Scott Boras.

So Harvey is full-go for the playoffs then? Not so fast. How many starts he'll be able to make depends on how much he ends up pitching down the stretch and how his arm feels.

From the AP:

''How he's used in the postseason is really going to be a function of how he's gotten through the six months of the regular season,'' Alderson said. ''I can't sit here and say he's going to be available throughout the entire playoffs, because we don't know how he will feel and what all of the considerations are at that time.''

Having already thrown 166 1/3 innings in his first season back from Tommy John surgery, Harvey is in position to make three starts in the regular season. He's scheduled to take the mound for the Mets on Tuesday against the Washington Nationals. From there? New York's already gone to a six-man rotation, but even then Harvey would have to make four more starts after Tuesday. It appears that Logan Verrett will step in for Harvey at least a couple times in September.

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All of this is far from ideal for everyone involved and it's a complicated situation. The pressure and attention will increase if the Mets slip up and allow the Nationals to cut their lead in the NL East to one or two games, because Harvey can only pitch in the playoffs if New York gets there. We'll see how circumstances affect the Harvey plan going forward.

More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:

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Israel Fehr is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter.


Utah CB Dominique Hatfield reinstated to team

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Utah cornerback Dominique Hatfield has been reinstated to the program, head coach Kyle Whittingham announced Monday.

“He’ll play as soon as he’s ready,” Whittingham said, per KSL.com. “As things are turning out, it was our belief, in fairness, he was deserving to be able to be reinstated back onto the football team.”

Whittingham said he and athletic director Chris Hill reached a decision to reinstate Hatfield and that the cornerback would be able to return to the field “whenever he is ready.”

“If he’s ready to play this week, he’ll play,” Whittingham said. “If he’s not, it could be something like three weeks.”

Hatfield has been in school and on scholarship, but has not been with the team since early July when he was arrested for aggravated robbery. Whittingham kicked him off the team after the arrest, but those charges were dropped a few weeks later.

Even after the charges were dropped, Whittingham said later in July that Hatfield was “working through some things” and remained separated from the team.

[Check out Dr. Saturday on Tumblr for things you won’t see on the blog]

News later emerged that Hatfield had been charged with assault stemming from a July 5 incident.

According to police documents, Hatfield was at a party and was asked by a person to stop “rolling marijuana into a blunt” and not smoke in the house. Hatfield allegedly “began striking (the victim) in the face and other parts of his body” with other “unknown individuals.” The alleged victim reportedly received bruising to his eyes, shoulder and back and cuts on his face and nose.

Hatfield was charged with misdemeanor assault, and according to KSL.com, those charges are still pending.

Hatfield, a junior from Los Angeles, totaled 38 tackles, nine pass breakups and one interception in 10 starts in 2014. He was expected to start in 2015 for the Utes, who are coming off a win over Michigan in Thursday’s season opener.

When asked about the possibility of Hatfield returning to the team, Whittingham said in August that Hatfield could potentially return to the starting lineup. He also has a redshirt year available.

“If it was before camp ended, it’d be a very viable possibility that he could be back in the mix early in the season,” Whittingham said. “The longer it goes, the less likely it is that he’d be a factor this year for us.

“Now he does have a redshirt year; if in fact he’s able to get reinstated and get everything worked through, we have that option, too.”

The Utes face Utah State at home on Friday night.

For more Utah news, visit Utezone.com.

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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!

Jason Pierre-Paul reportedly 'ready' to play, but obstacles could remain

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The Jason Pierre-Paul saga has been such a mystery summed up by Giants co-owner John Mara's incredible quote, "I don't know how many fingers he has" — that nothing should be too surprising. Even Pierre-Paul somehow playing in Week 1 or shortly thereafter.

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Giants coach Tom Coughlin didn't rule out Pierre-Paul for the season opener, and a report from NJ.com's Jordan Raanan said Pierre-Paul is "ready" to play. Pierre-Paul reported to the Giants on Monday for a physical, the first time the team and Pierre-Paul have met since a July 4 fireworks accident. The Giants' Pro Bowl defense end was franchise-tagged this offseason, then suffered significant injuries including reportedly losing his right index finger.

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But the reports on Monday afternoon were fairly positive. NJ.com's story, citing a source, said Pierre-Paul is in condition to play, though his hand is still healing. It sounds like the Giants would have to determine how limited Pierre-Paul will be with his hand early in the season, and determine if they're good playing him with those limitations.

There are contractual issues in play, however. As ESPN.com's Dan Graziano pointed out, Pierre-Paul is due about $14.8 million on the franchise tag. The Giants could put Pierre-Paul on the non-football injury (NFI) list after he signs the tender and not pay him for games he misses. He would miss at least the first six games on the NFI. Though, one reason Pierre-Paul was so secretive with the Giants and waited so long to take his physical is that he could argue that if the Giants pass him on his physical, he shouldn't be eligible for the NFI list. The two sides could come to an agreement on a lower guaranteed salary based on how many games the Giants think he might miss as he recovers.

This was one of the strangest ordeals in NFL history, so it makes sense that less than a week before the season kicks off we still have no idea exactly how this will all play out.

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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdown.corner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!

Louisville WR James Quick has severe ankle sprain, will miss Saturday's game

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Louisville receiver James Quick will not play Saturday against Houston after suffering a severely sprained ankle in the season opener against Auburn.

"I’m not real encouraged," Petrino said of Quick’s availability.

The good news, however, was that Quick did not suffer an injury to his Achilles tendon, which was the initial fear when Quick abruptly fell to the ground without contact. He had to be carted off the field.

Petrino said there’s no timetable for Quick’s return.

Quick was Louisville's leading returning receiver after catching 36 passes for 566 yards and three touchdowns in 2014. He had four catches for 28 yards before leaving Saturday’s 31-24 loss.

While the Cardinals lost a main receiver, they did gain a starting quarterback.

Petrino announced that freshman Lamar Jackson would be the starting quarterback going forward ahead of Reggie Bonnafon, who started against Auburn. Kyle Bolin and Will Gardner round out the rest of the depth chart.

Jackson came into Saturday’s game in the second quarter and finished the contest. He completed 9-of-20 passes for 100 yards and an interception and rushed for 106 yards and a score. Jackson’s rushing yards were the third-most ever by a Louisville quarterback and the first 100-yard rushing game by Louisville quarterback in 41 years.

"He really gave us a lift," Petrino said. "We had four series in the second half. We got three touchdowns and a field goal. He made a lot of big plays, some of them with his legs, some of them with his arm. He showed great competitiveness."

For more Louisville news, visit CardinalSports.com.

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Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!

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William McGirt's 71st-hole eagle leaves him on the playoff bubble

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With one shot, William McGirt may have extended his life in the FedEx Cup playoffs.

From 169 yards on the 17th hole at TPC Boston in Monday's final round of the Deutsche Bank Championship, McGirt holed out for eagle -- an eagle that moved him from well outside the top 70 in the points standings to just inside the bubble. The top 70 in points after this week's event move onto the BMW Championship, the third of four playoff events. 

Since finishing up with a par at the last for a 6-under 278 total on Labor Day, McGirt has fluctuated in the projected standings from 68th to 71st. He's at the mercy of players ahead of, tied with and behind him. Players who are ahead of him can drop down by losing shots to par, improving McGirt's position and landing him more FedEx Cup points to assure his spot in the top 70. Meanwhile, players tied with and behind him could still improve their score and further dilute the points he has earned. 

If McGirt ends up in the top 70, he would make the third leg of the playoffs for the third time in the last four seasons. However, he hasn't had much luck in the penultimate playoff event, finishing T-68 and T-65 in his two prior BMW Championship appearances. 


Ryan Ballengee is a Yahoo Sports contributor. Find him on Facebook and Twitter.

Pass or Fail: Colorado Avalanche new third jersey for 2015-16

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Avalanche

It’s no secret that the Colorado Avalanche were getting a new third jersey for the 2015-16 NHL season, and it’s no secret that the jerseys were rumored to include iconography from the late, not exactly great Colorado Rockies (who relocated to become the three-time Stanley Cup champion New Jersey Devils).

Thanks to kikkerlaika on Twitter, we have our best look at their new duds for this season, as the International Shop NHL site leaked all of this season’s third jerseys

(That includes the awesome Mighty Ducks-inspired jersey for the Anaheim Ducks and, curiously, does not yet include the all-black New York Islanders jersey that’s scheduled to be revealed later this month.)

In our humble opinion: These Avs jerseys … look … awesome.

As someone who is an avowed detractor of the Avalanche’s current jerseys – at best their logo looks like something out of a child’s first book of letters, at worst like the world’s lamest log flume ride – I want to write sonnets to the glory of this sweater.

Awesome primary color. Awesome logo. Love the flag on the shoulder patch. This is the logo of a proud NHL franchise, rather than looking like someone dumped Cool Whip on the a pair of burgundy trousers.

The design is going to be repurposed for the Avs’ Stadium Series jerseys later this season.

Allow us to apply the same test to these jerseys as we did to the Avalanche third jerseys that debuted in 2009:

1. Are they better looking than the Atlanta Thrashers' third jerseys, considered the worst in NHL history? Really, anything in life is. Even root canals. 

2. Are they better than the franchise's previous third jerseys? Dark blue wins every time.

3. Are they an improvement on, or more appealing than, the franchise's primary jerseys? I think you know where we stand on this.

So, all that said …

PASS OR FAIL: Colorado Avalanche third jerseys for 2015-16.

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