Kesler scores 3 as Canucks beat Wild 5-0 (AP)

Kesler scores 3 as Canucks beat Wild 5-0 (AP)
Ryan Kesler used playoff preparation and a pointed line of questioning as motivation to snap a goal funk. Asked after the morning skate about only scoring once in nine games — and that was on a 5-on-3 power play — Kesler responded with three goals to lead the Vancouver Canucks to a 5-0 romp over the Minnesota Wild on Thursday night.

Create-a-Caption: ‘I did it!’
You sure did, Delonte West! Way to go, pal! You did such a great job. Your teammates and coaches on the Boston Celtics are so proud of you, and so are all of us!You know what, Delonte? Go into my desk drawer — no, not THAT one, the one on the right; you know never to go into THAT one, right, buddy? — and take out a gold star to put on the Great Job! Board. You deserve it.What did Delonte accomplish that’s got him feeling so pleased? Best caption wins the complete “gold star system” learning experience. Good luck.In our last adventure: Vinny Del Negro is keeping a close eye on Blake Griffin. Like, really close.NOTE: There were a lot of strong captions that managed to be phenomenally juvenile without being, y’know, stereotypical and the worst. For that, dear readers, I thank you. You’ve fortified my faith in humanity.Winner, Eugene Shin: Through all the cheers and fan noise, you could still hear Ryan Gomes’ heart shattering into a million tiny pieces. Coach had found a new favorite.Runner-up, Sam Orme: Despite Coach Del Negro’s best efforts, Blake Griffin remains the staring contest champion of the universe.Second runner-up, Jones6: “You’re face-guarding totally wrong, Blake. Like me, see? This is how you do it.”It’s a banner day here at Camp C-a-C, because we’ve got TWO Special Commendations in Ruling to award in the Repurposed Movie Quotes That Made Me Laugh But Did Not Merit Award Placement Above The Actual Jokes Division. (Always a highly competitive division.)Kudos to Brian B., who invoked “Wet Hot American Summer,” which is always a strong choice:”Yeah, you made the shot, but you are in charge of the post-game bug juice, rook. DO YOU KNOW WHERE THE POWDER PACKETS ARE?!”***And similar plaudits to Tyler for doing what no one else ever has: Turning Vinny Del Negro into R. Lee Ermey.Gunnery Sergeant Del Negro: How tall are you, private?Private Griffin: Sir, six-foot-ten, sir!Gunnery Sergeant Del Negro: Six-foot-ten, I didn’t know they stacked [EXPLETIVE] that high!

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Sparks sign Aussie O’Hea to deal (PA SportsTicker)

Sparks sign Aussie O’Hea to deal (PA SportsTicker)
The Los Angeles Sparks have signed guard Jenna O’Hea to a free agent contract.

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Celtics beat Pistons but lose Shaq again (AP)

Celtics beat Pistons but lose Shaq again (AP)
The Boston Celtics got a rare, brief and encouraging glimpse of Shaquille O’Neal before he limped off to the locker room Sunday night. They can only hope it wasn’t their last. The 39-year-old former NBA MVP returned Sunday night after missing more than two months and scored six points in 5 1/2 minutes to help Celtics beat the Detroit Pistons 101-90.

Harvick makes late charge to win at Martinsville (AP)
Kevin Harvick was so bad during the early laps at Martinsville Speedway, his team had to force him to focus or risk a race-ruining driver meltdown.

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Bardsley to miss Brazil friendly

Bardsley to miss Brazil friendly
Sunderland defender Phil Bardsley joins Rangers’ Steven Naismith in withdrawing from the Scotland squad for Sunday’s friendly against Brazil.

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Geoffrion nets 3, Preds rally for OT win (AP)

Geoffrion nets 3, Preds rally for OT win (AP)
Boom and boom. The Nashville Predators learned how quickly any player named Geoffrion can strike. Both NHL playoff races got a little tighter Sunday when rookie Blake Geoffrion — grandson of Hall of Famer Bernie “Boom Boom” Geoffrion — added come-from-behind drama by scoring three times in the Predators’ stunning 4-3 overtime win over the Buffalo Sabres.

Phillies sign ex-Mets 2B Castillo
The Philadelphia Phillies signed three-time All-Star second baseman Luis Castillo to a minor league contract on Monday. Castillo will report to camp as a non-roster player and compete for playing time while five-time All-Star Chase Utley recovers from a right knee injury. Castillo is a career .290 hitter in 15 seasons with the New York [...]This was posted on www.officialsportsbetting.com , your guide to online sports betting. If you like new online casinos, please visit our partner site: http://www.hypercasinos.com online casinos.Phillies sign ex-Mets 2B Castillo

Hulsizer changes terms of Coyotes sale (AP)
Chicago businessman and potential Phoenix Coyotes owner Matthew Hulsizer says he has changed the terms by which he would purchase the franchise in an effort to assuage legal concerns raised by the Goldwater Institute. “We on Friday sent a letter to Goldwater to make it brain dead simple,” Hulsizer said during a television interview with Fox Sports Arizona during the first intermission of…

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Atlanta wastes leads, tops Flyers in SO (AP)

Atlanta wastes leads, tops Flyers in SO (AP)
The Atlanta Thrashers are suddenly feeling a lot better about their playoff chances. After squandering three leads in regulation, the Thrashers bounced back for a crucial win in the shootout, getting goals from Rob Schremp and Blake Wheeler to beat Eastern Conference-leading Philadelphia 4-3 Thursday night — their second win over the Flyers in less than a week.

Donald Sterling didn’t know Elgin Baylor was a basketball star
In 13 NBA seasons, Elgin Baylor made 11 All-Star teams, 10 All-NBA first teams, scored more than 23,000 points, and, along with Jerry West, turned the Los Angeles Lakers into one of the league’s two marquee franchises. He is by every possible metric a legend, one of the league’s first athletic innovators and a no-brainer selection as one of the 50 greatest players of all-time.Clippers owner Donald Sterling has lived in Southern California since 1935. Somehow, he was not aware of Baylor’s basketball career when he hired him to be the team’s general manager. No, I can’t explain it either.The truth came out during Baylor’s employment discrimination suit against Sterling. From Lance Pugmire for the Los Angeles Times (via Eye on Basketball):”You didn’t know about his basketball career?” Baylor attorney Carl Douglas asked Sterling in his first day on the stand as Baylor’s wrongful termination civil lawsuit against the team continued at a Los Angeles courthouse. “His accomplishments? The Hall of Fame?”"No,” Sterling answered. “… I didn’t know that. I hired him for $3,000 a month. I didn’t really know what his role was…. He was working in a mail-order company back then.” [...]When asked about a Baylor predecessor, Sterling said the name Carl Scheer “sounds familiar.” He added, “I don’t profess to know anything about basketball. I’m a professional lawyer.”It should come as little surprise that Sterling doesn’t think that basketball knowledge is necessary to own an NBA team — he’s proven as much with his incompetent handling of the Clippers over several decades. That he would brazenly admit as much as a matter of public record is another story, but the man was under oath, after all. Maybe he had no choice. In the grand scheme of things, this is one of Sterling’s lesser offenses — for instance, it comes nowhere close to this delightful tale from January. It also has little bearing on the case itself — this suit is about discrimination and wrongful termination, not Sterling’s knowledge of NBA history.But the situation of this case doesn’t make this revelation any less ridiculous. It doesn’t teach us anything particularly new about Sterling, but it serves as yet another example of why this man should be nowhere near an NBA front office. Eventually, someone with more power than Sterling will have to force him to sell the team. Because it’s downright unfair to the Clippers and their fans to let him stay in charge when he so clearly has no interest in doing the job well.

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Andretti, Petty to field Indy 500 car again (AP)

Andretti, Petty to field Indy 500 car again (AP)
Michael Andretti’s Andretti Autosport is teaming with Richard Petty to field a car for his cousin John Andretti in the Indianapolis 500. John Andretti will run in the Indy 500 for the third straight year on May 29 under a deal with Petty and sponsor Window World. John Andretti will run the No. 43 Team Window World car.

Hearing in NFL lawsuit set for April 6 (AP)
A request by NFL players to keep the league and its teams from locking them out will be heard by a federal judge on April 6 — the first time the two sides will be in a courtroom since the labor pact fell apart. U.S. District Judge Susan Richard Nelson scheduled the hearing. The players filed their request last week, hours before the lockout took effect Saturday, along with an antitrust lawsuit will…

Titans owner writes to ticket holders (AP)
Titans owner Bud Adams has sent a letter to season ticket holders answering questions on the NFL’s lockout, the draft and how refunds will be handled if any games are canceled. The Titans say the letter from Adams was mailed out on Monday so season ticket holders should begin receiving them starting Tuesday.

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Video: Dancing at Carnival is one thing Tom Brady isn’t good at

Video: Dancing at Carnival is one thing Tom Brady isn’t good at
He has three Super Bowl rings, a supermodel wife, more money than he could spend in three lifetimes and a hairstyle you may mock but of which you’re definitely jealous. One could have said that Tom Brady was the complete package. And then this video of him dancing at Carnival surfaced on YouTube: He looks like my dad after he’s had a drink at a wedding and decides to dance to Kool and the Gang. (Either that or a 6-year-old who needs a bathroom break.) How can somebody with so much athletic skills and body control be such a rigid dancer? Brady moves like he’s fully aware of what his arms and legs are doing at every moment. It’s not like Brady moves in the pocket like he’s Michael Vick, but given that he’s one of the greatest quarterbacks in NFL history, you’d imagine he’d have some semblance of how to maneuver his arms and legs to move rhythmically to music. He can dodge a Dwight Freeney rush but can’t get down to some samba? Frankly, I’m offended. The dancing makes Brady a living, breathing stereotype. In this post-racial world, there’s no place for that.

‘Lockout Insurance’ ruling could lead to antitrust issues for owners
  Now that the former NFLPA (currently termed “The Players”, we suppose) have filed a lawsuit seeking to enjoin the NFL’s owners from locking them out (as the owners have already done), the next step is for both sides to appear in the Minneapolis court of U.S. District Court Judge Patrick Schiltz, though it could still come before Judge David Doty, the same man who took the owners’ $4 billion in lockout insurance money generated through renegotiated TV contracts away from them, leading to two weeks of mediation that ultimately fell apart. At that time, Doty struck down a previous ruling by Special Master Stephen Burbank in which it was decided that the players had not satisfied a burden of proof that the owners were acting against them in minimizing certain profits in exchange for one-sided considerations and a breach of fiduciary duty. But when Doty overturned the Burbank ruling, he also did so with very specific language that could be seen to open the door to the antitrust rulings the players desire. Regarding the NFL’s specific contract violations so obvious even Burbank could not ignore them: (Note: All references to the “SSA” abbreviate the White Stipulation and Settlement Agreement; the ‘Reggie White Ruling’ which led to the CBA and what we have known as free agency since 1993). On February 1, 2011, the Special Master found that the NFL violated Article X, § 1(a)(i) when it granted NBC an additional regular season game in the 2010 season and granted ESPN an additional right in the 2010 season in exchange for an amended work-stoppage provision. Op. 46, 15—16. The special master granted the Players $6.9 million in damages for the NBC violation, and determined that the Players had not met their burden of demonstrating damages with respect to the ESPN violation. Doty saw things differently in both cases. The record shows that the NFL undertook contract renegotiations to advance its own interests and harm the interests of the players. The NFL argues that the SSA does not require it to act in good faith in 2011 or subsequent seasons, that lockouts are recognized bargaining tools and that it is entitled to maximize its post-SSA leverage. The court agrees. However, under the terms of the SSA, the NFL is not entitled to obtain leverage by renegotiating shared revenue contracts, during the SSA, to generate post-SSA leverage and revenue to advance its own interests and harm the interests of the Players. Here, the NFL renegotiated the broadcast contracts to benefit its exclusive interest at the expense of, and contrary to, the joint interests of the NFL and the Players. This conduct constitutes “a design … to seek an unconscionable advantage” and is inconsistent with good faith. And as to the owners’ contention that they put lockout insurance provisions in renegotiated contracts to help satisfy debt structures that could have killed some teams in the event of revenue stoppage, Doty threw the concept right back in their faces. The NFL also argues that the broadcast contracts were renegotiated to avoid defaulting under certain loan covenants. That fact alone substantiates value to the NFL without a corresponding increase in total revenues. Moreover, the value of the renegotiated contracts far exceeds the amount needed to satisfy loan covenants, and the DirecTV contract creates a financial incentive to institute a lockout. Further, the decision to lockout the Players is entirely within the control of the NFL, thereby rendering a debt default also entirely within its control. Lastly, the debt covenants are of the NFL’s own making. The risk of debt default brought about by a lockout does not excuse or justify a breach of the SSA. Therefore, construing the good faith obligation as modified by “consistent with sound business judgment,” the NFL breached the SSA by failing to act in good faith so as to maximize total revenues for each SSA playing season. So, in effect, Doty ruled that the owners violated a series of  SSA/CBA provisions that they had to adhere to, whether they opted out of the CBA in 2008 or not. Where does the antitrust language come in? When Doty ties the current SSA violations to ‘restraint of trade’ found in the ruling that set up the SSA in the first place. The NFL rankles under the restriction to its enormous market 6 power imposed by the White settlement after the jury in McNeil found that the NFL had abused its power in unlawful restraint of trade. The facts underlying this proceeding illustrate another abuse of that market power wherein various broadcasters of NFL games were “convinced” to grant lucrative work-stoppage payments to the NFL if the NFL decides to institute a lockout. Typical work stoppage provisions anticipate a strike by players, not a work stoppage created by the NFL itself. Whether the contract provisions insuring these payments might ultimately be deemed unenforceable because of their potentially collusive nature is not an issue before this court, but the court does consider the abuse of the NFL’s market power when finding that it did not act in good faith to benefit both itself and the Players, as required by the SSA. This is how packed the Doty ruling is — in one footnote on page 21, he ties the abuse of power in the case that set up the SSA (and the antitrust language therein) to the owners’ abuse of power in the renegotiations of the TV contracts. Then, he specifies the unusual nature of the current lockout by reminding everyone that it is an action in response to no other work stoppage action. Then, and just for good measure, he throws in the word “collusive” … and the concept of collusion is one that should have every owner in every sport sweating heavily. Doty summed up the flaw in Burbank’s ruling in a way that also summarized the flaws in the NFL’s recent actions. The special master failed to analyze the total capabilities and the market power of the NFL because he found it “difficult to believe that” the parties intended best efforts to “require the NFL to seek additional consideration for rights already under contract.” This is another example of importing corporate law to a sui generis agreement that was forged at the anvil of litigation, threatened repercussions and hard bargaining. Moreover, although the rights fees for the 2009-2010 seasons were already agreed upon, the renegotiated contracts materially changed almost every other aspect of the previous contracts. Further, the NFL gave digital rights in 2009 and 2010 without incremental payments to convince two broadcasters to agree to work stoppage provisions. More potential antitrust/restraint provisions exist in Doty’s take on the way the NFL strong-armed the networks. The NFL used best efforts to advance its CBA negotiating position at the expense of using best efforts to maximize total revenues for the joint benefit of the NFL and the Players for each SSA playing season. Moreover, at least three networks expressed some degree of resistance to the lockout payments. As it renegotiated the contracts, the NFL characterized network opposition to lockout provisions to be a deal breaker and “clearly a deal” it would not consider … To the contrary, the evidence shows that maximizing total revenues for SSA seasons was, at best, a minor consideration in contract renegotiations. Therefore, the court finds that the NFL breached Article X, § 1(a)(i) in extending or renegotiating its broadcast contracts. Finally, in Item 3 of his Conclusion, Doty sets forth the parameters by which an injunction may be applied in the case of relief for the breach of contract, and this might also apply to the way in which he chooses to bring down an injunction against the lockout. The court orders that a hearing be held concerning relief to be granted to the Players arising from the NFL’s breach of the SSA. The hearing shall consider the award of both money damages and equitable relief, including injunction. District of Minnesota Local Rule 7.1(b) will dictate briefing schedules and related procedures. It’s rare that you can go back and see just how a judge’s mode of thought and action might apply to his future rulings, but Doty’s language in overturning the Burbank ruling is a fascinating trip into the mind of a jurist that the NFL’s owners should not want to see coming from any distance. And even if a different judge hears the case, it would be very surprising if Doty’s language was not used in relation to these issues.

Football Pick Nr. 2 and 3 05/12/2010
Germany Bundesliga Nurnberg – Dortmund   Shocking weekend in Bundesliga because of the numbers of goals scored but today the game is between two overish teams. Last 8 games of Nurnberg were overs while Dortmund are 6-1 on overs when they play away from home. Nurnberg are missing two important defenders for this game: Pinola and Nilsson while Mike Frantz(midfielder 13 games – 2 goals) is missing also. I think this game will be an open one and by statistic and by what we have in the cards there is value on the odds for over.   So take over 2.5 @ 1.88 with Pinnaclesport   Greece 1st League Larissa – PAOK   This game is more of a speculation. PAOK are in some crysis at the moment, both financial but also with their game. They also played in Europe in midweek so they could be more tired than the home team today. Ok, Larissa are on the last place but that means they are desperate in need of points. Another fact that point to what we are picking for this game is that these teams have shared points for some years now. Also, Larissa are playing their first game on a new stadium so they will be motivated to do something good today for their fans. I see value in them.   Take Larissa to win @ 3.01 with Pinnaclesport (5 units bet)

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IOC: Munich has strong 2018 bid, govt support (PA SportsTicker)

IOC: Munich has strong 2018 bid
govt support (PA SportsTicker)
By NESHA STARCEVIC AP sports Writer

Britain announces Olympic flight restrictions (AP)
The British government has announced flight restrictions over the Olympic site during the 2012 London Games. Transport Minister Theresa Villiers says only commercial flights that have been subject to full security procedures will be able to fly through the zone around the Olympic Park in east London.

Line from Tennyson to be engraved in 2012 village (AP)
A line from Alfred Lord Tennyson’s poem “Ulysses” will be engraved on a wall in the Olympic Village to inspire athletes competing in the 2012 London Games. The last line of the poem — “To strive
to seek
to find
and not to yield” — was selected by a panel that included Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duff and author Sebastian Faulks.

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Oregon: Recruiting services payments OK (AP)

Oregon: Recruiting services payments OK (AP)
School officials have confirmed that Oregon paid about $28,000 to a pair of recruiting services, but claim the payments and services were within NCAA rules. Yahoo! Sports reported Friday that Oregon paid $25,000 to Will Lyles of Complete Scouting Services in Houston. Lyles has a mentoring relationship with Ducks running back Lache Seastrunk and is also tied to running back LaMichael James, a Heisman…

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