Rangers’ Hamilton sits for 1st time since HR tear (Yahoo! Sports)

Rangers’ Hamilton sits for 1st time since HR tear (Yahoo! Sports)
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) The Texas Rangers were set for a rare weekday afternoon sellout, fueled by thousands of schoolchildren getting a break from their routine. Manager Ron Washington figures the kids would like to see Josh Hamilton in October, too, so he sat Hamilton and stuck with his plan to rest his key starters. Hamilton was out of Thursday’s lineup against Oakland, his first absence since a hot streak that vaulted him to the major league lead in all three Triple Crown categories. He was the last of five Rangers players to sit during a four-game stretch that ended against the A’s. ”It was as simple as it was to give the rest of them a day off,” Washington said. ”Those are the guys that’s going to take us where we have to go.” The former AL MVP has cooled off some since hitting .467 (14 of 30) with two doubles, nine homers and 18 RBIs over seven games. The run was sparked by the 16th four-homer game in major league history May 8 at Baltimore. Homerless in his past four games, Hamilton still has a 16-game hitting streak, longest in the majors this year. He entered Thursday leading all of baseball in average (.404), homers (18) and RBIs (45). During a pair of two-game series against Kansas City and Oakland, Rangers manager Ron Washington has already rested Ian Kinsler, Michael Young, Mike Napoli and Nelson Cruz. The Rangers were swept by the Royals but had a chance to sweep the A’s on Thursday. Texas is in the middle of a stretch of 20 games in 20 days. The Rangers got a break with a rainout in Baltimore last week, but had to play a doubleheader the next day. Their next scheduled off day is May 24. ”I’m not used to days off,” said Young, who sat Wednesday and was the DH in Hamilton’s traditional third spot in the order Thursday. ”I like to get out there every day. But rest if always a good thing.” Hamilton, who didn’t appear in the clubhouse when it was open to reporters before Thursday’s game, left early April 29 against Tampa Bay because of back spasms. He missed the next three games at Toronto, but his absence appeared precautionary because the Rangers were playing a rare series on artificial turf. The four-time All-Star played only 89 games in 2009 because of an abdominal tear and a pinched nerve in his back. He missed a month of his MVP season in 2010 with broken ribs after crashing into an outfield wall making a catch. He was out six weeks last year after he broke a bone in his arm diving headfirst trying to score on a foul popout, and had surgery for a sports hernia after the World Series. Hamilton led the AL with 130 RBIs in 2008, his first season with the Rangers. He led the league with a .359 average in 2010, when the Rangers won their first AL pennant.

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Steroids Era to consume Hall voters (AP)

Steroids Era to consume Hall voters (AP)
NEW YORK (AP)—Barry Larkin plans to play golf in Florida on Monday morning. Then he’ll return to his home in the Orlando area and await the most prized telephone call in baseball. He is the leading candidate to gain election to the Hall of Fame when voting by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America is announced. “It’s a shot of immortality. The best of the game in the history—in the history of the game,” he said Thursday. “To be emblazoned into that history of the game is a tremendous honor.” A player needs at least 75 percent to gain election. A 12-time All-Star and the 1995 NL MVP, Larkin received 51.6 percent of the votes when he appeared on the ballot for the first time in 2010. His percentage increased to 62.1 percent last year, when he fell 75 votes short as Roberto Alomar and Bert Blyleven were elected, and his chances figure to be helped by the lack of top newcomers. “I certainly have some anxiety about it, but not really nervous. I have a great perspective on it,” Larkin said during a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “I had a chance to speak to Jim Rice, who got inducted on his 15th time, and he really put me at comfort and ease and said, `You know, it’s really out of our hands, and there’s nothing we can really do about it. We don’t campaign for it, and it is what it is.”’ Spending his entire major league career with the Cincinnati Reds from 1986-04, Larkin hit .295 with 198 home runs, 960 RBIs, 2,340 hits and 379 stolen bases. He won three Gold Gloves and the 1990 World Series. He had hoped to return for a 20th season in 2005 at age 40, but retired after the Reds told him they didn’t want him back. “In 2005, I wasn’t really sure if I was completely done playing. I still had that question,” he said. “I don’t have that anymore. I know it’s the right move. It was the right decision. It was time to move on.” And because he retired then, he can join one of baseball’s most select groups. Of the 206 former big leaguers selected for the Hall, just 47 spent their entire careers with a single major league team and only two with the Reds: Johnny Bench and Bid McPhee. Larkin misses the camaraderie of spending 7 1/2 months a year with teammates but remains around ballparks. He broadcast for the MLB Network from 2009-10, then moved to ESPN last year. He’s a spring training instructor for the Reds, and has gone to South Korea and Brazil as an envoy for Major League Baseball and the State Department. “So I’m always on the field or talking about it,” he said. “I still get an opportunity to go out there and take a ground ball off my chin every once in a while.” A day after the announcement, the Hall of Fame holds a news conference in New York for anyone voted in. Even if he failed to get the necessary percentage, Larkin will be in Manhattan, to help his 16-year-old daughter CymcoLe put together a music video. She’s performs what he says is a combination of R&B, hip-hop and pop, and they shot footage last week in a Florida aircraft hangar. They plan to get footage at Times Square and the Empire State Building. That’s taken precedence over focusing on his Hall chances. “Everybody is so involved in launching my daughter’s career and no one is sitting around and really thinking about it,” he said. If he is elected, he would be inducted on July 22 at Cooperstown, N.Y., along with the late Ron Santo, elected last month by the Veterans Committee. Also among the holdovers are Jack Morris, Lee Smith and Jeff Bagwell. A relatively weak group of newcomers includes former AL batting champions Bernie Williams and Bill Mueller. Morris, the winningest pitcher of the 1980s but burdened by a 3.90 career ERA, received 53.5 percent on his 12th try last year, up from 52.3 in 2010 and 22.2 percent in his initial appearance. Players are eligible to appear on the writers’ ballot for up to 15 years, and his chances might decrease in future years because the ballot will get crowded with high-profile stars. The 2013 ballot figures to be the most controversial, with seven-time MVP Barry Bonds and seven-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens eligible for the first time along with Craig Biggio, Mike Piazza, Curt Schilling and Sammy Sosa. Bonds, Clemens and Sosa have been implicated in the use of performance-enhancing drugs, allegations they have denied. Mark McGwire, 10th on the career home run list with 583, received 19.8 percent of the vote last year in his fifth try on the ballot, down from 23.7 in 2010—a vote before he admitted using steroids and human growth hormone. Rafael Palmeiro, among just four players with 500 homers and 3,000 hits along with Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Eddie Murray, was on just 11 percent of the ballots last year in his first appearance. He received a 10-day suspension in 2005 for a positive test, claiming it was due to a vitamin vial given to him by teammate Miguel Tejada. Juan Gonzalez, a two-time AL MVP implicated by Jose Canseco in steroids use, received 30 votes last year, just above the 5 percent threshold for remaining on the ballot. Then in 2014, the focus will turn to elite pitchers when Greg Maddux (355 wins) and Tom Glavine (305) become eligible. Among pitchers eligible for the Hall, all 20 of the 300-game winners are in. But first, the class of 2012. “I certainly would like to be a part of it, and I really do want it to happen,” Larkin said. “But as far as analyzing it and seeing how it’s gone down in the past, I’ve never been that way, so it’s no different now.”

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Philadelphia 76ers 2011-12 Season Preview

Philadelphia 76ers 2011-12 Season Preview
Usually NBA season previews are best read in October, back when football games hardly mattered, Midnight Madness was a few weeks away, and baseball was winding down. Perhaps with the last of the offseason’s iced tea in hand, as you whiled away on a too-warm-for-the-season afternoon. Well, pour yourself a glass of bull shot and tighten those mittens, because it’s late-December and the NBA decided to have a season this year. As such, the exegetes at Ball Don’t Lie are previewing the 2011-12 campaign in a mad rush, as if you or we would have it any other way. So put down the shovel long enough to listen to Kelly Dwyer, Dan Devine and Eric Freeman as they break down each of the NBA’s 29 teams, plus Toronto. This time? It’s the Philadelphia 76ers. Kelly Dwyer’s Reasons to be Cheerful The 76ers didn’t pull the trigger on a massive trade centering around Andre Iguodala, the group couldn’t find a way to add any significant talent to a roster in need of a full-time star, and for a big market team the 76ers are about as anonymous as NBA squads come. Where to now, St. Peter? Perhaps another needed year of determining where, exactly, this roster stands. This is one of the reasons that you employ someone like Doug Collins as your head coach, because he can help keep your team in the playoff bracket even as you work around the fringes while figuring out which of your 47 talented forwards to keep. Elton Brand’s resurgence in 2011 doesn’t hide the fact that he was signed to be Philly’s breakout star and fell way short (through no fault of his own), and Dre Iguodala is best served as a sideman to that breakout star, but this doesn’t preclude Sixer fans from being cheerful at another above-.500 year and hopeful second round appearance. This clearly isn’t the stuff dreams are made of, but the Sixers are loaded with assets and they run 10-deep even without including the potential of NBA-ready rookie Nikola Vucevic. Few teams can boast the sort of powerhouse combination of youth and talent that the Sixers will be able to toss out, and if the coin flips in their favor this could lead to a massive pileup of wins. That’s not me slumming or pandering to Philly fans, this group has the potential under the right witchdoctor to do something special. That’s the regular season take, though. In the playoffs, a time Doug Collins’ 1-4 sets and isolation play is best suited for, teams have to fall back on that star. And while Jrue Holliday can get to the line and Brand can back you down, the Sixers are still lacking that go-to mug. Apologies for acting like a general columnist, NBA-skimmer; but Philly still needs That Guy. Until That Time, though, the Sixers can chalk up a litany of Big Wins with Those Dudes. Dre and Thad Young and potentially an improved Evan Turner are quite well-suited to taking advantage of teams that are either playing out the string, working under duress, or ill-prepared to compete at seven in the evening on a Wednesday. That’s not supposed to work as cold comfort, Sixers fans. If this team doesn’t tune out Doug Collins, you’re going to have a lot of fun between now and April. Dan Devine Has Feelings about Your Team: Philadelphia 76ers I’m so excited for you! There were a number of reasons why Evan Turner struggled at times during his rookie season. For starters, he faced challenges adjusting to an off-ball role after excelling as a possession-controlling playmaker at Ohio State. He also had to learn how to defend professional twos and threes without prototypical quickness for the swing spot. And unlike some high-lottery selections that get long leashes from rebuilding franchises with no hope of competing right away, Turner joined a Sixers squad with postseason aspirations led by a demanding first-year head coach who wasn’t about to just give away floor time based on draft position. (Constantly hearing about the electric kid picked one spot ahead of him probably didn’t do wonders for Turner, either.) Among the biggest factors when things went rough for Turner: his inability to knock down shots. He was consistently subpar from everywhere beyond the rim, according to Hoopdata, hitting just 37.1 percent of shots taken between three and nine feet of the hoop, 37.6 percent between 10 and 15 feet, 37 percent between 16 and 23 feet, and 31.8 percent from 3-point range. Not terrible marks — within a couple of percentage points of the median in all phases — but all below average, and with more than three-quarters of Turner’s field-goal attempts coming outside the restricted area, according to StatsCube, that just won’t cut it. He needs to improve his shot to become a featured contributor in the Sixers offense. During the offseason, Turner worked with recently enshrined Hall-of-Fame coach Herb Magee, a Philly hoops icon and renowned “shot doctor,” in the hopes of fixing what ailed his J and coming into the season with a sharper arsenal. The renovation was reportedly detail-driven and holistic — as Kate Fagan, then of the Philadelphia Inquirer, wrote after their first meeting, “It sounds like Turner and Magee worked for over an hour and a half … and never got past shooting the ball one-handed, not more than a foot away from the rim.” They focused on correcting mechanical issues like the placement of Turner’s guide hand in his shooting form and maintaining his follow-through after release. Whether the work will pay dividends in the regular season remains to be seen — in two preseason games, Turner shot a combined 8-of-18 (44.4 percent) from the floor and 1-of-3 (33.3 percent) from 3-point land — but Magee recently said Turner “has improved” his mechanics and said now “needs to get consistent minutes.” If Turner shoots well enough in the early going, he could earn the minutes that come with an increased role — one where he’s used not only as the primary facilitator on a second unit featuring speedy scorer Lou Williams and just-got-paid swingman Thaddeus Young, but also takes some of Jodie Meeks’ burn with the first team. That’s certainly what Sixers fans are hoping for, but irrespective of the early returns, they ought to be pretty excited that a guy they’re banking on to be a franchise cornerstone would so willingly submit to a breakdown-and-rebuild — that instead of saying, “This was good enough to win National Player of the Year and get me taken second overall, so forget you,” he listened and worked. You can win with guys like that. I’m so worried for you! The big worry is that despite last season’s .500 mark being good enough for the eighth seed and the expectation of continued improvement in Collins’ second year at the helm, the Sixers aren’t actually going anywhere. That despite the nice collection of young talent in Philly, that roster’s still short a star, and that unless Jrue Holiday becomes one or team president Rod Thorn can somehow trade for one, the Sixers seem destined for an Atlanta Hawks-esque string of mid-conference finishes and not really competing with the Chicago Bulls, Miami Heat and whoever else winds up joining those two teams this year in the East’s upper crust. There are smaller worries, too. Philly made major strides on the defensive end last year, giving up five fewer points per 100 possessions under Doug Collins than they did under Eddie Jordan the previous season. That’s not surprising, as Collins brings defensive improvement wherever he goes, and the upgrade typically lasts through the second season — the Chicago Bulls went from dead last in defensive efficiency the year before he arrived to the league’s third-best unit in two years, the Detroit Pistons went from dead last to 11th in his second year, and the Washington Wizards went from dead last to a more respectable 18th within two years. The problem is with defensive distribution. Iguodala, Meeks, Turner and Williams did a great job on the wings, holding opposing twos and threes to Player Efficiency Ratings of 12.4 and 12.5 last season, respectively, according to 82games.com’s positional statistics. Holiday’s numbers weren’t great at the point — opposing point guards put up an 18.6 PER against him — but his effort was better, and his youth and physical tools suggest the capacity for improvement with more coaching. In the frontcourt, though, once you get past an aging Elton Brand, the Sixers don’t have anybody who consistently plays interior defense. Philly allowed opposing power forwards and centers to put up well-above-average PERs of 17.7 and 17.2 last season, respectively, and don’t look to have improved heading into this season. Spencer Hawes is young and big, but not a very good or motivated defender. Young is long, active and athletic, but he’s undersized down low as a defensive four. Collins is reportedly relying on Marreese Speights to be the Sixers’ fourth big — for now, at least; the restricted-free-agent-to-be has reportedly drawn interest from the Memphis Grizzlies and the Denver Nuggets — but defense has long been seen as a problem for him (although Synergy’s numbers beg to differ). Neither Nikola Vucevic nor Lavoy Allen, Philly’s frontcourt rookies, profile as an especially effective defensive presence right out of the gate. Unless one or more of those bigs takes a major step forward defensively, the Sixers will be relying on 32-year-old Brand — who had a solid resurgence last year, playing more minutes than he had since a ruptured Achilles tendon knocked him out for the better part of the ’07-’08 and ’08-’09 seasons — to again shoulder primary offensive and defensive responsibilities down low and remain healthy while doing it. If he can’t or doesn’t, any slippage on the wings or continued below-average performance by Holiday will take the Philly defense back a step, giving back some of last year’s gains and putting more pressure on a star-less, 17th-in-the-league offense to improve. To be fair, that is a lot of ifs, and as a believer in both Holiday and Philly’s wings (defensively, at least), I expect the Sixers to continue to play soundly enough to get away with the lack of bangers. It might not be a major concern, but that’s the problem with life on the .500 line — the molehills look like mountains and objects in the rearview always seem like they’re in your backseat. I have no idea what to make of you! If you do not select B. Franklin Dogg as your new mascot, Philadelphia fans, then I have no idea what to make of you. He has everything — an adorable li’l hat, an adorable li’l collar, the capacity to stand on his hind legs and dribble a basketball, a far more impressive physique than his master, and a lack of weird head appendages that make it difficult for him to progress easily through door frames. You don’t want your mascot to be some boozed-up snuff-hound or glorified hat rack, Philadelphia. Do the right thing and vote for a dog so chill he needs two g’s in his last name, like it’s the 1990s. (You remember the ’90s — Barkley, Iverson, “Rocky IV,” a couple years of Aaron McKie. Pretty great, right?) Vote early, vote often and vote your conscience, Philadelphia. It’s the right thing to do. Eric Freeman’s Culture Club The worlds of the NBA and popular culture intersect often. Actors and musicians show up at games, players cameo in their shows and movies and make appearances at their concerts. Yet the connections go deeper than these simple relationships — a work of art can often explain the situation of an NBA team. Eric Freeman’s Culture Club makes these comparisons explicit. In each installment, we’ll assign one movie, TV show, album, song, novel, short story, or filmstrip to the previewed team. PHILADELPHIA 76ers: “Ben and Me” If you follow mascot news — and why wouldn’t you? — you’re probably familiar with the Sixers’ recent contest to choose a replacement for the odious Hip Hop. The choices were all city-themed, at least in theory, with “Big Ben,” a Benjamin Franklin figure, standing out as the most Philly of them all. However, there’s another Franklin-connected mascot on the list, a pooch named B. Franklin Dogg who claims to be the property of the Founding Father himself. This is a load of hogwash. As anyone who’s seen the classic cartoon “Ben and Me” knows, the most important animal in Franklin’s life was the mouse Amos, who led him to some of his greatest discoveries. Ignoring Amos’s contributions in favor of a dog that wears the Liberty Bell as a hat is an unforgivable oversight. That mouse helped Thomas Jefferson write the Declaration of Independence! What did B. Franklin Dogg ever do?! Did he even exist? We should not have to ask these questions in the first place. Please correct your injustice, Sixers. Buying the character rights from Disney will be well worth it. Related: Thaddeus Young, Andre Iguodala, Evan Turner, Jrue Holiday, Marreese Speights, Elton Brand, Atlanta Hawks, Chicago Bulls, Denver Nuggets, Detroit Pistons, Memphis Grizzlies, Miami Heat, Philadelphia 76ers, Washington Wizards, 2011-12 Season Previews

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Maddux interviews for Cubs manager (AP)

Maddux interviews for Cubs manager (AP)
CHICAGO (AP)—Texas Rangers pitching coach Mike Maddux is next up as the Chicago Cubs search for a new manager. Maddux is slated to interview on Wednesday. Milwaukee Brewers hitting coach Dale Sveum and Philadelphia Phillies bench coach Pete Mackanin have already been interviewed to replace Mike Quade, who was fired by new president of baseball operations Theo Epstein. Maddux pitched for nine teams in a 15-year major league career that ended in 2000. He became pitching coach of the Milwaukee Brewers in 2003, then took the same job with Texas before the 2009 season and has helped the Rangers win back-to-back AL pennants. The Cubs are also expected to interview Cleveland bench coach Sandy Alomar Jr. Maddux withdrew from consideration for the Red Sox manager’s vacancy, citing the distance between Boston and his family in the Dallas area.

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Maddux won’t seek Red Sox managerial job (AP)

Maddux won’t seek Red Sox managerial job (AP)
BOSTON (AP)—Texas Rangers pitching coach Mike Maddux has withdrawn from consideration for the manager’s job with the Boston Red Sox. He had been scheduled for an interview Tuesday, but Boston general manager Ben Cherington announced Monday that Maddux had withdrawn. The job opened when Terry Francona left following the team’s epic collapse in September, when it went 7-20 and missed the playoffs. Maddux pitched for nine teams, including the Red Sox, in a 15-year career that ended in 2000. He became pitching coach of the Milwaukee Brewers in 2003, then took the same job with Texas before the 2009 season. The Red Sox already have interviewed Philadelphia bench coach Pete Mackanin and Milwaukee hitting coach Dale Sveum. They plan to interview Cleveland bench coach Sandy Alomar Jr. Maddux, also a candidate for the Chicago Cubs managerial opening, said in a statement it was a family decision that led him to withdraw from consideration. “My wife and two daughters are together in the same state for the first time in three years and words cannot describe my happiness,” he said. “The game of baseball has many sacrifices but being apart from family is the toughest. I feel there is too much distance between the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex and Boston to see my family as much as I’d enjoy. “Again, I thank Ben Cherington and the Boston Red Sox for the flattery, honor, and compliment of considering me for their position.”

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Report: Francona affected by medication? (AP)

Report: Francona affected by medication? (AP)
BOSTON (AP)—As the Boston Red Sox disintegrated in what would become the worst September collapse in baseball history, some at Fenway Park grew concerned that the pain medication Terry Francona was taking after a half-dozen procedures on his knee was affecting his ability to manage, according to a report in the Boston Globe. In a 2,500-word, front-page article headlined, “Inside the Collapse,” the newspaper spread the blame on all sides: apathetic players eating fried chicken in the clubhouse during games; a general manager who squandered a $161 million budget on underperformers; ownership that thought players could be bought off with $300 headphones and a party on John Henry’s 164-foot yacht, “Iroquois.” Terry Francona(AP) But the most salacious revelations involved Francona, who left the team after the season when his contract options were not picked up. Since then, reports have surfaced about the dysfunction in a Red Sox clubhouse that produced a 7-20 record in September to turn what had been a once comfortable lead in the playoff race into an early offseason. According to the Globe, team sources “expressed concern that Francona’s performance may have been affected by the use of pain medication.” The sources were not identified, the article said, saying those interviewed feared for their jobs or their relationships inside the organization. The article also said Francona was worried about his son and son-in-law, who are Marine officers serving in Iraq. At the same time, Francona was living in a hotel, separated from his wife of more than 30 years. Responding to the allegations that he was “distracted,” Francona noted that he was dealing with the same problems during the four-month period when the team was going 80-41. Francona’s ill health was no secret—he was taken to the hospital with chest pains from Yankee Stadium in 2005—and he said he was taking the medication after multiple knee operations and at least five procedures to drain blood from his knee. “It makes me angry that people say these things because I’ve busted my (butt) to be the best manager I can be,” Francona told the paper. “I wasn’t terribly successful this year, but I worked harder and spent more time at the ballpark this year than I ever did.” Francona and second baseman Dustin Pedroia(notes), who declined to assign blame for the collapse, were the only individuals who were willing to discuss the team’s clubhouse culture on the record. (Designated hitter David Ortiz(notes) also commented, but said, “I don’t feel like talking about it anymore.”) Francona told the paper that he confirmed with team Dr. Larry Ronan that he did not have a problem with drug abuse. “I went and saw the proper people and it was not an issue,” Francona said. “It never became an issue, and anybody who knew what was going on knows that.” If Francona was distracted, he was not alone. A hastily scheduled day-night doubleheader to avoid Hurricane Irene angered players, who complained that management cared more about the money from ticket sales than winning. Sensing the “lingering resentment,” the article said, ownership threw a players-only party on Henry’s yacht and gave each player a pair of expensive headphones. Pitchers Josh Beckett(notes), Clay Buchholz(notes), John Lackey(notes) and Wakefield also appeared—in their uniforms, in front of the Green Monster—in a music video for a country song, “Hell yeah, I like beer.” Henry did not know about the appearance, he has said, and it is more troublesome when coupled with reports that Beckett, Lackey and Jon Lester(notes) were among those who would eat fried chicken, drink beer and play video games in the clubhouse during games, instead of being in the dugout with their teammates. “The guys that weren’t down on the bench, I wanted them down on the bench,” Francona said recently. “I wanted them to support their teammates.”

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Jeter tired of scrutiny over swing (AP)

Jeter tired of scrutiny over swing (AP)
Derek Jeter is tired of all the scrutiny of his swing. “I’m happy when I’m not talking about it,” the Yankees captain said before getting two hits Wednesday night in a win over Baltimore. Stride. No stride. Toe tap. Heel lift. Jeter’s famous stroke has been one the most analyzed aspects of the young season, and he’s not even off to the worst start in baseball.

Damon’s HR in 10th lifts Rays over Twins (AP)
Johnny Damon hit a two-run homer with one out in the bottom of the 10th inning, giving the Tampa Bay Rays a 4-3 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Thursday night. Carl Pavano pitched eight shutout innings for the Twins, but was denied the victory when closer Joe Nathan gave up a two-run double to Matt Joyce in the ninth.

Brooks Robinson discharged from hospital (AP)
Hall of Fame third baseman Brooks Robinson has been discharged from the hospital after being treated for a fever and infection. Robinson left the Greater Baltimore Medical Center on Tuesday. He says, “I am well on my way to a full recovery.” The 73-year-old Robinson was scheduled for an outpatient procedure on March 31, but became ill the night before and was admitted early for treatment.

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Super Bowl XLV NFL Online Betting – Cash in on Value-Packed NFL Futures Odds

Super Bowl XLV NFL Online betting – Cash in on Value-Packed NFL Futures Odds

With only eight teams remaining and the NFL playoffs steamrolling toward a quartet of exciting divisional round matchups
avid BetUS NFL online betting enthusiasts have a great chance of cashing in with a bankroll-boosting Super Bowl XLV wager than ever. I’m going to examine the value-packed NFL Futures Odds in the bettor-friendly BetUS Football Sportsbook
before offering up my…

MLB Betting – Tuesday Preview

MLB betting has a double bill of baseball on Tuesday
starting with an afternoon matchup in the NLCS and going through into the late hours of the night in the ALCS. Here’s a look at these Tuesday showdowns: Philadelphia Phillies at San Francisco Giants [Off topic: by the way
do you want to get a 55% bonus on your first deposit here at BetUS? If so JOIN NOW.] After stumbling through the…

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MLB Betting – Weekend Preview

MLB Betting – Weekend Preview

When MLB betting gets tough
the tough get betting. Baseball fans have a huge game to ponder this Friday night with the Texas Rangers trying to eliminate the defending World Series champion New York Yankees in the American League Championship Series. Anything can happen with a trip to the Fall Classic on the line.

World Series Betting – TEXAS GETS LEE-WAY

This may go down in history as the Fall Classic where those of us who will bet on the World Series gave the Rangers a lot of “Lee-way.” But gee
will anybody watch? All I keep hearing from the “baseball fans” I’ve talked to is how they won’t be tuning in to this year’s World Series
and that nobody else will. Why? Because it doesn’t feature a rematch of last year’s…

The Furious Year In Review – Top-10 Performances of 2010

I’m almost glad that the 2010 sports year is coming to an end. Between the four major Sports Betting
the World Cup in South Africa
the 2010 Winter Olympics
the NBA’s free agent frenzy
Brett Favre and Greg Oden’s dong texts
Tony Parker screwing his marriage over and countless other efforts
this has been one of the best years in sports that my feeble brain can remember….

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MLB Baseball Betting NLCS – This Kind of Pitching Should be Illegal

MLB Baseball betting NLCS – This Kind of Pitching Should be Illegal

Phillies’ and Giants’ pitchers could cool off bats in mid-October Those MLB baseball betting fans who put themselves more in the “purist” category will surely appreciate the National League Championship Series between the San Francisco Giants and Philadelphia Phillies
in a confrontation between pitching rotations that are so good
they should be illegal. The series starts on…

Olympic bobsledder Olsen joins National Guard (AP)
Olympic gold medalist Justin Olsen thought about becoming a soldier before becoming a bobsledder. He’s now found a way to do both. Olsen has enlisted in the New York Army National Guard as a human resource specialist
becoming the latest in a long line of American sliding athletes who also have military careers.

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