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Archives for April 2025

Crochet to Dish in Toronto

April 28, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

TORONTO – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Boston Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet aims to improve on his last start when he faces the host Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday night in the opener of a three-game series.

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The left-hander allowed four runs, five hits and a career-high five walks in five innings on Thursday in a 4-3 home loss to the Seattle Mariners.

Crochet took responsibility for the loss after the Mariners touched him for two runs in each of the first two innings.

“The game was the first two innings that I pitched,” he said. “That was really what lost us the game.”

The Blue Jays can look forward to Crochet reverting to a power pitcher from the beginning on Tuesday. He was trying to be a little too fine in the early innings against the Mariners.

“It became something where I was trying to pitch instead of just throwing,” he said after the start. “Once I started getting back to my roots and just being a power pitcher later in the game, the walks were still there, but I was at least able to get guys out.”

This will be the second time this season that Crochet (2-2, 1.95 ERA) will face the Blue Jays. He took his first loss of the season against them at Fenway Park on April 8 when he allowed four runs (one earned), five hits and four walks in 5 2/3 innings. In four career outings (two starts) against Toronto, he is 2-1 with a 0.66 ERA in 13 2/3 innings.

He is expected to be opposed by right-hander Bowden Francis (2-3, 3.58) on Tuesday. Francis has not faced the Red Sox this season, but he has had success against them. He is 1-0 with a 0.00 ERA and 11 strikeouts in 14 2/3 innings over in five career games (two starts) against Boston.

The Red Sox are coming off a 13-3 road victory over the Cleveland Guardians on Sunday. Kristian Campbell was 2-for-2 with four runs, a double, three walks, two RBIs and a stolen base in what manager Alex Cora described as “all-around probably one of his best, if not the best, game of the season.”

Campbell helped Boston take two of three from Cleveland.

The Blue Jays are returning from a 1-5 road trip after being swept 11-2 and 5-1 in a doubleheader by the New York Yankees on Sunday.

Toronto won the opener of the series 4-2 on Friday followed by a postponement on Saturday.

The Blue Jays’ lack of hitting with runners in scoring position was again a problem, going 2-for-17 over the doubleheader. They scored seven runs over the three games at New York. Before that, they totaled two runs and nine hits when they were swept in a three-game series against the Houston Astros.

Manager John Schneider knows what the Blue Jays must do better when they open their six-game homestand.

“Better at-bats with guys on base and taking advantage of mistakes,” Schneider said. “Things that we talk about all the time. … We know that we have the guys in there that can do it.”

Blue Jays center fielder Daulton Varsho is expected to return soon from his minor league rehabilitation assignment. He started the season on the injured list after offseason right rotator cuff surgery.

Toronto recalled outfielder Jonatan Clase to be their 27th player for the doubleheader on Sunday and he was returned to return to Triple-A Buffalo later the same day.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, MLB, Toronto Blue Jays

Way Too Soon NFL Draft Grades

April 27, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

GREEN BAY – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – To properly judge an NFL Draft class, it probably takes about three or four years to determine the overall impact. This week, media throughout the land will be providing “grades” for the various NFL team front offices. Admittedly, it’s ridiculous. But, it’s done in fun, not seriously. Here are some of the team selection grades:

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Cleveland Browns:

Grade: B

Best Pick: Harold Fannin Jr., No. 67 Overall

What We Liked: Lots of talented guys made their way onto the Browns roster through this class. It’s a very productive group that isn’t lacking in potential. Defensive tackle Mason Graham (No. 5) plays with a fury that should scare opponents, the new running back duo of Quinshon Judkins (No. 36) and Dylan Sampson (No. 126) has a lot of athleticism and should create a nice one-two punch. Fannin adds a dynamic weapon to the receiving corps that can be used in a wealth of ways. The support system for whoever is playing quarterback is going to be boosted.

Not Sure About: There’s an old adage that if you have two quarterbacks, you have no quarterbacks. Forcing a Dillon Gabriel (No. 94) vs. Shedeur Sanders (No. 144) quarterback competition seems like a move that will ultimately cause distractions. It’s classic Browns, never able to quite solve the quarterback problem as they intend to, and always with more drama than necessary. Carson Schwesinger (No. 33) also got taken a little early for my liking, but the value at linebacker in the second round wasn’t there for anyone.

Tennessee Titans

Grade: B+

Best Pick: QB Cameron Ward, No. 1 Overall

What We Liked: An all-around good draft for the Titans, who are putting together a crack offense in an attempt to actually win some games this year. Ward was the clear QB1 this year. His confidence and ability to handle lots of responsibilities will make the lives of his coordinators easier. Wide receiver Elic Ayomanor (No. 136) and tight end Gunnar Helm (No. 120) will be great support for Ward and provide reliable hands to help him get his rhythm going at the professional level. Safety Kevin Winston Jr. (No. 82) headlines the defensive picks for me. Though he was injured last year, he gave his all in 2023 and kept a day three slot because of it.

Not Sure About: I’m still not convinced Oluwafemi Oladejo (No. 52) is a real edge rusher. He just feels like a square peg being pushed into a round hole. I’ve mentioned the idea of “positionless defenses” but this guy has a position: It’s just not the one he’s playing at the moment. It also felt like a stretch to take wide receiver Chimere Dike (No. 103) in the fourth round, another speedster who does not do a lot else to provide value to the team.

Jacksonville Jaguars

Grade: B

Best Pick: CB/WR Travis Hunter, No. 2 Overall

What We Liked: That Travis Hunter trade was incredible. Getting two top-end weapons for the price of one is worth any amount of pick capital you have to pay to get up there. James Gladstone is making an incredible splash in his first year as a general manager with this trade and did lots of draft maneuvering that worked to his advantage. The pickup of guard Wyatt Milum (No. 89) solidifies the offensive line well, and running back Bhayshul Tuten (No. 104) should be a really strong dynamic duo with Tank Bigsby to take pressure off Trevor Lawrence.

Not Sure About: Hmm, lots of announcing guys who aren’t going to play the
position they did in college, shifting over to somewhere else. Caleb Ransaw (No. 88) played all slot corner last year and is looking to be used at safety; Jalen McLeod (No. 194) got announced as a linebacker when his natural fit is as an edge rusher; and Milum is likely shifting from tackle to guard. If these guys don’t do well at their next position, the Jaguars’ depth class is pretty much toast.

New York Giants

Grade: C-

Best Pick: Edge Abdul Carter, No. 3 Overall

What we liked: Carter is a great player. Pairing him with Brian Burns will turn a middling edge rusher unit into a force to be reckoned with. Focusing on the defensive trenches was a good decision for the Giants, who despite having lots of talent, really only felt like they were getting halfway decent results. Picking up defensive tackle Darius Alexander (No. 65) to supplement Dexter Lawrence should play out well, too. That defense could easily become a top-10 unit next year with the added talent.

Not Sure About: I know when you see a guy who could be a franchise quarterback on the board, you should do anything to get him, but is Jaxson Dart (No. 25) really that guy? Not only did the Giants take a quarterback propped up by an incredibly friendly system, they traded up to get him. After the first read, Dart often crumbled. I’m not sure I can see a world where Dart takes the Giants any further than Daniel Jones did. At least Jones could push the ball all the way downfield.

New England Patriots

Grade: A+

Best Pick: C Jared Wilson, No. 95 Overall

What We Liked: Lots of rock-solid picks building in Mike Vrabel’s first year as the head coach. The offensive line is molding into more of a unit than a series of disparate parts, the Patriots have a new running back in TreVeyon Henderson (No. 38) who can hopefully carry the workload. Wide receiver Kyle Williams (No. 69) gives quarterback Drake Maye one more weapon. This feels like a draft driven by logic and smart team-building.

Not Sure About: It was a little early for safety Craig Woodson (No. 106) for the liking. Woodson has trouble run-stopping and struck me as more of a developmental player than a solution to a safety problem. Other than that, nothing to complain about.

Las Vegas Raiders:

Grade: A+

Best Pick: RB Ashton Jeanty, No. 6 Overall

What We Liked: The Raiders got a blue-chip guy at six, hard to argue with
that. Jeanty is a big-time impact player for a team that never really had an
offense that chugged. However, one great pick does not make an A+ draft
class. The Raiders knocked it out of the park with virtually every pick. Their
new wide receiver room combines high-floor prospects like Jack Bech (No. 58) with big-upside swings like Dont’e Thornton Jr. (No. 108). Their two offensive linemen picks are both big-time athletes who could start early. Darien Porter (No. 68) may be old for a draft pick, but he’s the perfect Pete Carroll corner. Raiders fans, get excited.

Not Sure About: The two late defensive tackle picks don’t really have any
special skills and have limited upside. I would expect them to be rotational
players at best. If JJ Pegues (No. 180) starts getting reps at fullback, then get worried about these being wasted picks. I personally would have added a safety earlier, but that’s a nitpick on a top-tier draft class.

New York Jets

Grade: B

Best Pick: OT Armand Membou, No. 7 Overall

What We Liked: The Jets hit home runs with their first three selections. Membou can bring his athleticism to an offensive line that really needed only one more piece and create a rushing powerhouse for quarterback Justin Fields and running back Breece Hall. Tight end Mason Taylor (No. 42) sets Fields up with a quick dump-off weapon and with with good run-after-catch ability. Cornerback Azareye’h Thomas (No. 73) does great work in both zone and man and should quickly become part of the rotation. It’s now up to the free agent class to make it work.

Not Sure About: The day three selections were nothing to write home about. Wide receiver Arian Smith (No. 110) is very fast, but when it’s not game-breaking and it’s your main trait, it’s hard to be too impressed. Safety Malachi Moore is also a good athlete, but he doesn’t quite have the mental finesse to keep pass-catchers in his view consistently. Linebacker Francisco Mauigoa (No. 162) is good, but where will he play?

Carolina Panthers

Grade: B+

Best Pick: Edge Nic Scourton, No. 51 Overall

What We Liked: Getting two edge rushers (Scourton and Princely Umanmielen at No. 77) feels like a great maneuver to fill out the room. Especially adding Scourton to the mix, a crazy good power rusher whose hands will make waste to offensive lines across the southeast. The Panthers hit on all of their day three picks as well, especially Lathan Ransom (No. 122) and Cam Jackson (No. 140), who can make an immediate impact at safety and nose tackle. The depth on the team just got a lot stronger.

Not Sure About: It feels like the Panthers already have a lot of tall wideouts who can’t really separate consistently. Tetairoa McMillan (No. 8) does not add much to the room that quarterback Bryce Young doesn’t already have. Umanmielen doesn’t move me as an edge rusher, and while he isn’t a bad value in the third round, it doesn’t strengthen their bid for the NFC South. Running back might have been a higher priority.

New Orleans Saints

Grade: D

Best Pick: OT Kelvin Banks, No. 9 Overall

What We Liked: Banks is a good tackle who fits the mauling mold the Saints seem to look for. He feels a lot like Trevor Penning, but with more experience facing NFL talent and less frenzy. Jonas Sanker (No. 93) can fill a safety slot once their older guys age out, and he’s versatile enough where you can evaluate his strengths and slot a new guy in next to him pretty easily. Quincy Riley (No. 131) adds some speed to the cornerback room.

Not Sure About: Taking Tyler Shough (No. 40) is just begging to have the Brandon Weeden experience for yourself. If this is your plan at quarterback, you’ll be taking another big swing in 2026. It’s not like they have given him any support this year either. If the Saints had given him an earlier wideout, then perhaps it could be fine, but if the injuries return, it honestly could be an 0-17 season.

Chicago Bears:

Grade: A-

Best Pick: OT Ozzy Trapilo, No. 56 Overall

What We Liked: The Bears kept a good balance of need and overall player
value for much of the draft. Starting off with tight end Colston Loveland (No. 10) was a welcome surprise, as much of the buzz was around the inferior (sorry) Tyler Warren. Continuing to support Caleb Williams, the next two picks were another weapon in wide receiver Luther Burden III, who can really cook with the ball in his hands, and added protection from Trapilo. Their defensive picks mostly landed as well with defensive tackle Shemar Turner (No. 62) and cornerback Zah Frazier (No. 169) being high-floor prospects with decent athleticism and physicality.

Not Sure About: That pick of linebacker Ruben Hyppolite (No. 132) was an insane miscue. It was sort of like acing a history test and then writing gibberish on one of the essay questions. Does anyone outside of the Maryland fan base and obsessive pro day watchers like myself even know who Hyppolite is? Surely they could have gotten him later. The Bears don’t even really need a linebacker, which means they must have really loved this guy. Very odd pick from an otherwise very logical set of selections.

San Francisco 49ers:

Grade: C

Best Pick: LB Nick Martin, No. 75 Overall

What We Liked: Coach Mike Shanahan found some very good value outside of the first round. Martin was vastly underrated after getting injured early in the season, but he should bring sideline-to-sideline range that he couples with great instincts. Jordan Watkins (No. 138) has WR1 upside but at the very least projects as a WR2 for the offense. He was almost an Emeka Egbuka type in college who kept getting pushed by really impressive talents and not given a chance to shine.

Not Sure About: The first two rounds made me shrug. Edge Mykel Williams (11) is better on paper than on the field, but this isn’t a Strat-O-Matic game. Defensive tackle Alfred Collins (43) doesn’t have the strength or agility to be a game-wrecker, so the whole defensive line feels stagnant. There’s still a glaring hole at offensive tackle that needs more capital investment.

Dallas Cowboys:

Grade: C+

Best Pick: CB Shavon Revel Jr., No. 76 Overall

What We Liked: The Revel pick was impressive value for the spot. The once-incredible Cowboys cornerback room took a major step back, and Ravel should be able to make it afloat again. Guard Tyler Booker (No. 12) is a really good player who fits with the scheme of the Cowboys with his overwhelming power profile. The Cowboys addressed the majority of their needs and at least should have new competition at the spot.

Not Sure About: Can edge Donovan Ezeiruaku (No. 44) keep up his high production in the pros when he’s at an athletic disadvantage? The value is better in the second than his first-round projection, but it still is a worrying projection. Running back Jaydon Blue does not seem equipped to take on a bell cow role and feels like more of a special teams add.

Miami Dolphins:

Grade: C

Best Pick: DT Kenneth Grant, No. 13 Overall

What We Liked: Effort was made to replace the big-time players who have
left Miami for greener pastures. Grant is clearly meant to be the
next force up the middle, similar to how Christian Wilkins operated for the
Dolphins, and safety Dante Trader Jr. (No. 155) is kind of like if you got Jevon Holland from the 99-cent store: lots of strong play with a much lower paycheck attached. Guard Jonah Savaiinaea (No. 37) feels like one more step in the right direction to fixing an offensive line that has led to Tua Tagovailoa concussions. The needs are being addressed.

Not Sure About: Defensive tackle Jordan Phillips (No. 143) was a prospect that got first-round hype early in the cycle, but that tapered off when everyone realized that rumors of his athleticism were greatly exaggerated. Even the fifth round feels out of the range I would want someone of his production caliber. Cornerback Jason Marshall Jr. (No. 150) is a similar former high-upside project player who just never did much of anything. Miami needs some players who can actually make an impact —
outside of their offense, they lack star power.

Indianapolis Colts

Grade: B+

Best Pick: RB DJ Giddens, No. 151 Overall

What We Liked: The Chris Ballard strategy of taking exclusively pure athletes seems to have cooled off, as now Ballard is taking guys who also play good football. After a few years of middling draft classes, this is a group of guys you can feel confident in. Tight end Tyler Warren (No. 14) will provide more ways to ease Anthony Richardson’s quarterback responsibilities, and edge JT Tuimoloau (No. 45) and cornerback Justin Walley (No. 80) are good enough athletes but really excel in technical skill. The best pick, though, is Giddens in the fifth round. He has a balanced skill set that could make him a great supplement to Jonathan Taylor and even potentially be a full-time starter.

Not Sure About: Tim Smith seems to have been picked because he’s an Alabama defensive tackle. Really just another body for that rotation. I’m not
in love with the Warren pick, either. As dynamic as he was at the
college level, I’m not sure an offense can really be built around him in the pros without his athletic limitations showing through. Adding Riley Leonard (No. 189) to the quarterback room when he mostly just runs feels underwhelming for a team that’s sorely missing an actual passer.

Atlanta Falcons

Grade: B-

Best Pick: S Xavier Watts, No. 96 Overall

What we liked: The selections were impressive values in comparison to consensus. Edge Jalon Walker (No. 15) was seen by many as a potential top 10 pick thanks to his explosive nature; the testing numbers of edge James Pearce Jr. (No. 26) make his potential impressive, and getting Watts at the back half of day two after a slide could change their secondary. The values on these guys was impressive, and the Falcons betting on upside is a great choice in a weak division where any team could cement itself as the front-runner for the next five years. If these players pan out along with quarterback Michael Penix Jr., they could be a perennial playoff team.

Not Sure About: Trading up with a future first-round pick for a player at a position you already took in the top 15 feels like a poor use of resources. That defensive line certainly needed sprucing up, but it only matters so much if they’re not getting any interior pressure, and they certainly did not invest in defensive tackle as many expected. Not only that, they doubled up on doubling up. They took two safeties too! There are more holes on the roster than that! Solve your other problems!

Arizona Cardinals

Grade: A

Best Pick: CB Will Johnson, No. 47 Overall

What We Liked: Everything. The Cardinals went for the best football player available at every turn, from ending the surprising fall to the second round for cornerback Will Johnson (No. 47) to their first pick of Walter Nolen (No. 16), who got some of the best production of any defensive tackle in the SEC.

Even their day two and three selections were great choices, taking edge Jordan Burch (No. 78), who performed admirably at Oregon, and Cody Simon (No. 115), who led the linebacker corps for Ohio State. I had Burch as a top 50 guy, and Simon as one of the most underrated linebackers in the class. It solves a lot of problems for them very quickly.

Filed Under: NFL, Patriots Tagged With: Green Bay NFL Draft

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | April 27

April 27, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS, Editor in Chief of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – Long before we needed passwords for every single thing we do online, and long before all the passwords needed a double authentication via a mobile phone or additional email, there was a TV Show called, “Password.” It ran on CBS from 1961 until 1967, then switched to ABC for a nice run from 1971 to 1975. After that, it popped-up in a few different iterations.

None were as good as the original Mark Goodson-Bill Todman produced, and Allen Ludden hosted version. Ludden has an interesting yet sad backstory. He was born in 1917, the son of Elmer Ellsworth, an ice dealer who fell ill by the Spanish flu and died at age 26. Ludden’s mother remarried and, at age five, the youngster took on the name of his new father, Homer J. Ludden, an electrical engineer.

Allen Ludden graduated from the University of Texas-Austin with Phi Beta Kappa honors, and he served in the Army, then took a job as program director for WCBS, utilizing his skills from being the Army’s entertainment man for the Pacific theatre of the war. Ludden married Margaret McGloin on October 11, 1943, but she died of cancer in 1961. He then proposed to the great Betty White, a regular he met on Password. It took two or three proposals for Ms. White to accept. They were married on June 6, 1963 and remained so until Ludden’s early death at age 63, losing a battle with stomach cancer.

Before his death, there was a memorable episode of “The Odd Couple” when Ludden and White guest starred in their on air “Password” roles.

Aristophanes …

Ridiculous!

(That’s an inside joke related to THIS.)

###

Today, the Password is RELEGATION.

Relegation is an accepted practice in England’s Premier League, certainly the top tier of global futbol (we’ll call it soccer from now on). This season (2024-25), three teams from the Premiership will be relegated to Championship level. The three relegated clubs will transfer back the share certificates that gave them Premier League status, and the Premier League Board will confirm the cancellation of those shares at their annual summer meetings. The rule reads as follows:

“The teams who finish the season in the bottom three places of the Premier League table – 18th, 19th and 20th – drop down to the Championship, the second tier of English football. Those teams are replaced in the Premier League for the following season by three promoted clubs – the sides who finish first and second in the Championship, plus the winners of that division’s end-of-season playoffs.”

While Ipswich, Leicester and Southampton’s relegation will be officially confirmed this summer, two other clubs will be promoted (Leeds United and Burnley) and a third will be named from the upcoming Championship level playoffs.

Keep in mind, in 2015-16, Leicester won the Premier League and now the club finds itself in the equivalent of Triple A baseball.

The obvious question abounds: Would relegation ever work in North American professional sports? In short, the answer is a resounding no. Using the NBA as an example, when a team is purchased, they enter into a Joint Partnership Agreement with the other franchise owners. With that comes agreed upon draft choices, television money shares and all other benefits (NBA merchandising rights, etc). These days, teams are going for some $6 billion, so there’s zero chance of an agreement to be made to undercut that investment. The same goes for the NFL, MLB and NHL.

A secondary example – call it an idea – recently surfaced and it came from within the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Stanford men’s basketball coach Kyle Smithsuggested the ACC adopt a Premier League-like system for ACC basketball, according to the Washington Post of April 18.

The ACC sent only four teams to the NCAA Men’s Basketball tournament, a low for the conference that lives and breathes hoops. Smith’s idea is to create divisions within the ACC so the top teams play each other more often and thus have a chance for the Quad-1 victory – the kind the NCAA men’s committee values when selecting the tournament’s at-large participants.

With 18 teams in the ACC, that would mean two divisions of nine — Smith’s ideal version – or – not as desirable – three divisions of six. With two divisions, the bottom two teams of the top tier would move down every year, and the top two of the second tier would move up. With three divisions, one program would get relegated from each of the top two tiers, meaning two programs would get promoted. Smith’s idea for relegation is really promotions within two or three divisions, never a ticket down to say – the Southern Conference – for a stint. All clubs would remain ACC member teams and benefit from the Conference as a whole, never mind compete in all the other sports – both men’s and women’s.

Said Smith to the WaPo: “The ACC, we’re struggling for a place in the marketplace,” he said while in San Antonio for the 2025 Final Four. “We need to be the first ones to do something like this. The big boys, the SEC and Big Ten, are trying to take over. Put some pressure on them and the Big 12, too. This is the ACC! The ACC is basketball. So you come out and say: ‘We’re going to relegate teams to raise excitement and get back on top.’

“We might need to think of a better word than relegation,” Smith admitted. “You know, it could sting. But that’s what it would be! Relegation! And if we try it and it doesn’t work, what’s the worst case? We get four teams in the tournament? That just happened.”

TL’s Take: Re, Rel, Rele, Relegation would be a terrible idea for the major USA/Canada pro sports leagues but a very interesting idea for collegiate conferences. But, that only seems to relate to the mega-sized college conferences of 15+ teams. Going forward, more conferences might be forced to merge and – if that is the case – a college basketball conference of 18-30 member institutions, a new system would need to be developed. It wouldn’t work for a basketball conference like the BIG EAST with 11 member schools. And, it would NEVER work for the IVY League conference. Can you imagine if Harvard or Yale had a few bad seasons and were sent down to play against the “Little Ivy” schools like Amherst College, Wesleyan University and Williams College?

All that said, there is an incredible story about the opposite side of relegation, that being the three consecutive years of promotion gained by Wrexham of Wales, the club which became the first team in English football history to achieve three consecutive promotions. That dates all the way back to 1888. Franchise co-owner Ryan Reynolds of Canadian-American acting fame, said that his club is charting a course for the Premier League.

“Our goal is to make it to the Premier League,” Reynolds said. “It just seemed like an impossible dream – when he bought the club in February 2021 – but as storytellers, you look as much as you can at the macro view of history.”


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: A great Titan of Trinity and all-around tremendous friend, dating back to the mid-70s, is Jim Johnson, the executive director of Hockey Hall of Famer Pat LaFontaine’s Companions in Courage. More than one million pediatric patients and their families have benefited from the work done through LaFontaine and his foundation www.CiC16.org of which JJ oversees on a day-to-day basis. Says Johnson, “We’re in the process of providing new interactive rooms in Connecticut, Long Island and upstate New York. Plus, we are providing sensory devices, stuffed animals and upbeat videos to enhance the healing process at children’s hospitals across North America.

“I’d like to invite you to a wonderful night of upbeat jazz and friendship as we present a “Concert for COURAGE,” on Friday, May 30th at 8:00pm (ET) at the Adelphi University Performing Arts Center in Garden City, Long Island. Tickets are available for under $30.

Jazz keyboardist, Al DeGregoris and his All-Star ensemble, is known for incredible high-energy performances that “will have you moving all night long,” promised JJ. Hockey Hall of Famer Pat LaFontaine will be on hand and he’ll be joined by a few old friends. To purchase tickets: Click HERE.


THINK: Former NBA colleagues John Kosner and Ed Desser frequently pen some thought leadership pieces for our friends at the Sports Business Journal. The most recent opinion delves into this week’s NCAA rulings on the pending House antitrust judgement (expected July 1st) and its effect on college sports.

So say John and Ed: “As college athletics becomes more professionalized, we believe athletic directors need to think: vision, best practices and providing the right incentives for their students and institutions.

“For starters, the sky isn’t falling. Intercollegiate athletics remains crucial to all who participate, watch and cheer — and consider matriculating. College football is more popular than ever; men’s and especially women’s basketball are ascending, as are women’s sports such as softball, volleyball and gymnastics, which fuel Olympic sports globally. Sports media value and importance continues growing.

Thus, July 1 presents an opportunity to think differently.”

For the full column, Click HERE.

TL’s Take: I agree 100% with John and Ed that the collegiate administrators need to stop complaining and own the next chapter in competitive collegiate sports. It’s either that, or fold the cards and offer intramural sports for your students and stay on campus.

For too long, collegiate administrators were pointing the fingers, nay-saying everything professional sports was doing to their “amateur student athletes.” Meanwhile, FedEx envelopes were criss-crossing the nation, paying off athletes under the table. It was the “NBA’s fault” that players would come out early, they’d complain, ignoring the legal Robertson Settlement Agreement of 1970 and subsequent Haywood vs. National Basketball Association (1971) that called “for a significant number of high school graduates and college attendees to make themselves eligible for the NBA Draft as long as their senior year of high school had passed. At the time, the NBA allowed for the “hardship draft” to exist allowing for circumstances to determine the need for a player to turn pro and become a primary income source to benefit his family. That provision stood for few years before it was abolished by the 1976 NBA Draft in relation to the NBA-ABA absorption. In Collective Bargaining, it was exchange for allowing college underclassmen to join the rest of the draft eligible players so long as their high school class had graduated and they declare their intent to forgo remaining college basketball eligibility to enter the NBA Draft.”

It was never “an NBA rule,” but rather a key point in a legally agreed upon Collective Bargaining Agreement with the NBA Players Association. Collegiate basketball coaches would be sure to make their fans think otherwise.

That brings us to today, some 55 years after the fact, the NCAA and its member schools are looking at legal proceedings which allow for players to be paid to attend and also to make significant income from their Name, Image and Likeness, as determined by O’Bannon vs. NCAA. Thus, the golden goose of having a full sports business entity operating without having to pay the players has vanished. No longer is the promise of an athletic scholarship an adequate mechanism of bargaining with an athlete. It’s time for the colleges to adapt.

This coming week, the University of Kentucky will ask its board of trustees to approve a plan to convert its entire athletic department into an LLC, a move the school says will position it to adapt to the new world of collegiate sports.

Champions Blue, the name of the school’s proposed Limited Liability Company, would allow Kentucky to create a public-private partnership and raise funds and handle expenses as collegiate sports shifts into the new era.

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: New York Islanders, Password

Novak/Griffin Win Zurich Classic

April 26, 2025 by PGA Tour Brunch

NEW ORLEANS – Andrew Novak and Ben Griffin were grinding it through the final two holes of the 2025 Zurich Classic of New Orleans and it seemed to everyone watching that the PGA Tour would be staging its third consecutive week of playoff golf.

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Staring down a difficult 40-footer on the 17th, Griffin buried the putt and changed the outcome of the tournament with that clutch stroke.

At 28-under, Novak and Griffin finished one stroke ahead of Nicolai and RasmusHøjgaard to win the Zurich Classic, the lone team-based tournament of the year. Since the team format was introduced in 2017, the Novak/Griffin pairing joined Cameron Smith (2017 with Jonas Blixt) and Nick Hardy/Davis Riley (2023) as players winning their first career PGA TOUR title at the event.

Novak and Griffin also became the fourth of eight winning teams who’ve held the 54-hole lead/co-lead and went on to victory.

Novak and Griffin each pocketed 400 FedExCup points, $1,329,400, a two-year exemption on the PGA TOUR (through 2027) and entry into the three remaining Signature Events.

Zurich Classic | Final Leaderboard

1 Andrew Novak/Ben Griffin 62 66 61 71 260 (-28)

2 Nicolai Højgaard/Rasmus Højgaard 59 70 64 68 261 (-27)

3 Jake Knapp/Frankie Capan III 63 69 60 70 262 (-26)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: Zurich Classic of New Orleans

Red Sox & Guardians: Let’s Play Two?

April 26, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

CLEVELAND – Following a successful series against the leaders of the American League East, the Cleveland Guardians will take aim at the other storied franchise in that division. After rain postponed their series opener on Friday, the Guardians and visiting Boston Red Sox will play a split doubleheader today.

Cleveland extended its winning streak to five games by winning the first two contests of its series against the New York Yankees before falling 5-1 on Wednesday.

“Obviously, we want to win every single day,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said.

Cleveland is 11-4 after losing six of its first nine games of the season. The Guardians have won seven of the last nine meetings against the Red Sox.

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However, Boston’s scheduled Game 1 starter, right-hander Tanner Houck (0-2, 7.66 ERA), is 1-2 with a 2.37 ERA in nine career appearances (four starts) versus Cleveland.

Guardians star Jose Ramirez is 14-for-30 with five homers and 11 RBIs in his last seven home games against Boston. He is 2-for-13 against Houck, but one of those hits left the park.

After being roughed up for 12 runs (11 earned) and 10 hits over 2 1/3 innings at Tampa Bay on April 14, Houck yielded only a two-run homer in the first inning, two other hits with two walks and seven strikeouts over six frames of Boston’s 8-4 loss to the Chicago White Sox on Sunday.

“Slowly just working your way through it and showing up each and every day with a good attitude, chipping away at it, is kind of the recipe for success,” Houck said.

The veteran will try to help Boston get back on track from dropping the final two contests of a three-game home set versus Seattle. Alex Bregman homered with two RBIs and had half of the team’s four hits in Thursday’s 4-3 loss.

Bregman is 7-for-14 with five RBIs in the last four games. He is batting .320 this season.

“He’s in a good spot. A great start,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said.

In the nightcap on Saturday, the Red Sox will turn to Walker Buehler (3-1, 4.23 ERA), who allowed nine runs and 14 hits — including three homers — over 9 1/3 innings while splitting his first two starts as a member of the Red Sox. But he’s 2-0 with a 1.96 ERA in three starts since that rough opening.

The right-hander gave up three walks for a second straight start Monday against the Chicago White Sox on Patriots’ Day, but he permitted only four hits and a run while striking out nine in a season-high seven innings of a 4-2 victory.

Buehler has never faced the Guardians, who will start Ben Lively (1-2, 3.86 ERA) in Game 1. The right-hander yielded four hits and a walk through 5 1/3 innings of last Saturday’s 3-0 victory at Pittsburgh.

“That was Ben at his best,” Vogt said.

Lively usually has been at his best versus Boston, going 1-1 with a 2.25 ERA in four career starts.

Boston star Rafael Devers is 0-for-15 over the last five games overall and 0-for-5 with two strikeouts versus Lively.

Touted prospect Doug Nikhazy is slated to make his major league debut while starting Game 2 for Cleveland. A second-round pick in 2021, the left-hander was 1-0 with a 3.44 ERA and fanned 22 in four 2025 starts for Triple-A Columbus.

 

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, Cleveland Guardians, MLB

NFL Draft: Sanders Remains Undrafted

April 26, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

GREEN BAY – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – After two days, three rounds and 102 selections in the 2025 NFL Draft, Shedeur Sanders is still waiting to hear his name called. One must wonder, “who will be drafted first, Sanders or Cooper Flagg?”

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The highly hyped Colorado quarterback, who stunningly fell out of the first round on Thursday night, was not among the 70 players selected in the second and third rounds on Friday.

Three more quarterbacks were taken on Friday after two were called in the first round at the draft held in Green Bay, Wis. However, none of them was the son of Pro Football Hall of Fame member Deion Sanders, Shedeur’s head coach at Colorado.

The first quarterback off the board Friday came eight picks in, as the New Orleans Saints selected Tyler Shough with the eighth choice in the second round. Shough actually played in seven different seasons in college, starting at Oregon in 2018 before transferring to Texas Tech for the 2021 season and then Louisville for 2024.

The next two quarterbacks went late in the third round, with the Seattle Seahawks taking Alabama’s Jalen Milroe with the 92nd overall pick and the Cleveland Browns taking Oregon’s Dillon Gabriel two picks later.

Sanders’ statistics suggested he might be more highly prized by NFL teams targeting their next long-term quarterback. During his senior year at Colorado, Sanders led the Big 12 in passing yards (4,134), touchdowns (37) and passer-efficiency rating (168.2). He topped the nation with a 74 percent completion rate.

He led the Buffaloes to a 9-4 record, finished eighth in the Heisman Trophy balloting and earned Associated Press second-team all-American acclaim, with Miami’s Cam Ward receiving the first-team selection. Ward was the first overall pick in the draft Thursday, taken by the Tennessee Titans.

That capped a stellar four-year career playing for his father. In two seasons at Jackson State and two at Colorado, Sanders completed 70.1 percent of his passes for 14,347 yards, 134 touchdowns and just 27 interceptions.

The spotlight followed every move the Sanders family made over the last two years at Colorado, which carried over during the lengthy pre-draft process. Sanders’ potential destination was a hot topic on sports talk shows. Depending on the day, he was viewed as an ideal prospect for the Giants (who held the third overall pick), the Saints (ninth overall pick) and, worst-case scenario, the Pittsburgh Steelers (21st overall pick).

Sanders attended the NFL combine in February and measured in at 6-foot-1 and 212 pounds, but he did not throw for scouts until Colorado’s pro day in early April. On Saturday, the Buffaloes immortalized Sanders (and Heisman Trophy-winning teammate Travis Hunter) by retiring their numbers. There was still no sign that Sanders would be anything but a first-round selection.

But as draft day approached and uncomplimentary reports of Sanders’ interview skills and overly confident demeanor became public, the narrative shifted.

The final day of the draft is Saturday, with the fourth through seventh rounds. Of the teams believed to be most in need of a quarterback entering the draft, only the Steelers have yet to select one.

The Steelers are currently with the 21th pick of the fourth round, No. 123 overall.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: NFL Draft

NCAA Partners with SportsBooks

April 25, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

INDIANAPOLIS – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – The NCAA is set to forge a partnership with sportsbooks after an agreement was reached to supply data from its championship events through Genius Sports, multiple outlets reported Friday.

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Because the NCAA is not in charge of the College Football Playoff, the biggest impact from the new deal will come with information supplied through the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments. The agreement, which runs through 2032, does not include regular-season games.

While the NCAA has tried to keep its distance from the growing sports betting industry, the partnership with Genius Sports puts it more in line with professional sports leagues that have working relationships with the industry.

With online harassment of student athletes on the rise, NCAA president Charlie Baker spoke at a Senate hearing about the impact of sports betting and college athletics in December. The NCAA’s chief concern is with betting options tied to an individual player.

Genius Sports will now supply sportsbooks with official game data, through an authorized gaming license, while “limiting risky bet types,” and “safeguarding student-athletes,” are listed as primary goals of the London-based company.

“NCAA data will only be available to sportsbooks if they remove risky bets from their platforms and agree to fully cooperate with NCAA investigations and provide key information including geolocation data and device records,” NCAA senior vice president of external affairs Tim Buckley said in a statement, according to ESPN. “The NCAA retains the right to terminate any sportsbook data license if integrity protections are violated — ensuring real accountability.”

NCAA member schools will continue to get live game statistics for free through NCAA LiveStats, ESPN reported.

–Field Level Media

 

Filed Under: NCAA, Sports Business Tagged With: NCAA Sports Gambling

Big Winners at 2025 NFL Draft

April 25, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

GREEN BAY – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – One round out of seven is complete at the 2025 NFL Draft, so it’s far too soon to hand out draft grades. There will be steals aplenty on Friday and Saturday, and even more future busts.

That said, Thursday packed plenty of punch in the first 32 picks. Who were the winners and losers of Round 1? Here are three nominees for each:

Winner: The Jaguars (and Trevor Lawrence)

It’s a new day in Duval County. The franchise has been stuck in the mud and is moving on to Lawrence’s third full-time head coach in five years. So new GM James Gladstone sent a big package to Cleveland, moved up three spots to No. 2 and snagged Heisman winner Travis Hunter, who plans to play both wide receiver and cornerback in the pros. (Would Trent Baalke have made that move?) Hunter and Brian Thomas Jr. should make a terrific receiving tandem for Lawrence.

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Winner: Green Bay

The NFL probably doesn’t need to bring the draft to every city that has a franchise, but Green Bay was a standout choice for the history of the Packers and Lambeau Field. The Packers fans in attendance got to celebrate the unthinkable: their team drafting a wide receiver in the first round. Green Bay hadn’t done so since taking Javon Walker in 2002, mid-Brett Favre era. Speedster Matthew Golden of Texas could be Jordan Love’s No. 1 target this year.

Winner: The SEC

Although just one of the first six selections came from a Southeastern Conference school, it didn’t take long for the floodgates to open. The SEC ended the night with 15 first-round picks, nearly half of the first round, tying its own record set in 2020. Honestly, the 2020 mark was more impressive because the league hadn’t expanded to add Texas and Oklahoma yet. In the most predictable move of the night, the Philadelphia Eagles grabbed Alabama linebacker Jihaad Campbell at No. 31, adding to a defense that resembles an All-SEC first-team unit.

Loser: Shedeur Sanders

That quote that circulated this week from a veteran NFL assistant coach was an all-timer. “He’s so entitled.” “He blames teammates.” “He’s not that good.” But that quote wasn’t the reason Sanders dropped out of the first round. If anything, it may have been a window into an overall feeling around the league that Sanders wasn’t first-round worthy. The question becomes who will snap up Sanders on Day 2, and whether he stands a chance at a starting job in 2025.

Loser: Cowboys fans

Jerry Jones has a thing for offensive linemen named Tyler. The Cowboys’ owner and self-appointed general manager spent first-round picks on the left side of their offensive line in Tyler Smith (2022) and Tyler Guyton (2024). Now, Alabama’s Tyler Booker is headed to Dallas to play right guard. Most Cowboys fans would have preferred just about anything else with the No. 12 pick, very high for an interior lineman. For context, he’s replacing the retired Zack Martin — picked 16th overall in his draft.

Loser: Tommy DeVito

Wheel another chair into the New York Giants’ quarterback room. After taking edge rusher Abdul Carter third overall, the Giants traded back into the first round for a QB, passing over Sanders to pick Jaxson Dart from Ole Miss. You’d be hard-pressed to find a more confusing quarterback group than Russell Wilson, Jameis Winston, Dart and DeVito. Barring injury, the local boy affectionately known as “Tommy Cutlets,” who made eight starts the past two years, doesn’t stand a chance of making the roster now.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL, Patriots Tagged With: NFL Draft

Red Sox Head to Cleveland

April 25, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

CLEVELAND – (Staff and Wire Service Report0 – Following a successful series against the leaders of the American League East, the Cleveland Guardians take aim at the other storied franchise in that division.

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Yet to lose a series at home, the Guardians open a three-game set Friday night against the visiting Boston Red Sox, who look to avoid their third straight defeat.

Despite losing 5-1 to the first-place New York Yankees on Wednesday, Cleveland took two of three in the home set, and sit 7-2 at home.

“Obviously, we want to win every single day,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said.

Cleveland had won five straight prior to Wednesday, and is 11-4 after losing six of its first nine contests. The Guardians have won seven of their last nine against the Red Sox.

However, scheduled Boston starter Tanner Houck (0-2, 7.66 ERA) has a 1.78 ERA while going 1-1 in four career starts versus Cleveland. The right-hander allowed two runs and eight hits over 15 innings of his two starts against the Guardians in 2024. Overall, Houck is 1-2 with a 2.37 ERA in nine appearances, four starts, against Cleveland.

Cleveland’s Steven Kwan, batting .364 in the last 13 games, is 2-for-7 with a pair of walks versus Hauck. Fellow Guardians star Jose Ramirez, 14-for-30 with five homers and 11 RBIs in his last seven home games versus Boston, is only 2-for-13 all-time against Houck, but one of those hits left the park.

Entering this contest, Houck looks to post back-to-back strong starts for the first time in 2025. After being roughed up for 12 runs — 11 earned — and 10 hits over 2 1/3 innings at Tampa Bay on April 14, Houck yielded only a first-inning, two-run homer to Matt Thaiss, two other hits with two walks and struck out seven over six innings of Boston’s 8-2 loss to the Chicago White Sox on Sunday.

“I’ve been scuffling, even in spring training, with delivery stuff and just getting back on track, (but) slowly just working your way through it and showing up each and every day with a good attitude, chipping away at it, is kind of the recipe for success,” Houck said.

The veteran will try to help Boston get back on track after it dropped the final two of a three-game home set versus Seattle after winning six of seven. Alex Bregman homered, drove in a pair and produced half of the Red Sox’s four hits in Thursday’s 4-3 loss to the Mariners.

Bregman is 7-for-14 with five RBIs in the last four games, and batting .320 on the season.

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, Cleveland Guardians, MLB

NFL Draft: Day Two Best Available

April 25, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

GREEN BAY – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – The Cleveland Browns are set to lead off the second round with the 33rd pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, and general manager Andrew Berry could find a first-round talent or two lingering on Day 2.

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Cleveland also has picks 36, 67 and 94 before the festivities end Friday. The Chicago Bears (39, 41), Houston Texans (34, 58), Seattle Seahawks (50, 52) and Buffalo Bills (56, 62) are set to enter the second round with multiple picks.

Three prospects ranked among Field Level Media’s Top 25 went undrafted on Thursday: Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III, Marshall edge Mike Green and Michigan cornerback Will Johnson.

Here’s a look at the best players available with 32 picks in the books:

CB Will Johnson, Michigan
WR Luther Burden III, Missouri
OLB Mike Green, Marshall
DE Nic Scourton, Texas A&M
S Nick Emmanwori, South Carolina
CB Shavon Revel Jr., East Carolina
QB Shedeur Sanders, Colorado
OT Marcus Mbow, Purdue
DT T.J. Sanders, South Carolina
OLB Donovan Ezeiruaku, Boston College
QB Jalen Milroe, Alabama
DE Jordan Burch, Oregon
S Xavier Watts, Notre Dame
OT Aireontae Ersery, Minnesota
CB Benjamin Morrison, Notre Dame
OT Emery Jones Jr., LSU
DE JT Tuimoloau, Ohio State
CB Trey Amos, Ole Miss
DE Landon Jackson, Arkansas
CB Jacob Parrish, Kansas State
DT Deone Walker, Kentucky
OT Cameron Williams, Texas
S Kevin Winston Jr., Penn State
WR Isaiah Bond, Texas
CB Azareye’h Thomas, Florida State
WR Kyle Williams, Washington State
DT Alfred Collins, Texas
DE Jared Ivey, Ole Miss
CB Darien Porter, Iowa State
TE Harold Fannin Jr., Bowling Green
DT Joshua Farmer, Florida State
RB Kaleb Johnson, Iowa
RB TreVeyon Henderson, Ohio State
WR Jayden Higgins, Iowa State

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: NFL Draft

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While We're Young (Ideas) and March Go Out Like a Lyons
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Gotta Give Pitino the credit.  Constant and Full-Court Press made the difference and his players were in condition to wear down UConn. https://digitalsportsdesk.com/st-johns-defeats-mighty-uconn/
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In each round-up, there are far too many questions and not nearly enough definitive answers to the woes facing the New England clubs, the Celtics included. It might be time for some major shake-ups at...
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KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar: KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar:
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