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Digital Sports Desk

No “O” – Rams Defeat SF 49ers, 12-6

December 13, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

SANTA CLARA – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Los Angeles placekicker Joshua Karty booted a go-ahead 27-yard field goal with 9:28 remaining and Darious Williams came down with a crucial interception to lift the LA Rams to a 12-6 win over the San Francisco 49ers (thus 6ers) on Thursday night in Northern California.

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Heavy rain before halftime prevented both teams from finding an offensive rhythm, but Los Angeles (8-6) did just enough to earn its seventh win in nine games. The loss by the 49ers practically eliminated their chance of qualifying for the NFL postseason.

With the game tied at six-apiece, it looked as if the Rams were headed for the end zone after Puka Nacua got behind San Francisco’s secondary and hauled in a 51-yard pass from Matthew Stafford early in the fourth quarter.

The 49ers’ defense soon got a stop on third-and-2, though, forcing Los Angeles to bring out Karty for his 27-yarder.

San Francisco (6-8) quickly worked down to the Los Angeles 33 on its ensuing drive. Brock Purdy proceeded to throw a deep ball near the near-side pylon that Williams picked off, and Karty later made good on a 29-yard field goal with 18 seconds to go.

Although a horse-collar tackle on the following kickoff set the Niners up at the 50-yard line, they couldn’t generate a miracle in the final seconds.

Stafford completed 16 of 27 passes for 160 yards, with Nacua (seven catches, 97 yards) serving as his favorite target. Kyren Williams was a workhorse on the ground, going for 108 yards on 29 carries.

Star receiver Cooper Kupp didn’t have a single reception for the Rams.

Purdy finished 14 of 31 for 142 yards and the interception. Isaac Guerendo had 16 carries for 57 yards as San Francisco got outgained 302-191 in total yards.

Jake Moody and Karty exchanged second-half field goals within a span of just under 10 minutes to forge the 6-6 tie.

Amid the rain, San Francisco punted on six of its seven first-half drives.

The 49ers’ only successful drive before the break ended with Moody’s 53-yard field goal with 10:01 left in the first quarter. A 33-yard completion to George Kittle over the middle helped set up the kick.

After punting on its five first drives of the game, Los Angeles finally tied the contest with 65 seconds remaining in the first half on a 48-yard field goal from Karty.

The Rams climbed within a half-game of the first-place Seattle Seahawks (8-5) in the NFC West. The defending conference champion 49ers are last in the division, a half-game behind the Arizona Cardinals (6-7).

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: Los Angeles Rams, NFL, NFL Thursday Night Football, San Francisco 49ers

Baseball Winter Meetings Update

December 13, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

DALLAS – Super agent Scott Boras negotiated another record-breaking contract as one of his star clients, Juan Soto, reached an agreement with the New York Mets on a 15-year, $765 million deal.

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Boras declined to comment Wednesday on the historic deal involving Soto, who is undergoing his physical before it becomes official. However, Boras did talk about the Mets in general, commending their aggressive pursuit of building a championship-caliber organization after their run to the National League Championship Series last season.

“I think it’s pretty evident that the Mets have decided that they’re going to pursue winning and winning for a long time,” Boras said. “They’ve made it very clear to us that they’re not limited to signing one great player but multiple great players. They’re going to be, I think, a very steady and heavy commitment to acquiring the best talent.”

That was among the many notable comments made by Boras as he held court with reporters on Day 3 of the winter meetings at the Hilton Anatole.

Beyond Soto, Boras’ list of free agents this offseason includes infielders Pete Alonso and Alex Bregman, right-hander Corbin Burnes and left-hander Sean Manaea.

“A lot of market locomotion regarding Pete,” Boras said. “The Polar Bear Express is rolling.”

Boras added that Alonso is open to listening to a lot of teams.

“Certainly his experiences with the Mets were extraordinary, both for them and him,” Boras said.

Boras also shared his thoughts on his other clients.

“We’ve had numerous meetings with teams and owners. We all know what comes after AB, that is the ‘C’ in champions. In Bregman’s case, that is ‘C’ squared,” Boras said. “All of these teams realize what a leader he is, what a champion he is and plus his skill level to boot. So, he’s had a remarkable career to date and is very much in demand.”

On Burnes: “For pitching, for Corbin Burnes, it’s kind of like Elvis. He’s got that ‘Burnes-ing Love’ for a No. 1 starter. You are really feeling it today, and very early this morning for me, I might add.”

On Manaea: “There is a new Sean rising. It’s something that teams have recognized. The demand is really something that I think is going to happen soon.”

Hamilton to Baseball Hall

Cleveland Guardians longtime radio announcer Tom Hamilton was selected as the 2025 recipient of the Ford C. Frick Award, presented annually for excellence in broadcasting by the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.

Hamilton started calling games for the Guardians in 1990.

–Drew Davison, Field Level Media

Filed Under: MLB Tagged With: MLB, New York Mets

Belichick Can Be Finer in Carolina

December 12, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

CHAPEL HILL – (Staff and Wire Service Report). It probably could’ve been Chestnut Hill last summer but instead, it’s Chapel Hill today as Bill Belichick rejoined the coaching ranks at the collegiate level, landing a five-year contract to take over as the head coach at North Carolina.

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The deal must be ratified by the university’s Board of Trustees and Board of Governors. A special session will be held Thursday, according to multiple media outlets. Undoubtedly, the word money will come up.

Belichick’s five-year pact calls for the six-time Super Bowl-winning head coach to earn a total of $50 million, The Athletic reported.

Belichick’s father, Steve Belichick, was an assistant coach at the University of North Carolina from 1953-55. Bill Belichick takes over a Tar Heels program that has not won a conference title since 1980.

Belichick said in a statement released by North Carolina, “I am excited for the opportunity at UNC-Chapel Hill. I grew up around college football with my Dad and treasured those times. I have always wanted to coach in college and now I look forward to building the football program in Chapel Hill.”

North Carolina chancellor Lee H. Roberts added in a statement, “This is an exciting day for Carolina football and our University. Carolina is committed to excellence and to creating an opportunity to succeed in everything we do, from the classroom to the field of competition. I know after speaking with Coach Belichick that he shares that commitment. His legacy speaks for itself, and we look forward to working together on the next chapter of Carolina football.”

Belichick will replace Mack Brown, whom North Carolina fired at the end of the regular season. The Tar Heels (6-6) will play in the Fenway Bowl on Dec. 28 in Boston.

Tar Heels athletic director Bubba Cunningham said in a statement, “We know that college athletics is changing, and those changes require new and innovative thinking. Bill Belichick is a football legend, and hiring him to lead our program represents a new approach that will ensure Carolina football can evolve, compete and win — today and in the future.”

Belichick, 72, parted ways with the New England Patriots following the 2023 season after 24 years with the franchise. He was out of coaching this year despite interviewing for multiple NFL vacancies last offseason, and has been working multiple roles in the media.

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Belichick has 333 wins as an NFL coach and needs 14 more to break the all-time wins record for NFL coaches held by Don Shula. However, according to reports earlier this week, he was surprised not to hear from the NFL teams with existing vacancies.

It will be his first coaching position at the collegiate level. His son, Steve, is the defensive coordinator at the University of Washington and a prominent role for him at UNC was reportedly a part of his father’s pitch to the Tar Heels. Huskies head coach Jedd Fisch was a former assistant for Bill Belichick, who spent significant time around the Washington program over the past year.

During an interview with “The Pat McAfee Show” on Monday, Belichick outlined what he believed he could bring to a program during the NIL era that has contributed to other coaches such as Nick Saban leaving college football.

“The college program would be a pipeline to the NFL for the players that had the ability to play in the NFL,” he said. “It would be a professional program, training, nutrition, scheme, coaching, techniques that would transfer to the NFL. It would be an NFL program at a college level and an education that would get the players ready for their career after football, whether that was (at) the end of their college career or at the end of their pro career.

“But it would be geared toward developing the player, time management, discipline, structure and all that, that would be life skills, regardless of whether they’re in the NFL or somewhere in the business.”

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NCAA, NCAA Football, Patriots Tagged With: Bill Belichick, New England Patriots, NFL, North Carolina, UNC

Crochet All Sewn-Up by Sox

December 11, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

DALLAS – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – The Boston Red Sox acquired All-Star left-hander Garrett Crochet from the Chicago White Sox in exchange for four highly touted minor league prospects, multiple media outlets reported Wednesday.

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The Red Sox are sending catcher Kyle Teel, outfielder Braden Montgomery, infielder Chase Meidroth and right-hander Wikelman Gonzalez to Chicago, according to the reports.

Teel is Boston’s No. 4 prospect and No. 25 in all of Major League Baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. Montgomery is the No. 5 prospect in the Red Sox organization and No. 54 overall. Meidroth and Gonzalez are both top 15 prospects in Boston’s system, according to MLB Pipeline.

Crochet, 25, is coming off an All-Star season, his first as a starter, in which he went 6-12 with a 3.58 ERA in 146 innings over 32 starts for the woeful White Sox. Overall, he is 9-19 with a 3.29 ERA in 104 career appearances (32 starts).

Crochet played last season on a one-year deal worth $800,000 and he is under team control for two more years. He signed a one-year deal with the Red Sox worth an estimated $2.9 million, according to Spotrac. He’ll become an unrestricted free agent in 2027 unless he signs a long-term deal with the club before then.

Teel, 22, was selected No. 14 overall by the Red Sox in the 2023 draft. He hit .288 with 13 home runs, 23 doubles and 78 RBIs between Double-A Portland and Triple-A Worcester in 2024.

Montgomery, 21, was taken No. 12 overall in this year’s draft. He hit .322 with 27 home runs and 85 RBIs with an OPS of 1.187 in his final season at Texas A&M in 2024.

Meidroth, 23, was a fourth-round pick of Boston’s in 2022. He hit .293 with seven HRs and 57 RBIs at Worcester this past season.

Gonzalez, 22, went 4-3 with a 4.73 ERA in 24 appearances (19 starts) at Portland.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, Garrett Crochet

NFL to Play in Berlin

December 11, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

BERLIN – (Staff Report from Official News Release) – The National Football League will play its first-ever regular-season game in Berlin, Germany in 2025 as the league continues to prioritize global growth for American football. The NFL did not announce the teams that will be playing in the game.

The 2025 NFL Berlin game will be played at the Olympic Stadium as part of a multiyear commitment to playing games in the world famous German city..

The NFL has held regular-season games in Munich and Frankfurt dating back to 2022, and the game in Berlin will mark the fifth NFL regular-season game in Germany and the first in the German capital.

“Germany has a rich tradition of American football, and the NFL has a deep history with the city of Berlin,” said NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. “We first held a preseason game at the Olympic Stadium 34 years ago, before it was home to NFL Europe’s Berlin Thunder in the early 2000s. Now, with almost 20 million NFL fans in Germany, we’ll make a historic return to the city playing a regular-season game for the first time as we open the next chapter in our relationship with Berlin.”

“This long-term partnership with the NFL will continue to boost Berlin as a global sports metropolis, as well as excite fans at the Olympic Stadium,” said Senator for the Interior and Sports, State of Berlin, Iris Spranger. “The 2025 NFL Berlin game means worldwide visibility, numerous international guests, increased tourism and high economic value across the city. We’re looking forward to an incredible game and an ongoing successful partnership with the league, as we continue to strengthen the presence of American football throughout the state.”

Filed Under: NFL, Sports Business Tagged With: NFL, NFL Germany, NFL International

Vince Carter/T-Mac Team-Up Again

December 11, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

BUFFALO – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Basketball Hall of Famers Vince Carter and Tracy McGrady are two of the 10 new partners added to the Buffalo Bills’ ownership group, the team announced during the NFL league meetings in Dallas on Wednesday.

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“It’s a huge honor to join this historic Bills organization,” Carter said in a statement. “I’m truly thankful the Pegula family has given me the opportunity to help the franchise continue to grow and thrive in player growth, community service and of course winning the Lombardi trophy. See you soon Bills Mafia!!!!”

Former United States men’s national team member Jozy Altidore and private investment firm Arctos were also added to the ownership group.

This marks the first time in the franchise’s history that it has added minority owners.

“This has been an incredible journey to add such an impressive and diverse group of limited partners along with a reputable private equity partner in Arctos that has an extensive track record of success with professional sports franchises,” Bills owner Terry Pegula said in a statement.

“They all have all achieved high levels of success in their respective industries and we’re grateful for their interest in our team, our sport, and the future of the Buffalo Bills. Most of them have a personal attachment with our team, Western New York or Southern Ontario which was a very important factor to me.”

The remaining minority owners are Rob Palumbo, co-managing partner of Accel-KKR, a technology-focused private equity firm; Sue McCollum, CEO and owner of beverage distribution companies Eagle Brand Sales and Double Eagle Distributing; Theresia Gouw, co-founder and managing partner of the venture capital firm Acrew Capital; Rob Ward, co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm Meritech Capital; Mike Joo, COO of Global Corporate & Investment Banking and head of North America Corporate & Investment Banking at Bank of America; Tom Burger, co-founder and managing partner of the investment firm Gridiron Capital.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL, Sports Business Tagged With: Buffalo Bills, NFL, Vince Carter

Bruins Top Flyers in 2OT

December 8, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Boston’s Pavel Zacha scored his second overtime game-winning goal in three games to propel the Boston Bruins past the visiting Philadelphia Flyers 4-3 on Saturday afternoon. The game was the first of a day-night, hockey-basketball doubleheader at TD Garden.

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After Boston goaltender Jeremy Swayman (23 saves) stopped a Joel Farabee breakaway to extend the extra session, David Pastrnak curled around the net and fed Zacha for the back-door finish to decide the game at the 2:49 mark.

Trent Frederic posted his second multi-goal effort of the season before Brad Marchand’s tying goal for Boston, which has won four straight.

Matvei Michkov gave Philadelphia a 2-0 lead in the first period, becoming the first NHL rookie to reach the double-digit goal plateau this season.

Cam York also scored, Travis Sanheim had two assists and Aleksei Kolosov made 27 stops for Philadelphia, which has lost back-to-back games (0-1-1) following a 4-0-1 run.

Marchand found the tying goal with 5:22 left in regulation, going five-hole on Kolosov after corralling a Justin Brazeau pass down the wall to even the score at 3-3.

The game reached overtime despite Boston earning three power plays in the third period — all after Frederic scored for a second time at the 5:18 mark, netting the deflection of a Charlie Coyle shot in the slot.

The Bruins had a 31-26 advantage in shots.

Michkov buried two of Philadelphia’s first six shots, opening the scoring with a power-play goal at 7:24 of the first. After Emil Andrae had his straight-on try blocked, Sean Couturier directed a loose puck to Michkov for a drive from the right circle.

The Flyers took a 2-0 lead when Sanheim fired a perfect cross-ice pass off the wall and right to Michkov, who charged down the wing and right to the top of the crease to bury the puck into an open side of Swayman’s net.

After Kolosov made a sliding pad save on Morgan Geekie, Boston continued to put pressure on during the power play and got within 2-1 on Frederic’s rebound tally at 5:26 of the middle frame. Mason Lohrei triggered the point shot that led to the goal.

York reestablished Philadelphia’s two-goal lead with 4:31 left in the second, taking Sanheim’s low-to-high feed and beating Swayman with a wrist shot from the top of the right dot.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Bruins, NHL Tagged With: Boston Bruins, NHL, NHL Bruins, Philadelphia Flyers

Morant Leads Grizzlies Over Cs

December 8, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Ja Morant had 32 points, nine rebounds and nine assists to help the visiting Memphis Grizzlies defeat the Celtics 127-121 Saturday night and earn their first win at the TD Garden since 2013.

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The victory ended Boston’s six-game winning streak against Memphis. The Grizzlies had lost 16 of their last 17 games against the Celtics, including the last 10 in Boston.

Boston led 103-99, but a 10-0 run handed Memphis a six-point lead with 7:19 to play. The Grizzlies maintained the lead after that.

Jaren Jackson Jr. added 27 points, nine rebounds and three steals for the Grizzlies, who went 15 of 33 on 3-point attempts. Jackson scored 14 points in the fourth quarter.

Jayson Tatum had 17 points, 13 rebounds and nine assists for the Celtics, who shot 18 of 60 from long range. Boston received 23 points from Jrue Holiday and 22 from both Payton Pritchard and Jaylen Brown.

Boston’s Sam Hauser left the game in the first half with right adductor tightness and did not return.

Marcus Smart, who spent his first nine NBA seasons with the Celtics before he was traded to Memphis in a three-team deal that brought Kristaps Porzingis to Boston, was 1 of 11 from the field and scored three points. He was given a standing ovation by the Boston crowd when he entered the game.

The loss ended Boston’s three-game winning streak and its seven-game home winning streak.

A 10-0 run gave Memphis an early 18-8 lead, and the Grizzlies led 31-27 going into the second quarter.

Memphis took a 12-point lead following a Morant basket with 29.8 seconds remaining in the first half and led 66-54 at halftime. The Celtics shot 36 percent from the field in the first two quarters and made only 9 of 31 from long range.

Pritchard’s 3-pointer capped a 13-3 run that sliced the Memphis lead to 88-86 with 1:37 left in the third quarter, but Boston trailed 94-89 entering the fourth.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, Celtics, NBA Tagged With: Boston Celtics, Ja Morant, Memphis Grizzlies

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | A Memorial Tribute to Coach Lou Carnesecca

December 8, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

While We’re Young (Ideas) | Paying Tribute to Coach

A wreath and flowers in memory of the great St. John’s Coach Lou Carnesecca (St.John’s Photo)

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

JAMAICA ESTATES – If you attended St. John’s University in New York anytime between 1958 and 1992, chances are you knew Coach Lou Carnesecca. With the exception of a three year stint (1970-1973) with the New York Nets of the American Basketball Association (ABA), Carnesecca roamed the Hillcrest Queens campus of St. John’s much to the delight of the athletics department, the basketball players, the student bosy, faculty and administration.

Simply put: Everyone Loved Louie.

He was so great, you’d have thought he’d last forever.

This columnist first set eyes on Carnesecca at a Niagara College at St. John’s game held on Thursday, February 13, 1969 – a school night I might note. St. John’s thumped Niagara 97-60 and sent All-American guard Calvin Murphy back to the Falls after placing quite a hurtin’ on the longtime rivals with games that date back to 1909. I can vividly remember Murphy conducting a “Globetrotters-like” warm-up stationed on the free throw line, tossing fancy passes to his teammates as they made lay-ups in entertaining fashio, all decked out in 1960-70s stylish warm-ups. It was quoite a sight and quite a show.

Then the game started and the show shifted to the sidelines, as Carnesecca marched up and down, legs kicking, arms tossing, hands gesturing on every field goal, free throw and every single call made by a referee.

Of course, Carnesecca lived by the adage of “Peacock Today, Feather-duster Tomorrow,” so the side show was not about the legend of Little Louie. It was Carnesecca’s very own way of coaching his players, living the game with his players, protecting his players, rooting his players on to victory. After all, what could a little body English hurt when the Italian language was accompanying every shot or challenging every single call.

At Louie’s side was assistant coach John Kresse, an able sidekick who tried-out for the St. John’s varsity but was cut. Carnesecca spotted the basketball genius of the then 21-year old and basketball history was made, both at St. John’s (1965-1970 and 1973-1979) and at the College of Charleston where Kresse became the fifth highest winning coach by percentage (.797) of any Division 1 NCAA college basketball coach, registering 560 wins and 143 losses during his 23 years as head coach.

Before Kresse left Louie’s side, Carnesecca was well on his way to a (526-200) regular season record of his own, establishing a yearly 20-win season back when college programs played 27 or 29 games maximum in a single basketball season. In doing so, St. John’s basketball became “New York’s Team,” outshining big time college programs and rivals at NYU, Fordham, Columbia, City College or Manhattan.

The key was a combination of Carnesecca’s roots at St. Ann’s Academy where he won two Catholic High School titles and his following the legendary Joe Lapchick who decided to leave St. John’s in 1947 to coach the New York Knickerbockers of the (Basketball Association of America (BAA), the predecessor or the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Through his work at St. Ann’s (now Archbishop Molloy) and his network of Catholic High school coaches, Carnesecca claimed all he needed were some subway tokens to recruit the best basketball players in the world. Carnesecca, Kresse and third assistant Ron Rutledge combed the city schools, even coaxing many of the public school’s best to stay home in NYC rather than play in front of strangers in Carolina (North and South), Florida or California.

After all, at that time, only St. John’s could offer a regular schedule of games at the MECCA of basketball, Madison Square Garden – the World’s Most Famous Arena – which Louie tagged as, “MACY*s window.”

One of the players, Frank Alagia, from St. Agnes Cathedral High School on Long Island, took Carnesecca up on his offer to play in front of friends and family. Alagia reflected back on his coach and mentor from some 50 years ago saying, “The thing that he really taught us, most of all, was he led by his example and he was a very humble man. He was a very giving man and he gave everybody the same time, whether you were from a big network, a small network, a big newspaper, a small newspaper. He was very good with everybody, and that was a great lesson to me.

“He’s such a part of the fabric of New York,” added Alagia. “Don’t forget, he followed a legend in Joe Lapchick and became bigger than that legend. When you think about it in sports, how many times can you remember when a legend follows a legend like that? So, I mean, that kind of speaks for itself.”

The undaunted following of a legend, the sideline exhuberance, and the subway token approach put Carnesecca in gyms all over Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Bronx, and Long Island with an occasional trip to Staten Island, Jersey or Connecticut. It also allowed Carnesecca to be reacquainted with players he met and coached at his legendary summer camps, as he maintained a stable of local high school coaches who were employed each and every summer to help run the camps.

Let St. John’s and Golden State Warriors Hall of Famer Chris Mullin explain: “Obviously, Coach spent his whole life here, right? That alone, just the longevity alone, but it was more his infectious personality,” noted Mullin. “His warmth, his care, his love, his protection, I always felt like he protected us.

“He gave us praise for wins and he took the losses. He burdened the losses for us, and he gave us the wins, let us celebrate the wins. With that, he just treated everyone with respect.

“I’ve known him for over 50 years. I met him when I was 11 years old. Just looking back, he was always gracious, very humble. He won with class and lost with grace.”

St. John’s Billy Goodwin Celebrates the 1983 BIG EAST title

Mullin, the ‘92 Dream Team shooter extraordinaire and possibly New York City’s best collegiate player of all-time (if you think of Power Memorial’s Lew Alcindor/Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as a Los Angeles collegian) met Carnesecca in 1974 as an 11 year old. By 1981, Mullin was shooting jumpers and owned a set of keys to Alumni Hall (now Carnesecca Arena). By 1985, Mullin and Carnesecca were headed for the Final Four in Lexington, Kentucky. By 2011, the duo stood center stage at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts as Mullin asked Carnesecca (Hall of Famer as of 1992) to be his honorary presenter to the all-time greatest players assembled.

After Coach Carnesecca’s funeral service celebration this week at St. Thomas More on campus, former Seton Hall and NBA coach P. J. Carlesemo summed it up quite nicely, quoting words mentioned during the Mass of Christian Burial, “When you think back to the BIG EAST, I think Father Shanley said it, but I mean, the BIG EAST would never have been the BIG EAST without Lou, and I can’t think of St. John’s without him.”


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: For this special column, how about a few other notes and quotes about Lou Carnesecca, all from those in attendance at the funeral Mass on Friday?

St. John’s center-forward Walter Berry, College Player of the Year in 1986: “We were here playing, and some of the things he instilled in me as a man, forget about basketball.

“It’s about Lou today. He did a lot for a lot of people and he was one of the greatest people I’ve known. You know, I don’t want to break down, but, this is a hard day for everybody. Coach was my guy, man. He helped me in ways that nobody else could.”

Alagia: “There’s just so many memories I have with him. Just playing for him, but later on, going to visit him and talking about old times because I can go back with Coach to the 60s and even 50s and talk about guys, and Coach loved that. He loved his days when he coached at St. Ann’s, like his gradual rise and how he came to St. John’s. There’s just so many memories that I have. It would be hard to pick one.”

St. John’s guard Mark Jackson on the first time he met Carnesecca: “I remember Coach sitting there, and his presence in the gym, almost like a spotlight was just on him. Any room or gym he walked into, you can tell there was something special about him, and from that moment on, I wanted to be a member of St. John’s basketball team.”

St. John’s phenom Felipe Lopez on getting calls from Coach Carnesecca long after he turned pro and long after his retirement from the NBA: “He would still call me sometimes. I was like, ‘Lou Carnesecca is calling me? That’s amazing’. That was the type of human being he was. Someone who really cared about his players, his family, his community, his college, and obviously he built such a great legacy in basketball.”

St. John’s guard turned highly competent broadcaster, Tarik Turner, on Carnesecca’s legend at the school even when Brian Mahoney took over as head coach: “I knew about just the legend, watching him coach on the sidelines and coach great players like Mark (Jackson) and Chris (Mullin) and Walter (Berry), but I knew I was going to get a chance to play for Brian Mahoney, his long term assistant, so I knew I had a connection to him, but I didn’t know what kind of man he was until I met him and sat down with him.”

St. John’s center Bill Wennington, a three-time NBA champion who grew up in Montreal, Canada but knew of the St. John’s coaching legend: “When you come to New York, playing at The Garden – The Mecca – Coach Carnesecca’s name is a part of the legacy. He got kids in off the street from the city to come and play here, and molded them into men and taught us life lessons, made us better basketball players, but made us better people and better men in our lives.”


TIDBITS: St. John’s tribute to Coach Carnesecca will continue into 2025. On January 4, one day prior to what would’ve been his 100th birthday, St. John’s will host Lou Carnesecca Day for the Johnnies’ matchup vs. Butler. Fans in attendance will receive a replica of the Lou Carnesecca statue, a fixture in the arena’s lobby. In addition, throughout the game, St. John’s will celebrate Coach Carnesecca with several video board features and messages. … This week’s edition of “The St. John’s Red Storm Podcast” will feature a never-heard-before sit down interview with Coach Carnesecca and fellow Hall of Famer and St. John’s legend Jack Kaiser. To listen to “The St. John’s Red Storm Podcast,” To listen, visit HERE.


THIS JEST IN: Things are looking up for the Arizona Bowl. They went from being the Barstool Sports Arizona Bowl in 2023 to the Snoop Dog Arizona Bowl for 2024. Of course, dating back to 2020, we had the Offerpad Arizona Bowl, a sponsorship from the California-based home sales joint.


YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: The BIG TEN fined both Michigan and The Ohio State University a cool $100,000 for their parts in the wild post game melee that took place in Columbus, Ohio last week. … The on-field fight took place when Ohio State defensive linebacker Jack Sawyer took exception to Michigan’s edge rusher Derrick Moore deciding to plant a blue Michigan flag on the midfield Buckeye logo.

The melee broke out from there, with reports of Michigan Wolverine players being maced by attending police officers.

Dueling statements accompanied the fines.

The BIG TEN tried to close ranks and put the issue to bed saying, it “considers this matter concluded and will have no further comment.” But, the conference said the teams violated the league’s sportsmanship policy, noting: “Not only did the actions of both teams violate fundamental elements of sportsmanship such as respect and civility, the nature of the incident also jeopardized the safety of participants and bystanders.”

Ohio State countered: “What happened post-game (Saturday) was unfortunate,” the statement read. “Good sportsmanship is always important in everything we do at Ohio State. Moving forward, we will continue to examine and address our post-game protocols to ensure our student-athletes, coaches, visiting teams and staff safely exit the field.”

The fisticuffs came immediately after time ran out and players met-up at midfield after Michigan’s 13-10 win at Columbus.

To the BIG TEN’s proclamation, considering the matter over, WWYI notes the all-American line from the motion picture, Animal House, “What? Over? Did you say over? Nothing is over until we decide it is.”

In other words, “was it over when the Astros were banging on Gatorade coolers? Was it over when Tom Brady said the footballs were properly inflated? Was it over when Gil Hodges looked at the the baseball with J.C. Martin’s shoe polish?

Surely, if that melee happened after an NBA game on Thanksgiving Weekend, they’d still be showing the fight’s lowlights and seeking a Federal investigation on the pepper spraying of athletes.

Filed Under: NCAA, Opinion, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: Big East Basketball, Coach Lou Carnesecca, St. John's, TL's Sunday Sports Notes

Red Sox Lose O’Neill

December 8, 2024 by Digital Sports Desk

BALTIMORE – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Former Boston Red Sox outfielder Tyler O’Neill has agreed to a three-year, $49.5 million deal with the Baltimore Orioles, multiple media outlets reported Saturday.

Embed from Getty Images

The deal includes an opt-out clause after the first year, per the reports.

O’Neill heads to Baltimore after spending the 2024 campaign with the American League East rival Red Sox. In 2024, he hit .241 with 31 home runs and 61 RBIs in his lone season in Boston, a welcomed spark to an otherwise sluggish offense.

The Orioles, who went 91-71 this year, bring in O’Neill after electing to let Anthony Santander walk in free agency. Santander posted a .235 average while clubbing 44 homers and driving in 102 runs this season. He has yet to sign with another team.

In 590 games with the St. Louis Cardinals (2018-23) and Red Sox (2024), O’Neill, 29, has cracked 109 homers to go along with 278 RBIs. He is a career .246 hitter and has won two Gold Glove Awards.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, MLB

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