Friday, March 31, 2017

MLB predictions 2017: Our World Series picks, standings and award winners

Ahh yes, baseball season. It’s the perfect time to get outside, eat some sunflower seeds, fuss with your fantasy roster and, of course, make some predictions about what’s going to happen seven months from now.
As we do every year, the Yahoo Sports MLB crew has delivered its predictions for the season ahead. And we’re predicting it all: World Series winners, division winners, standings, MVPs, Cy Youngs, breakout players and we’re tossing in a few fun topics for those of you who love watching Bartolo Colon hit dingers and watching Tim Tebow’s batting average in the minors.
Our 2017 predictions are led by Yahoo’s MLB experts Tim Brown and Jeff Passan, plus your Big League Stew bloggers, Chris Cwik, Mike Oz, Liz Roscher and Mark Townsend. The regular season is long and full of twists and surprises so that makes predicting baseball even tougher. We’re still pretty confident in our picks, though. And if doing this every year has taught one thing, it’s that you, our kind and thankful readers, will remind us if we get something wrong.
 
 
 

Interstate collapse complicates Braves’ stadium debut

The collapse of a section of an interstate in Atlanta has heightened traffic concerns for the Braves’ first game at new SunTrust Park.
The Braves are encouraging fans to adjust their plans to attend Friday night’s exhibition against the New York Yankees. Only season-ticket holders are invited, but now the path to the stadium for those estimated 20,000 fans has become more challenging.
The stadium is located near the interchange of I-75 and I-285 in the northern Atlanta suburbs. The section of interstate collapsed Thursday because of a fire on I-85. Traffic will be directed from that major road to other interstates, including those flanking the stadium.
The stadium seats 41,000. But even with a smaller crowd, the Braves already were expecting traffic congestion Friday, with fans traveling to the park for the first time and finding their way to parking lots. With both sides of I-85 closed as repairs began, traffic worries are now even greater in a city well accustomed to such problems.
The Braves urged fans to be aware of changes before leaving for the game.
“Traffic patterns in Atlanta will be adjusted for everyone, so please listen to local authorities as they direct you around the metro area,” the team said in a statement. “Also, we encourage all fans to purchase their parking before they leave today.”
The Braves’ first regular-season home game is April 14 against the San Diego Padres. They open the regular season Monday at the New York Mets.

Women's Final Four preview: The case for each team

Geno Auriemma spent Thursday morning re-watching his team’s 98-38 rout of Mississippi State from last year’s regional final round. He then pledged to tell his current players that they had nothing to do with that result.
“There's nobody on this team right now that had anything other than 'I was at that game' to do with that score,” Auriemma said. “If you watch that game, Stewy [Breanna Stewart], looked like an NBA player playing against high school kids. Moriah [Jefferson] was so much better than anybody on the floor. And [Morgan] Tuck just dominated long stretches of the game. So the score was like 30-4 at the end of the first quarter. I think [Katie] Lou [Samuelson] had one bucket. I don't think Kia [Nurse] had any. The other guys didn't even play. If they think they had anything to do with that win, they're going to be reminded today, no, they didn't. And this is not the same Mississippi State team we played.”
Auriemma’s squad remains the heavy favorite to win its fifth consecutive final - two wins will increase the consecutive wins streak to 113 - but this year’s group isn’t the mortal lock of previous years when the Final Four was essentially a UConn Invitational. Below, a scouting report for Friday’s Final Four games:
 
No. 2 Mississippi State vs. No. 1 Connecticut (9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2)
 
The Case For Mississippi State: Of all the non-UConn teams, Mississippi State has looked the strongest during the NCAA Tournament. Known historically for being a defensive-first team, the Bulldogs have scored in the 90s twice (against Baylor and DePaul) and put up 75 against Washington. One place Mississippi State has an advantage over UConn is size in the post and post depth. Sophomore center Teaira McCowan, who had a career-high 26 points against Washington, is bigger than any UConn player at 6-7. If she gets doubled in the post and makes good decisions to get the ball to open shooters such as junior combo guard Victoria Vivians and junior point guard Morgan William (41 against Baylor), Mississippi State will at least have an avenue for open shots. With McCowan and 6-5 senior center Chinwe Okorie, one of Mississippi State’s goals will be to get UConn’s frontcourt players in foul trouble. Mississippi State is ninth in the country in turnover margin (6.59 per game), so UConn’s guards (senior Saniya Chong, Nurse, a 6-0 junior, and freshman Crystal Dangerfield) are going to be key in controlling tempo.
“If I am Mississippi State I really want to pressure the basketball because I want to make players like Chong and Nurse speed things up,” said ESPN analyst Kara Lawson. “I would extend some [defense] in the full court but I would do that judiciously because I don’t want to give them too many open threes. I’d also try to get the ball inside because they have size and UConn does not. I’d be on my post kids to work very hard. I want to make the game as physical as possible because that bodes well for me with my depth.” If you believe in motivation, Schaefer called last year’s 60-point loss “a humbling experience.” You’d have to think his players will be motivated.
 
The Case For UConn: Here is something scary: All-America sophomore guard/forward Katie Lou Samuelson has not shot well during the tournament (just 6 of 25 from three-point range) and UConn still hasn’t missed a beat. UConn has four players-Samuelson, sophomore forward Napheesa Collier, Nurse and junior wing Gabby Williams -who are all capable of taking over games in a stretch. Collier (20.6 points, 9.1 rebounds and a 68.9 field goal percentage, second-best in the nation) is a particular tough matchup given her mid-range game; Williams is arguably the nation’s best two-way player. UConn has averaged 96.5 points per game during the tournament and that’s how games are won at this point of the season: You have to convert your offensive possessions in big moments.
“I don't care how good your defense is, generally speaking, when you get to this point in the season, you're not going to win this thing with your defense,” said Auriemma. “I mean, you have to play good defense, don't get me wrong. But if you can't score, and score when you have to on demand in this tournament, it's really, really hard to win. Really hard to win.” What should worry Mississippi State is this: UConn has not played exceptionally well on offense and they are still shooting 58.7 percent from the field in four Tournament games.
Who Wins: UConn
Not only does UConn have five spots on the floor where they can score, they match-up well with Mississippi State on defense. They also have better guards than Baylor to stop William, who makes Mississippi State go. It’s been a great year for Mississippi State but look for the ride to end here. I don’t think the game will be close.

 
No. 2 Stanford vs. No. 1 South Carolina (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2)
 
The Case For Stanford: We’re used to Stanford being led by dominant All-America scorers (players such as Candice Wiggins, Jayne Appel, Chiney and Nnemkadi Ogwumike) but this team is truly a collective. They play unselfish basketball and have balanced scoring between senior forward Erica McCall (14.4 points), junior center Brittany McPhee (13.4 points), and senior wing Karlie Samuelson (12.8 points). Six different players have led Stanford in scoring in a game this season. How have things changed this year for head coach Tara VanDerveer? “I need more antacid,” she said on Thursday. “It's very challenging. A lot of it is game to game. This has been a great year for our team, and great growth for our team and growth for me to really figure out this puzzle. We have to figure out during the game, and that might be why sometimes it takes us a while to get going. There was a comfort, kind of a sense of comfort when Chiney was going to come to the game and give you 25 points, 15 rebounds. There was a security in that. But at the same time there's a real excitement with this team just to say, “Hey, we're going to have to make game time adjustments.” Their confidence and their resilience has been really fun.”
One thing about this team: They will be a tough out. The Cardinal came from 16 down in the second half against Notre Dame and Stanford has been down by at least seven points and come back to win six times this season, including five of its last six games. You always need a player to outperform her regular season stats in the tournament and that’s been McPhee: She’s averaging 19.0 points, 5.8 rebounds, 3.8 assists, 1.5 steals, and 1.5 blocks in the NCAA Tournament. Collier is the only player with similar numbers across the board.
The Case For South Carolina: Give coach Dawn Staley a ton of credit. During the SEC Tournament, the Gamecocks lost their second best player-senior center Alana Coates-so Staley was forced to play a smaller lineup to create driving lanes, with junior All-America forward and Player of the Year candidate A’Ja Wilson (19.7 points, 6.9 rebounds and 3.6 bocks since the start of the SEC Tournament) as the scoring rock on the low block.
“She’s [Wilson] very athletic, a skilled player, can hit the outside shot,” said VanDerveer. “She scores low, runs the floor well and she plays with some really good guards that get her the ball. She's the proverbial load. You have to play really hard to play against her. I know our team will battle her, but it's not going to be easy.”
Since Coates’ injury, sophomore guard Kaela Davis (daughter of former NBA player Antonio Davis) has emerged as a game-changing player. She recorded her third-straight 20-point game in the NCAA Tournament with a game-high 23 in the regional final win over Florida State. Davis has averaged 18.0 points on 51.7 percent shooting since the SEC Tournament. “I think it's just been attacking the paint, being aggressive, not just settling for jump shots,” Davis said. “Just kind of looking past that first defender, and trying to get points in the paint.” Fellow guards Tyasha Harris (a career-best 16 points against FSU) and Allisha Gray (19 points against Quinnipiac) have also been terrific. South Carolina has become a tougher team to guard in the tournament because they’ve been forced to spread the ball around and attack from the driving lanes as opposed to dumping it into Coates and Wilson. Harris is a freshman but she hasn’t played like a first-year point guard - her assist-to-turnover ratio is 2.1
 
Who Wins: South Carolina
This is truly a toss-up game - the oddsmakers favor South Carolina by -2 - and I’d expect it to come down to the final five minutes. Wilson is the most dominant player on the floor and if she stays out of foul trouble, which she did not do against Florida State, South Carolina has a player they can feed in the stretch for post baskets or free throws off a foul. Staley is 0-5 lifetime against VanDerveer but I think that streak ends here. Look for the Gamecocks to win this late.

Dolphins just signed a free agent who's suspended for 8 games

Former Los Angeles Rams safety T.J. McDonald is joining the Miami Dolphins on a one-year contract, the team announced Friday. However, the veteran safety must first serve an eight-game suspension due to a violation of the NFL’s substance abuse policy. McDonald was arrested in May of last year for DUI and pleaded down in January to a reckless driving charge that involved drugs or alcohol.
A four-year starter for the Rams, McDonald adapted to the NFL quickly, totaling 215 tackles, 18 pass breakups, five sacks, four interceptions, and several game-changing hits over his first four seasons.
He thanked the Rams organization on Twitter, and touched on his past:
McDonald won’t immediately help Miami’s defense due to his eight-game suspension. But he provides experience at the strong safety position and depth. He will be available later in the season if Miami needs him.
McDonald was part of a Rams defense that had the 16th-ranked run defense last season, and he could help improve Miami’s 30th-ranked run defense from a year ago. But, the Dolphins will have to wait until later in the season to find out if he can.

Patrik Elias officially hangs up his skates

Unrestricted free agent Patrik Elias was hoping to play hockey this season, but chronic issues with his knee forced him to the sidelines.
On Friday morning, the 40-year-old officially announced that he was going to retire from pro hockey.
He ends his career having scored 408 goals and 617 assists in 1240 games (all with New Jersey). Elias won two Stanley Cups in 2000 and 2003 (he added 45 goals and 125 points in 162 career playoff games), he was selected as an NHL All-Star four times and he won a bronze medal with the Czech Republic at the 2006 Olympics.
Elias was certainly willing to continue playing. In December, he was still trying to figure out if he was going to sign a new deal with the Devils so that he could suit up for a few more games, but it sounds like the knee is what held him back.
“Time flies,” Elias said, per the Devils’ website. “Some great years, successful years, some rough years, but it all brought us here.
“If I didn’t have any health issues, if the knee didn’t bother me as much, I’m pretty sure I would be still playing because I love the game, I love being out there on the ice, I love the work, I love the grind.”
The lifelong Devil scored at least 20 goals 10 times in his career. He also put together four seasons of 30-goals or more, and in 2000-01, he found the back of the net a career-high 40 times.
“I think it’s going to sink in with a little bit more time. You know, there’s been times it almost happened that I didn’t play for this organization,” Elias said about spending his entire 19-year career with one team.
“I’m so proud and so humble to be able to play for one team, one organization. As you said, it doesn’t happen that often. A lot of things have to come into play and I was lucky enough to have their support.”
CapFriendly
According to what we have on file, forward Patrik Elias retires after 19 seasons with career earnings totaling roughly $75,250,000.
The Devils announced that Elias will take part in the pre-game warmup on Apr. 8 against the Islanders as part of a #Pattyslastlap promotion.

Chicago Bulls' memorial for former GM hit an odd snag when they wore their sleeved jerseys

When former general manager Jerry Krause died earlier this month, the Chicago Bulls announced that they would add a memorial patch to their jerseys.
Like many NBA memorials, the patch is in the form of a band across one of the shoulder straps, with Krause's last name written on it.
Here is a closer view:
Tweet Embed:
https://twitter.com/mims/statuses/844991086279974913
The Chicago Bulls put a memorial patch for their former GM Jerry Krause. #RIP pic.twitter.com/DuGyIEieP0
The memorial hit a bit of a snag on Thursday night when the Bulls wore their alternate jersey against the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Since the alternate jerseys have sleeves, there are no shoulder straps. That leaves the "band" looking strangely out of place as it just floats on the front of the jersey. It now looks more like an oddly shaped patch instead of a band.
The irony of this is that black memorial bands are typically worn on sleeves and NBA teams put them on the shoulder straps because they never had sleeves in the past.
Black arm bands in general have become less common in other sports as they have been replaced in recent years by more intricate patches. But here is an example of a black arm band being worn by the New York Yankees in 2007 in honor of Cory Lidle who died in a plane crash.
Still, bands persist in the NBA, something that is now complicated by the addition of sleeved jerseys.
The Golden State Warriors are wearing a memorial band this season, albeit in team colors instead of black, in honor of former player Nate Thurmond.
Tweet Embed:
https://twitter.com/mims/statuses/785919395797217280
Two patches for the Warriors this year: 70th-season logo and memorial "42" band for Nate Thurmond. pic.twitter.com/Df1XNIohOt
So how do the Warriors handle the band when they wear their alternate jerseys? Interestingly, they just go without the memorial all together on the sleeved alternate (middle) while still using it on other alternates, such as the Christmas Day jersey (right) [Note: see below].
Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images; Jamie Squire/Getty Images; Jason Miller/Getty Images
As a reader quickly pointed out, the Warriors do add a small patch in honor of Thurmond to the bottom of the sleeve on the black alternate. That can be seen here.
To further complicate matters next season, the NBA will allow teams to add an advertising patch to the front of their jerseys. This will reduce the amount of available real estate on the front for memorial patches even further.
This suggests that even more teams will be forced to use memorial "bands." But at the same time, it doesn't seem like the sleeved jerseys are going anywhere. It will be interesting to see how teams handle the transition from traditional to sleeved jerseys, in terms of memorials, moving forward.

The latest reported reason teams aren't signing Colin Kaepernick: His vegan diet

We’ve reached a tipping point on the Colin Kaepernick saga. It has officially entered a phase of absolute ridiculousness.
Whether you believe Kaepernick is unsigned because of his national-anthem protest or simply because he’s not accurate enough from the pocket, I bet you didn’t see this coming: Matt Maiocco, who covers the San Francisco 49ers for NBC Sports Bay Area, said teams haven’t signed Kaepernick because they are worried about the quarterback’s … vegan diet.
To clarify, Maiocco is a fine and thorough reporter. I’m not questioning the report. I’m questioning if NFL teams have collectively lost their minds. And Maiocco seemed to recognize the silliness of it; he was just passing along information.
Let’s point out that New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, who is probably the greatest quarterback ever, has an intense diet that has been described as vegan for “most of the year,” with some lean meats in the winter.
Kaepernick’s weight was down last season, and that was an issue in him not being fully ready at the start of the season, but he also had multiple offseason surgeries. That played a big part. And he’s reportedly back to his full weight this offseason, so the vegan excuse seems even stranger.
What are we really talking about here? NFL teams clearly don’t want to be accused of colluding against Kaepernick, but does that mean we’re going to get a parade of dumb excuses why he’s unsigned. It’s very unusual for a quarterback of Kaepernick’s age and ability to be unsigned, and if you want to buy that it’s because he’s vegan, go ahead. Feel free to believe it when someone else reports in a week that Kaepernick has too many vowels in his name or whatever will be next for The Real Reason he’s scaring NFL teams off.
But this is the road we’re seemingly taking with the Kaepernick story now. His national anthem protest isn’t why he’s unsigned, it’s because teams are worried about him being a vegan. Sure, sounds plausible. Like if he showed up for a meeting with an NFL team eating a steak, they’d sign him on the spot.
Maybe Kaepernick will get signed before long (Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh thinks there’s no question he will be signed… and we’ll be revisiting those glowing Harbaugh quotes if Kaepernick is still unsigned as training camps start). In the meantime, we can count how many insane excuses teams come up with for not picking him up.

Did LeBron James throw shade at Lonzo Ball in pregame warmups?

Of the many feuds that LaVar Ball has found himself embroiled in — some all in good fun, some more serious — there is one that he cannot win. That one is his feud with LeBron James.
The beef began when LaVar, out of nowhere, unleashed one of his many hot takes: That LeBron’s kids will struggle to deal with the pressure of living up to their father. It was part of a broader take that superstar athlete dads don’t raise superstar athlete children. LeBron wasn’t happy that his name was brought into it.
“Keep my kids’ name out of your mouth, keep my family out of your mouth,” James said.
Thursday evening, LeBron added another chapter to the feud. Or at least he might have. You decide for yourself:
A crucial aspect of the potential shot at Lonzo’s shooting form is LeBron’s smile after the release
We have no way to tell why LeBron put up pregame shots like this, and if he’s asked about it, James will likely flash a cheeky smile and play it off as nothing to do with Lonzo Ball’s awkward shooting form. But is this shade?
C’mon. Yes. Of course it is. This is classic LeBron shade. James ranks top two in the NBA in pettiness. This is petty LeBron at his best.
LeBron is a terrible matchup for LaVar in the world of back-and-forth beefs. LeBron had his initial say. He will likely ignore, and remain unperturbed by, anything else LaVar says. But he’s petty enough to take veiled shots back at LaVar — and perhaps now at his sons. We’ll see if this draws any response from LaVar.

Randy Moss, 40-year-old professional soccer player? Well, yes, we fell for it too

Randy Gene Moss is one of the greatest wide receivers ever to play professional football. And we thought when we read a press release from the United Soccer League’s Charlotte Independence that Moss was signing a contract with them, that Moss was ready to take on a new sport shortly after he turned 40.
It turns out, he’s up to his old tricks. It was an April Fools’ Day gag. (On March 31, mind you, although we were wondering … )
Yes, a few things felt fishy about the whole deal, including the fact that Moss was signing with a pro soccer league (even one a level below MLS) just one day prior to their season opener against the Charleston Battery. But we admit that we took the bait, and even were secretly rooting for the USL and U.S. Soccer to sign off on Moss being able to wear his famous No. 84 jersey four years after retiring from the NFL.
How should we have really known? Well, technically, the press release included a hint that was hidden in the text, spelling A-P-R-I-L F-O-O-L-S with the first letter of each sentence in the press release. USA Today was the first to get to the bottom of the story.
Yep, we got Mossed, people. Maybe we just badly wanted it to be true. After all, we are talking about one of the finest athletes in the NFL over the past few generations, and he has taken an interest in soccer in the past.
We even wrote in the original post: “We assume this is not an April Fools’ Day joke. If it is, we absolutely love it. This would be peak Moss if so. The dude always keeps us guessing.”
Ain’t that the truth?
We’ve heard of far more ridiculous stunts by other fledgling professional leagues — hey, Tim Tebow is playing minor-league baseball just down the road from Charlotte! — and assumed it was an effort to sell a few tickets while allowing Moss his whim. Plus, his son, Thad, will play football for North Carolina State in the fall, so we made the geographic connection. This is all so sad because we also checked the Independence schedule and halfheartedly considered a fun road trip to see him in goal.
This is the worst April Fools’ Day — or March 31 — prank we’ve ever fallen victim to.

2007 NFL first-rounder is out of jail, ready to work out at Tennessee's pro day

NFL pro days are great settings for hopeful draft picks to work out in front of scouts’ and coaches’ eyes. But it’s rare you see a player who was drafted nearly 10 years ago at one of these things, much less one who just got out of jail.
Former New Orleans Saints and San Diego Chargers wide receiver Robert Meachem was a first-round pick in 2007, spending seven seasons in the league (six in New Orleans) and last playing in 2014. But on Friday, he’ll try to revive his career at age 32 while working out at Tennessee’s pro day on Friday alongside players 10 or more years younger.
Former New Orleans Saints wide receiver Robert Meachem is trying whatever he can to get NFL people to notice him. (AP)
In 103 career games, most of them with the Saints, he caught 178 passes for 2,914 yards (16.4-yard average) with 27 TDs. He’s perhaps best-known for ripping the ball away from a Washington Redskins safety (who had just intercepted Drew Brees) and running it back for a touchdown in the Saints’ Super Bowl season of 2009.
How has Meachem been preparing? It’s hard to know exactly considering he was jailed for 30 days — the day before Valentine’s Day this year, no less — for failing to pay child support and alimony and was scheduled to be released on March 15 unless he paid off his sizeable debt to her and their two children.
As of February 13, he had owed his ex-wife nearly $400,000 and was fighting her trying to get any of his future pension, also claiming in court that one of his financial advisors was taking his money without Meachem knowing.
Meachem played at Tennessee, starting in the fall of 2004. Vols running back Alvin Kamara, also working out for NFL scouts, was 9 years old at the time. It’s an interesting spot for Meachem to remind NFL people that he’s still interested in playing, and though you do occasionally see former players come back to their schools to work out (Jonas Gray — remember him? — worked out with DeShone Kizer at Notre Dame, for instance) it’s rare that someone so far removed from their college days shows up at one of these things.
Desperate times require desperate measures, apparently. Meachem appears to need the cash.

TODAY IN HISTORY - MARCH 31ST

1889 – The Eiffel Tower is officially opened.
1906 – The Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (later the National Collegiate Athletic Association) is established to set rules for college sports in the United States.
1913 – J. P. Morgan, American banker and financier (b. 1837) dies.
1918 – Daylight saving time goes into effect in the United States for the first time.
1929 – Liz Claiborne, Belgian-American fashion designer, founded Liz Claiborne Inc. (d. 2007) is born.
1930 – The Motion Picture Production Code is instituted, imposing strict guidelines on the treatment of sex, crime, religion and violence in film, in the U.S., for the next thirty-eight years.
1931 – TWA Flight 599 crashes near Bazaar, Kansas, killing eight, including University of Notre Dame head football coach Knute Rockne.
1933 – The Civilian Conservation Corps is established with the mission of relieving rampant unemployment in the United States.
1935 – Herb Alpert, American singer-songwriter, trumpet player, and producer is born.
1935 – Georges V. Matchabelli, Georgian-American businessman and diplomat, founded Prince Matchabelli perfume (b. 1885) dies.
1948 – Al Gore, American soldier and politician, 45th Vice President of the United States and Nobel Prize laureate is born.
1951 – Remington Rand delivers the first UNIVAC I computer to the United States Census Bureau.
1958 – In the Canadian federal election, the Progressive Conservatives, led by John Diefenbaker, win the largest percentage of seats in Canadian history, with 208 seats of 265.
1966 – The Soviet Union launches Luna 10 which later becomes the first space probe to enter orbit around the Moon.
1970 – Explorer 1 re-enters the Earth's atmosphere after 12 years in orbit.
1972 – Evan Williams, American businessman, co-founded Twitter and Pyra Labs is born.
1978 – Charles Herbert Best, American-Canadian physiologist and biochemist, co-discovered Insulin (b. 1899) dies.
1980 – The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad operates its final train after being ordered to liquidate its assets because of bankruptcy and debts owed to creditors.
1985 – The first WrestleMania, the biggest wrestling event from the WWE (then the WWF), takes place in Madison Square Garden in New York City.
1992 – The USS Missouri, the last active United States Navy battleship, is decommissioned in Long Beach, California.
1993 – Brandon Lee, American actor and martial artist (b. 1965) dies.
1998 – Netscape releases Mozilla source code under an open source license.

Thursday, March 30, 2017

LeBron James passes Shaquille O'Neal for 7th on all-time NBA scoring list

LeBron James is already established as one of the greatest players in NBA history, but his place in the record books is not yet close to confirmed. At just 32 years old, the Cleveland Cavaliers icon has the chance to pile up stats and near the top of the leaderboards in nearly every major statistical category. As he does so, he will pass many of the sport’s most prominent legends and reaffirm his place in history.
LeBron accomplished one of those feats on Thursday night against the Chicago Bulls at the United Center. With 4:28 remaining in the fourth. quarter, James went to the line for three free throws and made the first (and then missed the next two) to score his 28,597th career point and pass Shaquille O’Neal for seventh on the NBA’s all-time scoring list.
LeBron came into Thursday needing 23 points to tie Shaq and scored 19 in the first half to help the Cavs to a 50-41 lead at the break. He scored two points during a rough third quarter for Cleveland but managed to tie O’Neal on a drive past Michael Carter-Williams a few minutes into his fourth-quarter rotation.
Unfortunately for James and the Cavs, those historic points came in the midst of a second-half collapse. The Bulls out-scored them 58-43 in the second half to come away with a 99-93 win.
Given his relatively young age and continued elite level of play, LeBron should be able to reach at least the top five on the scoring list before his career is through. Dirk Nowitzki is next at 30,181 points (and counting), which should be within reach in the 2017-18 campaign even if Nowitzki returns to the Dallas Mavericks for another season. Wilt Chamberlain currently resides in fifth with 31,419 points, which would take LeBron roughly 108 more games to reach at his 2016-17 scoring average of 26.0 ppg.
However, this particular move up the list of all-time scorers has special meaning. While Shaq’s game doesn’t have a great deal in common with LeBron’s mix of basketball genius and incredible athleticism, the two do have a connection as the two most dominant forces on the court of the last 20 years. Both entered the league as unprecedented physical presences who forced referees to find new ways to officiate the game.
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Plus, there’s something fitting about LeBron passing Shaq on a 1-of-3 trip to the line. Maybe it was on purpose!

Plum and Auriemma are AP Player and Coach of Year

Kelsey Plum had a historic season for Washington while Geno Auriemma did one of his best coaching jobs at UConn.
Both were overwhelming choices as The Associated Press women's basketball Player and Coach of the Year in awards announced Thursday.
Plum broke the career NCAA scoring mark, topping Jackie Stiles' 16-year-old record in style with a 57-point effort on her senior night.
"If you had told me that all this stuff would have happened to me personally, I would have laughed at you," Plum said. "Not the sense that I didn't believe in myself or anything like that. But it's not something that you think about. I'm the all-time leading scorer in college basketball and it's something I never dreamed about."
Auriemma did laugh before the season at the notion his Huskies, who lost three All-Americans to graduation, would be undefeated this year. He thought there was no way that the team's 75-game winning streak would continue that much longer. Not with a schedule filled with top teams.
Yet UConn met every challenge and enter the Final Four without a loss, winners of 111 straight games.
"This year, our coaching staff, it was hard. It was really, really hard because the of the people that we had to replace, the schedule that we had early on, the lack of depth, what we thought we had going in and what we ended up with ultimately," Auriemma said. "There were just a lot of challenges going into this season. I'm probably prouder of what our coaching staff did this season than I am since anytime going back to Diana (Taurasi)'s junior year. That was probably the last time that I thought we really, really, really did about as good a job as you can possibly do, maybe more so. That was the last time I remember it being this hard."
Plum received 30 of the 33 votes from the national media panel that selects the weekly Top 25. A'ja Wilson of South Carolina, Gabby Williams and Katie Lou Samuelson of UConn each received a vote. The voting was done before the start of the NCAA Tournament.
Auriemma garnered 26 of the votes for coach of the year. Oregon State's Scott Rueck was second with three while Drake's Jennie Baranczyk received two. Duke's Joanne P. McCallie and Mississippi State's Vic Schaefer each received one vote.
It's the ninth time that Auriemma has been honored as the AP's coach of the year, including the last two years. His team was sitting in the audience of the press conference, ecstatically cheering as their coach received the award.
Plum became the first Washington player and first Pac-12 player ever to receive the award.
"She's meant so much to the university and to the Seattle area," said Washington coach Mike Neighbors. "When I got the job a few years back she could have left to goto Ohio State or transfered somewhere else, but she believed in me and what we could do here."
Neighbors also was in awe how everywhere his team went, young girls would watch and try to emulate the 5-foot-7 Plum.
"One of the greatest parts of her legacy is that there are a lot of kids running around the country who think they can be the next Kelsey Plum," he said. "You don't have to have a physical attribute that screams you're a basketball player, you just need a great work ethic and a hard drive to succeed."