Friday, February 8, 2008

5 in a row


- Huge spot start for Mike Smith in place of injured Marty Turco. Gets a shutout and helps Dallas build a 6 point lead in the division and win their 5th in a row. Some absolutely amazing saves last night. Although I still worry about goal scoring when it really matters, this team is getting healthy and looking strong, to quite strong.

Smith saves day in Dallas Stars' 1-0 win

01:53 AM CST on Friday, February 8, 2008
By RICHARD DURRETT / The Dallas Morning News
rdurrett@dallasnews.com

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Marty Turco's stiff neck meant the Stars needed backup goalie Mike Smith to stiffen up against the Wild on Thursday at Xcel Energy Center.

And the lanky 25-year-old delivered, playing one of the best games of his career, leading the Stars to an entertaining 1-0 win.

Smith hadn't played since Jan. 22 and was desperate to show he could get the job done against a tough opponent.

If not for a hard elbow to the head Tuesday against Vancouver, Turco probably would have played Thursday against Minnesota, the Northwest Division's top team.

But the Stars' starting goalie, 4-0 since the All-Star break, stayed in Dallas to rest. Smith filled in nicely, using his 6-3 frame to stop 25 shots for his second shutout of the season.

Smith's biggest save helped the Stars get the go-ahead goal a little more than three minutes into the final period. Smith stuck out his long right leg to block an uncontested shot at the side of the net by Marian Gaborik, a deft scorer who normally doesn't miss such opportunities.

"I don't do the splits very often," Smith said. "I'm not sure my groin will like that too much in the morning."

The puck bounded off Smith's pad, and a few quick passes later, Niklas Hagman made a nice move on Wild goalie Niklas Backstrom, slowing down just enough to get him out of position for a backhanded shot. It was Hagman's 20th goal, marking the first time in his career he's reached that plateau.

The goal silenced most of the 18,568 spectators, with Stars co-general manager Brett Hull the one exception. He jumped out of his seat, yelled and pumped his fist even before the red light came on. Then he watched Smith make the lead stand up the final three-quarters of the period.

"The main thing is I wanted to come in here and give the team a chance," Smith said. "I wanted to come in and stabilize the team like Marty's done the last four games. He's played well and stolen some wins for the team. That's what we've got to do right now."

Smith's great game was critical as the Stars missed numerous chances to take the lead in the first two periods. Backstrom was nearly as good as Smith, helping Minnesota build momentum while killing off penalties.

Dallas had a 5-on-3 advantage for 1:07 of the first period but couldn't do much with it. When Mattias Norstrom was hit in the face and bleeding from a high stick in the second period, the Stars got a four-minute power play. Dallas, 0-for-6 on the power play, kept the puck in the Wild zone, but Minnesota's penalty killers blocked shots and got out of the way so Backstrom could make a few saves.

"You're concerned that you're going to have a letdown, and that penalties are going to even out," Stars coach Dave Tippett said. "So you change your aggressiveness so that you don't have to start killing penalties. We weren't successful on the power play, but you have to find other ways to win."

And the Stars keep doing that right now. Dallas is 5-0 since the All-Star break and has won five consecutive road games. The Stars continue to pile on points in an effort to stay on top of the Pacific Division and in front of San Jose, which has five games in hand.




- We all may be wrong about this, but it's hard to find one person outside of the Phoenix locker room on board with this trade. It just made Dallas and San Antonio's job a lot easier. No Dirk/Ginobli/Josh Howard stopper for Phoenix anymore. And Phoenix still has no answer for Tim Duncan or any of the guards on both teams.



Suns may not rise with Shaq

10:11 PM CST on Thursday, February 7, 2008

The Mavericks have no need to run and hide. Stand back and applaud, maybe.

The Phoenix Suns just got Shaquille O'Neal. That doesn't mean the race to win the West is over. It's more open now to more teams than it was 48 hours ago.

The Suns didn't get better. Just bigger.

Losing Shawn Marion to Miami is a very large deal to the Phoenix Suns' way of doing business. There have been indications that his relationship with point guard Steve Nash wasn't the best. He was known to complain about having a secondary role.

But it still worked.

On the floor, Marion served the Suns' attack-attack-attack-some-more style very well. You can't assuredly say the same about the 35-year-old O'Neal.

He can rebound at the defensive end, hit Nash with the outlet and get the running game in motion. For that, he has real value.

But the Shaq that's coming back to the West isn't the player who won three titles with Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers. He's not even the player who, filling a supporting role to Dwyane Wade, helped the Miami Heat upset the Mavericks for an NBA title 20 months ago.

In his heyday, Shaq was an awesome and powerful machine, averaging 29 points and 13 rebounds a night and scaring the daylights out of any opponent who dared to come charging down the lane.

In his first year with the Heat, conditioning himself better than he had at the end of his Lakers run, O'Neal was still a 20-points, nine-rebounds-a-night guy.

This season, when he hasn't been injured, O'Neal has supplied the Heat with 14.2 points and 7.8 rebounds a night.

Those aren't Shaq numbers.

Those are Andrew Bogut numbers. And that's just not enough to stamp the Suns as favorites in the West, which is deeper in quality teams than ever.

What about missing Marion?

His athleticism really allowed the Suns to be what they had become. They and the Warriors have traded back and forth the scoring lead in the league, both averaging 109 to 110 points per game.

Marion's numbers have been off this year, and who knows how much that might have to do with his failed attempts to land a new contract in Phoenix, which was the impetus for this trade, anyway.

But even at 15.8 points, 9.9 rebounds and two steals a game, Marion has allowed the Suns to maintain the break all night. That won't be the case any longer.

If they don't score quickly, the Suns will back up and wait for O'Neal to take his spot down on the low post. They will look more Eastern Conference than they have since before Nash's arrival.

That might be a good thing for the Mavericks. That's not a good thing for the entertainment value of watching the Suns play.

Really, I think for Mavericks fans, the bigger concern than the big man who used to win titles for the Lakers is the big man who might help the Lakers now.

The arrival of Pau Gasol in Los Angeles is scarier than Shaq landing in Phoenix. When injured Andrew Bynum returns, a front court of Lamar Odom, Gasol and Bynum, along with the backcourt of Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher, gives the Lakers a real chance to reach the Finals for the first time since O'Neal left for Miami.

But the West is too crazy to call right now. Houston is 29-20 and Portland 28-20, and they're not even in the playoffs at the moment. Golden State is the No. 8 seed, but the Warriors, who had to overcome an 0-6 start with Stephen Jackson suspended, trailed No. 1 Phoenix by 4 ½ games entering play Thursday.

It will be interesting to see how Suns coach Mike D'Antoni adapts his strategy to fit O'Neal's presence in the lineup. With Shaq, the team will be more entertaining than ever off the court.

On the court, not so much. And not any better than what they were.





- Bo pulls a nice class out of the of dog shit he was handed. Very good save.



22. Nebraska
One ESPN 150 prospect
The Cornhuskers had a strong class in the spring of 2007 but imploded shortly after Bill Callahan's future looked bleak. New head coach Bo Pelini did a good job down the stretch of luring prospects back and signing linebacker Will Compton (Bonne Terre, Mo./North County) and defensive end Josh Williams (Denton, Texas). ESPN 150 offensive tackle Baker Steinkuhler (Lincoln, Neb./Southwest) stayed strong with his in-state commitment as did projected outside linebacker Sean Fisher (Omaha, Neb./Millard). Old Cornhuskers fans have to be pleased with a pledge from 210-pound power back Collins Okafor (Omaha, Neb./Westside) and Scouts Inc.'s No.1-rated fullback/H-back prospect Kyler Reed (Overland Park, Kan./Saint Thomas Aquinas).


NU Football: Pelini, Huskers ignore hype

BY RICH KAIPUST
WORLD-HERALD BUREAU

LINCOLN — Nebraska coach Bo Pelini sat down to unveil his first recruiting class Wednesday and discussed it exactly in that way.

As a class.

In his 28-minute session at Memorial Stadium, Pelini not once mentioned any of his 27 signees by name.

There were absolutely no references to "four stars." No gushing over anybody. Not one mention of some player helping right away or being a steal, sleeper or project.

"There's no sense in singling kids out," Pelini said matter-of-factly. "Everybody knows about them. You can read about them."

Pelini said now they're part of the Husker program. It's not about individual players. Once they signed letters of intent, it no longer was about Internet hype and announcements and putting on hats.

"They know that," he said. "They signed on for that."


For perspective, Pelini mentioned 26 people on the NU athletic department staff — by name — and thanked them for their hand in recruiting. Compliance, academic personnel, student assistants, video staff, etc. That didn't include later references to assistant coaches and Athletic Director Tom Osborne.

But not once did he say the names Baker Steinkuhler, Will Compton or Kody Spano. Steinkuhler was a "five star," ya know.

"I don't really want to get into anybody specifically," Pelini said. "I'm proud of every recruit that we have and what they become in the future."

Read into it whatever you want. Around the country, no doubt, at least a few head coaches were rattling off stats and pumping up players to the delight of recruiting geeks.

NU offensive coordinator Shawn Watson, however, liked Pelini's style.

"Honestly, that's the way it should be," Watson said. "I think what happens today — with the onslaught of all the different things going on with recruiting — there's a lot of pressure and hype that maybe wrongfully gets placed on a young man who hasn't had life experiences enough to know that all that really is not important right now. What's important is that you understand you have to work hard and you have to earn your place. That's part of being forthright and honest and shooting them straight down the middle."

Pelini was not downplaying the overall class, by any means. In fact, the Huskers finished strong after the string of decommitments that hit the staff during the transition from Bill Callahan to Pelini.

The Huskers pulled nine players from Texas, and Pelini and his staff have made it clear NU wants to establish stronger roots there. Steinkuhler led a list of six in-state recruits. The Huskers' release also included 18 walk-ons, with Pelini saying there could be a dozen more once proper paperwork clears.

Nebraska apparently remains alive for at least one other prospect, making it possible that the Huskers sign 28. NCAA rules stipulate that a class of newcomers number no more than 25 when players report in August, meaning NU could lose recruits to academic ineligibility or delay enrollment of a player or players.

In a major change from Callahan, Pelini also made no mention of where NU's class was ranked. For the record, rivals.com had Nebraska at No. 30 and scout.com at No. 21.

"It's hard to say," Pelini said. "Talk to me two, three years down the road and I'll tell you how good a class it was.

"We believe there's a lot of talent and potential in this class, and we're looking forward to working with each of them."

Only Watson and Ted Gilmore were on the Husker staff last season, so Pelini said NU didn't have a strong feel for what it needed in this class. The Huskers' answer was to go looking for "good football players — guys that play with passion, play with an attitude."

Gilmore said the staff was cognizant of numbers as it went out.

"I knew what I needed because I lost four receivers," Gilmore said. "But obviously everybody else has got to figure that out this spring, has got to figure out where the talent level is or if it fits their scheme. When you're in that position, you take athletes."

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Please do this


- So you remove a guy who was tailored to play with Steve Nash and in that system (mainly because he can't shoot and running and dunking is his game on offense). You also take away the best rebounder and defender on your team. A versatile guy who can guard Dirk one night and Kobe the next. A glue-type guy who does all the little things on a team that lacks those players.

And you replace him with an out of shape, plodding 350 lb'er, who's 35, who will be so out of his element in that offense, and is still on the books for 2 years at $40 million. Wow. Do this please. Dirk's job against Phoenix just got easier.


Sources: Suns a 'yes' away from acquiring Shaq for Marion

The seemingly improbable pairing of an aging Shaquille O'Neal and the run-and-gun Phoenix Suns is just a final "yes" from the Suns away from happening, according to NBA front-office sources.

Sources told ESPN.com on Tuesday night that the Miami Heat have already agreed to send O'Neal to the Suns in exchange for All-Star forward Shawn Marion and out-of-favor guard Marcus Banks. Miami is simply waiting for Phoenix management to complete a medical examination of O'Neal and formally accept what would rank as one of the most unexpected trades in league history.

"It looks like it's going to happen," said one source close to the situation. "We should know for sure by tomorrow."

ESPN The Magazine's Ric Bucher reported Tuesday night on "SportsCenter" that O'Neal is scheduled to arrive in Phoenix on Wednesday to undergo a physical. A source close to Marion told ESPN.com early Wednesday that the Suns have informed the 29-year-old that the deal will go through, with the forward eager now to move on after playing with the Suns for his whole career.

The Arizona Republic also reported that a deal could be imminent and that O'Neal had contacted some Suns players Tuesday night. The Suns pushed back their shootaround, originally scheduled for 9:45 a.m. MT to 4:45 p.m., shortly before Phoenix plays New Orleans.

The Miami Herald first reported on its Web site Tuesday night that the Heat have informed O'Neal that they are shopping him and that talks with the Suns were serious.

That apparently surprised O'Neal ... but also pleased him. Sources told ESPN.com that the 35-year-old -- in the midst of his least productive season and with the Heat cratering from a championship in 2006 to a 9-37 record less than two years later -- is eager to leave Miami and his deteriorating relationship with Heat coach Pat Riley.

Making a move for O'Neal appears on the surface to make little basketball or financial sense for the Suns. O'Neal's arrival in Phoenix would undoubtedly prompt widespread skepticism about his ability to keep up in the Suns' high-octane system. The two years and $40 million remaining on O'Neal's contract after this season also clashes with the Suns' recent pattern of trading away players (such as Kurt Thomas) and draft picks in attempt to reduce payroll and eventually drag themselves away from the NBA luxury-tax line of $67.875 million.

The Suns, though, have been plagued by well-chronicled concerns about their chemistry for nearly two years, generally focusing on the occasional dissatisfaction voiced behind the scenes by either Marion or Amare Stoudemire. In the locker room as well as the front office, sources say, there are factions that have believed for some time that one of them would eventually have to be traded for the Suns to reach their full potential.


Those in-house doubts about this group's ability to break through and win the first championship in team history have only grown this season, sources say, even though Phoenix currently holds the best record in the West at 34-14.

But owner Robert Sarver and team president Steve Kerr, according to sources with knowledge of the Suns' thinking, have ruled out trading Stoudemire, despite season-long speculation suggesting that his defensive deficiencies would ultimately lead to his exit before Marion's. Sarver and Kerr have deemed Stoudemire too valuable to part with, given that he's only 25 and continues to play at an All-Star level after three surgeries, ranking as perhaps the NBA's most successful comeback patient from the dreaded microfracture knee procedure.

Marion asked to be traded before the season but has rarely mentioned that declaration since, with many Suns insiders believing that he went public with that request mostly as a protest response to being mentioned in trade rumors for years. If he leaves now, it's likely more because Phoenix believes (a) that Boris Diaw can assume some of Marion's old duties, (b) that Stoudemire will relish playing alongside Shaq as a power forward as opposed to masquerading as a center and (c) that team chemistry will improve immediately with this change.

Acquiring O'Neal would also address the size issues Phoenix has faced since two-time MVP Steve Nash was reacquired as a free agent in the summer of 2004 to orchestrate coach Mike D'Antoni's free-wheeling system.

The Suns are said to be confident that Nash can find a way to get Shaq involved offensively. And it's undeniably true that the West is still filled with plenty of big men for Shaq to match up with. Just to name five: San Antonio's Tim Duncan, Houston's Yao Ming, New Orleans' Tyson Chandler, Portland's Greg Oden (next season) and Andrew Bynum of the Los Angeles Lakers.

Of course, O'Neal turns 36 in March and has been plagued by a persistent hip problem that has cost him 14 games this season. He refused to speak with Miami reporters after Tuesday's practice, while Riley insisted that O'Neal would soon undergo an MRI after missing the Heat's past six games.

And when he has been healthy, O'Neal is averaging a career-worst 14.2 points and 7.8 rebounds, while the Heat's demise has deepened after they followed their historic comeback from 2-0 down against Dallas in the 2006 NBA Finals by absorbing a first-round sweep by Chicago last season.

So if the deal does go through as widely expected now, Phoenix would be banking on the idea that O'Neal will be rejuvenated health-wise and reinvigorated mentally by the prospect of fresh start, after a half-season in which his remaining effectiveness and durability have been doubted louder than ever.

Miami's motivation, meanwhile, is clear. The Heat's need to revamp their entire roster around Dwyane Wade grows more apparent by the day in what ranks as an unprecedented collapse for a championship team that didn't lose its star players. Marion has the ability to opt out of his contract at season's end if he's willing to forfeit next season's $17.2 million salary, potentially giving the Heat substantial salary-cap space as early as this summer.

It remains to be seen if the Heat want Marion more for the financial flexibility or because they see him as a long-term complement to Wade. It also remains to be seen how much Phoenix will miss Marion's athleticism and versatility, since his ability to guard all five positions and tireless running made him a one-of-a-kind fit alongside Nash in D'Antoni's system.

Sarver said earlier this month that Marion was one of the Suns' cornerstone players who "flat-out was not getting traded," but that changed once Miami started shopping O'Neal. Although Riley later denied it, Bucher reported on ESPN2's "NBA Coast to Coast" last week that Miami had been begun to gauge trade interest in the hulking center with four championship rings from his time with the Lakers and Heat.

Although attempts to reach officials from both teams proved unsuccessful, D'Antoni did acknowledge the possibility of O'Neal's arrival on his weekly radio show Tuesday night, saying: "It would mean a lot. [But] that's a big question that's got to be thought over and pondered."




- 4 in a row. Shootouts rock.



Captain caps Dallas Stars' fourth straight win

09:34 AM CST on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
By MIKE HEIKA / The Dallas Morning News
mheika@dallasnews.com

The Stars have been finding a way to win games and collect points, and as boring as that sounds sometimes, it paid off again Tuesday night.

Facing a crippled Vancouver Canucks team, the Stars had to go to their sixth shooter in the shootout but came out with a 3-2 victory that pushed their winning streak to four games and their record to 32-20-5.

"It's true what Tip [coach Dave Tippett] says about wanting to do more, but for us, it's recognizing what kind of game we were in," said goalie Marty Turco, who stopped 22 shots and improved to 19-7 in shootouts.

"You have to keep pushing ahead, and never feel that you want to do more. It is human nature, but it's good experience for this team. You've got to continue to learn and gain confidence in these typesgames."

The Canucks were without five of their regular defensemen – Willie Mitchell (back), Kevin Bieksa (calf), Luka Krajicek (shoulder), Mattias Ohlund (personal) and Aaron Miller (foot) all missed the game. Vancouver filled the lineup with a mostly minor league defense, but the group played well and the Stars failed to put enough pressure on to see if it would crack.

Dallas waded into the game – neither team was able to put a shot on goal in the first seven minutes – then watched as Vancouver took the lead on a power-play goal at the 12:50 mark of the first period.

Dallas saw an early end to its run of 22 consecutive penalty kills as Markus Naslund scored. The top-ranked penalty kill in the league was foiled when Mason Raymond made a nice touch pass to Naslund in the slot, and he one-timed a shot over Turco.

But the Stars bounced back and scored a gritty goal at 16:40 of the first period to tie the score. Mike Ribeiro made a nice play along the boards to get the puck to Brenden Morrow, and Morrow uncorked a one-timer from the left circle. The puck went sailing toward a scrum at the net, and deflected in off the skate of Vancouver's Alexandre Burrows. Jeff Halpern had created the scrum by driving hard to the net and pulling Burrows in front of Canucks goalie Roberto Luongo.

Dallas then capitalized on its power play in the second period, as Morrow made a slick backhand pass into the slot and Jere Lehtinen deflected the puck between Luongo's legs for a 2-1 lead at the 7:11 mark.

"Same old Lehts, he does it all," Morrow said of Lehtinen's first goal since returning from a sports hernia that kept him out for 33 games. "He looks like he hasn't missed a step."

The Canucks made a spirited stand to earn a point in the standings. Naslund added his second goal of the game and Luongo then stopped 13 shots in the third period – 32 for the game. That forced the shootout, where the Stars improved their shootout record, the NHL's best, to 26-7.

Jussi Jokinen scored first for Dallas, and Naslund scored for Vancouver. Morrow then put in a wrister as the sixth shooter and Turco came up with a stop to give Dallas two points in the standings.

"Right now, everybody in the Western Conference is so tight that it's important to play a full 60 minutes and get whatever points we can," Ribeiro said.

The Stars have won seven consecutive regular season games against the Canucks at American Airlines Center. It is the second longest active home winning streak against one opponent in the NHL.

"We'll take the points and run," Stars coach Dave Tippett said.





- Baseball America's look at the future of the Rangers.



As it became apparent the Rangers were going to miss the playoffs for the eighth straight season in 2007, second-year general manager Jon Daniels faced some tough decisions, and he ultimately embraced a true commitment to rebuilding the organization from the ground up.

Texas limped out of the gates under first-year manager Ron Washington, finding itself in last place and 51⁄2 games back of the first-place Angels by the end of April. By the end of May, the Rangers trailed by 131⁄2 games, and when the deficit had stretched to 161⁄2 games by the end of June, Daniels had little choice but to look toward the future.

That meant trading franchise cornerstone Mark Teixeira to maximize the return for a player who faces free agency after the 2008 season. He did just that by shipping Teixeira to the Braves along with lefthander Ron Mahay for a bounty of five highly regarded prospects: catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, shortstop Elvis Andrus, righthander Neftali Feliz and lefties Matt Harrison and Beau Jones.

Texas went even further by moving Eric Gagne and Kenny Lofton to the Red Sox and Indians, bringing back more prospects in outfielders Engel Beltre and David Murphy and catcher Max Ramirez, plus a young big league lefty in Kason Gabbard.

Those three deals highlighted the dramatic overhaul of the farm system, and what had been one of baseball's thinnest organization's is now one of its most talented.

The system's transformation was augmented by strong work in the draft by scouting director Ron Hopkins and his staff. The Rangers had five picks before the second round, which they used on a trio of high-upside prep righthanders (Blake Beavan, Michael Main and Neil Ramirez), a safe college righty (Tommy Hunter) and a college center fielder who could be the team's leadoff man of the future (Julio Borbon). And as usual, the Rangers were active in the Latin American market under international scouting director A.J. Preller, landing a solid crop led by Venezuelan lefthander Martin Perez.

The net result is greatly improved minor league depth, particularly on the mound. Developing impact pitchers long has been a challenge for the Rangers, whose 4.75 major league team ERA ranked 24th in baseball in 2007. Now a majority of their top prospects are pitchers, giving some reason for optimism. However, much of the high-ceiling talent remains in the lower levels of the minors, so it will take another couple of years before the Rangers will start seeing dividends in Arlington.

The Rangers expect to continue their rebuilding process in 2008, field a competitive team by 2009 and make a serious playoff run in 2010. In addition to the foundation in the farm system, Texas has whom it regards as a few core players to build around at the big league level, including outfielder Josh Hamilton (brought over in an offseason trade with the Reds for righthander Edinson Volquez), second baseman Ian Kinsler, righthander Brandon McCarthy, Saltalamacchia and shortstop Michael Young. The most significant major league bright spot from a gloomy 2007, Young recorded his fifth straight 200-hit season. Since 1940, only Young, Wade Boggs and Ichiro Suzuki have accomplished that feat.



TOP TEN
PROSPECTS

1. Elvis Andruz, ss
2. Chris Davis, 3b
3. Eric Hurley, rhp
4. Taylor Teagarden, c
5. Neftali Feliz, rhp
6. Michael Main, rhp
7. Kasey Kiker, lhp
8. Blake Beavan, rhp
9. Julio Borbon, of
10. Engel Beltre, of

BEST
TOOLS

Best Hitter for Average German Duran
Best Power Hitter Chris Davis
Best Strike-Zone Discipline Johnny Whittleman
Fastest Baserunner Jose Vallejo
Best Athlete Michael Main
Best Fastball Neftali Feliz
Best Curveball Neil Ramirez
Best Slider Eric Hurley
Best Changeup Kasey Kiker
Best Control Matt Harrison
Best Defensive Catcher Taylor Teagarden
Best Defensive Infielder Elvis Andrus
Best Infield Arm Elvis Andrus
Best Defensive Outfielder Julio Borbon
Best Outfield Arm Engel Beltre

PROJECTED 2011
LINEUP

Catcher Taylor Teagarden
First Base Jarrod Saltalamacchia
Second Base Michael Young
Third Base Chris Davis
Shortstop Elvis Andrus
Left Field Engel Beltre
Center Field Julio Borbon
Right Field Josh Hamilton
Designated Hitter Ian Kinsler
No. 1 Starter Eric Hurley
No. 2 Starter Neftali Feliz
No. 3 Starter Michael Main
No. 4 Starter Blake Beavan
No. 5 Starter Brandon McCarthy
Closer Kasey Kiker

TOP PROSPECTS
OF THE DECADE

Year Player, Position 2007
1998 Ruben Mateo, of Brewers
1999 Ruben Mateo, of Brewers
2000 Ruben Mateo, of Brewers
2001 Carlos Pena, 1b Rays
2002 Hank Blalock, 3b Rangers
2003 Mark Teixeira, 3b Braves
2004 Adrian Gonzalez, 1b Padres
2005 Thomas Diamond, rhp Rangers
2006 Edinson Volquez, rhp Rangers
2007 John Danks, lhp White Sox

TOP DRAFT PICKS
OF THE DECADE

Year Player, Position 2007
1998 Carlos Pena, 1b Rays
1999 Colby Lewis, rhp Athletics
2000 Scott Heard, c Out of baseball
2001 Mark Teixeira, 3b Braves
2002 Drew Meyer, ss Rangers
2003 John Danks, lhp White Sox
2004 Thomas Diamond, rhp Rangers
2005 John Mayberry Jr., of Rangers
2006 Kasey Kiker, lhp Rangers
2007 Blake Beavan, rhp Rangers

LARGEST BONUSES
IN CLUB HISTORY

Mark Teixeira, 2001 $4,500,000
John Danks, 2003 $2,100,000
Vicent Sinsi, 2003 $2,070,000
Thomas Diamond, 2004 $2,025,000
Drew Meyer, 2002 $1,875,000




- Bobby Knight resigns.


- Super Bowl recap.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Road trip salvaged


- Another loss to an Eatern Conference leader wouldn't have been good. Good win here, especially considering the Maverick's history against Orlando.

Dallas Mavericks rebound with strong outing

11:38 PM CST on Monday, February 4, 2008
By EDDIE SEFKO / The Dallas Morning News
esefko@dallasnews.com

ORLANDO, Fla. – The Dallas Mavericks on Monday were wearing the same road uniforms that they wore the day before. The faces looked the same.

But, boy, can appearances be deceiving.

There was no resemblance whatsoever to the team that was so deplorable in Detroit.

Defying all logic, the Mavericks followed up their worst game of the season with one of their best, building a nice lead and then executing when they had to in a 107-98 win over the Southeast Division-leading Orlando Magic at Amway Arena.

In winning, the Mavs avoided a three-game sweep by Eastern Conference divisional leaders after dropping a heartbreaker at Boston and getting stomped at Detroit. They also showed that the difference between trashy and terrific can be as subtle as a tweak in the playing rotation.

Jason Terry, who had been forced into the starting lineup at point guard because of the injury to Devin Harris, returned to his sixth man role, with J.J. Barea starting at the point. Terry played his usual minutes, but the alteration made all the difference.

After the Mavericks had staved off Orlando's comeback attempt, coach Avery Johnson stood on the court as his players filed past him toward the locker room. He passed out high-fives and hugs in one of the most emotional moments of the season.

"I wanted the men to know that I'm in their corner," Johnson said. "I'm out there fighting. I think I stood up tonight more than I've stood up the whole season, just letting them know that if we're going to go down, then I'm going to go down with them."

The collective effort was amazing, considering how poorly the Mavs played in a 23-point loss to the Pistons on Sunday.

Terry needed to get back into a comfort zone, so the natural move was to get him out of the starting lineup. The move had the desired effect. Terry hit 8-of-14 shots, the first time since Jan. 19 that he's hit at least half of his shots (seven games).

Terry, who prides himself on being able to fill any role asked of him, admitted it might have been a good move to get him back in the sixth-man role that has been so good for him this season.

"It's an adjustment to make," he said. "I've been able to do it in the past, but the last two games, it just didn't go as smoothly as it usually does."

It certainly seemed to help his shot. But there have been suggestions coming from all sides about his shooting of late – in particular from his coach.

"With Jet, we've always said, when you're open, shoot," Johnson said. "And when you're not open, shoot, because we love for you to shoot."

Said Terry: "I was getting calls from here to Seattle, Washington, to shoot the ball. They thought I was a little hesitant the other night. But shooters shoot."

And so, he did. And so did Josh Howard, who scored a team-high 28 points. Dirk Nowitzki matched Terry's 20 points as the Mavericks led the entire game.

Dallas' lead reached 19 in the second quarter, but it was down to 83-80 in the fourth. Terry started a 10-0 blitz with an 18-foot running jumper and hit two more perimeter shots in the run.

"That's the money time of the basketball game," Terry said.

Orlando, which got 28 points from Dwight Howard, never got closer than six the rest of the way. The best thing Terry did was take the right shots, Johnson said. Against Detroit, he passed up an open 3-pointer when the game was still in reach, drawing his coach's ire.

"When he's open and he doesn't shoot, then we have a problem," Johnson said.

Meanwhile, Barea did a nice job of setting an early tempo. Johnson said he considered moving Barea into the lineup at Detroit but was concerned about matchup problems defensively.

It worked wonderfully against Orlando, which also starts a Puerto Rican point guard, Carlos Arroyo.

Technically, the Mavericks went 2-2 on this trip, since it started in Memphis. But they went home for a day before starting the Boston-Detroit-Orlando swing.

"O-2 road trip was not the way we wanted to start," Nowitzki said of the Celtics and Pistons games. "We definitely wanted to go home with a win."





- It's about time the Stars start having some home-grown youth that can actually contribute.



Young defensemen rewarding Dallas Stars for their patience

11:47 PM CST on Monday, February 4, 2008
By MIKE HEIKA / The Dallas Morning News
mheika@dallasnews.com

The Dallas Stars received a little reminder Saturday night of just how young their defensemen really are.

On one shift, Calgary captain Jarome Iginla made a deft stick lift on Niklas Grossman, creating a golden scoring opportunity. On another shift, Flames veteran Owen Nolan put a few tricky moves on Mark Fistric, also ending up with a great shot on net.

Stars goalie Marty Turco made both saves, but the Stars coaching staff made a save of another variety – protecting the confidence of the two young defensemen after the game with constructive criticism.

With veteran defenseman Sergei Zubov (foot/groin) still listed as week to week and fellow veteran Philippe Boucher (shoulder) probably a month away from returning, the trio of Fistric, 21, Grossman, 23, and Matt Niskanen, 21, will be expected to play a lot of minutes at important times for the Stars.

"I think you teach and you push and you direct, but you try to do it in a positive way," Stars associate coach Rick Wilson said. "They have to trust themselves, and we have to trust them, too, for that to happen."

So far, the coaches' trust in the young defensemen has paid off. Niskanen is averaging more than 23 minutes of ice time a game with Zubov out and is plus-14 this season. Grossman has seen his minutes increase to 18, and he is plus-1. Fistric has ranged from eight to 15 minutes in his 14 games, and he is plus-6.

"Part of it is there are no other options – patience on our part is forced," Stars coach Dave Tippett said. "But I look at it as a two-way street: There's been patience on our part that has paid off for them, but they've also paid off the organization with good play."

Tippett praised Turco for cleaning up a lot of messes over the last three games. The Stars goalie went 3-0-0 on a trip through Western Canada with a 1.67 goals against average and a .948 save percentage. However, Tippett also said the defensemen are showing great intelligence and a knack for learning from their mistakes.

"The experience these guys are getting is excellent, and they've responded very well," Tippett said. "Sure, they're going to have hiccups, but the majority of times, they've dug in and found a way to get the job done."

Fistric said the learning process has been interesting. He said rubbing elbows with NHL superstars is a challenge mentally and physically.

"These are guys you watched on television, and that is kind of strange to be on the ice against them. But you have to get over it," he said. "You obviously have respect for the player, but you also know you have to do your job."

Wilson said that while the Stars are careful not to damage the young defensemen's confidence, they also are very upfront about the expectations that come with being an NHL player.

"It's a fine line, because as much as we are developing players, the majority of their development should be done before they get here," Wilson said. "This league is about winning, and you're measured by that every single game. So, yes, you need to have patience, but the bottom line is they need to know this is a job – and a job where they are required to do certain things the right way."





- Nebraska raids Texas for recruits.



Nebraska going deep into Texas for recruits

BY CURT McKEEVER / Lincoln Journal Star
Tuesday, Feb 05, 2008 - 12:27:47 am CST

Josh Williams knew nothing about the popularity of high school football in his new state when his family moved from Shreveport, La., to Denton, Texas, when he was about to start junior high.

Well, almost nothing, because even back then, it would have been next to impossible for Williams to be totally oblivious.

“The high school stadiums out here look like small-college stadiums,” he said.

To this day, Williams, now a senior at Denton’s Ryan High, still doesn’t completely get Texas’ infatuation with prep football. But he’s grateful for it. After all, becoming a star in one of the nation’s hotbeds of major college recruiting left him with almost limitless options.

Nebraska — along with schools from the Big 12, Southeastern and Pac-10 conferences, and other colleges in Texas — had no trouble finding and then offering the 6-foot-4, 200-pound defensive end a scholarship. Williams said yes to the Huskers last July, but then had to be won over again after Bill Callahan was fired at the end of the 2007 season.

As it turns out, Williams could pose as the poster boy for the “Deep in the Heart of Texas” strategy new coach Bo Pelini and his staff have used during their first eight weeks on the job.

Pelini’s first NU recruiting class, which will be announced Wednesday, currently includes nine Texans out of 25 recruits. Nebraska’s number of commitments had shrunk from 24 to 15 after Callahan was fired.

In building it back up, the Huskers got six Texas players after Pelini was hired. Williams also recommitted after he considered other offers.

Williams said Nebraska assistant Ted Gilmore didn’t mention the level of priority the Husker coaches were placing on signing kids from Texas. Then again, he probably didn’t have to.

“It seems Texas is going to be pretty big,” Williams said.

Oh, sure. Any school would like to make tracks for the Texas border, grab a couple handfuls of recruits each year and then start racking up championships. But getting kids from Texas isn’t as simple as just saying you’re going to recruit kids from Texas.

Ask Chad Morris, the coach of Nebraska quarterback recruit Kody Spano at Stephenville, Texas, who has spent 17 years coaching in that state.

“You don’t have a lot of outsiders come in here. You’ve got to have an ‘in,’” Morris said. “If someone on the outside is going to try and come and recruit here, the most important thing is for that coach to be straight-up and be honest. We get some coaches that try and come in and try and negatively recruit other schools. That’s a big turnoff. Kids can sense a bluff there.”

Morris completely understands, though, why schools like Nebraska would covet Texas kids. There, high school football is not just a part-time deal.

Morris, also the athletic director, is like many Texas high school head coaches and doesn’t teach classes. He has 12 assistants. He conducts spring practice — an option given to schools in the largest two of Texas’ five classifications.

“It’s a way of life for a lot of people,” Morris said, noting that his team has played in front of 32,000 people and regularly draws 9,000 for home games. “It’s a big business for high schools in the state of Texas.”

Nebraska running backs coach Tim Beck can relate.

Before spending the past three seasons as an assistant at the University of Kansas, he was head coach for three years each at two Texas high schools.

Beck took his first job there after the staff he was on at Southwest Missouri State was fired — and after turning down an opportunity to become offensive coordinator at Stephen F. Austin, an NCAA Division I-AA program in Texas.

Beck says Nebraska won’t count on getting a certain number of recruits from Texas every year, that it will go wherever to get the best talent. But he also noted how common it is for a coach to walk into a Texas high school and see four seniors who are Division I prospects, and have four or five underclassmen waiting in the wings.

And, yes, it helps to know the lay of the land.

“No question if you’ve been down there as a coach it helps,” Beck said. “If I want speed, I go here. If I want hard-nosed kid, I go here.

“It’s hard, I think, when you come in as an unknown. But your school has a lot to do with it. Anybody that would come in there from the Big 12 would be recognized, because there’s national exposure.”

The influx of Texans at Nebraska isn’t an entirely new phenomenon. The Huskers’ 2007 class had seven players from the state. The previous year’s class, though, had just one.

Williams said he didn’t give any advantage to Texas schools who were recruiting him, but admits he’s comforted by the fact that so many other players from the state will be joining him at NU “because I know Texas has some pretty good ‘ballers’ coming out this year.”

The majority of the state’s players will become Longhorns, Aggies, Red Raiders, Horned Frogs or wear the uniform of another state school.

The ones who get away — and many do because of sheer numbers — oftentimes become prize catches for schools such as Nebraska.

Although for Williams, the venture north comes at somewhat of a price.

Two of his closest friends are the younger twin brothers of Derek Lokey, a Ryan High alum who just finished his senior season at Texas — and were quick to razz Williams about his college choice.

“If I was a nail and you were putting me in some wood, I was through the board twice,” Williams said. “I was getting pounded.

“I just didn’t feel the same (about Texas) as Nebraska.”

Those words are lip-smacking tasty to the Huskers’ new, Texas-sweetened recipe.




- Great performance by Petty Sunday night. Another great one here.......


- Genius.


- Another great use of Where the Streets Have No Names. Fast forward to 1:20.