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Michigan basketball keeps on rolling, derails Purdue, 70-53

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Michigan basketball did not play a clean basketball game Friday night.

The Wolverines struggled to hold onto the ball, turning it over 14 times. They shot just 44.6% from the field. 

But U-M’s defense held Purdue to its lowest-scoring game of the season in a 70-53 victory on Friday night, and the Wolverines left Mackey Arena with sole possession of first place in the Big Ten. 

Michigan jumped out to an early 10-point lead in the first half and led by double digits for much of the game. 

Isaiah Livers led all scorers with 22 points and added 10 rebounds, three assists and two blocks. Eli Brooks added 11 points on 5 of 8 shooting. 

Michigan’s defense stands tall

The Wolverines played as well on defense as they have all season in the first half, holding Purdue to just 0.70 points per possession and a 2 of 14 start from the field. Michigan didn’t let Boilermaker center Trevion Williams establish himself down low; Williams, Purdue’s leading scorer, scored just five points on 2 of 7 shooting in the first half. 

Meanwhile, the Wolverines guarded the 3-point line tightly, keeping the Boilermakers without a made 3-pointer in the first 20 minutes. The stingy defense allowed Michigan to open up an early 14-4 lead, and even when U-M’s offense faltered at times, the defense helped the Wolverines maintain that early advantage. 

The defense did not let up in the second half, as Purdue shot just 11 of 37 (29.7%) in the final 20 minutes and rarely found easy looks. 

Seniors lead the way

Livers and Brooks have played a lot of winning basketball but Friday’s game seemed to highlight why they are so important to this season’s team. After scoring a game-high 20 points in Tuesday’s win over Maryland, Livers scored a game-high 22 points Friday, and he did it without dominating the ball.

Livers’ utility as a scorer comes from his shooting, and he hit three crucial 3s Friday’s that helped kickstart a struggling offense. He also picked up a loose ball and dunked in transition and played tough defense, finishing with numerous contests at the rim. It was an all-around performance from the senior forward, one that Michigan needed on a night when it didn’t play its cleanest basketball. 

Brooks, meanwhile, was everywhere on the court. As Purdue tried to muster a second-half comeback, he drove to his left and finished over Boilermaker 7-foot-4 center Zach Edey. Brooks played his trademark defense, stifling Purdue’s guards and preventing easy dribble penetration. U-M’s defense is simply not the same when Brooks isn’t on the floor, and his ball-handling and knowledge of the offense allows the Wolverines to get by with just two true guards in the rotation because Juwan Howard can either play Brooks and Mike Smith together or stagger lineups with at least one of the two in the game. 

Another quiet game from Dickinson

Michigan star freshman center Hunter Dickinson scored in double digits in his first 11 games, despite coming off the bench in the first five contests. But he has seen his scoring output dip recently. Some opponents, like Minnesota, deserve credit for forcing the ball out of Dickinson’s hands with aggressive double teams. But he also has struggled with turnovers and is not shooting well at the rim; at Purdue, Dickinson finished with 10 points on 4 of 8 shooting and six turnovers.

Dickinson did add a key basket late in the second half when Williams gambled on a steal attempt by catching the ball and finishing despite being fouled (he also made the ensuing free throw). He also defended Williams well and was a huge reason why the Purdue center shot just 6 of 19. Still, it’s a credit to the Wolverines’ depth and defense that they held a double-digit lead for most of Friday’s game despite the quiet performance from their leading scorer. 

Contact Orion Sang at osang@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @orion_sang. Read more on the Michigan Wolverines and sign up for our Wolverines newsletter.



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Ravens announce the hirings of Rob Ryan, Anthony Weaver

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The Ravens announced the hirings of Rob Ryan and Anthony Weaver to their defensive staff. Ryan will serve as inside linebackers coach and Weaver as run game coordinator/defensive line coach.

In a news release, head coach John Harbaugh said the team continues to interview candidates for their defensive backs coaching position.

“Rob is a proven NFL coach who brings extensive experience to the Ravens,” Harbaugh said in a statement. “In addition to his passion for the game, he has an outstanding ability to connect with and teach players.

“Anthony is highly regarded throughout the NFL. As a former Ravens’ draft pick who made significant contributions while playing here, he understands the culture of our organization and the standard to which Baltimore defense is held.”

Ryan, 58, is a 20-year NFL coaching veteran who most recently served in the same role for the Washington Football Team in 2019.

Weaver enters his 12th season of coaching, including his 10th in the NFL. He played seven NFL seasons, including his first four seasons in Baltimore. Weaver began coaching in 2010.

Weaver served as defensive coordinator/defensive line coach for the Texans in 2020.

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Hank Aaron, longtime baseball home-run king and Hall of Famer with Braves, dies at age 86

Hank Aaron, legendary slugger and Hall of Famer, died at the age of 86, the Atlanta Braves announced Friday morning. CBS46 in Atlanta first reported the news.

Aaron established himself as an inner-circle all-time great during the course of his 23-year career with the Milwaukee Braves, Atlanta Braves and Milwaukee Brewers from 1954-76. 

In said career, Aaron hit .305/.374/.555 (155 OPS+) with 624 doubles, 755 home runs, 2,297 RBI, 2,174 runs, 3,771 hits and 240 stolen bases. He retired as the all-time home run leader and held the record for decades. He’s still the all-time leader in RBI and total bases. He also holds the record for the most All-Star games at 25 and the most seasons as an All-Star at 21 (for a stretch, MLB held two All-Star games per year).

The 1957 NL MVP, Aaron also won three Gold Gloves and two batting titles while leading the league in home runs four times, RBI four times, runs three times, hits twice, doubles four times, slugging four times and OPS three times. He won the World Series with the 1957 Braves and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in his first try in 1982. 

The biggest moment most remember of Aaron’s career was surpassing Babe Ruth’s 714 career home runs on April 8, 1974. Here’s the great Vin Scully on the call: 

In terms of those career stats, Aaron stacks up as well as anyone. He’s fourth in history in runs, third in hits, 13th in doubles, second in home runs, first in RBI, 27th in walks, 24th in OPS+, first in total bases, first in extra-base hits, seventh in times on base, fourth in intentional walks. He’s even fourth in sacrifice flies. 

There are few who can even come close to the type of statistical prowess Aaron put together on the field. For example, he’s one of just three players with at least 2,000 runs and 2,000 RBI (Babe Ruth and Alex Rodriguez). Try this one: His lead in total bases is 722.

Among position players, Aaron ranks fifth in career WAR behind Barry Bonds, Ruth, Willie Mays and Ty Cobb. 

“I want to send my heartfelt and warmest condolences to the Aaron family on their loss today,” Bonds, the current all-time home-run leader said in a statement on Instagram. “I was lucky enough to spend time with Hank on several occasions during my career and have always had the deepest respect and admiration for all that he did both on and off the field.  He is an icon, a legend and a true hero to so many, who will forever be missed.”

Aaron’s prodigious offense wasn’t relegated to regular-season play. In 17 postseason games, he hit .362/.405/.710 with six home runs and 16 RBI. The 1957 World Series title was the first for the Braves since moving to Milwaukee from Boston. During that series, Aaron went 11 for 28 with a triple and three homers. No one else on his team had more than five hits and Aaron drove home seven of the Braves’ 22 runs. In the 1969 NLCS, the Braves were swept by the Mets in three games, but Aaron went 5 for 14 with two doubles and three homers while driving home seven of the Braves’ 15 runs. 

“Hank Aaron is near the top of everyone’s list of all-time great players,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement. “His monumental achievements as a player were surpassed only by his dignity and integrity as a person. Hank symbolized the very best of our game, and his all-around excellence provided Americans and fans across the world with an example to which to aspire. His career demonstrates that a person who goes to work with humility every day can hammer his way into history – and find a way to shine like no other.” 

“Hank eagerly supported our efforts to celebrate the game’s best and to find its next generation of stars, including through the Hank Aaron Award, which recognizes offensive excellence by Major League players, and the Hank Aaron Invitational, which provides exposure to elite young players. He became a close friend to me in recent years as result of his annual visit to the World Series.  That friendship is one of the greatest honors of my life. I am forever grateful for Hank’s impact on our sport and the society it represents, and he will always occupy a special place in the history of our game. On behalf of Major League Baseball, I extend my deepest condolences to Hank’s wife, Billye, their family, the fans of Atlanta and Milwaukee, and the millions of admirers earned by one of the pillars of our game.”

Braves chairman Terry McGuirk released the following statement:

“We are absolutely devastated by the passing of our beloved Hank. He was a beacon for our organization first as a player, then with player development, and always with our community efforts. His incredible talent and resolve helped him achieve the highest accomplishments, yet he never lost his humble nature. Henry Louis Aaron wasn’t just our icon, but one across Major League Baseball and around the world. His success on the diamond was matched only by his business accomplishments off the field and capped by his extraordinary philanthropic efforts.

“We are heartbroken and thinking of his wife Billye and their children Gaile, Hank, Jr., Lary, Dorinda and Ceci and his grandchildren.”

Aaron was born and raised in conditions bordering on poverty in Alabama and was expected to take part in making the family money from a young age, picking cotton among other jobs. His family couldn’t afford to get him baseball equipment, so he learned how to hit with a broomstick and bottle caps. Come high school, his talent took over and he was catching on with the Indianapolis Clowns of a Negro League at age 17. After the Clowns took the Negro League World Series in 1952, Aaron got offers from the Giants and Braves. He spent 87 games in C League (roughly equivalent to Class A these days) at age 18 and then 137 in A League (around Double-A or Triple-A) at age 19 before hitting the bigs in 1954 at age 20 and never looking back. 

He finished fourth in NL Rookie of the Year voting in 1954. The next year he was an All-Star, finished ninth in MVP voting and led the league in doubles. Two years later he won MVP and the Braves were World Champs. He wouldn’t miss another All-Star Game in a season until he was 42 — his final year. 

As noted, Aaron wasn’t just one of the greatest — if not the greatest — baseball players ever. He was an exemplary human off the field, carrying a modest decorum to his final days. Current Astros manager Dusty Baker came up with the Braves in 1968 and played with the already-legendary Aaron through 1974. Friday, Baker told Astros reporter Brian McTaggart, “[Aaron] was second only to my dad, and my dad meant the world to me.” 

In addition to all his baseball accolades, Aaron was awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal by President Bill Clinton in 2001 and the President Medal of Freedom by President George W. Bush in 2002. Aaron now has an award named for him, as the Hank Aaron Award is given to the best hitter in each league, each season by Major League Baseball. 

“My wife, Sue, and I are terribly saddened and heartbroken by the passing of the great Henry Aaron, a man we truly loved, and we offer our love and our condolences to his wonderful wife, Billye,” said former MLB commissioner Allan H. “Bud” Selig in a statement.

“Besides being one of the greatest baseball players of all time, Hank was a wonderful and dear person and a wonderful and dear friend. Not long ago, he and I were walking the streets of Washington, D.C. together and talking about how we’ve been the best of friends for more than 60 years. Then Hank said: “Who would have ever thought all those years ago that a black kid from Mobile, Alabama would break Babe Ruth’s home run record and a Jewish kid from Milwaukee would become the commissioner of baseball?

“Aaron was beloved by his teammates and by his fans. He was a true Hall of Famer in every way. He will be missed throughout the game, and his contributions to the game and his standing in the game will never be forgotten.”  

A portion of Aaron’s Hall of Fame plaque includes a quote from Georgia congressman Andrew Young that says the following: 

“Through his long career, Hank Aaron has been a model of humility, dignity, and quiet competence. He did not seek the adoration that is accorded to other national athletic heroes, yet he has now earned it.”  

The baseball world lost one of its truly iconic figures on Friday. 

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Reports: Bears promoting Sean Desai to defensive coordinator

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Chicago has found its replacement for the retired Chuck Pagano.

The Bears will promote safeties coach Sean Desai to defensive coordinator, according to multiple reports.

Desai has been with the Bears since 2013 when he started out as a quality control assistant, working with Chicago’s defensive backs and linebackers. He also assisted the special teams coaches.

He was promoted to safeties coach for the 2019 season. He is believed to be the first coordinator of Indian descent in the NFL.

Pagano retired after the 2020 season following two years as the Bears’ defensive coordinator.

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Comcast’s NBCUniversal to Shut Down Sports Cable Channel NBCSN by Year-End

NBCUniversal is shutting down its sports cable channel NBCSN at the end of the year and migrating much of its programming to its sister general entertainment network USA, the company said.

The premium properties on NBCSN are the National Hockey League and Nascar auto racing, both of which will start to transition to USA Network this year. Some content will remain on both channels until NBCSN officially turns off the lights. NBCUniversal informed staffers of the plan Friday afternoon in a company memo.

“We’re absolutely committed more than ever to live sports as a company, and having such a huge platform like USA Network airing some of our key sports content is great for our partners, distributors, viewers and advertisers alike,” said NBC Sports Group Chairman Pete Bevacqua.

By putting high-profile sports on USA Network, NBCUniversal—a unit of Comcast Corp. —is hoping to solve two problems with one move: Get rid of an underperforming asset and boost an already powerful one. The Premier Soccer League will also have matches on USA.

NBCSN has struggled to compete against bigger rivals such as Walt Disney Co. ’s ESPN and Fox Corp.’s Fox Sports cable network. While it has a large national reach, its ratings pale in comparison to its competition. Fox Corp. and Wall Street Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.

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NBCUniversal to Shut Down Sports Network NBCSN at End of 2021

Fans of big NBC sports franchises like the NHL and Premier League will have to follow them to a new home.

NBCUniversal will shutter its NBCSN sports network, and move some of its top sports properties to the USA network in a maneuver executives believe will boost the economics of the general-entertainment cable outlet at a time when new streaming-video hubs are luring bigger audiences. The company has told its distributors it intends to shut down NBCSN at the end of 2021, according to a person familiar with the matter.

NBCU’s top sports properties include Nascar racing, National Hockey League contests and English Premier League football. USA is not going to become an all-sports network, this person cautioned, but might function more like WarnerMedia’s TNT, which has built a durable franchise out of its rights to air National Basketball Association games, does for that media company. It remained unclear whether the move would affect NBC Sports employees; the division recently experienced staffing cuts as part of a restructuring at NBCUniversal as it grapples with the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.

“USA has been a top five cable entertainment brand for over twenty years by way of constantly broadening our slate and finding ways to excite our viewers through immersive storytelling and iconic personalities, “said Frances Berwick, chairman, of NBCU’s entertainment networks, in a statement provided after the move became known.  “We remain committed to original entertainment programming, and believe that high-profile live sports will complement USA’s broad premium scripted, unscripted and WWE slate, enabling us to engage our passionate, intersecting audiences more deeply and with greater urgency.”

USA has always had a sports lineage. In its early days, when it was launched by entrepreneur Kay Koplovitz and subsequently owned jointly by MCA and Viacom, the network had rights deals at various times with Major League Baseball, the NHL, and the NBA, and its evening schedule was often dominated by sports programs. USA carried boxing matches on Tuesday nights for more than a decade. But in 2004,  most of its sports operations were merged into NBC Sports, when NBC purchased Vivendi Universal.

In a new era, sports may be more essential to maintaining the health of a traditional general-entertainment outlet like USA. Cable networks have suffered as audiences move to streaming-video hubs for the sorts of high-caliber scripted series that had long been a staple of cable. Even as they place more emphasis on their own streaming hubs, big media outlets like NBCUniversal, Disney and others need to maintain the large, live audiences that advertisers and cable and satellite distributors crave. Sports and news programming continues to draw those crowds.

More to come…



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Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, still in concussion protocol, at practice again Friday

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Patrick Mahomes was with the Kansas City Chiefs as they began Friday’s practice session, their last one before Sunday’s AFC Championship Game against the Buffalo Bills at Arrowhead Stadium.

His participation on Friday would appear to put Mahomes on a path to play Sunday. Chiefs coach Andy Reid said Mahomes took all of the snaps in Wednesday’s practice and a majority of them on Thursday.

Mahomes was knocked out of last week’s divisional-round playoff win over the Browns with symptoms of a concussion after he was tackled hard on a running play. He has been in the NFL’s concussion protocol.

Three other key Chiefs players who have been fighting injuries were also present for the start of Friday’s practice: wide receiver Sammy Watkins (calf), running back Clyde Edwards-Helaire (hip, ankle) and cornerback Bashaud Breeland (concussion, shoulder).

Coach Sean McDermott said the Bills were preparing for Mahomes to play.

“I guess at the beginning of the week we weren’t quite sure, and we really won’t know, I guess,” McDermott said. “It’s probably trending in that direction, so that’s what we’re anticipating.”

ESPN’s Mike Reiss contributed to this report.

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Kevin Porter Jr. trade a painful setback in Cleveland Cavaliers’ rebuild: Chris Fedor

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Cavaliers had no choice.

Kevin Porter Jr. — a 6-foot-4 wing who teased fans, teammates, coaches and executives with a promising rookie season dotted with hypnotizing on-court flashes of star qualities — wasn’t going to reach his potential here in Cleveland. So, the Cavs agreed to send Porter to the Houston Rockets in exchange for a future second-round pick late Thursday night.

Head coach J.B. Bickerstaff, who volunteered to oversee Porter’s development at the start of the 2019-20 season while Bickerstaff was still John Beilein’s lead assistant, couldn’t consistently get through to Porter — even though Bickerstaff is known leaguewide as a great communicator, leader and culture-builder.

General manager Koby Altman, who started fostering a bond with Porter during his erratic freshman season at USC, often checking in with the troubled youngster via text and spending plenty of time on campus getting to know him, couldn’t get through to Porter anymore either. At least, not enough to pull him back after months of missteps.

“The organization did everything and more for him,” a league source told cleveland.com. “They went above and beyond. They gave him more chances than most franchises would have.”

Now the Rockets will try to save Porter from destroying his career — a hopeful start that spiraled quickly with too much free time during a pandemic-extended offseason, a string of poor decisions away from the court and immaturity that followed him, first from Seattle to USC and then college to Cleveland. Always one step forward and a few steps back.

For Houston, it’s a low-risk, high-reward move — a worthy gamble for an organization that recently dealt James Harden to the Brooklyn Nets and has assistant coach John Lucas, who has a history of helping reclamation projects with off-court issues. If it doesn’t work, the Rockets move on, giving up nothing, as the heavily-protected second-rounder is unlikely to ever convey.

For the Cavs, it’s a significant setback in their rebuild.

Teammates considered Porter the most talented of the young core, the player with the likeliest path to stardom. Members of the front office viewed him as untouchable when rival teams reached out in past trade talks. Porter was supposed to be the one — the centerpiece of this rebuild with the capability of altering the trajectory, the phenom they stole at the end of the first round.

Even after an offseason arrest, Porter was still in Cleveland’s long-term vision, choosing to pick up his third-year option.

What could have been. Flash forward to Thursday. The Cavs agreed to a trade that was basically a salary dump. They had two options: Deal Porter for not much in return or waive him outright. They chose the least painful, getting some wiggle room below the luxury tax and an open roster spot earmarked for a backup point guard to help fill the short-term void with Matthew Dellavedova sidelined indefinitely because of a concussion.

CLEVELAND, OHIO – FEBRUARY 29: Head coach J.B. Bickerstaff of the Cleveland Cavaliers speaks to Kevin Porter Jr. #4 and Collin Sexton #2 during the first half at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on February 29, 2020 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)Getty Images

Two-way street

Make no mistake: No one looks good here.

Not Porter, who received multiple chances to show the organization he learned from his mistakes, to prove he had the emotional maturity to deal with everything that goes into being an NBA player. The Cavs set goals for him and Porter didn’t always work toward them, feeling disrespected with the organization holding him out for so long. They were hoping he would reciprocate or simply respond in a different, more mature way. They were also hoping Porter would make better choices when it came to those around him.

The Cavs empathized with him, recognizing his chaotic past and the massive burden he was carrying at such a young age, moving his family to Cleveland so they could be taken care of and safe. Despite the time, effort, resources, and extra care, it didn’t work. How do you help someone who is not willing to help themselves? How many next times will you give before frustration builds and exhaustion overwhelms?

Altman doesn’t look good either. He took a gamble nearly two years ago, paying $5 million and giving up four second-round picks for Porter’s draft rights. The Cavs worked tirelessly to accumulate those assets. They are in no position to throw them away — even if just second-rounders. The Cavs knew all the reasons behind Porter’s draft night plummet. They did their homework, talked to countless people and met with Porter personally. Despite some other teams taking Porter off the board, the Cavs were enamored with his upside, seeing a Harden-like offensive package and tantalizing two-way traits.

Their thought process: What does it look like for this kid when we provide structure he’s never had, a consistent routine he needs, proper eating habits, a better sleep schedule, workouts, professional coaching, a few veterans to show him the way and Bickerstaff as a relatable mentor?

It wasn’t perfect in Year One. There were some slipups. But his rookie season made it seem a wise bet.

Porter averaged 10.0 points, 3.2 rebounds and 2.2 assists. He was one of the bright spots during a sometimes-miserable 19-win season that ended abruptly in March because of the COVID-19 pandemic. He dueled Harden in a captivating showdown last December. Porter ignited a February comeback against the Miami Heat, tallying a career-high 30 points.

Bickerstaff often referred to Porter as one of the best passers on the roster and there was excitement about the possibility of using the 20-year-old swingman as a playmaking guard. Porter developed a close relationship with assistant coach Lindsay Gottlieb, who spoke of her love for the youngster.

Then it all changed during a lengthy offseason. Porter drifted away.

Cleveland Cavaliers Kevin Porter Jr. argues a call from an official in the first quarter, January 15, 2021, at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse.John Kuntz, cleveland.com

End of the winding road

In August of 2020, he was accused of punching a woman in the face. In October, Porter posted a black square on his Instagram with the message “Do you ever wish to see the end of your time?” That incident led to Cavs officials and teammates reaching out to him, making sure he was OK and offering to help. He was involved in a one-car accident in November — arrested and charged with improper handling of a firearm in a motor vehicle, failure to control the vehicle and misdemeanor possession of marijuana. All of those charges were dismissed.

Porter’s days with the Cavs reached a breaking point last Friday when he became upset after learning his space in the locker room had been given to newly acquired forward Taurean Prince. Porter had returned to practice with the Cavs a day earlier — part of an undisclosed reintegration plan.

That night, Altman came in and tried to talk through the issue. But Porter wouldn’t calm down. Food was thrown. Tensions rose. The verbal exchange between Porter and Altman was “uncomfortable for everyone in there,” said a source who witnessed it.

Jan 15 was the culmination of too many mistakes, including disrespecting teammates and staff members.

Following that confrontation, Porter was told to clean out his locker and removed from the building, exiled from the team while the front office determined the next steps. Porter didn’t practice Saturday and then Bickerstaff, who has said on multiple occasions how they are in the business of people, caring for their players beyond basketball, addressed the situation Monday afternoon.

“We all want to see Kevin be successful, and I still feel that way,” Bickerstaff said. “So whatever it is that happens in the future for him, I hope nothing but the best for him. And it’s part of our responsibility as coaches to give everyone our all and try to make the best of every situation. I can say that we did that.”

Bickerstaff’s message has centered on togetherness, collective buy in, accountability and discipline. The Cavs are trying to build a culture that’s not yet firmly established. A surprising 7-7 start has them moving in the right direction, currently in the Eastern Conference playoff picture a month into this strange season. They couldn’t risk all of that for one player, no matter how talented. They had already gambled enough on him.

The Cavs didn’t want this. They stood by Porter after his arrest. They repeatedly referred to him as a good kid at his core. It wasn’t an impulsive decision.

Maybe there were some things they could’ve done better. Same goes for Porter. Bickerstaff and Altman will surely reflect on that. They will take the mirror test. But moving on was the best — and only — option for everyone involved. Porter was the lone guy who couldn’t live up to the organizational standard. What would it say about the core values if he kept getting preferential treatment and endless chances? This was a message. Words into action.

The new core

With Porter gone, the focus turns to the remainder of Cleveland’s young nucleus. Collin Sexton displaces Porter as the cornerstone. Low-maintenance Sexton has been one of the East’s best players over a breathtaking six-month stretch that extends back to last December. His recent play helps soften the stinging blow.

Jarrett Allen’s arrival is a nice boost too, giving the Cavs a 22-year-old center of the future who becomes the defensive linchpin. Dylan Windler is nearing a comeback and was a threat to Porter’s playing time. Taurean Prince, the throw-in piece of the Allen deal, is still just 26 years old. Isaac Okoro has impressed the Cavs since being drafted fifth overall in November. Darius Garland showed exciting growth before suffering a sprained right shoulder. Don’t forget unheralded Larry Nance Jr. Having all of them at least helps.

The Cavs chose culture over talent. But it doesn’t change the end result: Cleveland lost one of its treasured — and most important — building blocks.

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Defensive Back Houston Griffith Returning to Notre Dame

According to Irish Illustrated sources, Notre Dame defensive back Houston Griffith is expected to return to South Bend and play for the Fighting Irish once again next season. This was first reported by Bryan Driskell of Irish Breakdown.

On Jan. 4, Irish Illustrated reported that Griffith was entering the Transfer Portal and would leave South Bend. The 5-11, 205-pounder officially entered his name on the list within 48 hours. However, Griffith is expected to remove his name from the portal shortly. As of 10:45 am ET, Griffith is now officially out of the Transfer Portal.

Irish Illustrated also reported last week that the expectation was Griffith would return due to the fact that there was a new defensive coaching staff in the secondary at Notre Dame. Defensive coordinator Clark Lea has since become the head coach at Vanderbilt and safeties coach Terry Joseph left to coach defensive backs at Texas.

According to sources, conversations went very well between Notre Dame and Griffith have gone well. We’re told head coach Brian Kelly has done a terrific job of personally recruiting him and making it clear how important Griffith is to next year’s team. That, mixed with the recruiting efforts of new defensive coordinator Marcus Freeman, has helped the Irish greatly.

The 5-11, 205-pounder arrived at Notre Dame as part of the 2018 class. The Bradenton (Fla.) IMG Academy standout, originally from the Chicago area, chose the Fighting Irish over scholarship offers from Florida State, Alabama, Duke, Florida, Georgia, Iowa State, Michigan, Ohio State, Oklahoma and many others across the country. The Under Armour All-American was highly-touted out of high school and ranked as a Top100 prospect per the 247Sports Composite Rankings. He was the No. 11 cornerback that cycle. 247Sports had him rated slightly lower as the No. 148 overall recruit in 2018. He recorded 28 tackles, two tackles for loss and a sack as a senior at IMG.

As a true freshman at Notre Dame, Griffith played in 11 games and even started the matchup against Wake Forest. He totaled 14 tackles and two pass breakups that year. He played in 13 games the following year, while totaling five tackles and a pass breakup. In 2020, Griffith played in 12 games played, to of which he started, totaling 14 tackles and a tackle for loss.



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Dolphins’ offensive coordinator search takes surprising turn

The Miami Dolphins’ offensive coordinator search has been, well, extensive. Miami got word near the end of the week immediately following their season-ending loss to the Buffalo Bills that veteran offensive coordinator Chan Gailey would be stepping down from his post, leaving the Dolphins in position to hire their third consecutive play caller in as many seasons in the Brian Flores era.

And, about a week ago, the Dolphins’ list of rumored candidates was reported. Included were:

Dolphins RB coach Eric Studesville
Dolphins QB coach George Godsey
Clemson OC Tony Elliott
Chargers QB coach Pep Hamilton
49ers run game coordinator Mike McDaniel
Steelers QB coach Matt Canada

But as last weekend unfolded, it seemed as though Miami’s shortlist of candidates was whittling away. First it was reported that Elliott desired to stay at Clemson. Then it was reported that Kyle Shanahan, amid departures from his staff in San Francisco, would promote McDaniel to serve as the 49ers’ offensive coordinator and that Matt Canada was in line to be promoted from the Steelers’ quarterbacks coach role to take the offensive coordinator role in Pittsburgh.

Presumably, there were three remaining candidates: Godsey and Studesville from within the Dolphins’ building and Hamilton. And we haven’t gotten any traction towards a resolution since. But the news from yesterday threw the whole situation for a loop. The Pittsburgh Steelers interviewed Hue Jackson for the position Canada was rumored and penciled in to take as the team’s offensive coordinator. So now Canada may be back on the table for the Dolphins after all.

Also reported to be in the running for Pittsburgh’s suddenly available vacancy? Pep Hamilton, who is reportedly interviewing in Pittsburgh today.

If Pittsburgh settles on Hamilton, the Dolphins will have no one to blame but themselves — they’ve been the only team reported to show significant interest for over a week but never made the hire, so one would assume Miami’s preference lies elsewhere, either with an internal candidate or perhaps with Canada after all.

We’d say that this vacancy will come to a resolution soon — but we thought that last week as well with the 2021 Senior Bowl looming for this coaching staff; so who knows when the hire is made. Before next season would be a safe bet.



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