Kamis, 28 Maret 2019

USA TODAY Sports expert picks for NCAA tournament Sweet 16 games - USA TODAY

"Survive and advance" is the rallying cry for NCAA tournament teams. While Duke saw its season's mortality bounce around the rim three times before falling out against Central Florida, Tennessee survived in overtime, and LSU used a game-winner to advance here, the rest of the remaining teams have mostly evaded madness en route to the Sweet 16. 

But can we really expect double-digit victories with the top three seeds from each region still playing? It's highly unlikely. 

Which teams win Thursday and Friday to reach the Elite Eight? And which teams advance to the Final Four after the second weekend?

BEST OF BEST: Ranking the eight Sweet 16 games by watchability

MONEY MATTERS: Big money bonuses on line for coaches in Sweet 16

NEED TO KNOW: Breakdowns of Thursday's NCAA tournament games

USA TODAY Sports' college basketball staff writers make their expert picks. 

Dan Wolken, USA TODAY Sports

  • Gonzaga vs. Florida State winner: Florida State
  • Tennessee vs. Purdue winner: Purdue 
  • Michigan vs. Texas Tech winner: Michigan 
  • Virginia vs. Oregon winner: Virginia 
  • Michigan State vs. LSU winner: Michigan State 
  • North Carolina vs. Auburn winner: North Carolina
  • Duke vs. Virginia Tech winner: Duke
  • Kentucky vs. Houston winner: Houston

— Final Four: Duke over Michigan, Virginia over Houston 

— Title winner: Duke over Virginia

Scott Gleeson, USA TODAY Sports

  • Gonzaga vs. Florida State winner: Florida State
  • Tennessee vs. Purdue winner: Purdue 
  • Michigan vs. Texas Tech winner: Texas Tech
  • Virginia vs. Oregon winner: Virginia 
  • Michigan State vs. LSU winner: Michigan State 
  • North Carolina vs. Auburn winner: Auburn
  • Duke vs. Virginia Tech winner: Duke
  • Kentucky vs. Houston winner: Kentucky

Final Four: Duke over Texas Tech, Virginia over Kentucky 

Title winner: Virginia over Duke

George Schroeder, USA TODAY Sports 

  • Gonzaga vs. Florida State winner: Gonzaga
  • Tennessee vs. Purdue winner: Tennessee
  • Michigan vs. Texas Tech winner: Texas Tech
  • Virginia vs. Oregon winner: Virginia 
  • Michigan State vs. LSU winner: Michigan State 
  • North Carolina vs. Auburn winner: North Carolina
  • Duke vs. Virginia Tech winner: Duke
  • Kentucky vs. Houston winner: Kentucky

Final Four: Duke over Texas Tech, Tennessee over North Carolina 

— Title winner: Tennessee over Duke 

Nancy Armour, USA TODAY Sports 

  • Gonzaga vs. Florida State winner: Gonzaga
  • Tennessee vs. Purdue winner: Purdue
  • Michigan vs. Texas Tech winner: Michigan
  • Virginia vs. Oregon winner: Oregon
  • Michigan State vs. LSU winner: Michigan State
  • North Carolina vs. Auburn winner: North Carolina
  • Duke vs. Virginia Tech winner: Duke
  • Kentucky vs. Houston winner: Kentucky

— Final Four: Michigan State over Gonzaga, North Carolina over Purdue

— Title winner: North Carolina

Eddie Timanus, USA TODAY Sports 

  • Gonzaga vs. Florida State winner: Gonzaga
  • Tennessee vs. Purdue winner: Tennessee
  • Michigan vs. Texas Tech winner: Texas Tech
  • Virginia vs. Oregon winner: Virginia
  • Michigan State vs. LSU winner: Michigan State
  • North Carolina vs. Auburn winner: North Carolina
  • Duke vs. Virginia Tech winner: Duke
  • Kentucky vs. Houston winner: Kentucky

— Final Four: Duke over Gonzaga, North Carolina over Tennessee

— Title winner: Duke

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2019-03-28 13:49:50Z
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Scott Miller's 2019 MLB Predictions for Every Team - Bleacher Report

FILE - In this Oct. 28, 2018, file photo, the Boston Red Sox celebrate after Game 5 of baseball's World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Los Angeles. The Red Sox won 5-1 to win the series 4 games to 1. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
David J. Phillip/Associated Press

Welcome to Opening Day, a sacred Day of such vast importance that it always deserves full capitalization.

Because with it comes not only a fresh start, a blank slate and a daily schedule, but also a significant promise: summer. Last day of school. Five of the most glorious words in existence.

What other sport can promise that?

So book your vacations now…and book these predictions, too. Believe me, later this summer you will be lying on a beach somewhere, sand in your toes, thinking to yourself, How did that B/R guy do that, nailing the entire baseball season like that in March?

                             

AL East

Nick Wass/Associated Press

Scoreboard since 2000: Boston Red Sox four World Series titles, New York Yankees two.

Red Sox: No lineup is more versatile in this division than that of the Red Sox, who can bludgeon you with J.D. Martinez or slice and dice you with Mookie Betts, Andrew Benintendi and Xander Bogaerts. In an age of strikeouts, Boston's lineup is stocked with contact hitters, and that wins. Only the Pirates, Astros, Mariners and Indians struck out fewer times in 2018. The rotation is better than the Yankees'. Biggest question: Will kissing off closer Craig Kimbrel bite them?

Yankees: Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Gary Sanchez will hang crooked numbers, but the early-season loss of ace-in-the-making Luis Severino to shoulder trouble and absence of CC Sabathia (heart, knee) has them playing from behind early. They need innings from James Paxton to get to what should be baseball's best bullpen. Don't sleep on Adam Ottavino, a sneaky addition to Aroldis Chapman, Zack Britton and Dellin Betances in the pen.

Rays: The addition of starter Charlie Morton to Cy Young winner Blake Snell and last year's arrival, Tyler Glasnow, doesn't do much for the corrosive concept of "bullpenning," but it gives a fun Tampa Bay team more weapons. Rays starters last year worked only 624 innings—fewest in the majors. They also won 90 games.

Blue Jays: Let's just pick up with the same question we asked last year: When does Vladimir Guerrero Jr. get here? Come on, Toronto. Give the people what they want!

Orioles: The Birds opened last year with Manny Machado, Adam Jones, Jonathan Schoop…and lost a franchise-record 115 contests. This year…well, Camden Yards is a beautiful place to watch a game. 

              

AL Central

Ross D. Franklin/Associated Press

The All-Star Game will be played in Cleveland on July 9. That's about as close as most of this division will come to anything All-Star-related.

Indians: Houston's Division Series waxing of Cleveland is difficult to forget, especially when sizing up this year's outfield: Leonys Martin, Tyler Naquin and Jake Bauers. Seriously? But with Corey Kluber, Trevor Bauer, Carlos Carrasco and Mike Clevinger rocking baseball's best rotation, and most of the rest of the division rebuilding, there's only one real threat to the Indians…

Twins: Adding Marwin Gonzalez, Nelson Cruz and Schoop makes Minnesota better—but good enough to catch the Indians? New manager Rocco Baldelli needs a lot of help from a rotation that could go either way with Jose Berrios (stud), Kyle Gibson, Jake Odorizzi and Michael Pineda (hmmm…).

Royals: Shortstop Adalberto Mondesi is on deck for a breakout season and will be a lot of fun to watch while teamed with second baseman Whit Merrifield. Remember when designated hitter Jorge Soler was one of the Cubs' hottest prospects? He serves as another example that it is smart to be wary of hyped prospects. It's a bummer that catcher Salvador Perez is out for the season after Tommy John surgery.

Tigers: Miguel Cabrera is healthy, happy and motivated to prove he remains among the game's elite hitters. Count me as a believer. But he doesn't have much to work with teamwise.

White Sox: Chicago hitters led the majors with 1,594 strikeouts last summer, and I'm pretty sure Yoan Moncada had about 1,200 of them himself. Even White Sox fans cover their eyes when Moncada comes to the plate.

             

AL West

Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press

Brother, can you spare a playoff game for Mike Trout?

Astros: Just wait until future ace Forrest Whitley joins Justin Verlander and Gerrit Cole. Looking to win their second World Series title in three years, Houston is stacked. The Astros could have a Cy Young winner (Verlander or Cole) and an MVP (Alex Bregman) on the field this year.

Angels: Baseball's best player, Trout, has a new 12-year deal that leaves only one question: Can this organization put enough good players around him to play in October? This club hasn't won a World Series under owner Arte Moreno (he took over after the '02 win) and, incredibly, has never won a playoff game with Trout on the roster (the team's only played three, in 2014). The Angels are more well-rounded this year but must stay healthy: They led the majors last season with 32 disabled-list moves and were sixth in 2017. Ouch!

A's: They had a great season last year, but it's difficult to see everything coming together like that again in 2019, especially with starter Sean Manaea likely out for the season after a labrum tear and Jharel Cotton still recovering from Tommy John surgery. First baseman Matt Olson broke a hamate bone while opening the season in Japan. Khris Davis again will put on a power show, but the fascinating thing will be to see whether he will hit .247 for a fifth consecutive season. You can look it up.

Rangers: We'll all miss the retired Adrian Beltre, but there are signs the Rangers have bottomed out and will progress under new manager Chris Woodward. They'll roll out an interesting, patched-together rotation of Mike Minor, Edinson Volquez, Shelby Miller, Lance Lynn and Drew Smyly. If they could only pitch to Joey Gallo, they'd rack up the strikeouts.

Mariners: This is baseball's witness protection team. Even hardcore Mariners fans have no idea who's on the roster from day to day given general manager Jerry Dipoto's wheeling and dealing. The game's longest playoff drought (team motto: Making October tee times since 2002!) will continue.

            

AL Wild Cards

Rays and Yankees: The smart play would be to pick the Twins as the wild-card entrant along with the Yankees because they will rack up wins against the White Sox, Royals and Tigers. But Tampa Bay is legit.

              

NL East

Chris O'Meara/Associated Press

Clearly, the one division big enough to contain Bryce Harper.

Nationals: Wouldn't it be something if Washington actually won a playoff series in the year Harper bolted? Don't be shocked: The Nationals think they have a better overall team this season, with pieces that fit together better, too. And they may be right. Max Scherzer, Patrick Corbin and Stephen Strasburg form a pretty good start to the rotation. Young Juan Soto, 20, is an absolute stud, and Victor Robles now has room to roam in the outfield. The additions of professionals Brian Dozier (second base), Yan Gomes and Kurt Suzuki (catcher) may well make the Nats better.

Phillies: They were better even before Harper arrived, when they acquired catcher J.T. Realmuto, shortstop Jean Segura, outfielder Andrew McCutchen and closer David Robertson. If ace Aaron Nola can repeat his 2018 heroics and Jake Arrieta has a few things left, Citizens Bank Park will be rocking again. Of course, given these demanding fans, the most asked question in the industry this spring was: When will Harper receive his first rousing boos from Philly fans? Odds are heavily in favor of Opening Day if he fails to drive in runs in a key situation.

Braves: Last season's surprise division winners won't sneak up on anybody this year. But they do still have Ronald Acuna Jr., Ozzie Albies and Freddie Freeman, and they've added slugger Josh Donaldson, so they may not need to sneak up on anyone. This division will be a slugfest all summer.

Mets: Spring training hadn't even ended when Noah Syndergaard ranted about the club's travel itinerary and failure to work out a contract extension for Jacob deGrom. The Mets got the deal done with deGrom. Now, if the rest of the club takes on the same ornery nature, this could be quite a summer. New closer Edwin Diaz and infielders Robinson Cano and Jed Lowrie give this club a fresh look. Is it the look of a contender? Could be.

Marlins: Rebuild. Lather, rinse, repeat. Rebuild. Lather, rinse, repeat. …

          

NL Central

Ross D. Franklin/Associated Press

Is Great American Ball Park big enough to contain Yasiel Puig?

Cardinals: Matt Carpenter and Paul Goldschmidt can make magic together in the lineup. St. Louis has good rotation upside with Miles Mikolas, Jack Flaherty and Dakota Hudson, and enticing bullpen pieces in Jordan Hicks, Andrew Miller and John Brebbia. This division will be fun, and the Cardinals' three-year playoff absence will end.

Cubs: President of baseball operations Theo Epstein said over the winter that this will be a year of "reckoning" for the Cubs. Sounds scary, and it may be: Manager Joe Maddon is in the final season of his contract, and phenom Ian Happ was dismissed to the minors after a middling spring. There is a sense of urgency here, and with two good shoulders again, Kris Bryant is primed for a bounce-back season. So are the Cubs.

Brewers: Yes, their bullpen was fantastic last year, but will it repeat? Jeremy Jeffress' shoulder is barking and Corey Knebel has a tear in his elbow. Josh Hader is all-world, but the rotation remains short, and manager Craig Counsell and Co. will have to match last summer's display of creativity to get back to the postseason.

Reds: They could finish anywhere from first to fourth, but one thing they will not be with Puig is boring. His bat will do more damage in Cincinnati's ballpark than a toddler set loose in a department store display of fine china. Their pitching has been awful in recent years, and Sonny Gray, Tanner Roark and Alex Wood joined to help fix that. The equation is fairly simple: If the Reds pitch well, they will win.

Pirates: It must be so frustrating to be a Pirates fan and watch everyone else make moves while your team stands pat. The acquisition of starter Chris Archer last year was terrific, but the Buccos followed that with a winter of, essentially, silence. And yes, that includes adding Lonnie Chisenhall and Jordan Lyles.

          

NL West

Matt York/Associated Press

The last team to lose back-to-back World Series and then win the next year? The 1923 New York Yankees. Dodgers, your move.

Dodgers: There is so much depth here that yes, even though Clayton Kershaw will open the season on the injured list with shoulder trouble and is eroding before our eyes, the Dodgers should breeze to a seventh consecutive division title. Corey Seager is back at shortstop after he missed 2018, and file away the names Dustin May and Tony Gonsolin, a couple of right-handed phenoms who should provide late-season help.

Rockies: Score one for manager Bud Black, under whose guidance Colorado has done what few thought could be done: pitched, pitched well and pitched consistently, even at altitude. Kyle Freeland, German Marquez, Tyler Anderson and Co. also get a boost from the long-term extension awarded to Gold Glove third baseman Nolan Arenado.

Padres: Manny Machado says he wants championships, an MVP award and more Gold Gloves. Just maybe, the vaunted Padres farm system can help him with that. Fernando Tatis Jr. will be a revelation at shortstop, and with Machado, Tatis, second baseman Luis Urias (when he arrives) and first baseman Eric Hosmer, some of the most fun someone can have in this game will be watching this infield defense at work. The rotation remains on training wheels, but you can see things getting better for this franchise.

Diamondbacks: The trick for the Snakes will be making this year more about who is there instead of who isn't. Gone are Paul Goldschmidt, Patrick Corbin and A.J. Pollock. At 35, Zack Greinke is aging. (Though his long hair is back, so I told him this spring that I think that alone portends a solid season. He laughed.) Newcomer Luke Weaver, acquired in the Goldschmidt deal, is a key, and let's see what outfielder Adam Jones brings.

Giants: Manager Bruce Bochy is retiring at year's end, so can the old gang of Buster Posey, Brandon Crawford, Brandon Belt, Madison Bumgarner and Co. give him a rousing send-off? Sorry, the odds are stacked against it.

           

NL Wild Cards

Phillies and Cubs: Call it the Ryne Sandberg Invitational.

              

World Series

Nationals over Astros: Wouldn't it be something if Washington not only won a playoff series in the first year A.B. (After Bryce), but if the Nationals then went on to win the National League Championship Series and World Series as well? Hey, it could happen. Scherzer on the mound, Soto and Anthony Rendon in the middle of the lineup, Sean Doolittle and Trevor Rosenthal in the pen...why not?

          

MVPs

David Dermer/Associated Press

Alex Bregman, Astros (AL): Talk about a gamer who rises to the occasion. There are no limits for this gritty kid. And he wants greatness.

Juan Soto, Nationals (NL): The Nationals marveled at how mature he was even last year, at 19. Soto is wise beyond his years, powerful beyond his age and a superstar in the making.

             

Cy Youngs

Brynn Anderson/Associated Press

Gerrit Cole, Astros (AL): He's coming off a season in which he fanned a career-high 276 hitters and led the majors with 12.39 strikeouts per nine innings, the third-best K/9 mark in AL history (behind Pedro Martinez's 13.20 in 1999 and Chris Sale's 12.93 in 2017).

Max Scherzer, Nationals (NL): Jacob deGrom had a phenomenal 2018, but Scherzer, who led the majors with 300 strikeouts in 2018, continues to set the bar for consistency.

             

Rookies of the Year

Chris O'Meara/Associated Press

Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays (AL): There's greatness ahead, but that big body (6'2", 250 lbs) is a concern. He needs to make sure he doesn't add weight. Guerrero will open the season on the injured list with an oblique strain, which will only increase anticipation for his long-awaited debut.

Fernando Tatis Jr., Padres (NL): Five tools, man. He can run, hit (with power), field, throw. Hosmer said this spring that Tatis looks like Machado from 10 years ago. That is not an exaggeration.

            

Managers of the Year

Jason Behnken/Associated Press

Kevin Cash, Rays (AL): Tampa Bay either takes another step forward this year or goes crashing back. Here's a vote for the former.

Dave Martinez, Nationals (NL): One year in, Martinez still has to prove he can manage. By the end of this Bryce-less summer, he either will have solidified his status or he will join the rest of the gang in the Nationals' overloaded managerial discard bin.

       

Biggest Storylines

Keith Srakocic/Associated Press

Ready, set, go.

• For the first time in an MLB season, there were more strikeouts (41,207) than hits (41,020) last summer. Is the game capable of reversing that (yaaaawn) troubling trend?

 By changing teams, will Harper help Philadelphia finally win again, or will his departure aid Washington's badly needed overhaul and allow the Nationals to finally win? Meanwhile, how will Harper and Phillies manager Gabe Kapler get along? Those are some definite Type A personalities.

 The continued neutering of managers: With front offices more analytically inclined than ever, the move is to hire young managers who will accept, ahem, lineup "suggestions" and other strategies from the baseball operations department. As the old-school skippers get chased away (and don't you dare call these newbies "skippers;" they are little more than middle-managers), it's also become a cost-saving method for clubs. A USA Today study last summer revealed that 21 of the 30 managers were earning $1.5 million or less, and only three were earning more than the average player salary of $4 million. With the Angels moving on from Mike Scioscia in '19 (hello, Brad Ausmus), the Giants' Bochy set to retire at season's end and the Cubs' Maddon on the hot seat, all three of those could be gone, too. Bochy and Maddon are earning $6 million each this year. Good luck to any manager who wants to reach that salary level anytime soon. The days of Sparky Anderson, Billy Martin, Tony La Russa and Lou Piniella, sadly, are long gone.

 Rules changes: The most significant changes this year are just one trade deadline, on July 31 (the pesky waivers Aug. 31 deadline has been eliminated), the reduction of six mound visits to five per team in a nine-inning game and the Home Run Derby now is worth $1 million to the winner. Next year is when it gets interesting, including a proposal that a reliever must face a minimum of three hitters unless the inning ends. We'll break all that down next season.

 Will Bumgarner (Giants), Marcus Stroman (Blue Jays), Trevor Bauer (Indians) and Corey Kluber (Indians) be on the trade block come July, or will their teams stay in contention?

 The "reckoning" of the Chicago Cubs. Hey, those are Epstein's words. Translation: The nucleus that won the 2016 World Series—Anthony Rizzo, Bryant, Addison Russell, Javy Baez, Kyle Schwarber and more—hasn't won since and the clock is ticking loudly. Win now, or changes are coming.

• The NL East is the power division, as four of the five teams made significant moves to try to win this year. It will be a fascinating summer.

• Bullpenning: Tampa Bay helped make it hip last year, using it to great effectiveness. Milwaukee tried to punch a World Series ticket with it. Most baseball men doubt it is sustainable over a 162-game grind. And don't mention it around Scherzer or Verlander, else you might get socked in the jaw.

• MLB attendance dropped below 70 million last summer for the first time since 2003. A total of 17 of the 30 clubs saw attendance declines, most notably in Toronto (from 3.2 million in '17 to 2.3 million in '18). MLB says bad spring weather had a lot to do with this, and maybe so. But nobody is buying tickets to see Sergio Romo start games (part of Tampa Bay's opener strategy last season). And it's become an all-or-nothing game: The combined rate of home runs, strikeouts and walks (the "three true outcomes," in analytics parlance) was 33.7 percent in 2018. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, since strikeouts were first recorded in both leagues in 1913, there have been only seven seasons in which homers, strikeouts and walks have accounted for 30 percent or more of all plate appearances. All of them have occurred since 2012. The attendance decline was the impetus for some of the rules changes, and you can bet MLB will be watching ticket sales closely in 2019.

         

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.  

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2019-03-28 13:03:36Z
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MLB Opening Day 2019: Schedule, starting pitchers for Thursday - USA TODAY

The 2019 Major League Baseball season gets underway proper Thursday, with all 30 teams in action, starting with the Yankees hosting the Orioles at 1 p.m. ET.

While the Mariners and Athletics already played two official games in Tokyo last week, Thursday marks the earliest Opening Day – excluding international openers – ever.

In Washington, Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer take the hill for the Mets and Nationals, just the second time (1974) that consecutive Cy Young winners have pitched against each other on Opening Day. In Tampa, Blake Snell and Justin Verlander square off in another Cy Young battle.

The biggest story line of the day might be Bryce Harper making his Phillies debut, against the Braves at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia.

MLB 2019: Predictions for the new season

POWER RANKINGS: Can Yankees overtake Red Sox?

PIVOTAL PLAYERS: These six could make or break their teams' seasons

(all times Eastern)

1:00 p.m

Baltimore Orioles at New York Yankees – Andrew Cashner (4-15, 5.29 ERA) vs. Masahiro Tanaka (12-6, 3.75 ERA) 

1:05 p.m.

New York Mets at Washington Nationals  Jacob deGrom (10-9, 1.70 ERA) vs. Max Scherzer (18-7, 2.53 ERA)

2:10 p.m. 

St. Louis Cardinals at Milwaukee Brewers  Miles Mikolas (18-4, 2.83 ERA) vs. Jhoulys Chacin (15-8, 3.50 ERA)

3:05 p.m.

Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phillies – Julio Teheran (9-9, 3.94 ERA) vs. Aaron Nola (17-6, 2.37 ERA)

3:37 p.m.

Detroit Tigers at Toronto Blue Jays – Jordan Zimmermann (7-8, 4.52 ERA) vs. Marcus Stroman (4-9, 5.54 ERA)

4:00 p.m.

Arizona Diamondbacks at Los Angeles Dodgers – Zack Greinke (15-11, 3.21 ERA) vs. Hyun-Jin Ryu (7-3, 1.97 ERA)

Houston Astros at Tampa Bay Rays – Justin Verlander (16-9, 2.52 ERA) vs. Blake Snell (21-5, 1.89 ERA)

4:05 p.m.

Chicago Cubs at Texas Rangers – Jon Lester (18-6, 3.32 ERA) vs. Mike Minor (12-8, 4.18 ERA)

4:07 p.m.

Los Angeles Angels at Oakland Athletics – Trevor Cahill (7-4, 3.76 ERA) vs. Mike Fiers (0-1, 15.00 ERA in 2019; 12-8, 3.56 ERA in 2018)

4:10 p.m.

San Francisco Giants at San Diego Padres – Madison Bumgarner (6-7, 3.26 ERA) vs. Eric Lauer (6-7, 4.34 ERA)

Cleveland Indians at Minnesota Twins – Corey Kluber (20-7, 2.89 ERA) vs. Jose Berrios (12-11, 3.84 ERA)

Colorado Rockies at Miami Marlins – Kyle Freeland (17-7, 2.85 ERA) vs. Jose Urena (9-12, 3.98 ERA)

Pittsburgh Pirates at Cincinnati Reds – Jameson Taillon (14-10, 3.20 ERA) vs. Luis Castillo (10-12, 4.30 ERA)

4:15 p.m.

Chicago White Sox at Kansas City Royals – Carlos Rodon (6-8, 4.18 ERA) vs. Brad Keller (9-6, 3.08 ERA)

7:00 p.m.

Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners – Chris Sale (12-4, 2.11 ERA) vs. Marco Gonzales (1-0, 4.50 ERA in 2019; 13-9, 4.00 ERA in 2018)

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2019-03-28 11:00:00Z
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Kobe Bryant ranks himself GOAT over Michael Jordan, LeBron James - Fox News

Kobe Bryant weighed in on who he thinks is the NBA’s greatest player of all time during a Wednesday night appearance on the “The Late Late Show with James Corden.”

Bryant participated in the show’s popular segment “Spill Your Guts or Fill Your Guts,” in which celebrities are asked to either answer a question truthfully or eat an unsavory delicacy instead.

The retired Los Angeles Lakers 5-time champion was asked by host James Corden to either rank the best basketball players out of Michael Jordan, LeBron James and himself, or take a healthy bite of cow tongue.

Initially, Bryant backed off from answering the question out of fear of instigating a long debated topic.

KOBE BRYANT FAN IN CHINA RETURNS RETIRED NBA STAR'S HIGH SCHOOL JERSEY -- AFTER REALIZING IT HAD BEEN STOLEN

"You know what I'm going to answer, but I'm not going to answer it, because then everybody's going to sit there and debate about it," he said.

But as Bryant leaned in for the bite, along with a little push from Corden to answer the question, he quickly changed his mind and named himself the GOAT.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“OK, fine,” he said. “I’m the best, Michael is second-best, LeBron is third-best.”

Bryant’s response was quickly met with chants of “MVP” from the audience.

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2019-03-28 08:55:33Z
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How to watch Giants-Padres online and on MyTeams app - NBCSports.com

SAN FRANCISCO -- What could have been The Winter of Bryce has turned into The Winter of Incremental Improvement. 

And that's fine, to be honest.

Farhan Zaidi was brought in because the organization's rosters, from the big leagues to A-ball, were a mess, and he promised on Day 1 to find any advantage he could while adding slight upgrades here and there. This is what the Giants needed to do, but there's no doubt that they still trail well behind most others in terms of roster strength. 

As we get ready for Opening Day, here's a look at the position groups, with some grades. The first thing you had to do in school was show up, and in that respect, the Giants are in good shape. They're remarkably healthy, and that makes the outlook a little rosier here at the end of the spring: 

Starting pitching: B-

These guys could be an A or a C. Who knows what the Giants will really get from a group that looks deep but does have question marks. Madison Bumgarner, Derek Holland and Dereck Rodriguez provide a solid foundation, and Drew Pomeranz could be a sneaky addition

But the peripherals on some of the top guys are concerning, and Jeff Samardzija will have to re-prove himself after an injury-marred season. He had a good spring but got rocked Tuesday in his return to Oracle Park. 

Bullpen: B+

For now, it might be the strength of the team. Will Smith, Tony Watson, Sam Dyson and Reyes Moronta form a nice quartet at the back end and Trevor Gott and Travis Bergen look like finds. Mark Melancon had a brutal spring, but shouldn't be in a high-leverage role given the depth here. Nick Vincent has had a good career and made the team early. 

There's more depth in Triple-A than a year ago, and starters Andrew Suarez, Tyler Beede and Shaun Anderson could help as relievers if needed. 

Infield: B+

There are five All-Stars here, and all enter the season fully healthy, so the potential is there for this to be one of the better groups in the majors. Joe Panik, in particular, looks like a new man this spring, and Buster Posey has had no setbacks after season-ending hip surgery. 

It should be noted, though, that Panik is the only starter here under 30 and all five infielders dealt with injury issues last season. On talent alone, this is a strong group, but it's hard to rely on health for a full season. 

Outfield: INC.

The grade here really would be a D or an F, but it's hard to even make a determination because half the outfield consists of players -- Connor Joe and Michael Reed -- we simply haven't seen.

Steven Duggar's teammates think he can be a star, and Gerardo Parra was a nice addition, but this group will undergo changes throughout the season as Farhan Zaidi looks for a fix for an organization allergic to developing outfielders. On paper, this is the worst outfield in the majors, but it's also the one place where Zaidi may be able to make the biggest impact by getting creative. 

Bench: C

On days when Yangervis Solarte starts in left, the Giants will have three bench bats -- Erik Kratz, Joe and Reed -- who were picked up in the week before the opener. It's not a sign of strength when 25 percent of your position player group was available in minor trades that late in the spring. 

[RELATED: Giants mailbag: Why Panda over Hansen?]

The fourth player here is Pablo Sandoval, and while he provides value as a left-handed bat, he duplicates what Joe does defensively. There's not really a backup shortstop, so expect the bench to get shaken up pretty quickly. 

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2019-03-28 06:17:10Z
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Rabu, 27 Maret 2019

Lady Vols basketball coach search: Are Jeff Walz, Kara Lawson in play? - Knoxville News Sentinel

Tennessee is in the market for a women’s basketball coach.

Holly Warlick is out after seven seasons on the job, Tennessee announced on Wednesday.

Here are 15 candidates to monitor throughout the Lady Vols’ search, separated by category.

Swing for the fences

Brenda Frese

Current job: Maryland coach

Frese, 48, is one of the most successful coaches in women's basketball. She notched her 500th career victory in January. Maryland made the NCAA Tournament for the 15th time in Frese's 17 seasons as coach, earning a No. 3 seed.

Maryland has made the Final Four three times under Frese, including a national championship in 2006. She's one of seven active head coaches who has won a national title.

Frese would be a tough acquisition. She's under contract through 2021 with built-in extensions set to run through 2025. The Baltimore Sun reported her 2018 earnings to be $1.19 million.

Becky Hammon

Current job: San Antonio Spurs assistant

Hammon, 42, is breaking barriers in the NBA. She has positioned herself to one day become the league's first female head coach. Already, she's served as head coach of the Spurs' summer league team, leading it to a title in 2015. She's in her fifth season on San Antonio's staff. Greg Popovich promoted Hammon to his top assistant before this season.

Hammon played at Colorado State before becoming a six-time WNBA all-star. She's never coached in the college ranks — she reportedly turned down a chance to become Florida's women's coach in 2017 — but perhaps the allure of Tennessee could pull her from the NBA.

Hammon played for the Knoxville-based Tennessee Fury of the National Women's Basketball League in 2003. Her scoring average of 20.6 points led the league.

Scott Rueck

Current job: Oregon State coach

Rueck, 49, was born in Oregon, played at Oregon State and has spent his entire coaching career within the state. Could Tennessee lure him away?

The Lady Vols got a close look at his program last year, when the Beavers eliminated Tennessee in the second round of the NCAA Tournament en route to the Elite Eight.

Oregon State is a No. 4 seed in the midst of its sixth straight NCAA Tournament appearance. The Beavers have made four consecutive Sweet 16 appearances, including the program's only Final Four in 2016.

Rueck is in his ninth season. Previously, he led George Fox to an NCAA Division III championship in 2009, one of its seven national tournament appearances in Rueck's 14 seasons as coach.

He's under contract through the 2026-27 season. He's earning $631,000 this season, according to his contract terms. His salary will increase throughout his contract, culminating with a salary of $879,425 in the final year of his deal.

► John Adams: UT made right decision to part ways with Warlick

Jeff Walz

Current job: Louisville coach

Walz, 47, is one of the nation's best coaches. Tennessee would have to open its purse strings to have any hope of landing him. He developed Louisville into a perennial power. The Cardinals made the Final Four last season for the third time under Walz.

Louisville beat Connecticut 78-69 this season in front of a home crowd of 17,023. The Cardinals made the NCAA Tournament for the 11th time in his 12 seasons and earned a No. 1 seed. They reached the Sweet 16 for the ninth time during his tenure.

Walz earns $1.48 million annually. His contract runs through 2025. He'd owe a buyout of one year's salary for leaving his contract early.

Louisville's athletic director Vince Tyra did not hire Walz, so perhaps he would consider picking a new boss.

Rising talents

Courtney Banghart

Current job: Princeton coach

Princeton is the only head coaching job Banghart has ever had, and she's thrived in the role. She's led the Tigers to eight NCAA Tournament appearances in her 12 seasons as coach. Princeton had never made the Big Dance before hiring Banghart.

Banghart, 40, has never coached in college outside the Ivy League. Her first college job was as an assistant at Dartmouth, her alma mater.

She was named the Naismith National Coach of the Year following the 2014-15 season, when Princeton went 31-1 and reached the NCAA tournament's second round. Also in 2015, Fortune Magazine named her among the world's 50 greatest leaders.

Lisa Fortier

Current job: Gonzaga coach

Fortier, 37, is one of the top up-and-coming coaches in the country. Kelly Graves built Gonzaga into an elite mid-major, and Fortier kept the train rolling. She's in her fifth season as coach after seven seasons as an assistant for Graves.

Gonzaga made the NCAA Tournament for the fourth time in Fortier's five seasons. The Bulldogs reached the Sweet 16 in her first season as an 11-seed before falling 73-69 to Tennessee.

Fortier is a California native who played college basketball in her home state. She has spent her entire coaching career on the West coast.

Kellie Harper

Current job: Missouri State coach

If Tennessee wants a coach with ties to the Lady Vols, Harper is one possibility. She's also as marketable as ever, having guided Missouri State to its first Sweet 16 appearance since 2001.

Harper, then Kellie Jolly, was the popular point guard for the Lady Vols for their three-peat of national championships from 1996-98. She's from Sparta, Tennessee.

Harper, 41, is in her sixth season at Missouri State. She also led the Bears to an NCAA Tournament appearance in 2016. She's been a mid-major success, having led Western Carolina to a pair of NCAA appearances during her five seasons there as a first-time head coach.

However, she was fired after four seasons at North Carolina State, having made the NCAA Tournament in just her first season.

She's under contract through the 2021-22 season and earns $247,000.

Carolyn Kieger

Current job: Marquette coach

Kieger, 35, has turned her alma mater into a force. A former four-year starting point guard, Kieger spent six seasons as an assistant at Miami before taking the reins at Marquette.

The Golden Eagles endured a couple rough seasons to start her tenure before taking off. They made their third straight NCAA tournament appearance and reached the second round in each of the past two seasons, giving the program its fifth and sixth NCAA Tournament victories.

Marquette's 27 victories this season marked a program record.

Kieger is under contract through the 2022-23 season.

Tina Langley

Current job: Rice coach

If you can't get Frese, how about Frese's protégé? Langley, 45, spent seven seasons on Frese's staff at Maryland, the final five as associate coach.  

Rice has been on an upward trajectory throughout Langley's tenure. The Owls won the Women's Basketball Invitational to cap her second season before reaching the WNIT's second round in Year 3. Now comes the greatest success. Rice set a program record with 28 wins this season and made its third NCAA Tournament appearance in program history.

Langley is an Alabama native who played for West Alabama and began her coaching career at a high school in the state. She's been an assistant at Georgia, Clemson and Toledo.

Quality veterans

Katie Abrahamson-Henderson

Current job: Central Florida coach

Although Abrahamson-Henderson has never been the head coach at a Power 5 school, she's proven at three stops that she's a winner. In her third season at UCF, she led the Knights to their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2011 and just their fifth bid in program history.

UCF's 26 wins marked a program record.

Abrahamson-Henderson, 52, started her coaching career at Missouri State, which made three NCAA appearances and won a WNIT championship during her five seasons. She led Albany to five straight NCAA appearances during a six-year tenure before making the move to UCF.

She's under contract through the 2022-23 season. Her salary is $400,000.

Cori Close

Current job: UCLA coach

Perhaps Tennessee will take the approach of: If you can't beat her, hire her.

Close's Bruins eliminated the Lady Vols in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, UCLA's fifth NCAA appearance in her eight seasons. The Bruins have reached the Sweet 16 in four straight seasons, including the program's second Elite Eight appearance last year.

Close, 47, is known as an ace recruiter and a bright offensive mind. The Close era got off to a rocky start after she replaced Nikki Fargas, but the Bruins have won at least 22 games in each of the last four seasons.

Before becoming a head coach, she was the associate coach for Florida State's Sue Semrau for seven seasons. 

Close is from California, so money likely would need to be a motivating factor to leave. She's under contract through the 2020-21 season and earns $475,000.

Katie Meier

Current job: Miami coach

Meier, 51, had a standout career at Duke, tallying 1,761 career points, but she's been a longtime presence at another ACC school.

In her 14th season at Miami, she coached one of her best teams. They bowed out in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, ending a 25-win season. The Hurricanes did not make an NCAA Tournament until her sixth season, but this year marked their eighth bid in the past nine seasons. 

Before Miami, Meier won 76 games in four seasons at Charlotte, including one NCAA appearance. Her teams have never advanced beyond the second round of the NCAA tournament.

Meier is under contract through the 2023-24 season.

Wes Moore

Current job: North Carolina State coach

Moore has been a winner everywhere he's coached. His latest achievement is leading the Wolfpack to three straight seasons of at least 23 wins. N.C. State made its third straight NCAA Tournament appearance, which marks its fourth bid in Moore’s six seasons. That includes consecutive Sweet 16 appearances.

Kay Yow built N.C. State into one of the nation’s most respected programs, but the Wolfpack had backslid before Moore’s arrival, making the NCAA Tournament just once in the six seasons before he was hired. The Wolfpack reached the Sweet 16 last season.

Before going to N.C. State, Moore, 61, led Chattanooga to nine NCAA appearances in 15 seasons. His career started at Division III Maryville College, located 18 miles south of Knoxville. Moore earns $460,000 annually, and his contract runs through next season, so he’s affordable.

Sue Semrau

Current job: Florida State coach

Semrau, 57, is in her 22nd season at Florida State, where she has piled up more than 400 career victories. Although she's never reached a Final Four, she's been wildly successful. The Seminoles finished one win shy of a fifth consecutive 25-win season.

FSU made its 15th NCAA Tournament appearance under Semrau. The Seminoles made the NCAA Tournament just once in her first seven seasons, but once she got the program rolling, it didn't slow down. She's led FSU to three Elite Eight appearances.

Semrau is under contract through the 2019-20 season and earns $715,000 annually.

Wild card

Kara Lawson

Current job: TV analyst

Lawson has no college coaching experience, but she's long been a name on Lady Vols fans' radar, thanks to her continued involvement in the sport and UT.

Lawson was a standout guard under legendary Tennessee coach Pat Summitt, helping the Lady Vols make a pair of Final Four appearances. She played 13 seasons in the WNBA and won an Olympic gold medal with the U.S. in 2008. She began her broadcasting career while her playing career was active. She currently a broadcasts games for ESPN and is the color analyst for the Washington Wizards.

Lawson was appointed to UT's Board of Trustees in 2018, and she is one of three members on UT's special committee on athletics.

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https://www.knoxnews.com/story/sports/college/university-of-tennessee/womens-basketball/2019/03/27/lady-vols-tennessee-basketball-candidates-holly-warlick-jeff-walz-kara-lawson-kellie-harper/3066070002/

2019-03-27 20:15:00Z
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There’s A New Favorite In The 2019 Women’s NCAA Tournament - FiveThirtyEight

The 2019 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament resumes on Friday with its Sweet 16 games. In the video above, Assistant Sports Editor Sara Ziegler talks about the lack of surprises in the tournament so far and the path of the one Cinderella team that’s still hanging on. She also discusses who our model thinks is the new favorite to cut down the nets in April.

You can see all of our March Madness projections here.

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https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/theres-a-new-favorite-in-the-2019-womens-ncaa-tournament/

2019-03-27 17:42:00Z
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