Rabu, 10 April 2019

Mock Draft 10.0: Kyler to Cards, Giants Acquire a Third First-Round Pick - Sports Illustrated

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https://www.si.com/nfl/2019/04/10/mock-draft-kyler-murray-cardinals-new-york-giants-first-round-qb

2019-04-10 13:42:45Z
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No More Magic: Johnson Abruptly Resigns From The LA Lakers - NPR

Magic Johnson fought back tears while he broke the news of his resignation to reporters on Tuesday. He said he hadn't told his boss yet because he knew he would cry "like a baby." Mark J. Terrill/AP hide caption

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Mark J. Terrill/AP

Magic Johnson isn't having fun anymore.

"Today, I'm going to step down as president," the former NBA superstar told a gaggle of reporters on Tuesday night, about an hour and a half before the Los Angeles Lakers played their last game of the season. "I was happier when I wasn't the president."

Johnson has served as the team's president of basketball operations for over two years – the latest move in a long and successful career as a businessman and philanthropist after he retired from basketball in 1991 when he tested positive for HIV .

His resignation came out of the blue; on Monday, Johnson had a three-hour meeting about the team's future after its sixth consecutive losing season, The Associated Press reported.

Reporters and basketball fans weren't the only ones to find out about his resignation late in the game.

"Somebody's gonna have to tell my boss," Johnson told reporters.

His boss is Lakers owner Jeanie Buss, who hired Johnson just over two years ago after she dismissed her brother Jim, who was vice president of basketball operations, and General Manager Mitch Kupchak in an effort to change things up after multiple losing seasons.

Johnson said he just couldn't face Buss, who he called "my sister."

"Have you really not told Jeanie yet?" a reporter asked.

"No, I haven't. I couldn't," he answered. "She doesn't know I'm standing here because I knew I would be crying like a baby in front of her."

The Hall-of-Famer barely kept it together in front of the press: "I'm about to cry now," he said.

When his boss inevitably heard the news, the Lakers issued a statement thanking Johnson for his time with the team. "There is no greater Los Angeles Laker than Earvin Johnson," said the statement. "He will always be not only a Lakers icon, but our family."

Buss also tweeted her thanks:

But not everyone thought Johnson was good for the Lakers.

"It's a mess," said sports anchor Rob Parker recently, calling the former president of basketball operations "tragic Johnson."

"Nobody ... thought that the Lakers wouldn't make the playoffs when LeBron James came here, even with the injury," said Parker.

James, who joined the LA team in July of last year, didn't respond to Johnson's resignation on Tuesday.

Johnson didn't give any specific reasons for his decision to quit.

He said he's happy with where the team has gone during his two years. "We're halfway there with Lebron coming back," said Johnson. "I think this team is going to be in position to really contend for championship with the growth of the young players."

The Lakers ended their season with a loss to the Portland Trail Blazers on Tuesday night, after being eliminated from the playoff race last month.

They used to be an all-star team with 16 NBA championship wins. But it's been six straight years since their last win, and three years since they made the playoffs.

Johnson said he is not stepping down because of differences he's had with the team's coach of three years, Luke Walton.

"I like Luke a lot," said Johnson. "We have different opinions about different things – that's OK."

It's been widely reported that the Lakers were expected to dismiss Walton at the end of the regular season.

Walton told reporters he didn't know Johnson was planning to quit. "I found out the same time as you guys," said the coach at a press conference after the team's Tuesday night game.

However, Johnson did suggest vaguely that his departure had to do with an upcoming confrontation.

"Tomorrow, I would have to effect somebody's life – ruin their life," he said. "That's not fun for me, that's not who I am."

Delivering bad news – that's one of the job requirements Johnson said he doesn't like. He talked about the challenge of having to trade players that he likes.

Johnson would rather be on the other side of things, helping mentor players like tennis champion Serena Williams and Philadelphia 76ers point guard Ben Simmons.

But NBA rules prevent teams – including players, coaches and management – from doing anything that might entice a player away from another team they're under contract with. Mentoring another player can be construed as tampering.

Johnson has been investigated by the NBA for tampering four times, including for his response to a mentoring request from Simmons in February. Also this year, Johnson incurred a $500,000 fine for "impermissible contact" with Oklahoma City Thunder player Paul George's agent, and another $50,000 for praising Milwaukee Bucks player Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Johnson said he's had enough of the tampering charges. "I can't help young men who want me to help them," he said. "I don't like that; I like to be free."

He also said he was tired of "the backstabbing and the whispering" associated with his leadership position.

"What am I doing? I've got a beautiful life," said Johnson, laughing. "So I'm gonna go back to that beautiful life."

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https://www.npr.org/2019/04/10/711691359/no-more-magic-johnson-abruptly-resigns-from-the-la-lakers

2019-04-10 11:33:00Z
52780262052169

Magic Johnson abruptly resigns as Lakers' president - 10TV

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Magic Johnson abruptly quit as the Los Angeles Lakers' president of basketball operations Tuesday night, citing his desire to return to the simpler life he enjoyed as a wealthy businessman and beloved former player before taking charge of this tempestuous franchise just over two years ago.

Johnson didn't tell owner Jeanie Buss or general manager Rob Pelinka about his shocking decision before he announced it in front of reporters about 90 minutes before the final game of the Lakers' sixth consecutive losing season.

Los Angeles, which is missing the NBA playoffs yet again despite the offseason addition of LeBron James, played well after Johnson's announcement, but still lost 104-101 to Portland.

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"I want to go back to having fun," Johnson said, fighting off tears. "I want to go back to being who I was before taking on this job. We're halfway there with LeBron coming (last summer). I think this summer, with that other star coming in, whoever is going to bring him in, I think this team is really going to be in position to contend for a championship with the growth of the young players."

Johnson didn't directly tie his decision to the future of Luke Walton, but the third-year coach was widely expected to be fired by Johnson. Without using names, Johnson repeatedly mentioned Buss' affinity for Walton, who was in place before Johnson got his job in February 2017, and Johnson's desire not to cause upheaval between the owner and her chosen coach.

"(On Wednesday) I would have to affect somebody's livelihood and their life," Johnson said. "And I thought about it and I said, 'That's not fun for me. That's not who I am.' And then I don't want to put her in the middle of us, even though she said, 'Hey, you can do what you want to do.' I know she has great love for him and great love for me."

Johnson and Buss had a three-hour meeting Monday about the direction of the 16-time NBA champion Lakers, who haven't made the postseason since 2013. Magic claimed he didn't finalize his decision until Tuesday morning.

"Somebody is going to have to tell my boss, because I know she's going to be sick," Johnson said. "But I knew I couldn't face her face-to-face and tell her."

Buss didn't attend the Lakers' season finale, although Johnson waited by the executive parking area at Staples Center in hopes of seeing her. Buss tweeted her reaction at halftime.

"Earvin, I loved working side by side with you," Buss wrote. "You've brought us a long way. We will continue the journey. We love you."

Walton, who is 98-148 in three seasons, refused to say much about Johnson's announcement after the loss to Portland: "I found out when you guys did. It was 80 minutes before the game ... and I haven't had any time to really process it."

Clearly blindsided by Johnson's announcement, the Lakers also issued a team statement at halftime.

"There is no greater Los Angeles Laker than Earvin Johnson," it said. "We are deeply grateful to Magic for all that he has done for our franchise as a player, an ambassador and an executive. ... He will always be not only a Lakers icon, but our family. As we begin the process of moving forward, we will work in a measured and methodical fashion to make the right moves for the future of our organization."

Johnson's desire for his old life wasn't the only reason for his departure. He also said he is tired of being investigated or fined by the NBA for tampering when he comments on basketball on Twitter or even speaks to another organization's player.

Johnson, a longtime broadcaster and respected basketball figure before moving into the front office, has been investigated four times for tampering after everything from a joking comment about Paul George on Jimmy Kimmel's talk show to his response to an email sent to him by Philadelphia's Ben Simmons.

"I thought about Dwyane Wade retiring (Wednesday), and I can't even tweet that out or be there," Johnson said. "Serena Williams called me a week ago and said, 'Will you mentor me and be on my advisory board?' And I said, 'Yeah, I'm going to do that.' So when Ben Simmons called and we went through the proper channels and they made me look like the bad guy out of that situation, but I didn't do anything wrong ... I was thinking about all those times, all those guys who want me to mentor them or be a part of their lives, and I can't even do that. I had more fun on the other side."

Johnson, who will turn 60 in August, also has many thriving business interests along with ownership stakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles FC.

Johnson's sudden decision ends another chapter in the remarkable life of the star point guard from Lansing, Michigan, who won an NCAA championship at Michigan State before claiming five NBA titles and three league MVP awards during his 12-year playing career as the leader of the Showtime Lakers.

Johnson retired in 1991 after he tested positive for HIV, but later returned briefly to the Lakers as a player and a coach. Johnson says his current health is ideal, and he insists no health concerns were part of his decision to quit the job that seemed to be his ultimate destiny.

Johnson was hired along with Pelinka when Buss dismissed her brother, Jim, and GM Mitch Kupchak just 26 months ago. The Buss children's father, Jerry, had long envisioned Johnson in a powerful role in the Lakers' front office, and Jeanie put Magic in charge of shaking up her storied franchise in decline.

Immediately after taking the job, Johnson stated his plan to land at least two free-agent superstars to return the Lakers to immediate title contention. That plan rankled feelings around the league and got him in trouble when he publicly acknowledged the Lakers' interest in George, which led to an investigation that eventually stuck the Lakers with a $500,000 fine for Pelinka making improper contact with George's agent.

Johnson made several personnel moves to clear salary cap space for his ultimate goal, notably trading guard D'Angelo Russell to Brooklyn largely to rid the Lakers of Timofey Mozgov's onerous contract in 2017.

Johnson also criticized Russell for his maturity and playing style on the way out the door, but Russell has blossomed into an All-Star leader for the playoff-bound Nets. Some of Johnson's other moves have worked out much better, including the Lakers' drafting of Lonzo Ball, the acquisition of Kyle Kuzma and the bargain signing of center JaVale McGee.

And though James was in charge of his decision to join the Lakers last summer, LeBron credited Magic with closing the deal in a meeting before he agreed to a four-year contract.

But after James strained his groin at Christmas and subsequently sat out for the longest injury absence of his 16-year NBA career, the Lakers were unable to compile enough midseason wins to stay in playoff contention. The Lakers also slumped before the trade deadline when Johnson aggressively pursued disgruntled New Orleans superstar Anthony Davis in a trade that would have required the Lakers to give up much of their talented young core.

James was shut down for the season late last month, and he watched the Lakers' season finale in street clothes on the bench. He wasn't available to reporters after the game.

The Lakers have missed the postseason in each of their three springs since Johnson and Pelinka took over, and Magic didn't stick around long enough to see whether his plan would yield another free-agent star this summer — when the likes of Kawhi Leonard and Kevin Durant should be in play — or next, when Davis should be available.

The Lakers compiled their best record in six years this season, but were eliminated from playoff contention by Russell's Nets back on March 22. Los Angeles had never missed the playoffs in more than two consecutive seasons before this six-year drought.

Johnson remained publicly supportive of Walton, but Magic also was widely known to agree with Walton's detractors who aren't impressed by his offensive game planning and rotations. Johnson's decision to step down likely means the Lakers won't make a decision on Walton's future until a new front office is in place.

Johnson and Pelinka, Kobe Bryant's former agent, didn't know each other before they were paired by Buss, but Johnson said he worked well with Pelinka. Johnson also pointedly refused to say whether Pelinka should remain as the Lakers' general manager, saying the decision rested solely with Buss, whom he repeatedly called "my sister."

"She doesn't know I'm standing here," Johnson said. "Because I knew I would be crying like a baby in front of her."

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https://www.10tv.com/article/magic-johnson-abruptly-resigns-lakers-president-2019-apr-1

2019-04-10 07:10:07Z
CBMiV2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LjEwdHYuY29tL2FydGljbGUvbWFnaWMtam9obnNvbi1hYnJ1cHRseS1yZXNpZ25zLWxha2Vycy1wcmVzaWRlbnQtMjAxOS1hcHItMdIBAA

Magic Johnson abruptly resigns as Lakers' president - Sports - WTHR

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Magic Johnson abruptly quit as the Los Angeles Lakers' president of basketball operations Tuesday night, citing his desire to return to the simpler life he enjoyed as a wealthy businessman and beloved former player before taking charge of this tempestuous franchise just over two years ago.

Johnson didn't tell owner Jeanie Buss or general manager Rob Pelinka about his shocking decision before he announced it in front of reporters about 90 minutes before the final game of the Lakers' sixth consecutive losing season.

Los Angeles, which is missing the NBA playoffs yet again despite the offseason addition of LeBron James, played well after Johnson's announcement, but still lost 104-101 to Portland.

"I want to go back to having fun," Johnson said, fighting off tears. "I want to go back to being who I was before taking on this job. We're halfway there with LeBron coming (last summer). I think this summer, with that other star coming in, whoever is going to bring him in, I think this team is really going to be in position to contend for a championship with the growth of the young players."

Johnson didn't directly tie his decision to the future of Luke Walton, but the third-year coach was widely expected to be fired by Johnson. Without using names, Johnson repeatedly mentioned Buss' affinity for Walton, who was in place before Johnson got his job in February 2017, and Johnson's desire not to cause upheaval between the owner and her chosen coach.

"(On Wednesday) I would have to affect somebody's livelihood and their life," Johnson said. "And I thought about it and I said, 'That's not fun for me. That's not who I am.' And then I don't want to put her in the middle of us, even though she said, 'Hey, you can do what you want to do.' I know she has great love for him and great love for me."

Johnson and Buss had a three-hour meeting Monday about the direction of the 16-time NBA champion Lakers, who haven't made the postseason since 2013. Magic claimed he didn't finalize his decision until Tuesday morning.

"Somebody is going to have to tell my boss, because I know she's going to be sick," Johnson said. "But I knew I couldn't face her face-to-face and tell her."

Buss didn't attend the Lakers' season finale, although Johnson waited by the executive parking area at Staples Center in hopes of seeing her. Buss tweeted her reaction at halftime.

"Earvin, I loved working side by side with you," Buss wrote. "You've brought us a long way. We will continue the journey. We love you."

Walton, who is 98-148 in three seasons, refused to say much about Johnson's announcement after the loss to Portland: "I found out when you guys did. It was 80 minutes before the game ... and I haven't had any time to really process it."

Clearly blindsided by Johnson's announcement, the Lakers also issued a team statement at halftime.

"There is no greater Los Angeles Laker than Earvin Johnson," it said. "We are deeply grateful to Magic for all that he has done for our franchise as a player, an ambassador and an executive. ... He will always be not only a Lakers icon, but our family. As we begin the process of moving forward, we will work in a measured and methodical fashion to make the right moves for the future of our organization."

Johnson's desire for his old life wasn't the only reason for his departure. He also said he is tired of being investigated or fined by the NBA for tampering when he comments on basketball on Twitter or even speaks to another organization's player.

Johnson, a longtime broadcaster and respected basketball figure before moving into the front office, has been investigated four times for tampering after everything from a joking comment about Paul George on Jimmy Kimmel's talk show to his response to an email sent to him by Philadelphia's Ben Simmons.

"I thought about Dwyane Wade retiring (Wednesday), and I can't even tweet that out or be there," Johnson said. "Serena Williams called me a week ago and said, 'Will you mentor me and be on my advisory board?' And I said, 'Yeah, I'm going to do that.' So when Ben Simmons called and we went through the proper channels and they made me look like the bad guy out of that situation, but I didn't do anything wrong ... I was thinking about all those times, all those guys who want me to mentor them or be a part of their lives, and I can't even do that. I had more fun on the other side."

Johnson, who will turn 60 in August, also has many thriving business interests along with ownership stakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angeles FC.

Johnson's sudden decision ends another chapter in the remarkable life of the star point guard from Lansing, Michigan, who won an NCAA championship at Michigan State before claiming five NBA titles and three league MVP awards during his 12-year playing career as the leader of the Showtime Lakers.

Johnson retired in 1991 after he tested positive for HIV, but later returned briefly to the Lakers as a player and a coach. Johnson says his current health is ideal, and he insists no health concerns were part of his decision to quit the job that seemed to be his ultimate destiny.

Johnson was hired along with Pelinka when Buss dismissed her brother, Jim, and GM Mitch Kupchak just 26 months ago. The Buss children's father, Jerry, had long envisioned Johnson in a powerful role in the Lakers' front office, and Jeanie put Magic in charge of shaking up her storied franchise in decline.

Immediately after taking the job, Johnson stated his plan to land at least two free-agent superstars to return the Lakers to immediate title contention. That plan rankled feelings around the league and got him in trouble when he publicly acknowledged the Lakers' interest in George, which led to an investigation that eventually stuck the Lakers with a $500,000 fine for Pelinka making improper contact with George's agent.

Johnson made several personnel moves to clear salary cap space for his ultimate goal, notably trading guard D'Angelo Russell to Brooklyn largely to rid the Lakers of Timofey Mozgov's onerous contract in 2017.

Johnson also criticized Russell for his maturity and playing style on the way out the door, but Russell has blossomed into an All-Star leader for the playoff-bound Nets. Some of Johnson's other moves have worked out much better, including the Lakers' drafting of Lonzo Ball, the acquisition of Kyle Kuzma and the bargain signing of center JaVale McGee.

And though James was in charge of his decision to join the Lakers last summer, LeBron credited Magic with closing the deal in a meeting before he agreed to a four-year contract.

But after James strained his groin at Christmas and subsequently sat out for the longest injury absence of his 16-year NBA career, the Lakers were unable to compile enough midseason wins to stay in playoff contention. The Lakers also slumped before the trade deadline when Johnson aggressively pursued disgruntled New Orleans superstar Anthony Davis in a trade that would have required the Lakers to give up much of their talented young core.

James was shut down for the season late last month, and he watched the Lakers' season finale in street clothes on the bench. He wasn't available to reporters after the game.

The Lakers have missed the postseason in each of their three springs since Johnson and Pelinka took over, and Magic didn't stick around long enough to see whether his plan would yield another free-agent star this summer — when the likes of Kawhi Leonard and Kevin Durant should be in play — or next, when Davis should be available.

The Lakers compiled their best record in six years this season, but were eliminated from playoff contention by Russell's Nets back on March 22. Los Angeles had never missed the playoffs in more than two consecutive seasons before this six-year drought.

Johnson remained publicly supportive of Walton, but Magic also was widely known to agree with Walton's detractors who aren't impressed by his offensive game planning and rotations. Johnson's decision to step down likely means the Lakers won't make a decision on Walton's future until a new front office is in place.

Johnson and Pelinka, Kobe Bryant's former agent, didn't know each other before they were paired by Buss, but Johnson said he worked well with Pelinka. Johnson also pointedly refused to say whether Pelinka should remain as the Lakers' general manager, saying the decision rested solely with Buss, whom he repeatedly called "my sister."

"She doesn't know I'm standing here," Johnson said. "Because I knew I would be crying like a baby in front of her."

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https://www.wthr.com/article/magic-johnson-abruptly-resigns-lakers-president-1

2019-04-10 08:30:46Z
52780264601174

Magic Johnson decided it's better to just be Magic Johnson - ESPN

LOS ANGELES -- Magic Johnson had the title he'd always wanted. He had the power to guide one of the most important franchises in sports, carte blanche.

Anything he wanted to do as President of Basketball Operations for the Los Angeles Lakers, he had the power to do. Fire the coach. Trade any player. Lakers owner Jeanie Buss told him that repeatedly.

But the only thing he really wanted was to go back to being Magic Johnson.

Beloved civic leader. International celebrity. Lakers legend. Basketball ambassador.

It's awesome being that guy. And Magic Johnson is great at it.

Being president of basketball operations for the Lakers is hard. Really, really hard. And Magic Johnson never figured out how to be Magic Johnson in that role so he abruptly quit Tuesday night.

As stunning as his decision was for everyone in the NBA, he was remarkably clear in explaining himself.

"I was happier when I wasn't the president," Johnson said. "When you gotta make trades, you're not happy."

Johnson enumerated all sorts of unsavory things about the job during an hour-long media session that spilled out into the hallways and corridors of Staples Center before the Lakers' final game of the season.

He didn't like: "The backstabbing, the whispering. I don't like that. I don't like a lot of things that went on that didn't have to go on.

"The fines and the tampering and the this and the that, I can't help young men who want me to help them, or I can't tweet out. Like Russell Westbrook, that was a great feat the other day. I couldn't even tweet it out to say hey congratulations. If I had did that, everyone would have said he's tampering. I don't like that. I like to be free."

He really didn't like having to make the decision on whether to retain embattled coach Luke Walton.

"She gave me the power, that is the same page. I could have done anything I wanted to, tomorrow. But I decided to step down," he said.

But what he really didn't seem to like was the negativity he has faced this season. Negativity he couldn't charm his way out of.

There aren't many situations in life that Magic Johnson hasn't been able to charm, compete or fight his way out of. The ones he couldn't -- talk-show host, Lakers coach and now Lakers president -- he got away from quickly.

Who needs it?

Magic Johnson stared death in the face when he was diagnosed with the HIV virus in 1991 and decided he was going to beat it. And he did. So then he decided that whatever was left of his life, he was going to spend exactly as he wanted to. As he said, "I got a great life. Damn, I got a great life outside of this. What the ff ... what am I doing? I got a beautiful life. I'm going back to that beautiful life. I'm looking forward to it."

That's a beautiful sentiment.

But it was also a cruel thing to do to a woman he considers to be family.

"I want to thank my sister for allowing me to do this," Johnson said of Lakers owner Jeanie Buss. "I couldn't face her to tell her, so I had to do it this way because we love each other so much."

They might love each other, but telling the world before telling your family -- not to mention your boss -- is weak.

Yes, being the Lakers' president is hard and if Johnson didn't want to keep doing it, he didn't have to keep doing it. But he could've talked it through with Buss and planned his exit, instead of leaving the franchise in an embarrassing lurch.

Leaving the way he did, with the franchise approaching one of the most important summers in recent history and with the situation with Walton still so unsettled, feels a lot like bailing when things got hard.

People have jobs they don't want and can't do. They find a way to do them, or an acceptable way out of them.

Those close to Johnson say he was "deeply offended" by the constant accusations of tampering that followed him and essentially forced him into the shadows this season.

When he did talk, he always said too much. That's how he always has been and part of the reason he has been so beloved. There's literally an NBA award named after him, the Magic Johnson Award, given to the player who has the best cooperation with the media. Magic was always that guy, as a player and later as a public figure. He's great at it.

But that's not what being an executive is. Not in a league for which information is not only commodified, but weaponized.

Magic never figured out how to play that game. He's best when the cameras are on. In the shadows, he lost his way -- and his identity.

Jeanie Buss was just as stunned as the rest of the world to hear Johnson's resignation. A few hours later, she put out a classy statement and tweet, even as she and the Buss family processed the situation. In addition to stunned, those close to the family said they were sad, angry and disappointed.

She spent the rest of Tuesday night huddled with general manager Rob Pelinka and several close advisers at the team's headquarters in El Segundo.

Johnson's quotes about Pelinka fell far short of a ringing endorsement, which left many wondering if that factored into his decision to step down. Lakers sources strongly shouted that notion down even as Johnson's quotes suggested otherwise.

"Do I think Rob is the right GM?" Johnson said. "That's a decision Jeanie has to make. I worked well with him. I had no problems with him. Now they say he had some bad, I don't know about that. A lot of my agent friends had called, but Jeanie has to make all the calls, that's not calls for me to make. This is her organization."

In a three-hour meeting Monday, Buss had once again made it very clear that she was giving Johnson the power to make the basketball decisions for the franchise, including the power to fire Walton and hire whichever coach with whom he believed he'd have a better rapport.

He either didn't want that power or couldn't handle it.

So now that power is right back to where it always should have been -- with Jeanie Buss. She has to start using it, instead of looking for someone else to pass it to.

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http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/26483921/magic-johnson-decided-better-just-magic-johnson

2019-04-10 06:49:45Z
52780262052169

Selasa, 09 April 2019

Cody Garbrandt rips ‘scumbag’ T.J. Dillashaw after USADA suspension - MMA Fighting

Cody Garbrandt wants to see all of T.J. Dillashaw’s sins laid to bare.

After the United States Anti-Doping Agency announced Tuesday that Dillashaw had been handed a two-year suspension for a failed drug test tied to his bout with Henry Cejudo at UFC Brooklyn in January, it didn’t take long for “No Love” to comment on the news and request that Dillashaw’s past samples be further examined:

Responding to a report from ESPN stating that one of Dillashaw’s previous test samples came back positive for EPO in addition to the Jan. 18 sample that was flagged for recombinant human erythropoietin, Garbrandt called Dillashaw a “coward” and a “scum bag” and added a challenge to his rival to “call me when that suspension is up!”

Garbrandt and Dillashaw have fought twice, with Dillashaw defeating Garbrandt by second-round TKO at UFC 217 to claim Garbrandt’s bantamweight title, and then defending that title in their rematch at UFC 227, that time by first-round TKO. A former teammate of Dillashaw’s at Team Alpha Male, Garbrandt has previously accused Dillashaw of using banned substances, specifically naming EPO last April in a since-deleted tweet.

Garbrandt also wrote that he believes Dillashaw’s longtime coach Duane Ludwig is involved.

As a result of his suspension, Dillashaw will not be eligible to compete again until January 2021.

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https://www.mmafighting.com/2019/4/9/18303697/cody-garbrandt-rips-scumbag-t-j-dillashaw-after-usada-suspension

2019-04-09 22:37:20Z
52780265199694

McIlroy favored at Masters; Tiger draws big bet - ESPN

Rory McIlroy wasn't the favorite at the start of the year to win the Masters, but he is now.

McIlroy, a four-time major champion, has 7-1 odds to win his first Masters this week at Augusta National and complete the career Grand Slam.

Dustin Johnson is 10-1, followed by Justin Rose (12-1) and Tiger Woods (14-1). Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Rickie Fowler and Jon Rahm are each 16-1 at the SuperBook at Westgate Las Vegas.

One bettor put even more money on Woods at the William Hill US sportsbooks on Tuesday afternoon, wagering $85,000 at those 14-1 odds. The bet would win $1.19 million and represents the largest liability on any individual golf wager in the company's history.

Last August, when the SuperBook posted odds to win the 2019 Masters, McIlroy was lumped in with a group of second-tier contenders at 14-1. Spieth, Johnson, Thomas and Woods were each given better odds than McIlroy. That has changed.

No one has been hotter than McIlroy to start the season. He has yet to finish worse than sixth place in a stroke-play event in 2019 and, after his win at the Players Championship, emerged as the consensus Masters favorite in mid-March. McIlroy is the only golfer with single-digit odds entering the week.

"McIlroy going from 14-1 to 7-1 is a considerable move," said Jeff Sherman, vice president of risk for the SuperBook. "We're not getting any large wagers, but it's a lot of small stuff."

While McIlroy is the favorite, more money has been bet at the SuperBook on Woods to win the Masters than any other golfer. Woods also attracted the largest wager the SuperBoook has taken on this year's Masters, a $10,000 bet at 12-1 placed in late February.

Spieth is second in money wagered at the SuperBook. Sherman said he took a $6,000 bet on Spieth this week that caused him to trim the 2015 Masters champion's odds from 20-1 to 16-1.

Spieth and Woods also have attracted the most money to win the Masters at DraftKings sportsbook in New Jersey. Twenty percent of the money bet on DraftKings' tournament odds is on Spieth and Woods.

Information from ESPN's Ben Fawkes was used in this report.

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http://www.espn.com/chalk/story/_/id/26480896/mcilroy-favored-masters-tiger-draws-big-bet

2019-04-09 23:04:33Z
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