Rabu, 17 April 2019

Chris Sale admits to flat-out stinking as Red Sox reality turns bleaker - New York Post

The goal must be to pass back the Rivalry Envy that plagued the Red Sox for some 86 years, only to switch over to The Bronx for most of the past 14-plus.

Yet if that Yankees quest commences with baby steps, then Tuesday night had to feel sweet. For as banged up as these Yankees are, they look nowhere as messed up as baseball’s defending champions.

Most notably, the Red Sox’s ace, a man on whom the Yankees memorably passed three years ago, sounded more despondent than Lori Loughlin at a college crew race.

“I’ve got to find a way to pitch better,” Chris Sale said Tuesday night, after the Yankees knocked around him and his relief help for an 8-0 win at Yankee Stadium, with Sale’s counterpart James Paxton throwing a gem. “This is flat-out embarrassing. For my family, for my team, for our fans. This is as bad as it gets.”

It’s worse than anyone could have imagined, right? In the 2019 Rivalry opener, and in the Red Sox’s first visit here since they eliminated the Yankees in the 2018 American League Division Series, the Sawx fell to 6-12, giving them sole occupancy of the AL East basement even though the Orioles and Blue Jays, both 7-11, are definitively rebuilding.

“You keep working,” said manager Alex Cora, who then repeated: “You keep working. We have a talented group. We want to get going sooner than later. We keep preaching what we preach.”

It’s falling on a largely deaf audience, and though a handful of everyday players have struggled — reigning AL Most Valuable Player Mookie Betts owns a lousy .212/.321/.394 slash line — the primary blame falls on the starting rotation. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Red Sox starting pitchers have posted a 7.18 ERA in 18 games, the highest through this juncture in franchise history, surpassing the 6.96 posted by the 1931 club.

Sale, who has placed between second and sixth in the previous seven AL Cy Young Award ballots, owns an 8.50 ERA that actually decreased after Tuesday’s effort — when he permitted four runs on seven hits with a walk and six strikeouts in five innings.

“It’s as frustrated as I’ve ever been on a baseball field,” Sale said. He added, “It sucks. I’m not gonna sugarcoat it. I flat out stink right now. I don’t know what it is. When you’re going good, it’s good. When you’re going bad, it’s pretty bad.”

Cora offered that Sale’s velocity did improve notably, from an average fastball of 91.3 mph in his first three starts (thanks, FanGraphs) to as high as 98 mph, with an occasionally effective slider, too.

“He’s getting closer to the guy that we know he can be,” Cora said.

Asked if he agreed with his manager’s optimism, Sale said, “You’d better [bleeping] hope so.”

Cora doesn’t buy into the Hangover Effect, the notion that defending champions suffer after the physical and emotional toil of winning it all.

“In my case, I always say we’ve all been in the hangover part of it, and it’s not because we won a championship,” Cora said. “It’s because we had a few extra pops the night before.”

Well, if it’s not that, and if they’re largely healthy — unlike the Yankees — then something’s going on. Their switching of catchers, as they designated Blake Swihart for assignment and recalled Sandy Leon from Triple-A Pawtucket, led to another poor Sale outing and a Leon throwing error and 0-for-3 effort at the plate.

“Take a look at the back of their bubble-gum card, and that’s where they usually end up,” Red Sox president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said, crediting an unnamed baseball sage who came up with that before we eschewed bubble-gum cards in favor of Baseball-Reference.com. “Our guys, a lot of them have a way to go.”

No one more than Sale, who just signed a five-year, $145 million extension and who had never allowed more than three earned runs at the Stadium in seven previous starts here.

For once, the Yankees didn’t need to envy the lanky left-hander, Given their own problems? They’ll settle for that slight a victory right now.

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https://nypost.com/2019/04/17/chris-sale-admits-to-flat-out-stinking-as-red-sox-reality-turns-bleaker/

2019-04-17 06:46:00Z
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Nuggets coach used Clippers' rally as inspiration - ESPN

DENVER -- The Denver Nuggets, the second seed in the Western Conference, were down by 16 points to the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday night and about 18 minutes away from falling into a disastrous 0-2 hole in the series.

Denver coach Mike Malone called for timeout with 5:45 remaining in the third quarter with his team trailing 73-57 and conjured up the LA Clippers pulling off their big comeback win against the Golden State Warriors to motivate his team.

"I could see on some guys' faces which way is this game going to go?" Malone said. "... I reminded them what the Clippers did [Monday] night and how much basketball is left. It's only going to happen though if we believe, we commit, we fight and we attack, and the guys took it to heart -- and we closed the game out on a 57-32 run from that point on."

The Nuggets would trail by as much as 19 in the third, but with Jamal Murray erupting for 21 of his 24 points in an explosive fourth quarter, the Nuggets completed a potentially season-saving comeback. They notched their first playoff win of the postseason to even the best-of-seven series at 1-1 with a 114-105 victory over the Spurs.

Though the Nuggets didn't overcome a 31-point deficit like the Clippers did a night earlier in a 135-131 victory to shock the defending champs, their 19-point rally starting at the 4:28 mark in the third quarter was tied for the third-largest blown lead by the Spurs under coach Gregg Popovich in the playoffs.

"We gave up [39] points in the fourth quarter, end of story," Popovich said after the loss. "... Paul [Millsap] and Jamal had a lot to do with that, obviously. They both hurt us badly, and we didn't have any answers for either one of them."

With much of the Nuggets team experiencing the postseason for the first time, Denver came out and fell behind by 19 in the second quarter. Millsap, one of the few Nuggets with playoff experience, scored 15 points in the first half and kept Denver from falling behind by much more.

Murray and Will Barton couldn't get a shot to fall in the first three quarters, combining to go 1-for-18 during that span.

After shooting 8-for-23 and missing all six of his 3-point attempts in Game 1, Murray remained an hour after that contest to get shots up on the team's practice court late into night on Saturday following Denver's 101-96 loss. In the final 57.7 seconds of Game 1, Murray missed a 3-pointer, misfired on an open 18-footer that would have put the Nuggets ahead and turned the ball over.

"Just mental bounce back," Murray said of what the two days between games were like for him emotionally. "Obviously wasn't happy with myself, frustrated. The way I played ... I rushed everything. I was excited. I let the crowd, the amazing energy, get to me.

"I wanted to go into Game 2 relaxed."

Murray tried to set off the Pepsi Center at the start of Game 2 but missed what would have been a thunderous dunk early. At halftime, Malone told Murray to calm down and to just breathe.

"He was so frustrated at halftime, not making shots, shots that he's made his whole career," Malone said. "I just grabbed him and told him take a deep breath. Every shot right now is like the end of the world."

Meanwhile, Murray's point guard counterpart, Derrick White, was following up his breakout Game 1 performance by making 7 of 10 shots on Tuesday and scoring all 17 of his points for the Spurs in the first three quarters.

Gary Harris scored 14 of his 23 points in the third to keep the Nuggets within striking distance entering the fourth. Murray, who had missed all eight of his shots and had only three points after three quarters, walked onto the floor at the start of the fourth and looked at the sold-out crowd of 19,520.

Murray said seeing all the fans waving their playoff towels reminded him of his childhood dream of playing in front of a sold-out playoff crowd.

Then Murray caught fire. He hit eight straight shots coming in all kinds of variety -- pullups, fadeaways, 3-pointers. Then in a 19-second span, Murray delivered a one-two punch that knocked the Spurs out. He hit a fadeaway 3-pointer. And after Spurs forward Rudy Gay lost the ball, Murray came down and drilled a pull-up 3 in front of Popovich and the Spurs bench to give the Nuggets a 110-101 lead with 2:12 remaining as the Pepsi Center erupted.

Murray pumped his fist and pulled out his trademark "Blue Arrow" celebration by the scorer's table as the playoff towels were waving everywhere.

"Pretty perfect," Murray said about that moment. "Just the way I imagined it. When I get into the zone, everybody knows I get in a zone. ... I go crazy. I have a lot of fun. I love the game with a passion. I was hot, and I decided to pull up."

The series is tied 1-1, and now the young Nuggets go to San Antonio looking to steal home-court advantage back.

"He needs this," Malone said when asked if there was any consideration to benching Murray in the fourth because he was cold. "... I didn't foresee the fourth quarter he was going to have, but I knew in my heart he needed to get these minutes, he needed to be out there, I needed to show him that I believed in him."

"First of many for Jamal Murray," Malone added of the point guard's playoff performance. "I have no doubt."

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http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/26542674/nuggets-coach-used-clippers-rally-inspiration

2019-04-17 06:32:47Z
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22-Year-Old Jamal Murray's Absurd Game 2 Is Sign of Future Stardom for Nuggets - Bleacher Report

DENVER, CO - APRIL 16:  Jamal Murray #27 of the Denver Nuggets reacts to a play during Game Two of Round One of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on on April 16, 2019 at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado. 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images)
Garrett Ellwood/Getty Images

Fortunately for Jamal Murray and the Denver Nuggets, no matter how seemingly hopeless NBA playoff games are after three quarters, they always include a fourth.  

Murray's first seven playoff quarters featured frigid shooting, but he heated up when Denver needed him most. His 21-point fourth-quarter eruption Tuesday produced a shocking 114-105 win over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 2, salvaged a series split and may have saved Denver's postseason.

There's still a long way to go in this first-round series with the Spurs, who held double-digit leads in Games 1 and 2. It'd be a mistake to say the Nuggets are in the clear. But Murray's eruption, which featured eight consecutive made buckets after an 0-of-8 start from the field, felt like something bigger than a one-off late-game takeover.

For starters, it was a study in the power of confidence. Because you have to be self-assured to take shots like this while you're staring down an 0-2 hole against a No. 7 seed:

Murray hit exceptionally difficult shots during his incendiary run—shots that players get benched for attempting. In the wake of his no-show up until the fourth quarter, a lot of coaches never would have given him the chance to take those shots.

If Nuggets head coach Mike Malone had turned away from Murray after his 8-of-23 (0-of-6 from deep) performance in Game 1, it would have been understandable. And if Malone had relied instead on Gary Harris, who scored 23 points on 10-of-16 shooting in Game 2, or Malik Beasley, who heated up in spurts during both contests of this series, nobody would have questioned it.

But Malone seemed to understand there was more at stake:

That wide-lens approach is rarely employed in the win-now environment of postseason basketball. But much of the immediate reaction to Murray's explosion seemed to apply a similar focus on the big picture.

It's easy to get hyperbolic when you've just watched someone set the nets ablaze for an entire quarter, but the consistent placement of Murray's efforts into a broader context felt right.

That's because the Nuggets aren't an ordinary No. 2 seed. Skepticism was attached to this young team even before it fell to the Spurs in Game 1 over the weekend. That loss validated critics' concerns about Denver's lack of experience and its uncharacteristically deferential superstar, Nikola Jokic.

In seizing Game 2 like a conventional star would—by scoring and scoring and scoring—Murray quieted some of those doubts and offered a glimpse of Denver's ceiling.

Jokic isn't wired for a takeover like that. He's a passer first, and a gifted scorer (at a plodding pace) when he has to be. Since Jokic's emergence, Denver has badly needed a reliable high-volume gunner.

Murray's first seven playoff quarters negate the "reliable" part. Streaky might be the first word you'd use to describe him. But he's barely 22, and when a player is as obviously skilled and unafraid of the moment as he is, trusting natural development to produce more highs and fewer lows feels like a safe bet.

And if Murray uses this performance as a springboard, his pairing with Jokic could turn the Nuggets into something special.

You could see some of that Tuesday, as Jokic did everything within his considerable facilitating powers to spring his scorching teammate. Jokic assisted only one of Murray's eight fourth-quarter buckets, but he set screens, hunted handoffs and got out of the way.

DENVER, CO - APRIL 5: Jamal Murray #27 and Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets as seen during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers on April 5, 2019 at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees tha
Bart Young/Getty Images

It's strange to imagine Jokic, an All-NBA talent who rang up 21 points, 13 rebounds and eight assists in Game 2, as a sidekick. He's far better than that. But Jokic's game revolves around subtlety and skill. He exploits weaknesses with his passing and patience. He picks apart a defense's frailties with precision and guile. He operates with a scalpel, but it sometimes feels like he gets queasy at the sight of blood.

Murray is the Nuggets' much-needed butcher, delighting in the carnage of cutting a defense apart with bold, aggressive hacks.

Murray needed a breakthrough moment to get his postseason going, and Denver needed it ahead of a trip to San Antonio for two games that could have ended its season if Game 2 hadn't played out like it did.

Back to that big picture again, though: Murray's role in the win illustrated what this team could become.

With young squads like Denver, you focus on the ceiling. You ask what's possible if everything breaks right over a three- or four-year timeline.

If this version of Murray shows up a bit more often, the Nuggets' long-term upside is difficult to comprehend. He fills a specific shot-making, devil-may-care, ultraconfident void in the team's makeup when he goes off like this. He allows Jokic to be himself, and he permits other role players to organize themselves around a one-two punch.

He just makes everything clearer.

Yes, consistency will matter. Murray wouldn't have needed to catch fire to save Denver if he was lukewarm rather than ice cold earlier in the game. But let's not minimize the moment.

Murray's arrival could double as Denver's takeoff on a yearslong journey of success.

    

Stats courtesy of Basketball Reference, Cleaning the Glass or NBA.com unless otherwise specified. Accurate through games played Tuesday, April 16.   

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https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2831711-22-year-old-jamal-murrays-absurd-game-2-is-sign-of-future-stardom-for-nuggets

2019-04-17 05:43:46Z
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Damian Lillard and C. J. McCollum Lead Portland to a 2-0 Series Lead | April 16, 2019 - NBA

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uAw3fbJcy6A

2019-04-17 05:58:51Z
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Selasa, 16 April 2019

Bathroom break - Rays' Snell fractures toe, on IL - ESPN

The Tampa Bay Rays have placed ace Blake Snell on the 10-day injured list with a broken toe, the team announced Tuesday.

Snell, the reigning American League Cy Young Award winner, suffered a fractured fourth toe on his right foot when he got out of the shower and then attempted to move a large granite item.

"Really dumb," Snell told reporters Tuesday. "It's like a three-piece set and this pole that comes up like 2½, 3 feet. Went to move it, I lifted it up and it wasn't glued to the pole and the pole came crushing down."

The move is retroactive to Sunday, and Snell is expected to miss only one start.

Snell, 26, is 2-1 with a 2.16 ERA in four starts this season. The left-hander has 36 strikeouts in 25 innings.

To fill the spot on the roster, the Rays called up Emilio Pagan from Triple-A Durham.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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http://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/26538874/bathroom-break-rays-snell-fractures-toe-il

2019-04-16 20:53:12Z
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Warriors' Cousins has torn left quadriceps - NBA.com

Golden State Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins may have seen his first playoff run end after just two games played.

The Golden State Warriors have confirmed that Cousins suffered a torn left quadriceps. Cousins suffered his injury in the first quarter of last night's Game 2 loss to the LA Clippers. Per the team's official release:

Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins, who exited last night’s Game 2 against the Los Angeles Clippers with 8:09 remaining in the first quarter, underwent an MRI exam earlier this morning in the Bay Area. The MRI confirmed that Cousins has suffered a torn left quadriceps muscle. The injury will sideline Cousins indefinitely and he will begin rehabilitation immediately. Updates on his progress will be provided as appropriate.

His injury is likely season-ending, The Athletic's Shams Charania reports, but the team will see how he responds within the first two weeks of rehab for an injury that is not expected to require surgery.

Cousins is still awaiting to learn the exact extent of the tear. Additionally, ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reports doctors are still determining the severity of Cousins' injury, which will in turn determine the length of his recovery process.

Cousins injury happened while tumbling after a loose ball with 8 1/2 minutes remaining in the first quarter last night. He wasn't contacted on the play, and immediately stayed down as the Clippers corralled possession and headed upcourt in transition. Cousins immediately flagged the training staff and began heading toward the locker room, walking gingerly on the injured leg.

DeMarcus Cousins suffered his left quadriceps injury on this play in Game 2.

The team updated his status shortly afterward, announcing he wouldn't return and will be undergoing an MRI within a day's time.

During the postgame news conference, Warriors coach Steve Kerr told reporters Cousin's injury was "pretty significant" and that he expected Cousins "would be out ... a while."

> Powell: Warriors hurting in wake of Cousins' injury

“We’ll rally behind him, tell him it’s far from the end of the world, tell him he has so much great basketball ahead of him,” said Warriors guard Klay Thompson. “He believes that. ... He’ll bounce back. I know he will. He’s a fighter."

Cousins had two points, two rebounds and an assist in just less than 4 minutes. He fouled out of Saturday’s 121-104 Game 1 win with nine points, nine rebounds and four assists in 21 minutes. Kevon Looney picked up the bulk of the extra minutes in Cousins' absence and scored a career-high 19 points making all six of his shots but the Warriors had their seven-game postseason winning streak snapped that dated to last year's run to a repeat championship. 

Having signed with Golden State while rehabilitating a torn Achilles' tendon, Cousins had been eager to make his playoff debut in this ninth NBA season. In 30 games as a Warrior, Cousins averaged 16.3 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 1.3 steals and 1.5 blocks in 25.7 minutes. 

“It’s tough for sure, you feel for him considering all he’s been in this last year,” said Warriors guard Stephen Curry. “This is a big stage, the playoffs. He’s been looking forward to this. I don’t know the extent of the injury at this point but hope he gets back sooner than later. But just man to man in terms of him and what he’s been through, it’s tough. There’s no sugarcoating it. You hate seeing that opportunity on this big stage taken away from him like that."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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http://www.nba.com/article/2019/04/16/report-demarcus-cousins-torn-quadriceps

2019-04-16 19:50:00Z
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Reports: Warriors' Cousins has torn left quadriceps - NBA.com

Golden State Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins may have seen his first playoff run end after just two games played.

Per Shams Charania of The Athletic, Cousins has been diagnosed with a torn left quadriceps. Cousins suffered his injury in the first quarter of last night's Game 2 loss to the LA Clippers. The news was also reported by Connor Letourneau of the San Francisco Chronicle

His injury is likely season-ending, Charania reports, but the team will see how he responds within the first two weeks of rehab for an injury that is not expected to require surgery.

However, Letourneau reports Cousins is almost definitely done for the playoffs, but Cousins is still awaiting to learn the exact extent of the tear. Additionally, ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reports doctors are still determining the severity of Cousins' injury, which will in turn determine the length of his recovery process.

Cousins injury happened while tumbling after a loose ball with 8 1/2 minutes remaining in the first quarter last night. He wasn't contacted on the play, and immediately stayed down as the Clippers corralled possession and headed upcourt in transition. Cousins immediately flagged the training staff and began heading toward the locker room, walking gingerly on the injured leg.

DeMarcus Cousins suffered his left quadriceps injury on this play in Game 2.

The team updated his status shortly afterward, announcing he wouldn't return and will be undergoing an MRI within a day's time.

During the postgame news conference, Warriors coach Steve Kerr told reporters Cousin's injury was "pretty significant" and that he expected Cousins "would be out ... a while."

> Powell:  Warriors hurting in wake of Cousins' injury

“We’ll rally behind him, tell him it’s far from the end of the world, tell him he has so much great basketball ahead of him,” said Warriors guard Klay Thompson. “He believes that. ... He’ll bounce back. I know he will. He’s a fighter."

Cousins had two points, two rebounds and an assist in just less than 4 minutes. He fouled out of Saturday’s 121-104 Game 1 win with nine points, nine rebounds and four assists in 21 minutes. Kevon Looney picked up the bulk of the extra minutes in Cousins' absence and scored a career-high 19 points making all six of his shots but the Warriors had their seven-game postseason winning streak snapped that dated to last year's run to a repeat championship. 

Having signed with Golden State while rehabilitating a torn Achilles' tendon, Cousins had been eager to make his playoff debut in this ninth NBA season. In 30 games as a Warrior, Cousins averaged 16.3 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists, 1.3 steals and 1.5 blocks in 25.7 minutes. 

“It’s tough for sure, you feel for him considering all he’s been in this last year,” said Warriors guard Stephen Curry. “This is a big stage, the playoffs. He’s been looking forward to this. I don’t know the extent of the injury at this point but hope he gets back sooner than later. But just man to man in terms of him and what he’s been through, it’s tough. There’s no sugarcoating it. You hate seeing that opportunity on this big stage taken away from him like that."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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http://www.nba.com/article/2019/04/16/report-demarcus-cousins-torn-quadriceps

2019-04-16 18:11:00Z
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