Category: External Sports (Page 187 of 821)

Nyjer Morgan takes pot shots at Nationals

Washington Nationals baserunner Nyjer Morgan (R) argues after being called out at home plate against the St. Louis Cardinals in the eighth inning of their MLB baseball game in Washington, August 28, 2010. Home plate umpire Dan Bellino makes the call at left. Morgan was assisted by a teammate after scoring on the play and then called out. REUTERS/Gary Cameron (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASEBALL)

You knew it was only a matter of time before Nyjer Morgan sounded off about the Nationals. The guy can’t not say something. (Sorry for the double-negative but damn it, it works.)

Now that Morgan is becoming somewhat relevant again in baseball (he’s on the verge of earning more playing time with the Brewers thanks to his solid play), he decided to take a few pot shots at the Nationals on ESPN Milwaukee radio recently.

On why he was traded to Milwaukee (from the Washington Post):

“Basically, the process was the Nats wanted to get rid of me,” he said, when asked how he wound up in Milwaukee. “And basically, you know, I figure one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, in my eyes. And, basically, it feels good to be in a baseball city, [with] people who understand my game and love just the aggressiveness and the hard work and the hard play I bring.”

On why things went south in D.C.:

“I think just some stuff that happened last year, I guess,” Morgan responded. “I’m not sure, just the way I play, I guess it wasn’t ready for D.C., in my eyes.”

After the host explained that people in Milwaukee don’t really follow the Nationals closely enough to understand his comments:

“I don’t follow them neither,” Morgan said, with his trademarked Tony Plush cackle. “I’ll just plead the Fifth on it. I’m glad to be in Milwaukee now, I’ll tell you that.”

When asked about being in Milwaukee:

“Just the team camaraderie is unbelievable,” Morgan said. “For me, it’s fun again. And I haven’t been on what, a three-game winning streak for about two years now, so this actually feels unbelievable.”

As Post writer Dan Steinberg points out, the Nationals actually had eight winning streaks of three games or more in 2010, although something tells me Morgan isn’t sweating the details at the moment.

Why can’t players just let it go and move on? I mean, if the dude is happy in Milwaukee, why take pot shots at his former team? Morgan had two incidents last year of lowering his shoulder into a catcher and while some people defended his actions by saying he was “just playing the game hard,” the fact of the matter is that both plays were unnecessary. He was trying to lower the boom on both catchers (the Marlins’ Brett Hayes and the Cardinals’ Bryan Anderson) so that he could draw attention to himself. Catchers have gear on, but it’s not like those chest protectors are shoulder pads. Both incidents could have been avoided.

And now he’s in Milwaukee and spouting off about the Nationals? Please. I like Morgan – I think he’s funny and personable. But again, he does some things to draw attention to himself and it’s just not necessary. Plus, tell me how the Nationals did him wrong outside of trading him. Did they torment him? Did they withhold his pay? Did they make his girlfriend sit in the nosebleeds? Did they call his mother names and make him eat all his meals with his hands? What?

I’m sure he’s well-liked in Milwaukee now, so all of his attention should be on the Brewers. The Nationals are closed chapter in his life.

Strasburg responds to Dibble’s comments about father’s alleged e-mail

Washington Nationals starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg pitches to the Kansas City Royals in the sixth inning of their MLB interleague baseball game in Washington, in this June 23, 2010 file photo. According to the team’s website, Strasburg has a significant tear in his ulnar collateral ligament will likely require Tommy John surgery, the team announced in a conference call on August 27, 2010. Picture taken June 23, 2010. REUTERS/Gary Cameron/Files (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASEBALL)

Friday I posted a story from the Washington Post that included comments by Rob Dibble on how he believes an e-mail sent by Stephen Strasburg’s father to Nationals’ owner Ted Lerner was the reason he was booted from the MASN broadcast booth in D.C. last year. (The alleged e-mail stemmed from some comments Dibble made on air after Strasburg hurt his elbow during a game last year and the broadcaster told him to “suck it up.”)

After hearing about Dibble’s comments about his father, Strasburg took to Twitter in attempts to set the story straight:

For those of you wondering my dad doesn’t even have the Lerners’ email… Actually was a fan of Dibble believe it or not

Actually, if I’m deciding between whether or not to believe that it was Strasburg’s father that wrote the e-mail or one of Dibble’s fans, I’m going with Strasburg’s father. I wouldn’t put it past Lerner to a) give his e-mail to the franchise’s father and b) try to get Dibble off the air after he made some controversial comments about said franchise. But maybe that’s just me.

Either way, the whole situation is ridiculous. As I wrote yesterday, MASN hired Dibble to share his opinions and you don’t give Rob Dibble a job without taking a risk that he’s going to say something controversial. This is the same guy who was once involved in a brawl with then-manager Lou Pinella following a Reds game during his playing days. You hire Dibble to be a little edgy.

Alas, like all ridiculous stories, this one will die off soon enough. I actually think the only reason Strasburg responded to Dibble’s comments is because he’s hurt and isn’t pitching. If he had to take the hill in less than five days, I doubt he would be worried about anything that comes out of Dibble’s mouth. (Or at least I hope he wouldn’t.)

Predicting the first round NBA matchups

Boston Celtics’ Paul Pierce (L) collides with Miami Heat’s Dwyane Wade during the first quarter of NBA basketball action in Miami November 11, 2010. Pierce was called for an offensive foul on the play. REUTERS/Hans Deryk (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT BASKETBALL)

The 16 playoff spots are locked up, so all that’s left is to narrow down these first round matchups. The only matchups that are set are CHI/IND and ORL/ATL in the East. Here are the probable first round matchups as it stands on Saturday, along with my own estimation as to how likely they are to actually happen.

EAST

#1 Chicago vs. #8 Indiana (100%)

#4 Orlando vs. #5 Atlanta (100%)

#2 Miami vs. #7 Philadelphia (55%)
Boston and Miami square off on Sunday and the winner will be in the driver’s seat for the #2 seed. That’s important because the #2 seed will host Game 7 of a potential MIA/BOS matchup in the second round. It’s also important because Miami is 0-3 against Boston this season and needs to psychologically get it together if they hope to beat the Celtics in the postseason. The good news for Miami is that the C’s just aren’t the same since the Perkins trade. But we’ve learned not to underestimate Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce and Co.

#3 Boston vs. #6 New York (55%)
This might be the matchup that the C’s would rather see since they’ve handled the Knicks in their one post-trade matchup with the new-look Knicks. The Sixers have given the Celtics problems this season. (Their first three games were decided by a total of eight points.)

WEST

#1 San Antonio vs. #8 Memphis (65%)

The Grizzlies and Hornets play on Sunday in Memphis and if the Grizzlies win, they’ll be in a tie with New Orleans for the #7 spot. But the Hornets would still own the tiebraker (division record). Plus, I’m not even sure Memphis wants to win and increase the chances of facing the Lakers in the first round.

#4 Oklahoma City vs. #5 Denver (85%)
The Thunder could conceivably catch the Mavericks, though Dallas own the head-to-head tiebraker, so OKC would have to make up two games on the Mavs to overtake them. Denver could conceivably slip out of the #5 spot, but the Nuggets hold a 1.5-game lead on the Blazers. (Portland does own the conference tiebraker, however.)

#2 L.A. Lakers vs. #7 New Orleans (65%)
This assumes the Grizzlies can’t catch the Hornets. I doubt Memphis is too motivated — wouldn’t both teams rather face a reeling Spurs team than the defending champs?

#3 Dallas vs. #6 Portland (85%)
Dallas could slip out of the #3 spot while Portland could catch #5 Denver or slip into the #7 spot if the Hornets get hot. The Blazers only have two games left, but one is against a fairly hot Memphis team.

For an overview of the playoff race, check out CBSSports.com.

Bellator 40 Fight Card finalized

HeavyMMA.com writes that the Bellator 40 Fight Card has been finalized. The event, which is set for Saturday night in Oklahoma, is now official with seven contests, including Ben Askren’s welterweight bout against Nick Thompson.

Bellator 40 is now complete with the announcement of seven match ups.

The promotion revealed the fight card earlier today, just one day prior to the April 9 event.

The main card, which will broadcast live on MTV2 features a welterweight non-title contest between champion Ben Askren and MMA veteran Nick Thompson. Also on the card, Jay Hieron takes on Brent Weedman in the semi-finals of this season’s 170 lb. tournament, while Michael Chandler and Lloyd Woodard compete in the semi-finals of the lightweight tournament. Four preliminary card bouts have also been added.

A featherweight bout between Ronnie Mann and Josh Arocho were originally expected to meet on the main card, but the former’s traveling issues forced the cancellation of the tilt.

Check out the full card.

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