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Gophers, Fleck agree to new deal through '26

Published in Breaking News
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 12:10

Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck has agreed to a new seven-year contract through the 2026 season, the school announced Tuesday.

Fleck's new deal, which is 65 percent guaranteed, starts at $4.6 million in 2020 -- an increase of $1 million -- with a $10 million buyout if he leaves after this season. The buyout drops to $4.5 million next season and to $3 million in 2021 and 2022.

The school's board of regents still must approve the new agreement.

Fleck is 20-13 in three-plus seasons at Minnesota, which is 8-0 for the first time since 1941 and 5-0 in Big Ten play for the first time since 1961. The 38-year-old Fleck had been mentioned as a candidate for Florida State's coaching vacancy and a potential candidate if USC makes a coaching change.

Fleck initially signed a five-year, $18 million contract with Minnesota in January 2017. He received two subsequent extensions and salary increases, and he was signed through the 2023 season at a salary of $3.6 million for this year. That deal required Fleck to pay $1 million to Minnesota for every remaining season on his contract if he left for another head-coaching position.

His new agreement is expected to include a notable increase for the coaching staff salary pool.

"It is a tremendous honor to lead this team and represent the University of Minnesota and this great state," Fleck said in a statement. "Our family absolutely loves Minnesota, and we are excited to continue to call this state home. We are building a championship culture -- one that our fans can be proud of -- through the academic, athletic, social and spiritual development of our student athletes."

Fleck on Oct. 26 became the second-youngest FBS coach to reach 50 career wins. He went 30-22 at Western Michigan and guided the Broncos to the Cotton Bowl in the 2016 season.

Minnesota hosts Penn State on Saturday in a matchup of 8-0 teams.

Bilas Index: 1-68 team rankings, player ranks and more

Published in Breaking News
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 04:12

What is one to do after The Year of Zion? The spectacular Duke freshman captured the imagination of the country with his play and unique build and explosiveness. There has never been a player like Zion Williamson in college basketball, and ratings and interest proved it. This season, there isn't the single player who can capture the attention of the nation in that way. But that's OK. In fact, it's great. Why? Because it is different, and college basketball serves up something deliciously different every single season. This season will be no exception.

The 2019-20 season reminds of the 2010-11 season in which Kemba Walker seized control of the headlines and UConn won the national championship, seemingly out of nowhere. This season, when there are favorites and usual suspects to populate the top 10, the one thing we know is, we just don't know. Isn't that true every season, you say? No. Not even close. In 2014-15, we knew Kentucky had a legit shot to go unbeaten, Wisconsin was a Final Four team and Duke would be in the Final Four absent a bus accident on the way to the arena. This season, there are no such teams ... yet. A great player will emerge, and some outstanding teams will separate and give the look of a title contender. Yet, there is this strong feeling that if you are healthy with fresh legs and free minds, a number of teams can do something special in March.

Until we see some November and December games, the unwashed masses just don't know. Fortunately for you, The Bilastrator does know. The Bilas Index is the most comprehensive collection of basketball judgment on this, or any, planet. For the first time ever, The Bilastrator brings you The Bilas Index before a single ball is bounced in a regular-season game. As always, you're welcome.

1. Michigan State Spartans

Hard to believe that Tom Izzo has never snagged a preseason No. 1 ranking, despite the fact that his program is a true "blue blood." Izzo has the nation's best point guard in Cassius Winston and an emerging star in Aaron Henry. The keys will be at the 4 position -- where the Spartans need consistent production -- and avoiding turnovers. For some odd reason, the only thing one could criticize in Michigan State is consistent turnover issues. Still, the Spartans hang banners, and 2020 could bring another banner year, much like 2000.

2. Kansas Jayhawks

Bill Self says the recent NCAA notice of allegations will focus him and his team like nothing else could. Well, that is bad news for Jayhawks opponents. Self's team has size, length and depth. Devon Dotson is among the best point guards, Udoka Azubuike is a load in the paint, and Ochai Agbaji can be a star. Kansas will start a new streak in the Big 12, and don't be surprised if Mark Emmert is handing Bill Self the trophy in Atlanta, before being moved aside for the photo.

3. Florida Gators

Mike White has his best team, and he has been within a whisker of the Final Four. The arrival of Virginia Tech transfer Kerry Blackshear Jr. can be the difference between good and great. Blackshear can challenge for SEC player of the year, and White will use him like the queen on a chess board. The Gators are legit.

4. Kentucky Wildcats

John Calipari has returning talent, which is not always the case in Lexington. With Ashton Hagans, Nick Richards, EJ Montgomery and Immanuel Quickley, Cal has players who can lead the way, so the team is not "coach directed." A difference-maker is Tyrese Maxey, who can do it all as a rookie. Will Kentucky shoot it better this season? If so, Atlanta is the destination.

5. Maryland Terrapins

The Terps were a bucket away from beating LSU in last season's NCAA tournament, and they return a load of talent. Mark Turgeon has a sophomore class that is truly outstanding and will be remembered in College Park for a long time. Anthony Cowan Jr. is among the best point guards in the country, and Jalen Smith can be a lottery selection. Keep your eyes focused on Aaron Wiggins. He is special.

6. Louisville Cardinals

The Cardinals return talent and toughness, and they have a star in Jordan Nwora, one of only two All-ACC performers from last season. The key will be the point guard position and whether Steven Enoch and Malik Williams take significant jumps. Louisville can be the ACC's best team.

7. Gonzaga Bulldogs

Mark Few doesn't have the usual cast of returnees, but he does have a ton of talent and skill. Killian Tillie is an NBA talent who needs to stay healthy, Admon Gilder is a scorer who was very good at Texas A&M and Corey Kispert has the chance to be another Zags star. The Zags beat Michigan State in a closed scrimmage, which should not shock anyone. Gonzaga can compete with anyone, anytime, anywhere.

8. North Carolina Tar Heels

This will be a different version of the Tar Heels under Roy Williams. There are two grad transfers in Justin Pierce and Christian Keeling and arguably the best high school player in last year's class in Cole Anthony. Anthony will not make people forget about Coby White, but they won't cry about losing White after they see Anthony. He could very well be the ACC player of the year. He is that good. Garrison Brooks is greatly improved, and Armando Bacot gives Williams the rim protector he lacked last season.

9. Duke Blue Devils

Coach K has another excellent recruiting class but without the superstar firepower of the past few seasons. In other words, he has first-rounders but perhaps not top-5 or lottery picks. Vernon Carey Jr. is the best player and a beast in the post and on the glass, but Tre Jones needs to lead the way. This should be a versatile, deep and determined pressure-defensive team. Will Duke shoot the ball better than last season? If the answer is no, there will be growing pains this season.

10. Villanova Wildcats

The Wildcats were the most prolific 3-point shooting team in Villanova history last season, and don't expect this Jay Wright group to shoot fewer 3s. In fact, expect the Wildcats to shoot more. Villanova lost a lot, but it still has some excellent talent that is used to winning. It will take some time for the talented freshmen to learn the Nova Way, and they will. Villanova will be Top 25 all season but top 10 by the end.

11. Virginia Cavaliers

Tony Bennett lost his top three scorers to the NBA draft, which should set back the Cavaliers this season ... to No. 11. While the offensive firepower will not equal last season's title team, the Cavaliers still will defend at an elite level and control the tempo of games. That will lead to 25 or more wins and another legitimate shot at an ACC title. Virginia is a big-time program.

12. Texas Tech Red Raiders

Few thought the Red Raiders could match their success from two seasons ago, yet they exceeded it with a championship game appearance. Who wants to bet against Texas Tech this season? Chris Beard doesn't settle, and he recruits believers. Davide Moretti was one of the most improved guards in the Big 12 last season. Just how good was Moretti last season? He was the fifth player in Big 12 history to shoot at least 45% on 3-point field goals and 90% on free throws in a season in which he played at least 25 minutes per game. No player in league history has had two such seasons. Chris Clarke is getting a second chance in Lubbock, and Jahmi'us Ramsey has the opportunity to be among the nation's best freshmen. Texas Tech lost a lot, but it still will be very good.

13. Memphis Tigers

Second-year coach Penny Hardaway landed the No. 1 signing class in the country, headlined by James Wiseman. The class includes three other ESPN 100 prospects. The Tigers have missed the NCAA tournament in five straight seasons after making it in 10 of the prior 12 seasons. Hardaway is not shying away from expectations, and his players are responding. There will be growing pains due to youth but tremendous upside. The first test is Oregon in Portland in early November.

14. Purdue Boilermakers

Carsen Edwards and Ryan Cline combined to take 49% of Purdue's FG attempts a season ago. With both gone, the spotlight shifts to team depth: Matt Haarms, Nojel Eastern, Aaron Wheeler, Trevion Williams and High Point transfer Jahaad Proctor will all need to take a step forward. Both Eastern and Williams can be breakout stars in the Big Ten this season.

15. Davidson Wildcats

The Wildcats have the highest-ranked team in the Bilas Index that will have two available players -- Jon Axel Gudmundsson and Kellan Grady -- who averaged 15 points per game a season ago. Davidson might have the best backcourt in the country this season, and Bob McKillop's teams are usually pretty good when his guards are good.

16. Arizona Wildcats

Nico Mannion, Josh Green and the star-studded freshman class will get most of the attention. A potential wild card among the newcomers: Max Hazzard, who led UC Irvine in scoring last season en route to an NCAA tournament upset over Kansas State. Arizona struggled last season due to a lack of talent. That won't be the case this season.

17. VCU Rams

The Rams were the only team in the country a year ago that ranked in the top 15 in opponent turnovers per game (14th) and opponent field goal percentage (6th). They were an elite defensive unit, holding opponents to the third-lowest effective FG% in the nation, behind only Houston and Texas Tech. This team has experience and toughness.

18. Utah State Aggies

Sam Merrill is the leading returning scorer in the Mountain West and one of two returning first-team all-conference selections. Sophomore Neemias Queta will be another key, as he anchors the Aggies' interior defense. Last season, he set school records in blocks (84) and blocks per game (2.4).

19. Baylor Bears

Tristan Clark's return from injury will be enormous for Baylor. In 14 games last season, he averaged 14.6 PPG on a Division I-best 73.7 FG percentage (minimum of five FGs per game and 10 games played).

20. Houston Cougars

Houston held its opponents to 36.8% shooting and 27.9% on 3-point attempts last season, becoming the only team in the past 20 seasons to have the best FG% defense and 3-point FG% defense in Division I in the same season. Kelvin Sampson needs guys to get buckets after all that Houston lost. Kansas transfer Quentin Grimes will be a huge boost there.

21. Ohio State Buckeyes

Kaleb Wesson is one of the few guys in the Big Ten who could challenge Cassius Winston for conference player of the year. Wesson went from four made 3-pointers his freshman season to 26 3s a season ago. His continued ability to be a threat both on the block and behind the arc make him one of the toughest matchups in the league.

22. Providence Friars

Alpha Diallo, a 6-foot-7 guard, was second in the Big East in rebounds per game (8.1), fourth in steals per game (1.65) and ninth in scoring (16 PPG) last season. He might be the biggest threat to Markus Howard and Myles Powell for conference player of the year honors.

23. Cincinnati Bearcats

Cincinnati is one of just three programs that has been in the top 15 in opponent PPG each of the past five seasons, along with Virginia and Old Dominion. Will John Brannen bring the same sort of defensive identity? Or is that identity going to Westwood with the departed Mick Cronin?

24. Colorado Buffaloes

The Buffs can challenge for the Pac-12 title; Tyler Bey's 17 double-doubles led the Pac-12 last season, and he is back. McKinley Wright IV does it all; he was the only Pac-12 player with 400 points, 150 rebounds and 150 assists a season ago.

25. Seton Hall Pirates

For Myles Powell, the Seton Hall program scoring record is within reach (2,494 points by Terry Dehere). Powell enters the season with 1,663 career points, and he likely would have to average around 24 PPG to get there.

26. Harvard Crimson

Seth Towns, the 2017-18 Ivy League player of the year, missed all of last season. Along with Towns, Tommy Amaker returns his top nine scorers from last season, including All-Ivy first-team selection Bryce Aiken and Ivy League rookie of the year Noah Kirkwood. This can be Amaker's best team at Harvard, which is saying something. Amaker has changed the Ivy League and raised the level of play.

27. Saint Mary's Gaels

Jordan Ford scored 716 points last season, third most in a season in school history (behind Jock Landale in 2017-18 and Omar Samhan in 2009-10). His return means Saint Mary's is good enough to challenge for its first regular-season West Coast Conference crown since splitting it with Gonzaga in 2015-16.

28. Oregon Ducks

Dana Altman directed the Ducks to their third Sweet 16 in the past four seasons, and they will be led this season by senior Payton Pritchard. He has started 109 consecutive games and is one of three players in program history with 1,000 career points, 400 career rebounds and 400 career assists (Ron Lee and Luke Jackson). Oregon, which will welcome in several new faces, was 12th in Division I scoring defense last season, allowing 62.2 PPG after being 175th in 2017-18.

29. Dayton Flyers

Obi Toppin is the player to watch for the Flyers, both because he is their best NBA prospect and because it's difficult to look away when he plays. Toppin plays way above the rim; his 66.6% shooting in 2018-19 was the best in a season in A-10 history (minimum of five FGs per game).

30. Texas Longhorns

The team with the second-longest active win streak in Division I is ... the Texas Longhorns, after they stormed their way to an NIT title. Bringing in Luke Yaklich, who served as defensive coordinator at Michigan for two seasons and had the Wolverines in the top 10 nationally in scoring defense over both campaigns, is a significant add to Shaka Smart's staff.

31. Xavier Musketeers

The Musketeers return four players who averaged double-digit scoring last season (Naji Marshall, Paul Scruggs, Tyrique Jones and Quentin Goodin). They won only 19 games a season ago. The last time Xavier went consecutive seasons without winning 20 games was 1980-81 and 1981-82.

32. West Virginia Mountaineers

Over the past 15 seasons, four Big 12 freshmen have averaged a double-double in conference play. The first three were Kevin Durant (2006-07), Michael Beasley (2007-08), Mo Bamba (2017-18), and the fourth was West Virginia's Derek Culver last season. Expect Culver to take the next step toward being a star.

33. Tennessee Volunteers

Expect the Vols to be good again. Rick Barnes has increased the program's win total in each of the four seasons at the helm. Tennessee tied a school record with 31 wins last season and spent the entire 2018-19 campaign ranked in the top 10. Barnes will need to replace the SEC's leading scorer from last season in Grant Williams (19 PPG) and Admiral Schofield (16.4 PPG), who was fifth in league scoring. Lamonte Turner will get more shots and blossom into one of the SEC's best players.

34. Wisconsin Badgers

The Badgers won 14 conference games for just the third time in school history. Greg Gard will have to fill the shoes of three-time first-team All-Big Ten selection Ethan Happ.

35. Washington Huskies

All eyes will be on freshmen Isaiah Stewart (No. 3 in ESPN 100) and Jaden McDaniels (No. 7 in ESPN 100). They are two of the three top-10 recruits to play at Washington in the ESPN 100 era (since 2007). The other was Markelle Fultz (No. 7 in 2016). Kentucky transfer Quade Green is eligible immediately, which is a huge boost.

36. Auburn Tigers

The Tigers made their first Final Four appearance in program history last season. Bruce Pearl's squad set an SEC record with 454 3-pointers, a mark that trails only the 2017-18 Villanova team (464) in NCAA history. The backcourt will not match last season's, but Austin Wiley should have a breakout season, and freshman Isaac Okoro should be a difference-maker.

37. Iowa State Cyclones

Iowa State won the Big 12 tournament for the second time in the past three seasons. The Cyclones will need to replace their leading scorer Marial Shayok, who was second in the Big 12 with 16 20-point games (Kansas' Dedric Lawson had 18). Tyrese Haliburton is the breakout star, and he just needs to add scoring to his efficient floor game.

38. Georgetown Hoyas

The Hoyas have missed the NCAA tournament in four straight seasons. The program has not missed it in five straight since 1969-74. Georgetown will crack the tournament field with this team. The backcourt of James Akinjo and Mac McClung will take steps forward, and Omer Yurtseven will be effective as a pick-and-roll big man in Patrick Ewing's offense.

39. Alabama Crimson Tide

First-year coach Nate Oats brings consecutive 25-win seasons and consecutive NCAA tournament appearances with him from Buffalo. Previous head coaches Avery Johnson and Anthony Grant were not able to accomplish either in their time in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide have talent, led by point guard Kira Lewis Jr. and shooter John Petty.

40. NC State Wolfpack

The Wolfpack's 24 wins last season tied the most for the program since they won 26 games in 1982-83, when they captured the national title under Jim Valvano. Since hiring Kevin Keatts two seasons ago, NC State has led the ACC in turnovers forced for consecutive seasons. Markell Johnson will lead the way as one of the best point guards in the ACC this season.

41. Notre Dame Fighting Irish

The Irish return 85% of their scoring from last season, which is most in the ACC. They were winless versus ranked opponents last season (0-8), their first such winless season under Mike Brey and first for the program since 1998-99, when they went 0-6. John Mooney returns as the top scorer and rebounder, and Rex Pflueger is back after a knee injury that cost him the entire season. Notre Dame was young last season, and this group is more like Mike Brey likes it ... older.

42. LSU Tigers

The Tigers will rise up as the players age and jell. Last season's 28 wins were the most for the program since it won 28 in 1999-00, and the Sweet 16 appearance was its deepest tournament run since going to the Final Four in 2006. LSU has an excellent backcourt in Javonte Smart and Skylar Mays. The difference-maker is Trendon Watford, a super-talented freshman big man.

43. Michigan Wolverines

Zavier Simpson is one of the best passers in Michigan history; in fact, his eight 10-assist games last season were a single-season program record. With the losses of Jordan Poole, Ignas Brazdeikis and Charles Matthews, those assist opportunities will be tougher to come by.

44. Florida State Seminoles

Florida State is coming off a season in which it set program records for wins (29) and ACC wins (13). Leonard Hamilton will have to replace his two top scorers in Mfiondu Kabengele (13.2 PPG) and Terance Mann (11.4 PPG). Kabengele and Mann were two of seven players in the ACC with at least 400 points and 200 rebounds while shooting 50% from the field last season. Raiquan Gray needs to have a breakout season for the Seminoles.

45. Kansas State Wildcats

Bruce Weber has led the Wildcats to consecutive 25-win campaigns over the past two seasons for the first time in school history. Weber brings back Cartier Diarra and Xavier Sneed to lead the way.

46. New Mexico State Aggies

After setting a program record for wins in his first season with 28, Chris Jans followed it up last season with a 30-win campaign. The Aggies have won the WAC tournament seven of the past eight seasons.

47. Marquette Golden Eagles

This team was headed for a top-15 ranking, before Sam Hauser and Joey Hauser bolted for the door. Markus Howard returns, and he is the top major conference scorer coming back. Howard's four career 40-point games are already the most in Big East history. What can he do for an encore? Perhaps set the single-season mark for such games. His three 40-point games last season were tied with Eric Murdock (1990-91 for Providence) for the most in a single season in league history.

48. Pittsburgh Panthers

Last season's leading scorer, Xavier Johnson (15.5 PPG), will lead a group of eight returners. The Panthers have lost 24 consecutive road games, the longest streak in school history. That streak ends this season. Pittsburgh is turning a corner under Jeff Capel.

49. USC Trojans

Isaiah Mobley, No. 16 in 2019 ESPN 100, is the highest-ranked recruit to pledge to Southern California since DeMar DeRozan (No. 8) in 2008. Andy Enfield has led USC to a losing record in three of his six seasons at the helm.

50. Georgia Bulldogs

At one point last season, the Bulldogs dropped 13 consecutive conference games, their longest such losing streak in program history. But Tom Crean set a good foundation, and five-star recruit Anthony Edwards will help take the Dawgs to the next level.

51. Wichita State Shockers

The Shockers were 13th in Division I in rebounding last season, and they return their two leading rebounders in center Jaime Echenique and guard Dexter Dennis. They snapped a streak of seven consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, the longest in program history.

52. Indiana Hoosiers

The Hoosiers missed the NCAA tournament for the third straight year and the seventh time in the past 11 seasons. The program has not missed the tournament in four straight seasons since 1969-72. This can be a very effective defensive team, but the Hoosiers need to stay healthy. Injuries were a huge factor last season.

53. South Florida Bulls

The 2019 College Basketball Invitational champions won a school-record 24 games last season and earned their first postseason title since 1990. Alexis Yetna was named AAC freshman of the year and finished with the most rebounds by a freshman in league history (346).

54. Penn State Nittany Lions

Returning a guy like Lamar Stevens is a rare luxury. Stevens has scored more than 600 points in each of the past two seasons; if he does so again this season, he would climb to the top spot on Penn State's all-time scoring list, currently occupied by Talor Battle.

55. Creighton Bluejays

The Bluejays were 13th in Division I in 3-point FG% and fifth in 3-point FGs made last season. They are one of two Division I teams to return two players who each made 95 3s (Ty-Shon Alexander and Mitch Ballock).

56. Syracuse Orange

The Orange return one starter and will need to replace four of their top six scorers. Elijah Hughes and a much-improved Buddy Boeheim will lead the way.

57. UConn Huskies

Dan Hurley's squad is looking to make the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2015-16. The Huskies are in the midst of their longest tournament drought since missing it in 10 straight seasons from 1979-80 to 1988-89.

58. East Tennessee State Buccaneers

Steve Forbes enters his fifth season at the helm, and he led the Bucs to a top-three regular-season finish in the Southern Conference in each of the past four seasons. ETSU has four straight 20-win seasons, its longest streak since doing it four straight times from 1988 to 1992. They return their top six scorers from last season.

59. Wake Forest Demon Deacons

Danny Manning will lean on nine returners this season, led by last season's leading scorer in Brandon Childress (14.7 PPG), Chaundee Brown and Charlotte transfer Andrien White. Manning has struggled against ranked opponents, with a record of 3-40 while trying to rebuild the Wake program.

60. Butler Bulldogs

Last season was just the third time in the past 15 campaigns that Butler won fewer than 20 games. The Bulldogs return All-Big East second-team selection Kamar Baldwin, who was seventh in the conference in scoring last season (17 PPG).

61. BYU Cougars

First-year coach Mark Pope will look to snap a streak of four straight seasons of missing the NCAA tournament, the longest since 1997-2000. Pope will rely on returning big man Yoeli Childs, who was second in the WCC in scoring last season (21.2 PPG). Childs will have to sit out the first part of the season due to his participation in the NBA draft process, which is yet another example of "student-athlete welfare."

62. Mississippi State Bulldogs

In 2018-19, Ben Howland brought Mississippi State to its first NCAA tournament in the past 10 seasons. Reggie Perry will have a breakout season for the Bulldogs.

63. UCLA Bruins

Mick Cronin had a top-15 defense in each of the past five seasons with Cincinnati. UCLA did not rank inside the top 200 in any season over that span. Will the defensive philosophy translate to Los Angeles?

64. South Carolina Gamecocks

South Carolina will have to replace first-team All-SEC forward Chris Silva, who was top 10 in the SEC in points, rebounds and blocks per game. Frank Martin enters his eighth season at the helm and has one NCAA tournament appearance to show for it (albeit a Final Four run). He has won more than 17 games only twice.

65. Vermont Catamounts

Anthony Lamb is one of the most versatile and talented players in the country. He is one of two returning players in Division I who averaged 20 points per game on 50% FG shooting while making at least 50 3-pointers last season.

66. Boise State Broncos

Boise State returns its top four scorers from last season, including Derrick Alston, who was named to the five-man All-Mountain West preseason team. The Broncos' 13 wins last season were tied for their fewest since the turn of the century. Leon Rice has done a great job with this program, and the Broncos should be back this season.

67. Illinois Fighting Illini

With Ignas Brazdeikis and Romeo Langford in the NBA, the Illini have the two highest-scoring returners from last season's strong crop of Big Ten freshmen in Ayo Dosunmu (13.8 PPG) and Giorgi Bezhanishvili (12.5 PPG).

68. Liberty Flames

Led by Scottie James, the Flames had the fourth-best 2-point field goal percentage in Division I (.581) and were seventh in effective FG% (.569) last season. With James back, the Flames should again be among the most efficient interior offensive teams in the country. James and Caleb Homesley are two of the better players in the country at any level.

Blazers' Collins out about 4 months after surgery

Published in Basketball
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 13:00

Portland Trail Blazers forward Zach Collins will miss around four months after undergoing surgery to repair his left labrum, the team announced on Tuesday.

Collins dislocated his shoulder in the third quarter of a game in Dallas on Oct. 27.

Collins will begin a treatment and rehabilitation process and will be reevaluated in approximately four months, the team said in a release.

The 21-year-old averaged 9 points, 4 rebounds and 2 assists in three games this season.

Portland is already dealing with injuries to center Jusuf Nurkic and forward Pau Gasol that has significantly weakened its frontcourt depth to start the season.

Cardinals extend Shildt, prez Mozeliak, GM Girsch

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 13:01

ST. LOUIS -- Cardinals manager Mike Shildt has a new three-year contract through the 2022 season.

Shildt was hired in 2018 and his initial deal ran through 2020.

At its end-of-season news conference Tuesday, St. Louis announced president of baseball operations John Mozeliak received a three-year extension through 2023. The Cardinals exercised a 2020 option on general manager Mike Girsch and gave him a two-year extension through 2022.

"What Mo and his group have accomplished since he took over in 2008 as the head of our baseball ops is pretty impressive," Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said. "We've been in the playoffs seven times. We've had 12 consecutive winning seasons, two pennants, a world championship. ... We continue to have a robust farm system, which is not easy to do. When you have winning seasons, you don't draft high. But we've got a very strong scouting and player development group."

Hired as interim manager to replace Mike Matheny on July 14, 2018, and given the job that Aug. 28, Shildt led the Cardinals to a 91-71 record and their first NL Central title since 2015. The Cardinals beat Atlanta in the NL Division Series, then were swept by eventual World Series champion Washington in the Championship Series.

Shildt is an NL Manager of the Year finalist.

"There's not a lot of room for change," Mozeliak said. "But we recognize if we can create some that we should."

Mozeliak said the team was discussing a 2020 contract with 38-year-old right-hander Adam Wainwright, who was 14-10 with a 4.19 ERA in his 14th season with the Cardinals. Wainwright had a $2 million base salary in 2019 and earned $8 million in performance bonuses based on starts.

"Clearly both parties would like to find a way to make it work," Mozeliak said, adding he hoped to reach a deal within two weeks.

After the Cardinals' elimination, Mozeliak had coffee with third baseman Matt Carpenter, who slumped to a .226 average with 15 homers and 46 RBIs. Mozeliak views it as "an outlier."

"He had much higher expectations," Mozeliak said. "He's going to spend his offseason in preparing and trying to do some things to change that trajectory. So in terms of my confidence or our confidence in him, it's high."

St. Louis said Shildt's coaching staff will return for next season and promoted Jeremy Cohen to senior director of baseball development, Kevin Seats to baseball analytics director, Patrick Casanta to systems director, Matt Bayer to project director, Javier Duran to coordinator of technology and innovation and Tyler Hadzinsky to assistant director of scouting.

"You've seen the same faces up here, but underneath there's been a lot of vibrancy and change," DeWitt said. "We always bring in smart, young, new talent, and I feel like we continue to be pretty cutting edge in analytics and how we operate the business."

Girsch, hired by the Cardinals in 2006, talked about the vast change in recent years.

"When I started we did stuff on spread sheets because you could, and now you can't," Girsch said. "You need cloud-based databases to manage all the data. You need people to deal with the amount of information we have available to us just to have it organized and ready to go before you decide how to implement it."

Mozeliak praised his senior staff, which includes assistant general manager Moises Rodriguez, assistant general manager and director of scouting Randy Flores, director of player development Gary LaRocque and director of international operations Luis Morales.

"Not going to do this forever," Mozeliak said, "so having a way to think about succession and giving people that opportunity to grow I think is most important. We certainly don't want to be a broken record. We certainly don't want to be an organization that doesn't feel like we're trying to innovate or be fresh."

Ex-Saracens skipper Kyran Bracken says the 35-point deduction and £5.36m fine faced by the club for breaching salary cap rules are "very unfair".

The Premiership champions will appeal against the penalty, which comes after an investigation into business partnerships between chairman Nigel Wray and some of the club's players.

European champions Saracens described the sanctions as "heavy-handed".

"I was shocked, dismayed, disappointed as an ex-Saracen," said Bracken.

The former England scrum-half, 44, told BBC Sport: "It seems very, very harsh when you compare it to say, out and out cheating that may, or has, been done.

"With Harlequins and bloodgate - where players went on the pitch with capsules - they got a £260,000 fine and no points deduction, yet for Saracens it's 35 points and over £5m fine, it just feels disproportionate."

Bracken played more than 200 times for Saracens over 10 years, until his retirement in 2006.

The London club's punishments have been suspended until the outcome of the appeal, leaving Sarries fourth in the table.

"The fact is if someone's out and out cheating then that's wrong and they need to be punished, but it feels like this is more of a technicality and it doesn't feel fair," Bracken added.

"If you were to look at it in the cold light of day, have a look why they're really successful - they're really successful because they invest very heavily in their academy.

"They haven't bought that success, they've nurtured their own players."

'Salary cap there for good reasons'

Fellow Premiership side Worcester Warriors - who say they are "proud" to adhere to the salary cap - backed the league for taking action against Saracens.

Sarries previously claimed they "readily comply" with salary cap rules and were able to spend above the £7m cap because of the high proportion - almost 60% - of home-grown players in their squad.

"The salary cap regulations are there for good reasons. They ensure the financial sustainability of clubs and control inflationary pressures as well as maintaining a competitive Premiership," Warriors said a statement.

"The salary cap regulations were unanimously agreed by all clubs so everyone is aware of their obligations to comply with them and of the potential consequences should they breach them."

Roger Penske’s First Indianapolis Victory

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 11:30

In the aftermath of Monday’s announcement that Roger Penske was acquiring Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the NTT IndyCar Series, we present to our readers the story of Penske’s first Indianapolis 500 victory in 1972 with driver Mark Donohue. 

Love him or hate him, and there are many on both sides of that equation, Roger Penske’s unprecedented success in the Indianapolis 500 deserves recognition.

Penske once considered driving Indy himself but turned his considerable energy to the car owner’s role instead. In 1969, he arrived at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the first time with sports car racer Mark Donohue as his driver.

Penske in button-down shirts and the crew-cut wearing Brown University-educated Donohue were poles apart from drivers who’d dropped out of school to go racing and the best-dressed car owners who wore cowboy hats and boots.

Many in Indy car racing considered sports car racers a bit effeminate, but Penske soon quieted the skeptics by persistently practicing his life motto — effort equals result. Few were better prepared or more focused than Team Penske.

By his fourth year at Indianapolis, Penske had grown anxious for a victory. Chasing that goal, he surprised many by going outside the sports car ranks to add Gary Bettenhausen as a teammate to Donohue in 1972.

Bettenhausen was twice a USAC sprint car national champion. What he offered Penske was oval track savvy and the ability to setup a car for the unique nuances of oval racing.

Driving a pair of impeccably prepared, blue trimmed in yellow, Sunoco-sponsored McLarens, Bettenhausen and Donohue were consistently among the quickest during practice. On Pole Day, Donohue nabbed the third spot, while Bettenhausen qualified fourth.

In the days leading up to the race, most observers predicted a Penske driver would be the winner. Come race day, Bettenhausen assumed that role.

He took the lead on the 31st lap when polesitter Bobby Unser’s Eagle dropped out of the race. Bettenhausen soon left his closest competitors, Mike Mosley and Donohue, far behind.

Because he shouldered his legendary father’s incredible legacy (Tony Bettenhausen died attempting to win the 500), Gary Bettenhausen was the sentimental favorite. He dominated, leading 138 laps. But as it appeared a Bettenhausen image might finally appear on the Borg-Warner Trophy, he rolled to a stop.

A collective moan went up from the crowd.

“It was heartbreaking,” admitted Bettenhausen. “But 40 laps in I knew we were in trouble. The engine was overheating. I radioed Roger and he said, ‘Run it till it won’t run, Pal!’

“So I got out front, thinking I could at least win some of the lap prize money,” Bettenhausen added. “I tried a trick I’d learned racing sprint cars. At the end of the straights, I’d hit the kill button with the throttle wide open. The fuel flooded the valves and pistons and cooled it. Doing that, the temperature stayed down around 200 degrees.

“It just kept running, and I thought, ‘My family has tried to win this race for so long, maybe it’s finally going to happen,’” Bettenhausen said. “Then the yellow came out with 18 laps to go, and it was all over. Running that slow I couldn’t keep it cool and the engine seized.”

Bettenhausen remembered the crowd’s support helped assuage his disappointment. One group leaped the fence and surrounded him as he coasted to a stop.

“I bet I was handed 15 beers,” he laughed. “I climbed out of the car and sat there with those guys, drank some beer and watched the race.”

What Bettenhausen saw was Donohue charging after leader Jerry Grant, who was delivering a surprising run in Dan Gurney’s “Mystery Eagle.”

Donohue was gaining rapidly on Grant, but when Grant dove into the pits with a worn right-front tire, Donohue drove on to Penske’s first Indy 500 victory.

Donohue, typically gracious, said it should’ve been Bettenhausen’s victory. But Donohue’s victory was well deserved and made up for the 500 he should’ve won the previous year.

Much has changed since 1972. Gary Bettenhausen died in 2014 without winning at Indy. Donohue died driving a Penske Formula One car in 1975.

One thing that hasn’t changed is Penske’s love for the Indianapolis 500 and his intense desire to win the world’s greatest race.

And his creed, effort equals results, is still very much in play.

Austin Hill Sticking With Hattori Racing Enterprises

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 11:36

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Austin Hill will return to Hattori Racing Enterprises in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series next season.

Hill will remain as the driver of the No. 16 Toyota Tundra next year, which will receive increased sponsorship support from United Rentals, as well as returning partner Weins Canada, with support from Toyota Racing Development.

“It’s awesome to be coming back in 2020,” said Hill. “We have plenty left to accomplish this season, and that’s our number one focus, but it’s great to have things in place for next year to where we can move right into 2020. A year ago, I never thought I’d have a real chance to be at a place like HRE, but (team owner) Shige (Hattori), Mike Greci, (crew chief) Scott (Zipadelli) and all these guys have been awesome to work with. This team is in a great position because of a lot of committed partners like United Rentals and TRD. They do so much for us, and we wouldn’t be where we’re at without them. We’ve put together a good year so far, and I know we can do even more next season.”

Through 21 races this season, Hill has put the No. 16 Toyota Tundra in victory lane three times, including the season opener at Daytona Int’l Speedway and gave the organization its third playoff victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Hill is currently fourth in the Gander Trucks playoff standings and has collected two pole awards along with six top-five and 12 top-10 finishes. Team owner Shige Hattori looks forward to continuing the team’s success this season into 2020 with the core group intact.

“Austin has done a good job this year, and we’re looking forward to improving even more next season,” Hattori said. “It’s great for the team and Austin to have the support from our sponsors like United Rentals, Weins Canada Group, our Toyota Dealer partners in Japan, and TRD. We’re glad to have Austin back for next season, but we want to finish this season strong with another championship.”

Autonomous Race Car Competition Coming To Indy

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 11:46

LAS VEGAS – Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Energy Systems Network have announced a two-year, $1 million prize competition that will culminate in a head-to-head, high-speed autonomous vehicle race Oct. 23, 2021, around the speedway’s 2.5-mile oval

The announcement was made at the SEMA Show in Las Vegas, Nev.

The Indy Autonomous Challenge is a competition among universities to create software that enables self-driving Indy Lights race cars to compete in a head-to-head race on the IMS track. The development of such software can help speed the commercialization of full autonomous vehicles and enhance existing advanced driver-assistance systems in people-driven cars. These technologies help drivers remain in control and avoid accidents by prompting awareness and improving accuracy.

The Challenge builds upon the success and impact of the DARPA Grand Challenge – the 2004-05 defense research initiative that helped create the modern autonomous vehicle industry – as well as IMS’s roots dating back to 1909 as a proving ground for the nascent automotive industry. More than a century later, IMS has contributed to countless breakthroughs in automotive performance and safety, including the first rear-view mirror.

“There’s a fundamental connection between innovations on the racetrack and real-world improvements on the highway,” IMS President J. Douglas Boles said. “With the launch of the Indy Autonomous Challenge, IMS continues to embrace its historic role as a catalyst for the next generation of vehicle technologies in motorsports competition and wider consumer platforms. And while drivers will always be at the heart of racing at IMS, we’re excited to be part of this groundbreaking and exciting initiative.”

The Challenge consists of five rounds. Teams submit a short white paper during the first round, and in the second round, teams must demonstrate vehicular automation by sharing a short video of an existing vehicle or by participating in Purdue University’s self-driving go-kart competition at IMS. The Indy Autonomous Challenge’s simulation sponsor ANSYS will supply its industry-leading VRXPERIENCE Driving Simulator powered by SCANeRTM and its SCADE software development suite to teams for their use in developing autonomous vehicle software.

ESN and ANSYS will co-host “hackathons” to familiarize teams with the simulator’s full potential and ANSYS will award $150,000 in prizes to top finishers of a simulated race during the third round. The fourth round enables teams to test their actual vehicles at IMS in advance of the head-to-head race around the oval, which will award $1 million, $250,000, and $50,000 to the first, second, and third finishers, respectively.

“What we’re asking universities to do is hard,” said Matt Peak, director of mobility at Energy Systems Network. “Our hope is that by bringing together and offering up to participating teams the world’s premier automotive proving ground, performance chassis manufacturer, engineering research center and simulation platform, as well as nearly $1.5 million in total cash awards, universities will see the Challenge as not just throwing down the gauntlet but also extending the helping hand to accelerate innovation and the arrival of new technologies.”

Joining IMS and ESN for the announcement were race car manufacturer Dallara Automobili and the Clemson University International Center for Automotive Research (CU-ICAR). Through Clemson University’s long-running vehicle prototype program Deep Orange, Clemson graduate automotive engineering students will collaborate with ESN and Dallara to engineer an autonomous-capable version of Dallara’s 210 mph IL-15 Indy Lights chassis that can accommodate the competing university teams’ driverless algorithms. Participating teams will be directly involved in the converted vehicle’s design and specifications through monthly virtual design reviews (VDRs) and other feedback channels throughout the competition.

“Deep Orange is an educational framework that immerses students in industry-like environments to simulate real-world R&D challenges facing companies today,” said Dr. Robert Prucka, Clemson University Kulwicki Endowed professor and Deep Orange 12 project leader. “Working with industry partners such as IMS, ESN, Dallara and ANSYS gives students unparalleled opportunities to work with the latest technologies and collaborate with cross-functional teams in a way that will make them more innovative and capable engineering leaders after they graduate.”

Five universities registered for the competition upon its opening this morning: Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology (KAIST), Texas A&M Transportation Institute (TTI), University of Florida, University of Illinois and the University of Virginia. Members of each of these early registered teams joined the organizers at the SEMA Show for the announcement.

“Nearly 15 years ago, the DARPA Grand Challenge helped prove the innovation-generating and industry-creating role of prize competitions, while recent years have seen the value of autonomous vehicle proving grounds – including Texas A&M RELLIS/TTI Proving Grounds Research Facility – on full display”, said Ivan Damnjanovic, associate professor and director of engineering project management at Texas A&M University. “We’re excited to be in on the ground level of such a dynamic effort that leverages both of these tools while adding others that can excite and empower students, inspire classrooms and coursework, and altogether help transportation research institutions advance their programs.”

SHANGHAI – Not long after Charles Howell III finished his final round in Las Vegas, he packed up for a trip to Asia he never imagined taking.

It wasn't just for golf. And he wasn't alone.

Howell took his wife and two children on a five-week tour of Asia that isn't over yet. It started with a week in Hong Kong, and his family followed him to PGA Tour stops in South Korea, Japan and mainland China. This week, they're off to Thailand before returning home to Florida.

''We just decided to do something we've never done,'' Howell said. ''It was a once-in-a-lifetime trip. They're old enough to get it and love it and appreciate it, but young enough where we can still manage to make it work.''

His children, Ansley Grace and Chase, are in third and second grade, respectively. Howell said they would Facetime with their teachers in their morning (evening in Florida), do their school work and then head off for adventures they can't find inside the gates of Isleworth.

''We thought the kids would learn from this real-world experience in other countries with different languages, different currencies, different beliefs,'' he said. ''It's been more fun than I thought it would be.''

The highlight?

That came at the start of their working vacation in Hong Kong, where tensions have been running high the last five months amid pro-democracy protests.

''With what's going on in the world, walking straight out of a department store into a 20,000-person protest,'' Howell said. ''The kids talked to some of them and they explained what they were doing. And then the temples, the religions, it was just incredible.''

Howell took his son to play Hong Kong Golf Club, but that was the extent of his golf outside the three Tour stops, where his best finish was a tie for eighth in the Zozo Championship, the PGA Tour's first official event in Japan.

''If my family wasn't here, I would definitely not have played three in a row,'' Howell said. ''I wanted the kids to see the world isn't the border of the United States, that the border isn't the back gate at Isleworth.''

The final stop was Thailand, primarily for the kids to see the elephants. Howell is friends with Kiradech Aphibarnrat, who told him he would love his home country. Nothing on the trip has disappointed thus far.

Doug Ferguson is a golf writer for The Associated Press

Sergio joins Westwood with dubious WGC distinction

Published in Golf
Tuesday, 05 November 2019 06:07

Sergio Garcia tied a dubious mark last week at the HSBC Champions. He joined Lee Westwood as the only players to have competed 60 times in the World Golf Championships without ever winning.

Both had good chances.

Garcia, who made his WGC debut as a 19-year-old, took a three-shot lead into the final round of the Bridgestone Invitational in 2014 when Rory McIlroy erased that in three holes and went on to a two-shot victory over the Spaniard.

Westwood finished runner-up to Mike Weir in the American Express Championship at Valderrama in 2000, though he made enough money that day to capture his first Order of Merit on the European Tour. He also was runner-up to Vijay Singh at Firestone in 2008, and in 2010 he lost a duel to Francesco Molinari in the HSBC Champions, Westwood's debut at No. 1 in the world.

Only two other players have made at least 50 starts in the WGCs without ever winning - Paul Casey (52) and Jim Furyk (51).

Casey was runner-up in the Match Play in consecutive years to Geoff Ogilvy in 2009 and Ian Poulter in 2010. Furyk had two close calls at Firestone, losing in a seven-hole playoff to Tiger Woods in 2001, and making double bogey from the 18th fairway to finish one shot behind Keegan Bradley in 2012.

Doug Ferguson is a golf writer for The Associated Press

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