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Associate HC/DL Coach Larry Johnson Sr. (National Champion)

Continuity in coaching and development is a major consideration for any high school recruit. A 73 year old coach can't provide a credible promise for that.
The bandaid is going to have to get ripe at some point. End of last season seemed like the perfect timing for LJ to ride off into the sunset.
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Last movie you saw?

Saw whatever the most recent Jurassic movie. It was fine. I went mostly to spend time with one of my kids who wanted to see it, so that is better than the movie.

Action scenes were decent. The parts that were supposed to be funny did not land. The bonus family was underutilized. But the theater was packed so I am sure the studio will be happy.

I'm an old man though. It was 32 years since the original was released and I recall going to see that on a date.
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Cincinnati Reds (2025 is our year! Haha thats actually funny)

Reds get Zack Wheeler (8-3, 2.27 era) tomorrow. He is making $42 million per year and is the highest paid player on a team with a payroll of $279M this year. Mind boggling. I didn't realize mlb teams so blatantly disregarded the supposed deterrents - luxury tax? I guess nobody cares, and it seems they are useless. From baseball-reference:
Name Age Yrs Acquired SrvTm Agent Contract Status 2025
Zack Wheeler 35 11 Free Agency 11.098 Wasserman 3 yrs/$126M (25-27) $42M
Bryce Harper 32 14 Free Agency 12.159 Boras Corporation 13 yrs/$330M (19-31) $27.54M
Trea Turner 32 11 Free Agency 8.135 CAA Sports 11 yrs/$300M (23-33) $27.27M
Aaron Nola 32 11 Free Agency 9.076 Paragon Sports In... 7 yrs/$172M (24-30) $24.57M
J.T. Realmuto 34 12 Free Agency 10.038 CAA Sports 5 yrs/$115.5M (21-25) $23.88M
Nick Castellanos 33 13 Free Agency 11.029 Boras Corporation 5 yrs/$100M (22-26) $20M
Kyle Schwarber 32 11 Free Agency 9.086 Excel Sports Mana... 4 yrs/$79M (22-25) $20M
Taijuan Walker 32 13 Free Agency 10.142 WME Sports 4 yrs/$72M (23-26) $18M
Max Kepler 32 11 Free Agency 8.152 Apex Baseball 1 yr/$10M (25) $10M
José Alvarado 30 9 Traded 7.088 OL Baseball 3 yrs/$22M (23-25) & 26 team option $9.02M
Ranger Suárez 29 8 Amateur Free Agent 5.112 1 yr/$8.8M (25) $8.8M
Jordan Romano 32 7 Free Agency 5.051 VC Sports Group 1 yr/$8.5M (25) $8.5M
Alec Bohm 28 6 Amateur Draft 4.106 Boras Corporation 1 yr/$7.7M (25) $7.7M
Matt Strahm 33 10 Free Agency 8.064 ACES 1 yr/$7.5M (25) & 26 team option $7.5M
Jesús Luzardo 27 7 Traded 4.165 MVP Sports Group 1 yr/$6.63M (25) $6.62M
Joe Ross 32 8 Free Agency 7.018 Wasserman 1 yr/$4M (25) $4M
Ah - the Mets payroll is well over $300M. And I thought the Cubs were near the top. Nowhere close.
That's how you win. Cincinnati will never support that
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2026 TX OL Felix Ojo (Texas Tech Verbal)


While not a defensive lineman, on Friday, five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo (No. 7 nationally) committed to Texas Tech 24, just hours after confirming that his top four were Florida, Texas, Michigan, and Ohio State. So, what changed?

Who knows? But, his agent did say after his client’s commitment that the Red Raiders offered Ojo a fully guaranteed, three-year, $5.1 million deal. So maybe that had something to do with it ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.

I don’t know how those kinds of contracts work with college students, who, presumably, can transfer whenever they want, but that’s clearly not something Ohio State fans (and bloggers) have to worry about, because the Buckeyes seem to have no interest in going anywhere near those types of deals.

Just sayin': Apparently the sad state of college football recruiting is now you don't really have spend months actually recruiting some recruits anymore. Just call his agent the night before his commitment date and offer $5.1M over 3 years guaranteed....:sad2:
I love it because the peon programs will keep throwing money down a rat hole.
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NHL (Official Thread)

NHL players get green light to participate in 2026 Olympics​

The NHL, NHLPA and international officials on Wednesday finalized a deal agreed on long ago to send players to the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics.

The league, union, International Ice Hockey Federation and International Olympic Committee confirmed the participation of NHL players at the Olympic Games for the first time since 2014. The groups negotiated the agreement and announced it initially last year.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is thrilled to have his league's players back on the world's premier international stage.

"Olympic participation will showcase the skill and talent of NHL players on an international stage. We are proud to collaborate with the IIHF, NHLPA, and IOC to bring the best hockey players in the world to the Olympics and make this happen in a way that benefits the game globally," Bettman said in a statement.

"Best-on-best international tournaments like the Olympics provide the opportunity to create extraordinary moments for our players and fans alike," added Marty Walsh, executive director of the NHL Players' Association, in a statement. "The return to the Olympics marks a monumental moment for hockey and we thank our partners -- the NHL, IOC and IIHF -- for this collaborative process. The skill and passion on display in Milano Cortina will build off the excitement of the 4 Nations Face-Off and continue our game's global growth."
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Deaths Of Notable Sports Figures (R.I.P.)

Bobby Jenks, White Sox World Series champion, dies at 44 after battle with cancer

Jenks recorded the final out of the 2005 World Series​

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Former Major League Baseball closer Bobby Jenks has died at the age of 44 after a battle with a terminal form of stomach cancer, the Chicago White Sox announced on Saturday. Jenks died on July 4 in Sintra, Portugal.

"We have lost an iconic member of the White Sox family today," White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf said in a statement. "None of us will ever forget that ninth inning of Game 4 in Houston, all that Bobby did for the 2005 World Series champions and for the entire Sox organization during his time in Chicago. He and his family knew cancer would be his toughest battle, and he will be missed as a husband, father, friend and teammate. He will forever hold a special place in all our hearts."

Jenks last pitched in the majors for the Boston Red Sox in 2011. Across his seven seasons at the highest level, he pitched to a 3.53 ERA with 173 saves and 351 strikeouts in 357 ⅓ innings. He picked up an additional five saves in nine postseason appearances, across which he posted an ERA of 2.00. Armed with one of the biggest fastballs of his era, Jenks also earned a pair of All-Star selections as a member of the White Sox. As a rookie in 2005, Jenks emerged as closer for the White Sox team that went on to win the World Series. He picked up two saves in the White Sox's sweep of the Houston Astros, then members of the National League, in that World Series. He also recorded the last out in the clinching Game 4.

R.I.P.
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Columbus Blue Jackets (Official Thread)

Good article that provides some insight to what Blue Jackets GM Don Waddell has been up to:

Five thoughts after an underwhelming start to the Blue Jackets’ offseason

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By now, the relative quiet of the Columbus Blue Jackets’ offseason is likely sinking in with most of the fan base. There’s still a lot of summer to go, but it looks as if the Jackets’ changes will be more subtle than sweeping.

We’ve had some time to think about the moves that GM Don Waddell was able to swing, along with the ones he didn’t pull off and the ramifications of those moves/non-moves that followed. There’s always more than meets the eye, and that’s what we’re trying to scratch at here.

Here’s a closer look at five topics we’ve been thinking about over the last week:

What the Noah Dobson talks revealed

We couldn’t have known it at the time, but the way the trade of defenseman Noah Dobson played out last Friday — he was sent from the New York Islanders to the Montreal Canadiens — revealed the answers to two questions that lingered before the offseason carnival started.

First, that the Blue Jackets’ two first-round draft picks were not enough, either alone or together, to swing a trade for an impact player. Both the Blue Jackets and Canadiens were required to throw in a roster player. For Montreal, that ended up being forward Emil Heineman. For the Blue Jackets, that, reportedly, would have been Dmitri Voronkov.

The second part of this requires a delicate touch.

Dobson, who is from Prince Edward Island, Canada, wanted to play for the Montreal Canadiens. It’s likely not that he didn’t want to play in Columbus, just that he preferred Montreal, one of the marquee cities in the country of his birth.

That scenario played out in a couple of other instances, too.

The Blue Jackets would have put a massive contract offer on the table for 100-point winger Mitch Marner, but Marner made it clear that he wanted to sign with the Vegas Golden Knights. His former club, the Toronto Maple Leafs, agreed to a sign-and-trade with the Golden Knights.

Meanwhile, the Blue Jackets were involved in trade talks for defenseman Rasmus Anderson, who would have been a perfect fit on the second pair opposite young Denton Mateychuk. Anderson, who has one year remaining on his contract with the Calgary Flames, apparently has made it clear that he’d only entertain a contract extension with … you guessed it, Vegas. (He remains with the Flames.)

Columbus and the Blue Jackets are not seen by most NHL players as a city or franchise to be avoided. For proof, look at the two players acquired from the Colorado Avalanche, late last week. Both Charlie Coyle and Miles Wood had modified no-trade clauses in their contract, meaning they could list a number of clubs to which they couldn’t be traded.

Neither Coyle (10 teams) nor Wood (eight) had Columbus on their no-trade lists.

In summary, the Blue Jackets are not being avoided like the plague. But, they are not a marquee franchise yet, either.

Provorov’s signing became imperative

It’s clear that Waddell’s honeymoon, for many Blue Jackets fans, has ended. He, along with other GMs, clearly misread what this year’s market was going to be, how few players would change teams, and how the NHL’s rising salary cap would flatten the market by allowing teams to keep more of their players.

But once it became clear that Waddell wasn’t going to land a right-shot defenseman for his top four — Dobson being traded elsewhere, Andersson limiting the Flames’ trade partners, and perhaps others — he circled back to get serious about negotiations with defenseman Ivan Provorov.

When talks resumed on the other side of the draft, with Provorov only hours away from hitting the open market, the player had all of the leverage. The ticket: seven years, $59.5 million

At that point, the Blue Jackets had no choice but to sign him to a contract, because the worst possible scenario is not what happened with the free-agent and trade markets. No, the worst scenario Waddell faced on his blue line was failing to land any of those targets and allowing Provorov to leave via free agency.

Here’s another perspective on Provorov’s contract.

When Provorov signed a six-year, $40.5 million contract with the Philadelphia Flyers in 2019, the salary cap for the upcoming season was $81.5 million. That means Provorov’s salary cap hit, $6.75 million, occupied 8.2 percent of the salary cap.

The deal he signed on Tuesday, which carries an $8.5 million cap hit, occupies 8.9 percent of the salary cap ($95.5 million) this coming season. The NHL has already set the salary cap for the two seasons following the upcoming campaign. It’ll be $104 million in 2026-27 and $113.5 million in 2027-28, which means Provorov will eat 8.2 percent and 7.5 percent, respectively.

The lesson: we should be prepared for skyrocketing NHL salaries.

Oversell, underdeliver

Blue Jackets fans came into this summer on a high note, not just because the Blue Jackets finished last season on a burner and nearly made the playoffs, but because Waddell was making clear his plans to add significant pieces to the roster with an aggressive approach.

Dreams of top-six wingers, a top-four defenseman and a new starting goaltender swirled through their daydreams. Instead, they got three bottom-six forwards: Coyle, Wood and Isac Lundestrom, to replace the outgoing Justin Danforth, Sean Kuraly and James van Riemsdyk.

It’s an agitated fan base right now.

But once the disappointment fades in the searing heat of late July and August, most Blue Jackets fans will come back to the realization that this roster is still full of talent, and the reasons Waddell cited to believe that they can still be better next season are actually legitimate.

Young players — Adam Fantilli, Kirill Marchenko, Kent Johnson, Cole Sillinger, Dmitri Voronkov, Denton Mateychuk — already look like bona fide NHL players, and their profiles will continue to rise. Not every one of them in a perfectly straight, climbing trajectory, but logic dictates they’re still learning and growing.

This might be the biggest “everything is going to be OK” argument, and it’s something Waddell hinted at on the day free agency opened, when the Jackets re-signed Provorov: The Jackets’ top four — Zach Werenski with Dante Fabbro, Mateychuk with Provorov — wasn’t together all season. Fabbro was claimed on waivers in mid-November. Mateychuk didn’t come up until just before Christmas.

We went digging into this, and the numbers are dramatic

In the 41 games in which Werenski, Fabbro, Mateychuk and Provorov all dressed, the Blue Jackets went 26-13-2 (.658 points percentage) and allowed 2.95 goals per game. In the 41 games in which one or more were missing from the lineup, the Jackets went 14-20-7 (.427 points percentage) and allowed 3.56 goals per game.

The Damon Severson problem

One can imagine that nobody was more relieved by Provorov’s new contract than Damon Severson, who has not been able to find his groove in Columbus since he was traded to the Blue Jackets by New Jersey two seasons ago.

Severson, you’ll recall, was a healthy scratch 10 times last season, including the final eight games. That’s a hard pill to swallow for an organization that is paying Severson $6.75 million per season through 2030-31.

But after Provorov’s signing, Severson is now the third-highest-paid Blue Jackets defenseman, slotting behind Werenski and Provorov. That might sound like a minor issue, but Severson has been honest — especially in his first season in Columbus — about trying to live up to the contract Columbus bestowed upon him.

You can look at Severson from two different perspectives right now.

If he had played better his first two seasons in Columbus, they wouldn’t have been so driven to find a right-shot defenseman for their second pair. Severson, after all, is a right shot, and he was pursued by the Blue Jackets because then-GM Jarmo Kekalainen saw him as a top-four defender.

Now, though, the Blue Jackets are looking to shelter the player and put him in a lineup spot where he can succeed. They can’t trade his contract without eating a portion of the money he’s due or sweetening the offer with a draft pick or a prospect. They have to find a way to make this work.

As of now, you would expect him to start the season on the third pair with veteran Erik Gudbranson.

Goaltending remains biggest issue

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continued
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Georgia Bulldogs (2021-2022 National Champions & Excellent Drivers)

The self driving car market NEEDS to be set up in Georgia.

"Or maybe it already has." -defense lawyer
I was in Atlanta a few weeks ago and saw a Waymo
They're all over Phoenix
I was in San Francisco last month and they are all over in that city too. Apparently they don't go on the freeways there (yet). I just used Uber and the Caltrain to get around. Their website says Waymo is in Los Angeles and Austin too; and coming to Miami and Washington DC.

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