Thats Amaury’s News and Commentary: Panda’s new habitat

by Amaury Pi Gonzalez

SAN FRANCISCO–Pablo Sandoval had three official offers, one from the Boston Red Sox, one from the San Diego Padres and one from the San Francisco Giants. Pablo picked the Boston Red Sox. All three offers were believed to be for five years and at least $90 million.

The Giant Panda lives in a few mountain ranges in central China, mainly in Sichaun province, but also in Shaanxi and Gansu provinces, however this Panda, the one from Venezuela who plays third base is going to Boston, Massachusetts, to be more exact Fenway Park, the home of the Boston Red Sox, the same Red Sox team that finished last this season in the American League East, but won the 2013 World Series.

We can all speculate why Pablo and his agent chose Boston. Did he get tired of the same old-same-same-old story every year in San Francisco that the Giants wanted him to lose weight, but he did and he put it back on. Did he (and his family) just want a “change of scenery”, Boston is a beautiful city also, or the most obvious one (in my opinion) going to the American League he can extend his career and can always rest his legs by giving David Ortiz a brake as the Designated Hitter of the team, something he could never do with the Giants.

As good as Giants fans have been filling AT&T Park for years, Boston has the most passionate fans in all of baseball, and unforgiving fans also. Boston is a tough town to play, but if Pablo has the same regular season he had this year in Boston in 2015, the talk shows, the media, the fans in Beantown are sure to drive Pablo crazy.

On the other hand if the team makes it to the Postseason, then you have one of the best hitters in recent memory in a World Series. Pablo has an innate ability to “turn up the switch”in the postseason, and that is something that two of the biggest stars ever for these two franchises cannot say, Barry Bonds for the Giants and Ted Williams for the Red Sox; you are welcome to check Bonds and Williams stats in postseason, and they are not pretty.

So just like Panda picked the team he wanted to play, you are free to pick one of these scenarios, or maybe your own, maybe Pablo loves history and Boston has as much American history as any other city in the country. Maybe when the “dogs days of summer” arrive in Boston, with that humidity and he has a bad game, strikes out 3 times, leaves a ton of runners in scoring position, he can always go to the cemetery where Paul Revere is buried and think of American revolutionary history.

Pablo is leaving the Bay Area with three World Series rings (the third one he will probably get by courier to Boston next year) and leaves as one of the most popular Giants in recent memory; without a doubt since the 2000 season when the team moved from maligned Candlestick Park to comfy AT&T Park.

Pablo Sandoval is an easy going guy, affable with the fans and with teammates, and a guy that works as hard as anybody in baseball, you might think that is not accurate because of his weight, but it is a true statement. I have seen Pablo in Spring Training year after year. I have never heard anything negative about Pablo, from his teammates or from anybody in the media.

Boston is a different type of town for baseball, the Red Sox are more about baseball 100X100 than about mascots or Panda merchandise and souvenirs, the Red Sox fans live and die with their team, and they talk baseball all the time. With all respect to San Francisco, the Red Sox fans are way ahead of Giants fans when it comes to passion for the game. Unlike AT&T Park, there are no animal mascots at Fenway Park; as a matter of fact did you know who was the mascot of the Boston Red Sox? It is Wally the Green Monster! Now, how many people even knew that?

Common sense tells you that the Panda(nickname given to him from ex-Giants and A’s pitcher Barry Zito) would be happier in San Francisco, a city where he could do no wrong, but he has done it all in the City by the Bay, he has won enough hardware for his baseball showcase at home, as well sold enough merchandise and good will for the Giants, a team that is now advertising tickets for next season as a dynasty.

But who’s business is to say where Pablo should play? It is still a free country, and he was courted by at least the three teams that made very similar offers, and it is Pablo’s business and his family where he wants to play. As simple as that. So Giants fans, you do not have to complain from April to September anymore about the Panda anymore, but you will miss him if the Red Sox go back to the World Series next season, which for them would be their second World Series in the past three seasons.

So far the Red Sox are the big spenders this off season, also signing Hanley Ramírez from the Dodgers for 4 years and $88 million, and what I hear from Boston, is that they are not done yet with free agents. Jon Lester’s Red Sox jersey is waiting for him, just like he left it last season, nice and clean, at Fenway Park…

Felicidades Pablo y muy buena suerte!

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum and does News and Commentary each week on http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: Panda will be wearing Red Sox for the next five years at a $100 M

by Amaury Pi Gonzalez

SAN FRANCISCO–Former San Francisco Giants third baseman Pablo Sandoval has come to an agreement with the Boston Red Sox to the tune of $100 million for five years. Sandoval will be joined by former L.A. Dodger Hanley Ramirez who signed on with the Sox for a cool $88 million for four years.

The word on Yoenis Cespedes he will be traded because the Sox don’t have room for him in the outfield. The Sox said that Ramirez can play leftfield and Ramirez is basically a shortstop. This is nothing new during the Giants celebration parade I was working TV for Telemundo and the news anchor at the time asked “what are the chances of Sandoval leaving the Giants?”

I told the anchor that the chances of Sandoval leaving are excellent and now the Red Sox are going to pay Sandoval $100 million which the Giants weren’t willing to give up. That’s a great opportunity for Sandoval and congratulations are in order for him. He’s going to a team that’s going to be in the race again.

This is that time of the year when teams sign free agents and you might remember last year that the Angels signed Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson. Well this year is the Red Sox year, their getting Sandoval and Ramirez these are two established All-Stars. These two guys are commanding $90-100 contracts a piece.

Their not done yet the Sox could get Jon Lester back and Lester is worth another $100 million at least for a few years. The Red Sox are looking to improve and their looking to move up in the standings from last place and the Sox won the World Series in 2013 and last season they finished in last place.

But guess what the Sox could be in the World Series next season and they could do what the Giants did and get to the Series every other year. The Sox are going to have the guns, their going to have the players. Pablo is going to be interesting because he had all the love in San Francisco however even though anyone who covers baseball knows that Boston is a tough town on bad baseball.

I just hate to see what those fans in Fenway would do if Sandoval strikes out at the plate and looking bad doing it in the bottom of the ninth and loosing a game for the Sox. The talk shows in Boston are going to go crazy. Yes the Giants get a full house every time they play at home at 41,000 plus but let me tell you Boston fans are the most passionate fans in the game.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Spanish radio voice for the Oakland A’s and does News and Commentary each week on http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Warriors Beat Thunder, Lose Bogut and Barbosa

By Matthew Harrington

News came in many forms Sunday night for the Golden State Warriors. In the affirmative, the Dubs escaped Chesapeake Energy Arena with a 91-86 over the host Oklahoma City Thunder. Dampening the excitement of victory for Bay Area fans is the fact that both Andrew Bogut and Leandro Barbosa exited the contest early with injuries.

The Warriors (10-2)hit a season-low 35.6 percent of field goals, going 32 of 90 from the floor. The Warriors starters account for only 15 of the 32 makes, including poor shooting nights from Stephen Curry (5 of 15) and Klay Thompson (6 for 20). Thompson scored 20 points to Curry’s 15. Marreese Speights did the heavy lifting for the Warriors, scoring 28 points for the winners.

The Thunder (3-13), still without Kevin Durant or Russell Westbrook, were led on the scorer’s sheet by Reggie Jackson’s 22 points. Jackson pulled down 11 rebounds for the double-double, while former Warrior Anthony Morrow had a game-high 12 boards.

The Warriors lead by as much as 10 points the first half, but found themselves only up 70-66 heading into the fourth quarter. Without Bogut and despite not hitting a three-pointer in the entire second half, the Warriors outscored the Thunder down the stretch 21-20 for the win.

The Warriors travel itinerary doesn’t get any lighter in the next few days. The Dubs play four straight on the road before month’s end, starting with a Tuesday-Wednesday Florida back-to-back. The Warriors head to Miami to face the heat before moving on to in-state opponent Orlando.

49ers slip past the Redskins, but ready for a bigger test against the Seahawks on Thanksgiving

Boldin

By Morris Phillips

If the goal is to play meaningful games in November and December, then the 49ers have arrived.

But now that there here, what will they do with the opportunity?

For the first time in 2014, the 49ers came up with a game-winning touchdown drive in the fourth quarter to get past the stubborn Redskins at Levi’s Stadium on Sunday.  But in winning their third in a row, the 49ers again let their outclassed opponent hang around and have a chance to steal one late.

“Our guys did what they needed to do when they needed to do it,” Coach Jim Harbaugh said.  “Good teams win those kind of games.  Proud of our guys.  By any means necessary.”

Prior to driving 75 yards in eight plays to take the lead on Carlos Hyde’s four-yard touchdown run with 4:43 remaining, the 49ers were simply driving their fans and themselves crazy.  The first five San Francisco drives of the second half produced three punts, an interception and a rare Frank Gore fumble.  Two of those five drives were three-and-out, and Gore fumbled on the initial play of that possession.  For those watching the game on television, the sobering stat was relayed across the bottom of the screen: the 49ers were the NFL’s lowest scoring team in the fourth quarter this season.

But thanks to their rare streak of proficiency down the stretch, the 49ers pulled it out and now must get ready for the Seahawks with both teams on the outside looking in at the NFC playoff stack with five games remaining.  The first meeting in the NFL’s rivalry of the moment comes in just four days at Santa Clara with a return meeting December 14th in Seattle.

Both teams are 7-4 and looking up at the 9-2 Cardinals in the NFC West.  With two of each team’s remaining five games against each other, it becomes less and less likely that all three division teams can qualify for the playoffs.  Most likely, that means that either the Super Bowl champs or the 49ers—with three consecutive NFC Championship appearances under their belt—will miss the playoffs.

So it’s crunch time, and Harbaugh said as much after the game Sunday.

“We’re going to be back tonight,” Harbaugh said when asked how soon his coaching staff would begin preparations for Seattle.  “Coaches will be back tonight.  We’re going strong.”

Of the things the coaching staff will address are the dual issues of running the football, and stopping the run, as both were issues against the Redskins.  Alfred Morris, a top flight NFL back not unlike the Seahawks’ Marshawn Lynch, gashed the 49ers for 125 yards on just 21 carries on Sunday.  What the coaches may find disappointing is Morris did his damage as Redskins’ quarterback Robert Griffin continued to underperform, as he was sacked five times and threw for just 106 yards on Sunday.  With Griffin struggling, the 49ers should have been able to be more resourceful in attempting to stop Morris.  But it didn’t come to pass as the 49ers’ youthful inside linebackers, Chris Borland and Michael Wilhoite, took a step back.

“It came down to the inside backers and making them over or under commit just to open up a gap,” Morris explained.  “They changed it up after halftime by bringing the extra safety down in the box.  It presented a new problem but it didn’t stop our run game.”

Offensively, Sunday was another example of how Gore has lost a step, and rookie Carlos Hyde hasn’t gained the consistency he’ll need to become a quality back at the NFL level.  The pair combined for 20 carries, but only 52 yards gained, putting additional pressure on Colin Kaepernick.  The third-year starter had a decent day with 20 of 29 passing for 256 yards, but not enough the yardage and production involved the end zone.  In fact, Kaepernick looked visibly frustrated as the 49ers weren’t able to find the end zone after their initial possession of the day until the game-winner late in the fourth quarter.

Predictably, the Seahawks will employ a game plan that will look to frustrate Kaepernick.  His chemistry with Anquan Boldin will be hard for any opponent to shake, but the quarterback struggled to get the ball to Vernon Davis and Michael Crabtree, who combined for 8 catches and 79 yards on Sunday.  Without the dynamic presence of outside threats, the Seahawks could find disrupting Kaepernick that much easier.

The 49ers and Seahawks meet at 5:30pm on Thanksgiving night.  The Seahawks had little trouble with first-place Arizona on Sunday, winning 19-3 as Russell Wilson threw for 211 yards and ran for 73 more.

One more bowl chance for Cal

By George Devine, Sr.

Cal came into the 117th Big Game with a 5-5 record, the same as its opponent. Either the Bears or the Stanford Cardinal could become bowl-eligible with a sixth win for 2014. As Joe Starkey said, that would not necessarily mean a bowl invitation, but it would be a prerequisite. Stanford passed that test with its 38-17 win at Strawberry Canyon on Saturday. When they take on UCLA the following week, their chances for postseason can improve. Cal, on the other hand, saw its prospects diminish not only as the Cardinal piled up the points, but as reports kept coming into the press box showing Brigham Young’s pasting of Savannah State. Initial dispatches in the first quarter showed a 21-0 margin; the final score was 64-0. The Bears play BYU at home on November 29, and must beat them to be even considered for any kind of bowl game.

BYU has a big team, and a forceful one on both offense and defense. QB Christian Stewart completed three touchdown passes and ran for two more. The Cal secondary, which lacks speed in the secondary, will be up against him on Saturday and against receivers Mitch Mathews, Terenn Houk and Jordan Leslie. Nate Carter will be part of the visitors’ ground game, having scored a TD run from the 2-yard line.

The Bears, who turned the ball over five times against Stanford, will need to be less anxious and intimidated than they were against their traditional rival. Moreover, they will need to be less predictable. This second objective might be reached if coach Sonny Dykes once again alternates QBs Jared Goff and Luke Rubenzer, who spelled Goff for a good part of the second half.

In any case, the Bears will finish with a significantly better record than in Coach Dykes’ initial season last year. And, if reports so far are indicative, this improvement will be joined by a parallel boost in academic achievement and graduation rate, one of the concerns the new coach has been asked to concentrate on.

Kickoff for this final game of the season is at 1:30 p.m. PST.

NCAA commentary: Winston made official contact but it’s all good; Oregon offense plowing to success; Alabama can’t be contained

by Michelle Richardson

Florida State 20 (11-0) vs. Boston College 17 (6-5): The field was soaked and the game was tied and on the line but the Florida State Seminoles pulled out the rabbit and traveled 66 yards down field to give their kicker Roberto Aguayo reasonable distance to convert a 26 yard field goal for the game winner with just three second left on Saturday to just get by BC 20-17.

Still this is not the Florida State of last season, this is not the National Championship team of 2013 so people really need to let it go. Half of those Seminole players have graduated and are playing the NFL. Calvin Benjamin is in the pros with the Carolina Panthers and rightfully so let it go.

Even though if this is not that team this team continues to win, it doesn’t matter if it’s ugly or if it’s a blowout the bottom line is they win. Their 26-0 with a ten game win streak, they haven’t lost in 26 straight games and this next game they need to get past Florida and it doesn’t matter how poorly either team is playing.

Oregon 44 (10-1) vs. Colorado 10 (2-9): The Oregon Ducks didn’t disappoint but they also didn’t shock anyone either with a healthy 34 point win over the Colorado Buffaloes on Saturday. Ducks quarterback Marcus Mariota threw for 323 yards, completing 24 passes in 32 tries, with three touchdown passes Mariota also carried for a touchdown.

There was not too much expectation out of the Ducks, the Buffaloes came to Oregon and the Ducks took care of business. Mariota and Oregon will win the Pac 12 Championship I don’t see how they can’t and most likely they’ll play UCLA (9-2) to find out whose the overall Pac 12 Champions. The bottom line is Oregon took care of Colorado.

Alabama 48 (10-1) vs. Western Carolina (7-5) 14: This was the final game of the season for the Western Carolina Catamounts and this was another game that had no surprises as the Alabama Crimson Tide did what they were suppose to do and win and win big. The Crimson did what they were suppose to do in this game and they won by 34 points.

The games scheduled for the SCC on Saturday were pretty bad, for the most part with the exception of Arkansas over Ole Miss, there wasn’t a lot of great games going on. Next week all the big rival big games will be going on. Once again Alabama did what they were suppose to do. Western Carolina who plays in the Southern Conference got soaked and Alabama they did what they were suppose to do.

The Crimson Tide cruised past the Cats on offense even before the first half was over, Western Carolina played hard football, they didn’t give up and it’s hard to ask a football team to come and show up at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa and win there. With that crowd and all of that noise there.

Michelle Richardson does NCAA commentary each week on http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Stanford game recap: Stanford keeps the axe; routs Cal in the Big Game

by Daniel Dullum

BERKELEY–For this group of Stanford seniors, it was another trip around Memorial Stadium in Berkeley toting the Axe – they’ve never known anything different from their last four football encounters with California.

The Cardinal secured the Axe early in their 38-17 triumph over Cal. Nearly two minutes into the Big Game, Remound Wright rambled in from a yard out to start the onslaught with the first of his four touchdowns. Four minutes later, Jordan Williamson booted a 24-yard field goal and the Cardinal were up 10-0 after one quarter.

Cal pulled to within 10-7 to open the second quarter, but that was as close as the Bears would get. Rushing touchdowns by Wright and quarterback Kevin Hogan effectively blew the game open as Stanford took a 24-7 lead into the intermission.

Wright’s two second-half scores gave Stanford a comfortable 30-10 lead with 8:44 left in the fourth quarter. Wright wound up with 93 rushing yards on 23 carries. Hogan was 15 of 20 for 214 yards with one interception.

Hogan was also the Cardinal’s second busiest runner, rushing seven times for 46 yards.

Francis Owusu snared four of Hogan’s passes for 46 yards. Devon Cajuste and Austin Hooper each caught three passes for Stanford. Blake Martinez was the defensive star for the Cardinal, intercepting two passes and forcing a fumble.

Despite being flagged 12 times for 113 penalty yards, the Cardinal won the 117th Big Game and qualified for a lower-tier bowl game. With that, and taking home the Axe, it was a good day for the Cardinal, indeed.

Daniel Dullum covers Stanford football and basketball road games for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Cal’s Big Game problems against Stanford started early and never subsided

By Morris Phillips

Whatever Michael Lowe’s intentions were with his swooping, head first tackle on Stanford’s Austin Hooper, the result was Cal’s senior leader was ejected on the game’s first play from scrimmage and his final Big Game was over before it got started.

Needing a big start, near immediate impact on the scoreboard and a physical effort for 60 minutes, Lowe’s ejection for targeting was none of the above.  Instead, the Bears’ Big Game aspirations disappeared soon after Lowe was ejected.

Remound Wright’s first of four rushing touchdowns came six plays later—less than three minutes into the 117th Big Game–and Stanford went on to smash Cal, 38-17 on Saturday.

“In 20 years, I have never seen something like that happen during the first play of the game,” California coach Sonny Dykes said.  “That is a tough call for the first play of the ball game.  I wish that something like that wouldn’t affect us as much as it did.  It affected me and I think it affected our players.”

Lowe’s departure robbed the beleaguered Bears of a playmaker, one of the few Cal’s defense possesses, and someone who understood what it would take to topple Stanford and prevent a fifth-consecutive loss to the Bears’ biggest rival.

From the Cardinal’s perspective, the ejection simply accelerated what they had been slow-cooking all week: a game plan bent on slowing Jared Goff, sprinkled with an extra helping of physicality for the Cal quarterback and his targets.  Offensively, Stanford needed to break out of its malaise, and it did, courtesy of five Cal turnovers.  Afterwards, Stanford’s David Shaw expressed his pleasure with his team’s effort.

“I thought our defense played really well,” Shaw said.  “We’ve been talking all year about trying to get turnovers and to come away with a bunch today is huge.  For our offense to make something of those turnovers is big, as well.”

As always, for teams that know each other all too well, details were crucial.  Fifth-year senior David Parry described how tipped balls and rushed throws by Goff were precipitated by film study that showed how quickly Cal’s offensive line retreats in their shotgun sets, and how that tactic gave Parry and defensive linemates opportunities to get their hands up in the passing lanes.

One of those tipped Goff passes wound up in the hands of linebacker Blake Martinez with Stanford up 17-7 in the second quarter as Cal was driving to tighten the game.  Instead, Cal came up empty, part of a stretch between their initial, first quarter touchdown and a third quarter field goal where Goff was picked off three times and the Bears punted twice.

“They did a nice job tipping a couple of passes, so you have to give them credit for that,” Dykes said.  “We have to make sure we move in the pocket and make space.  A lot of times, tipped passes are on the quarterback, if we are not finding a throwing lane.”

For a team dependent on creating pace and offensive rhythm, the turnovers were killers.  Against Stanford and all their opponents, the Bears want to run at least 100 offensive plays.   That many plays run, contributes to the fatigue of the Bears’ opponents, and creates the possibility of mistakes, both physical and mental.

Instead, Stanford saw Cal run just 76 offensive plays and punt four times in addition to the damaging turnovers.

Sharks Lose to Coyotes in Shootout

By Mary Walsh

SAN JOSE–Saturday night, the Arizona Coyotes beat the San Jose Sharks 4-3. The game went to a shootout giving the Sharks one badly needed point but little else to celebrate. The game’s first and last goals were both scored by Antoine Vermette. The Coyotes’ Devan Dubnyk made 40 saves for the win. For the Sharks, Tommy Wingels, Andrew Desjardins and Joe Pavelski all scored to get the team to overtime.

The Sharks’ first goal of the game snapped a five game pointless streak and a ten game goalless streak for Tommy Wingels. It was an impressive short-handed goal to boot. After the game, Wingels said:

Our penalty kill gave one up early in the game so to get one back was important for us.

You’re not happy when you get scored on the penalty kill, and whether that makes you anticipate better or try harder, psychologically, I don’t know but Goody made a really good play. Both getting it out and on the rush so I just had a the easy job of putting it in.

Andrew Desjardins’ goal was his first of the season.

While many have said that practice is very important, so important that the lack of it may account for some of the Sharks’ recent losses, Todd McLellan did not think it important enough to sit a player who has never practiced with the team. After being traded to the Sharks for Jason Demers, Brenden Dillon arrived in time for the morning skate, but his gear did not. Despite not being able to participate in that practice, he was in Saturday’s game, paired with Brent Burns. Matt Irwin sat out.

The Arizona Coyotes have found ways to lose a lot of games this season. Sometimes they play very badly, other times they just draw the short luck straw. In any case, they quickly tumbled down the Pacific Division standings and have languished there through the first quarter of the season. All of that, next to the Sharks’ recent habit of losing to weak teams, did not bode well.

The Sharks gave up the first goal at 6:08 of the first period, to the Arizona Coyotes power play. The puck trickled out in front of Niemi and Antoine Vermette tapped it through the five hole. The Sharks seemed to have a serious communication failure there, as no one at all was defending Vermette as he loitered in the slot not far from the blue paint.

The Sharks also gave up the second goal, this one a shot from David Schlemko as he skated in fast enough to give himself a clear view of the net. It went just inside the post and out again, almost as if it did not want to rub the two goal lead in.

The Sharks did outshoot the Coyotes in the first, 11-7, despite the penalty. Still, none of those shots could beat Coyotes goaltender Devan Dubnyk.

The Sharks started the second period with some unconvincing play in the offensive zone. They were not very difficult for the Coyotes to push back out.

At 2:46, Andrew Desjardins went to the penalty box for tripping Tobias Rieder. A short-handed excursion quickly followed and gave the Sharks a draw in the Coyotes zone. After the draw, the Sharks again took control and after a couple more tours of the Coyotes’ end, Barclay Goodrow, Mirco Mueller and Tommy Wingels went in three on one to get the Sharks on the board. After such a lackluster start to the game, that brazen attack was certainly surprising.

Tommy Wingels also drew the Sharks’ first penalty, a holding call on Shane Doan at 11:34. The Sharks’ power play had a couple of good chances, most notably an opening for Brent Burns, but he hooked the puck up into the netting and out of play.

At 15:34, Vermette went to the box for boarding Tyler Kennedy. The second Sharks power play looked a lot less dangerous than any of their penalty kills. Then, 19 seconds after the power play ended, Andrew Desjardins found himself with a clear view of the net from the faceoff circle. He also had the puck. He shot it past Dubnyk and tied the game.

By the end of the second period, the Sharks led in shots 25-13.

The tie did not last long. 52 seconds into the third period, during a ferocious Coyote attack on the Sharks’ net, a rebound came out and pinballed around before Shane Doan helped it past Dillon and Niemi. Assists to Sam Gagner and Tobias Rieder.

At 7:12 of the period, Arizona’s Michael Stone went to the penalty box for tripping Patrick Marleau. Just prior to the penalty, the Sharks were showing distinct signs of life. A couple of good passes to get them out of the zone involved McGinn and Dillon, and some clean, composed puck movement from the Thornton line, put pressure on the Coyotes defense.

The power play was a little slow getting started, marked by a number of passes that required some patience. The Sharks waited the Coyotes out, until Couture was able to find Burns at the middle of the blue line with a tidy pass that Burns blasted on net. Joe Pavelski deflected it in to tie the game again.

The rest of the period seemed to be played mostly in the Sharks’ zone, but in the final seconds of the period the Sharks made a very good push, complete with good shots from Joe Pavelski and a zone entry with maneuvers through traffic from Sheppard. That last one, had Sheppard managed to put the puck in the net, would have been a nice addition to a highlight reel. Alas, he did not and neither did anyone else.

1:05 in to overtime, Coyotes captain Shane Doan went to the box for high-sticking Matt Nieto, who went to the bench holding his right hand gingerly. The Sharks’ power play featured an amazing almost goal saved by a Coyote sprawled in the net behind Dybnyk. Nothing else came close. A small pile up in the net at the end of the power play did remind me of this accident. Just like that pileup, everyone walked, or skated away. Unlike that accident, it was over very quickly.

The shootout went all three rounds, with Logan Couture, Joe Pavelski and Barclay Goodrow shooting for the Sharks. Sam Gagner, Mikkel Boedker and Antoine Vermette shot for the Coyotes. Vermette shot last and was the only shooter to score.

Joe Pavelski led the Sharks in shots with seven. Tommy Wingels led the team in hits. Three Sharks blocked three shots each: Patrick Marleau, Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Justin Braun. Antti Niemi made 22 saves on 25 shots.  Newcomer Brenden Dillon had one shot on goal, four hits and one blocked shot.

Jason Demers, who presumably had his equipment in time for the morning skate, seems to be fitting in nicely with the Dallas Stars.

The Sharks next play at 7:30 on Wednesday the 26th. They will face the visiting Calgary Flames at SAP Center in San Jose.

Undefeated Blue Devils down Stanford in Coaches vs. Cancer title tilt

By DANIEL DULLUM
Sports Radio Service
Saturday, November 22, 2014

Fourth-ranked Duke maintained its perfect record after five games on Saturday, defeating Stanford 70-59 in the championship game of the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y.

It was the first head-coaching meeting between Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski and Stanford mentor Johnny Dawkins, a former standout player at Duke.

Duke freshman Jahlil Okafor scored 10 points and pulled down 10 rebounds. And fellow freshman Justise Winslow added 14 points and nine rebounds and Quinn Cook led the Blue Devils with 18 points.

Chasson Randle led the Cardinal (3-1) with 22 points. Stefan Nastic had the defensive assignment to try and stop the 6-foot-11 Okafor and finished with 13 points and 13 rebounds before fouling out.

Cook – the tournament MVP – and Winslow helped the Blue Devils build a 15-point lead after halftime. Okafor slammed the door, with eight points and six rebounds down the stretch.

Stanford got no closer than 51-43 with 10:55 left in the second half when Randle sank a floater.