NCAA NIT Semi-Finals Stanford-Old Dominion podcast with Matt Harrington: Cardinal needing one more to get into NIT Finals

by Matt Harrington

PALO ALTO–For any team to wrap up their season participating in the NIT semi finals is a great start and on Tuesday that’s what the Old Dominion Monarchs (27-7) will face the Stanford Cardinal (22-13). This is an exciting opportunity for both of these teams to continue on with their basketball playing and doing it in a historic venue and get a trip to New York and play at Madison Square Garden instead of staying on campus it’s a great advantage for both of these schools.

The Cardinal put together a late little run after receiving unfortunate news that they will not be going to the NCAA Tournament and you look at the games that they recently played. The game against Vanderbilt last Tuesday where they won it by just three 78-75. The game against Rhode Island with a 74-65 victory where the Cardinal just ran away with it.

The Cardinal played with some dominance in these post season games, the same can’t be said for Old Dominion who in their last game took a buzzer beating three to beat Murray State 72-69. So it’s a tale of two contrasting schools that enter into this match up for Tuesday night. The Cardinal face a team the Monarchs who have really been dominate their coming off a three game win streak.

There’s no taking anything away from Old Dominion because they beat Murray State everyone in their mother was saying along with the folks in the NCAA Tournament that that game was going down to the wire. This was one team that many thought was snubbed in the big tournament and the faithful at Old Dominion. It’s going to be a very good tournament with two very good teams going into this game.

The Cardinal have the edge and maybe confidence in knowing they owned a couple of teams, the Monarchs have this old swagger to them you get when they get further. They have that confidence of those USA mid major teams thinking they have a chance to knock off one of the big boys one of those Pac 12 teams. Stanford has a big tournament getting right back into this game this is going to be a big chance for Old Dominion to come out swinging.

This is where Stanford head coach Johnny Dawkins looks forward to another October or maybe not that long and it should be mid season where the players are playing up to their capability. Just looking at the score from last game the Cardinal’s Marcus Allen almost scored ten points. Earlier in the season he wasn’t even a factor necessarily, Reid Travis is getting into rhythm with six points off the bench. So there are a number of surprises that the Cardinal have and they should be out there in force on Tuesday night against Old Dominion for this semi final.

Matt Harrington is covering Stanford basketball for the NIT Semi Finals with Daniel Dullum on game night coverage for http://www.sportsradioservice.com catch the Stanford podcast below

Rowe rallies Revolution

(AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

By Pearl Allison Lo

~ Not only did New England end their scoreless streak Saturday, they won their first game, beating the San Jose Earthquakes 2-1 on a snowy Saturday.

Kelyn Rowe scored in the 21st and 37th minute to pace the team. He led all with seven shots, five on goal.

The Revolution built on last game, with two more shots on goal for a total of eight.

They are still undefeated at home, with a 9-0-3 record. The Revolution have strung together three wins against the Quakes now, San Jose with only two goals through then.

In net, New England’s Bobby Shuttleworth faced 10 shots, four on goal and made three saves.

San Jose avoided the shutout for the fourth time in their last six against the Revolution, with a penalty kick by Chris Wondolowski in the 62nd minute.

Rowe was aided by Lee Nguyen and Daigo Kobayashi the first time he scored. Rowe’s goal came at the 346th minute of the season.

The second time Rowe scored, he was helped by Darrius Barnes and Chris Tierney.

The Quakes’ Marvell Wynne got hurt in the 53rd minute and had to be taken out in the 55th minute with a left hamstring strain. It was head coach Dominic Kinnear’s last available substitution.

Clarence Goodson drew the penalty which Wondolowski won. Wondolowski led with four shots, three on goal. He now has three goals on the season.

About the match, Kinnear said, “ They came out ready, we came out a little bit sleepy and that’s why we were down 2-0 at halftime. We fought hard to get back into the game and then obviously the chance at the end would have been great for us.”

That chance he was referring to was Wondolowski’s head-on kick in the 93rd minute which Shuttleworth pushed away. It was followed by a missed attempt at the near post by Jean-Baptiste Pierazzi after Wondolowski kicked the ball forward.

New England head coach Jay Heaps said, “We were excited with our first half, and the way we went out in that first half, and even the start of the second, but unfortunately, it became a real game. It was a good job to hold on, but it probably shouldn’t have been as close, but it was.”

Game notes: Both San Jose’s Victor Bernardez and Revolution captain Jose Goncalves returned from red card suspension, each with a shot on goal and Goncalves with two crosses. New England was without Kevin Alston again. Tierney led all with seven crosses. The Quakes next play Real Salt Lake April 5 at 2pm.

Warriors Win 60th Game, Clinch West

By: Eric He

Not since Gerald Ford was President have the Golden State Warriors been this good.

With a 108-95 win over the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday night, the Warriors won their franchise-record 60th game of the season and clinched the top seed in the West, ensuring them home-court advantage through the Western Conference Finals in the playoffs.

The last time the Warriors won more than 59 games and were the top seed in the conference was the 1975-1976 season.

After a rather sluggish first quarter, the Warriors pulled away in the second, dominated in the third, and coasted in the fourth for a comfortable win.

Stephen Curry’s 25 points led the way, and he maintained his torrid shooting from beyond-the-arc, hitting 6-of-9 three-point attempts. Klay Thompson, who finished with 21, scored 17 points in the third quarter that saw the Warriors outscore the Bucks 34-25 and extend a 10-point lead to 19.

Thompson made jumper after jumper, and scored nine consecutive points at one juncture to propel the Warriors’ advantage.

Back-to-back shots by Curry midway through the fourth put the Warriors up 99-78 and sealed the game.

Notes

The Warriors rested Andre Iguodala and Draymond Green on the back-end of a back-to-back. David Lee started in Green’s place … James Michael McAdoo contributed 12 points off the bench. … The Warriors held the Bucks to 37.9 percent shooting and 13.3 percent (2-of-15) from three-point range. … With their 26th road win of the season, the Warriors set yet another franchise record. … Next up for Golden State will be the Clippers on the road on Tuesday night.

Cardinal’s Season Ends At Hands Of Irish

By: Joe Lami

Stanford’s season came to an end on Friday night, when the Notre Dame Fighting Irish defeated the Cardinal 81-60 in the third round of the NCAA tournament.  The Cardinal were riding a five-game winning streak, but the second ranked Irish used amazing guard play to power past the Cardinal.

Notre Dame was led by their two guards, each took turns in dominating a half.

Sophomore, Lili Allen, played the game of her life, as she notched a new career high, 28 points, 24 of which was in the first half. Allen was averaging ten per game entering Friday, but was one of the difference maker in ending Stanford’s season. 

National player of the year candidate, Jewell Loyd, took over in the second half, scoring 17 of her 24 points. “She did a really good job in the second half, but she is going to draw the most attention, which why you see her making so many shots,” added Notre Dame hall of fame coach, Muffet McGraw.

The Cardinal were trying to keep it close early in the second half, as they trailed by just four, but that’s when Loyd took over, helping Notre Dame extend their lead to 59-47 in just a matter of minutes. “Loyd is probably the National player of the year,” added Stanford coach, Tara VanDerveer.

It was the end of the line for Stanford seniors Amber Orrange, Bonnie Samuelson, and Taylor Greenfield.  Samuelson led the way for the Cardinal with 17 points, 15 of which came from beyond the three-point arc.  Orrange finishes her career being one of Stanford’s best guards of all-time finishing with 12 points.  She ends her career high on the Cardinal’s all-time scoring list with 1,426 points.

Greenfield continued her strong play of late, coming off the bench to score eight.

The Cardinal were heavy underdogs against the one-seeded Irish in the Oklahoma City region, and unfortunately will not be able to continue their season.  The Irish will take on the Baylor Bears on Sunday for a chance at the Final Four.

Top prospect Slater shines for Futures in tie with Giants

By DANIEL DULLUM
Sports Radio Service
Saturday, March 28, 2015

SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – On a 94-degree afternoon at Scottsdale Stadium, 8,893 fans cheerfully spent 2 hours and 52 minutes watching a 2-2 nine-inning exhibition baseball tie between the San Francisco Giants and a split-squad of the organization’s top prospects.

It was the Giants’ second tie game of the spring, and their first since March 9 (5-5 vs. Los Angeles Dodgers).

Second baseman Austin Slater was 2-for-2 with a solo home run for the Futures, and outfielder Jaret Parker went 2-for-4. Third baseman Mitchell Delfino drove in the other Futures run.

Slater, an eighth-round draft choice in 2014, hit .350 last year at Stanford. In his first season as a pro, Slater hit a combined .346 with two home runs and 23 RBI for the Arizona League Giants and Salem Keizer (Northwest League)

The Giants Futures scored both of their runs in the top of the fourth. With one out, Slater homered to right. Mac Williamson and Parker followed with singles, and Delifino grounded out to second, scoring Williamson.

San Francisco tied the game with two runs in the bottom of the seventh. Pinch-runner Blake Miller – replacing Hector Sanchez, who singled – went to second on a wild pitch, to third on a fly to center and scored when Devin Harris doubled to center. Joaquin Arias, who walked, scored the second Giants run on a wild pitch by Rodolfo Martinez.

Harris was 2-for-3 and collected the Giants’ only RBI.

Nine different pitchers saw action for the Futures. Though Martinez wound up with a blown save, he struck out two and gave up one hit. Collectively, the Futures pitchers gave up five hits and no earned runs.

Yusmeiro Petit worked the first five innings for the Giants, logging five strikeouts, one walk and two earned runs. Chris Stratton, Keury Melia, Chase Johnson and Luis Ysla held the Futures scoreless on three hits over the final four innings.

The Giants have three more games in Scottsdale before heading back to the Bay Area for the annual preseason series with Oakland April 2-4. The Giants host the Dodgers (Sunday), travel to Mesa on Monday to play the Chicago Cubs, then return to Scottsdale for games agaisnst Colorado (Tuesday) and Cleveland (Wednesday).

CACTUS NEEDLES: San Francisco announced after the game that RHP Curtis Partch was reassigned to the club’s minor league camp. Partch, a 2005 Giants draft choice, spent 2013 and 2014 with Cincinnati. … INF Casey McGehee has started 18 games at third base forthe Giants this spring. … Giants OF Nori Aoki is tied for the Cactus League lead with three triples. … 1B Brandon Belt leads San Francisco with three homers, eight RBIs and a .327 average coming into Saturday’s game. … The Giants’ annual Play Ball Luncheon will be held Friday, April 3, from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., at the Hilton San Francisco (333 O’Farrell). This is the Giants Community Fund’s largest fundraising event. … Word out of the Athletics camp in Mesa is that Tyler Clippard will start the season as Oakland’s closer, Manager Bob Melvin told the media. Clippard, the winning pitcher in the 2011 All-Star Game, had spent most of his career as a setup reliever in Washington before he was acquired by the A’s this past winter. He was pressed into duty as the Nats’ closer in 2012, when Drew Storen became ineffective. Sean Doolittle, the A’s incumbent closer, is set to start the season on the disabled list (shoulder). … A’s LHP Barry Zito has looked impressive enough in Mesa that other teams are seriously scouting the former Cy Young Award winner in case the A’s cut him loose. Zito has enjoyed a solid spring and may head north with the Athletics as a fifth starter or long reliever.

Sharks Start Strong Again, Win 3-2 in Philly

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks lost two defensemen and had to go to a shootout after outshooting the Philadelphia Flyers 44-18, but they won 3-2. The shootout winner was scored by Brent Burns. Matt Irwin and Joe Pavelski scored the regulation goals for the Sharks, while Michael Raffl and Claude Giroux scored for the Flyers. Goaltender Al Stalock made 16 saves on 18 shots from the win, while Steve Mason made 42 saves on 44 shots for the Flyers.

Marc-Edouard Vlasic sustained a lower body injury during the first period and is not expected to play in Pittsburgh. Scott Hannan was also injured later in the game and is also likely to be out Sunday. Of finishing the game after so many injuries, head coach Todd McLellan said:

When you get to four, it’s pretty easy, you just keep saying “next.” You know, at five, which happened fairly early in the game, I thought our D did a really good job and our forwards protected them. We played enough in the offensive zone to not have them too taxed in our end. Where we ran into trouble is a little bit on the penalty kill against a very good power play but we managed the game well once they got hurt.

As they did in Detroit on Thursday, the Sharks had a very strong first period in Philadelphia. On those good starts, Joe Pavelski said:

We had a good practice the other night in Detroit. The same thing happened, we were pretty good all night, we weren’t really … it wasn’t that taxing of a game I don’t think in our own end and I think that probably helped a little bit.

The Flyers took an early penalty that let the Sharks warm up with a power play, but it was not until that power play had expired that Matt Irwin put the Sharks on the board. Jakub Voracek made an ill-advised clearing attempt up the middle, which Irwin caught and threw right back at the net. Assists went to Chris Tierney and Tommy Wingels.

The lead only lasted a couple of minutes. The Sharks had spent a long shift in their own zone when they finally cleared the puck. Unfortunately, Flyers’ Nicklas Grossmann brought it back in more quickly than expected. The tired Sharks defenders could not stop a shot from the blue line that hit a couple of players on the way in. The goal went to Michael Raffl, with assists going to Grossmann and Voracek.

Grossmann went to the box at 15:06 for holding. The Sharks power play held the zone pretty well, and the Flyers had to thwart several shots from the blue line. With 21 seconds left on the power play, Joe Pavelski threw the puck at Steve Mason from behind the goal line. The puck went under Mason and then trickled into the net. The referee blew the whistle early, and a review in Toronto deemed the whistle to be “irrelevant to continuous play.” No one had touched Mason and he did not seem to realize the puck was underneath him. Assists went to Logan Couture and Brent Burns.

During the first period, the Sharks lost Marc-Edouard Vlasic, who was deemed questionable to return at the start of the second period. At the end of the first period, the shots were 15-7 Sharks. By the middle of the second period, the Sharks had added five shots to their tally, while the Flyers had added one.

The Flyers got their first power play at 9:45 of the second, when Matt Nieto went to the box for interference. The Flyers had one shot during the power play, and Logan Couture ate up some time with a short-handed breakaway in the second half of the power play. Mason stopped the back-hander without much trouble but the Sharks got an offensive zone faceoff out of that.

With six minutes left in the second, Philadelphia’s Ryan White hit Tommy Wingels from behind and a little high. Wingels was slow to get up and White went to the box for boarding. The Flyers again handled hard shots from the blue line, and made plays near the net very difficult for the Sharks. The Sharks did manage three shots but they could not extend their one goal lead.

The second period ended with the Sharks leading in shots 22-12 and in faceoffs 26-20.

The Flyers mustered some good offensive pressure to start the third period, but despite a couple of close calls they were still being outshot 2-1 in the first five minutes.

Scott Hannan went to the box at 7:00 for hooking. The Flyers started their power play with a couple of chances at an open net when Stalock was caught out of the blue paint. They missed and it looked like the Sharks’ penalty killers had dodged a bullet. When the Flyers next attacked, Claude Giroux tied the game. He caught a cross-ice pass from Voracek and beat Stalock from the faceoff circle. Ryan White and Brayden Schenn were both screening Stalock and it is surprising that the puck did not touch either of them. Assists went to Voracek and Michael Del Zotto.

A scrum stopped the action with 7:23 left, after Nick Cousins hit Scott Hannan, sending the Sharks defenseman into the boards. Cousins’ hit seemed to catch Hannan’s arm from behind, so that Hannan could not protect himself as he might have. He went face-first into the glass. Hannan left the game and Oliver Lauridsen went to the box. The penalty was a result of the scrum, not the hit. Lauridsen then went to the dressing room, as did John Scott, both with ten minute misconducts.

At 15:43, Joe Thornton was called for tripping Jakub Voracek. The hit could have been called kneeing, as the players connected knee to knee when Voracek skated past Thornton at the Flyers’ blue line. Though they were missing Thornton and two defensemen now, the Sharks killed the penalty off.

Each team had good chances in the final minute. The Flyers’ Voracek gave the Sharks a scare when he skated into the zone and evaded three defending Sharks. At the last moment, Matt Irwin knocked the puck away from him and sent it to Matt Nieto, who took it the other way. Chris Tierney and Nieto gave the Flyers some grief that ended with Justin Braun getting a shot that just went wide of the net. With that, regulation time expired.

The Sharks started overtime well, with a lot of offensive zone time for defensemen. Braun, Dillon and Irwin all spent some time below the faceoff circle, supporting the forwards. It was in the Sharks’ zone, however, that Matt Irwin took a hit from Brayden Schenn and put the Sharks on the power play. The power play looked very good, and the Flyers had a tough time trying to clear the puck. At one point, Brent Burns seemed to be everywhere on the blue line, keeping a couple of pucks in that looked bound to get out. The Flyers did finally get the puck out just past the minute mark of the power play, but the Sharks were back in quickly. The Flyers had to work very hard for that kill but they got it.

The Sharks had a couple more chances and near misses but time expired before anyone could score.

Jakub Voracek shot first for the Flyers and scored with a late shot from almost at the goal line. Logan Couture shot next but hit the post.

Claude Giroux shot second for the Flyers but Stalock caught his slapshot. Joe Pavelksi shot next but his shot went off of Mason’s skate.

Matt Read tried some misdirection followed by a shot through the five hole but Stalock was not fooled. Melker Karlsson followed with some stick handling and a shot to the top right corner. He tied it up.

Sean Couturier shot next but Stalock stopped his backhand shot. Patrick Marleau shot low but Mason stopped him.

Vincent LeCavalier lost the puck before getting a shot off. Brent Burns went next for the Sharks. Skating in at a moderate pace, he faked to the right then shot backhand into the top left corner for the win.

The Sharks led the game in faceoff wins 38-35. Joe Pavelski led the Sharks with seven shots, and Logan Couture came in second with six. John Scott and Tomas Hertl led with three hits each. Brent Burns led with four blocked shots. Burns also led the Sharks in ice time with 27:33.

Claude Giroux led the Flyers with three shots. Zac Rinaldo led his team with eight hits. Nick Schultz and Chris Vandevelde led their team with four blocked shots each. Michael Del Zotto led the Flyers in ice time with 30:18.

The Sharks next play at 4:30 PT on Sunday against the Penguins in Pittsburgh.

Golden State Warriors podcast with David Zizmor: Warriors close to clinching Western Conference top seeding

by David Zizmor

OAKLAND–The Warriors have just been playing amazing basketball lately and this might be the best that they’ve looked all season. That’s including that long win streak earlier in the first half of the season. This team is really clicking on all cylinders, they have the points and their just starting to pull away in the NBA Western Conference.

The W’s are ten games up on Memphis and their four games up on the Atlanta Hawks for the overall best record and they just beat Atlanta last week by just a dominating score 114-95. Then this last week the beat up on Portland 122-108, they then beat up on Memphis 107-84, they beat up on Washington 107-76, these are three playoff teams they beat up on.

They won those games and there was not a close match in any of those games the factor in all three of those games the Warriors kept it close through the first half and they just exploded in the third quarter and the fourth quarter was no contest to rest the starters for the most part. You watch these third quarters whatever adjustments they make and the feel they’ve got for the first half all comes to a head in the third quarter.

The Warriors just run away with it, especially in this game the other night against Memphis, their up by five in the half it was a good game. Mike Conley from Grizzlies had a very strong first half with 16 points and in the second half the Warriors made an adjustment to counter for him. Conley scored zero points in that second half.

Meanwhile Stephen Curry scored 17 points in just the third quarter alone and the Warriors just bombed the Grizzlies out of the building at Fed Ex Forum in Memphis this was a road game for Golden State. So to go on the road and beat Memphis by 20 and the Warriors hadn’t beat Memphis yet this season and they were the only team the Warriors haven’t beaten in the entire NBA.

When the Warriors faced the Grizzlies much earlier in the season it was the December 16th they lost 105-98, they didn’t dominate the game because there were just a few games where the Warriors have been blown out but it wasn’t a very close game based on how the Warriors have played this season. The Warriors are in Milwaukee on Saturday night and could clinch for the number one seed in the Western Conference.

David Zizmor does Warriors commentary each week for http://www.sportsradioservice.com listen to his podcast below

Warriors Match Single-Season Franchise Wins Mark

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

Stephen Curry continued his barnstorming campaign to win the NBA’s Most Valuable Player award Friday night, dropping 38 points on the Memphis Grizzlies to lead the Golden State Warriors to the 107-84 victory. The Western Conference leaders now have eighth-straight wins and have matched the franchise record for wins in a single season.

Curry went 12-for-22 from the field in 34 minutes of play, nailing 8 treys out of 12 attempted to push the Warriors passed the number two team in the conference handedly. The All-star guard also dished out 10 assists.

Klay Thomspon pitched in 28 points while Andrew Bogut matched Memphis’ Jeff Green with a game-high 8 rebounds. Green also topped the Grizzlies (50-21) with 16 points coming off the bench.

The Warriors (59-13) forced 19 Memphis turnovers while out-boarding one of the Association’s physical elite 43-40. Memphis did outshoot Golden State on its home court, shooting 44.7 percent to the Warriors’ 43.3.

The Warriors held a 7-point lead after the opening 12 minutes, putting up 31 points to Memphis’ 24. The Grizzlies cut into the Dubs lead with a 25-23 second quarter but a dominant third frame put Golden State up big. The Warriors scored 31 while limiting Memphis to 16 for an 85-65. The Dubs closed the game out with a 22-19 fourth for the 107-84 final score.

After the contest, the Warriors hopped on a flight for Milwaukee. They take on the Bucks in the second game of a back-to-back Saturday night, looking for win number nine in a row against a Bucks team hovering around the .500 mark.

Pelicans fly past the Kings 102-88

by Charlie O. Mallonee

Two four game streaks came to an end on Friday night in New Orleans. The Pelicans four game losing streak ended, and the Kings four game winning streak came to an end as New Orleans beat Sacramento 102-88.

The teams played each other very evenly in the first half. The Pelicans held a 46-42 halftime lead, but in the second half New Orleans just pulled away led by the play of former Sacramento King Tyreke Evans.

Evans finished the night as the Pelicans high scorer putting up 25 points by shooting 10 for 15 from the floor. Evans also made it a double-double game by adding 10 assists.

Anthony Davis had another big night for New Orleans as he scored 24 points in 40 minutes of playing time. Davis had six blocked shots in the game.

The Pelicans were also helped by their second unit that scored 29 points off the bench. Kings coach George Karl felt the New Orleans bench just outplayed the Sacramento bench. The Kings bench could only produce 12 points in game.

The most frustrating fact of the night was the Kings failure to take advantage of the monster numbers put up by DeMarcus Cousins.Cousins scored 39 points and grabbed 20 rebounds for his 44th double-double of the season. He shot 16 for 28 from the field and went seven for 12 from the free throw line. Cousins had three blocked shots.

Rudy Gay’s numbers were down but not significantly. Gay scored 18 points but shot just seven for 18 in the game.

Omri Casspi with 10 points was the only other Kings player to score in double figures.

The Kings backcourt was very quiet in the game. McLemore put up just seven points and Ray McCallum scored just two points.  Between the two guards they had just one point in the first half.

Sacramento shot 44.3-percent from the field for the game. They were seven for 15 (46.7-percent) from 3-point range. The Kings went to the free throw line just 18 times in the game and were successful just 11 times (61.1-percent). Free throw shooting is normally a strength for this Kings team.

The Kings assist to turnovers ratio was not good on Friday night. They had just 14 assists and turned the ball over 11 (12 points).

New Orleans shot 51.2-percent (43 for 84) from the floor. The Pelicans shot nine for 20 (45.0-percent) from 3-point land with most of those coming in the second half.

The Kings will Saturday and Sunday off and then must face the very defensive minded Memphis Grizzlies in Memphis on Monday night.

NFL podcast & commentary with Tony Renteria: Hernandez fiancee found gun in kitchen drawer before Lloyd murder

by Tony Renteria

SANTA CLARA–Former New England Patriot wide receiver Aaron Hernandez’ fiancée testified on Friday that she found a gun in the kitchen drawer in Hernandez’ house just days before the June 17, 2013 murder of Hernandez associate Lloyd Oldin. Hernandez fiancee Shayanna Jenkins who has been to court at various but made her first appearance in court on Friday since March 6th said she made the discovery when going through the kitchen drawers looking for utensils.

You have to be in really bad trouble when your wife or your fiancée testifies against you in exchange for immunity. There has to be something that’s there. That has to be the smoking gun (no pun) and it’s such a waste of a talented football player to end yuur career to go to jail for murder. Hernandez could not separate his past from being a professional athlete. The court reconvenes on Monday.

Adrian Peterson starts to shop for new team: Peterson said that he and his agent are shopping around for another team other than the Minnesota Vikings. The Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer said that he expects Peterson to return. This is coming off of last season’s suspension of Peterson for spanking his son with a switch, Peterson was arrested and investigated for child abuse last season.

Peterson said this is the way he was raised and disciplining his child and this is the way he wants to raise his child. He could ask the Vikings “who are you as my employer to ask how I handle my family?” Sometimes when your in the limelight of the NFL your private life gets involved in your public life. At one point Peterson was ordered by the courts to stay away from his son. Peterson says he’s ready to get back to football after such a turmoil year.

49ers fans raising money to get Yorks out: So far San Francisco 49ers fans have raised some two thousand dollars in a bid to get a fund going to get 49ers owner Jed York and his family out from under the 49ers the money eventually will be used to try and buy the team from the Yorks. The fans want what the Green Bay Packers have and that is a fan owned organization. The fans have expressed their fed up with the Yorks over the handling of former head coach Jim Harbaugh’s leaving and the rest of the key players jumping ship.

If I was a 49ers fan after going through everything to get the new stadium, having to pay crazy ticket prices, having to endure the long lines outside the stadium before the games you want to see them take a step forward from where they were. It’s tough to deal with such a high at one point with playoffs and a Super Bowl and keep that going but the 49ers are going so far down and so fast it’s like an elevator going from the top floor to the bottom floor and I don’t see how they will easily recover this season from this bad off season and I don’t really blame the fans for raising these funds.

How will former 49er Ray McDonald work out in Chicago: McDonald who faced domestic violence allegations and sexual assault allegations and signed with the Bears last week. McDonald’s situation is something that carried through with everything that was going on with the NFL last season. It was such a bad season when it came to domestic violence and sexual abuse.

Its tough to say if the 49ers did the right thing letting McDonald go and the 49ers need to start distancing themselves from that type of character on their squad. This is something that your hearing about all the time in the NFL especially during the 2014-15 season. Did the Bears do the right thing? Players always seems to find a place to play in the NFL by what kind of character you are.

Tony Renteria does NFL Commentary each week for http://www.sportsradioservice.com listen to Tony’s podcast below