NCAA Podcast with Michelle Richardson: MSU caps on Harbaugh and Wolves fumble; Fournette racks up big offensive day for LSU; Hogan has Cardinal headed for top rankings

On the podcast today with Michelle, Michigan State University Spartans (7-0) cashes in with a huge win over the Michigan Wolverines (5-2)9 after a fumble on a punt by Wolves kicker Blake O’Neil. Once the ball eluded O’Neil the Spartans defensive back Jalen Watts Jackson recovered the ball and ran it the other way for 38 yards for the game winner Saturday 27-23.

LSU’s (6-0) Leonard Fournette knows something about perfect records and play he ran for 180 yards and two touchdowns and LSU’s Les Miles faked a field goal with just seconds left in the game to get the game winner over the Florida Gators (6-1). This was the second time in five years that LSU has executed the fake punt against the Gators for the 35-28 win.

Thursday was a busy day for Stanford quarterback Kevin Hogan who led the Cardinal to a 56-35 victory over the UCLA Bruins (4-2). Hogan tossed for 131 yards, three touchdowns, and an interception. The Cardinal keep on winning while UCLA are going the other way.

Listen to Michelle on her NCAA commentary podcast below at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

photo credit Yahoo Sports MSU DB Jalen Watts Jackson

Haley leads Barracudas past Condors

By: Eric He

A late power play goal by Michael Haley was enough for the San Jose Barracuda to squeeze by the Bakersfield Condors 4-3 on the road on Saturday night.

Haley, who had two goals on the night, converted from point-blank for the game-winner at 16:41 of the third period after a feed by Ryan Carpenter. San Jose was able to hang on to seal its second consecutive road win.

Haley also scored the first goal of the game, deflecting a pass from Carpenter again to put the Barracuda up 1-0. After Bryan Lerg gave San Jose a 2-0 lead, a parade to the penalty box by the Barracuda resulted in consecutive power play goals by Bakersfield to even the score.

After the Condors went ahead 3-2 early in the third, the Barracuda finished with two unanswered for the win. Trevor Parkes recorded his first goal of the season, jamming in the rebound after a shot from the point.

Aaron Dell made 30 saves on the night, while prospect Julius Bergman made his season debut with the Barracuda.

The Barracuda will head back home and take on the San Diego Gulls on Wednesday.

Lakers and Warriors end early due to wet floor

By Joe Hawkes-Beamon

SAN DIEGO — With the playing surface at the Valley View Casino Center filled with too many wet spots and players noticeably slipping, the game between the Golden State Warriors and Los Angeles Lakers was called at the 2:16 mark in the third quarter with Los Angeles holding a 85-70 lead.

According to CSNBayArea.com’s Warriors’ Insider Monte Poole, “On no fewer than seven occasions, players were seen slipping and sliding on the floor. In one notable first-half instance, Warriors guard Steph Curry slipped and recovered to drain a 3-pointer over Jordan Clarkson.”

Curry finished with 19 points on 7-for-13 shooting (5-of-10 on 3s), leading all Warriors in scoring. Curry also added four assists and three rebounds. The reigning MVP scored 14 points in the first half and drained 4-of-8 3s.

Festus Ezeli, starting for injured center Andrew Bogut, scored 10 points and grabbed nine rebounds.

Clarkson led all Lakers with 17 points on 7-for-9 shooting, while forward Julius Randle added14 points.

Lakers guard Nick Young, who scored 10 points, said after the game per ESPN, “It was just too dangerous to play on, people slipping left and right.” Young began the game hot, knocking down three straight 3s in under two minutes in the second quarter.

Los Angeles (2-4) shot a better percentage from the floor than Golden State (46% to 38%), and controlled the points in the paint outscoring the Warriors 34 to 22. Golden State turned the ball over 12 times, compared to just five by the Lakers.

Golden Staten continues their three-game SoCal road swing Tuesday against the Clippers on ESPN, before finishing up against the Lakers once more on Thursday on TNT.

Kings beat the Pelicans in Kentucky

NBAE/Getty Images
NBAE/Getty Images

by Charlie O. Mallonee

The Kentucky Wildcats capped off their “Midnight Madness Weekend” by hosting a NBA preseason game between the Sacramento Kings and the New Orleans Pelicans on Saturday night. The Wildcats had three of the top 10 basketball recruits in the nation on campus for the big weekend.

The Kings – Pelicans game featured four former Kentucky players (three of whom played for head coach John Calipari) and two of Calipari’s former Memphis players. The Kings DeMarcus Cousins and Willie Cauley-Stein played for Kentucky under Calipari. Rajon Rondo played for Tubby Smith at Kentucky.

The Pelicans star center Anthony Davis played for Calipari in Lexington. New Orleans players Tyreke Evans and Chris Douglas-Roberts played for Calipari at Memphis.

That is not a bad way to impress high school recruits. Please meet these five NBA players who I coached in college. Did you say you would like to play in “the association”?

Now on to the game

This contest was the Kings sixth and final preseason game. The next time the Kings play an opponent it will be on October 28th when they open the season with the Los Angeles Clippers in Sacramento. It was George Karl’s last opportunity to see his players in actual game situations.

The Kings started the game slowly falling behind the Pelicans 31-20 after the first quarter of play. The Kings then turned up the tempo and outscored New Orleans in each of the final three quarters.

The Kings won the game 107-98. The victory allowed Sacramento to finish the preseason with a 5-1 record. The loss dropped the Pelicans preseason record to 2-2.

Kings

Rudy Gay led the Kings attack scoring 20 points in 30 minutes of playing time. Gay made it a double-double game by pulling down 10 rebounds.

DeMarcus Cousins put up 19 points while grabbing five rebounds in his 24 minutes on the floor. Fellow Kentucky Wildcat Willie Cauley-Stein scored seven points and recorded six rebounds. The Kings other Kentucky alum – Rajon Rondo – posted three points and three assists.

Darren Collison had a strong game for the Kings scoring 19 points, grabbing seven rebounds while dishing out five assists. Collison shot 8-for-11 from the field.

Omri Casspi added 16 points and seven rebounds. Kosta Koufos scored 11 points in 14 minutes of playing time.

As a team, the Kings shot .447 (38-for-85) from the floor. They shot just .273 (6-for-22) from 3-point range. Sacramento hit 25 of 34 free throw attempts (.735).

The Kings won the battle in the paint as they outscored the Pelicans 58-31 down low. Sacramento also won the battle on the boards pulling down 50 rebounds to just 45 for New Orleans.

Sacramento had only 14 assists in the game but also committed only 14 turnovers (four in the second half). Karl wants the assist total be at 25 per game, but he will live with 14 turnovers.

Pelicans

Ryan Anderson led the Pelicans scoring with 20 points going 6-for-14 from the floor.

Former Kentucky star Anthony Davis put up 19 points shooting 7-for-15 from the field. Davis was 2-for-4 from 3-point land.

New Orleans shot 34-for-79 (.430) in the game.

Up next

For the Kings, it is lots of scrimmages until the 28th of October when they open the season at home with the Clippers.

The Pelicans close out their preseason with the Rockets in Houston on Monday night.

FRYS.COM OPEN: Steele stays steady, holds on to lead

By Jeremy Harness

After his opening-round of 63 that catapulted him into the early lead, Brendan Steele has simply held firm without letting his game fluctuate. As a result, he has maintained a razor-thin lead that is in place now.

Steele shot a three-under 69 to give himself just enough room to end Saturday’s proceedings with a one-stroke advantage on the field heading into the final round.

He made his headway on the front nine, birdieing two of the first five holes before suffering a bogey at the eighth. However, just as he did on Friday, he made back-to-back birdies at the ninth and 10th holes to get things right back on track.

The 32-year-old then parred the remaining eight holes to secure his spot at the top of the leaderboard heading into Sunday.

“Sundays are always tough,” said Steele, who has been on the tour for five years now. “Fridays, when you’re hanging around the cut line, and then Sundays when you’re in the lead, those are the two toughest times.

“That’s when character kind of comes out.”

On Sunday, Steele, whose only win on the PGA Tour came in the 2011 Valero Texas Open, will be paired with Andrew Loupe, who himself shot a nine-under 63 to get himself into that final group with a realistic chance to come away with his first PGA Tour win.

“Just keep the pedal to the metal,” Loupe said when asked about his mentality on Saturday. “That’s all I was trying to do. Everything just kind of felt a little bit locked in in my warmup.

“Brendan is playing great. He shot nine-under the first round. You can make birdies out here, but if you’re a shade off, you can make bogeys easily.”

Also right in the mix is Kevin Na, who has some experience being in contention in major tournaments and made it to the FedEx Cup Tour Championship the last two years. He fired an eight-under 64 by recording four birdies on the front nine and following that up with two birdies and an eagle on the back nine to head into Sunday with some real momentum.

“(Sunday), I bet they’re going to set up the golf course pretty difficult,” Na said. “There will still be plenty of good scores out there, so (I have to) keep the foot on the gas pedal.

“The course was there for the taking a little bit today, and I took advantage of it.”

Sharks Lose 6-3 To Islanders

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks recorded their first loss of the 2015-16 season Saturday. The New York Islanders won 6-3, with goals from six different Islanders. Sharks rookie Nikolay Goldobin scored his first NHL goal and Joel Ward scored his first as a Shark.

In addition to having played the night before, the Sharks suffered a handful of injuries before and during Saturday’s game. Both factors probably contributed to a somewhat disjointed game from San Jose. After the game, Joe Pavelski said:

That’s the way the game goes sometimes. Definitely, I think there were times where we played our game the way we wanted to play and we were pretty tight and we did well. And then we opened it up too at times and got a little careless. A few bounces maybe didn’t go our way as well. If you’re playing a team like that, you can’t give them any space because they are so offensive and it just takes a little bounce for them to break it open and start feeling good.

Just before the game, news broke that Sharks defenseman Paul Martin was out with a lower body injury. The injury occurred during Friday’s game but Martin did finish that one. Depending on the length of his recovery time, this could be even worse news than Logan Couture’s absence. Martin was playing like the guy the Sharks hoped he would be when they signed him. Good matches for Brent Burns have not been easy to find.

To start the game, DeBoer opted to put Brenden Dillon with Burns, and pair Dylan DeMelo with Matt Tennyson. Goaltender Al Stalock made his first start of the season under some inauspicious circumstances. With Joonas Donskoi also still out, DeBoer decided to start Nikolay Goldobin on the top line again, with Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski.

Islanders goaltender Jaroslav Halak was back from injury, playing his first game of the season. This mean that the Sharks barely missed facing an old teammate in goaltender Thomas Greiss, who is now backup for Halak.

Tomas Hertl took the first penalty of the game 3:16 in. He was called for hooking. Half way through the penalty, the Islanders were called for too many men on the ice. Jon Tavares served the penalty. Both penalties expired without a goal.

The Sharks had a good shift or two around the middle of the period, with the top forward line and the Burns-Dillon pair hemming the Islanders in their own zone for a bit.

At 6:56, the Sharks won a faceoff and this allowed Thornton to make a cross-ice pass to Braun, who shot it from the point. The puck went in but Joe Pavelski weas at the net and close enough to Halak to make Islanders head coach Jack Capuano challenge the goal. The challenge was overruled and the goal stood up. The goal went to Pavelski, with assists to Braun and Thornton.

With 2:13 left in the period, Mikhail Grabovski was awarded a penalty shot after he blew by Brenden Dillon and forced Dillon to trip him up to prevent a scoring chance. Al Stalock stopped the penalty shot and the Sharks carried on with their 1-0 lead.

At the end of the period, the shots were even at 10 each.

That changed quickly, as did the score, in a wild second period. Just 21 seconds in, Johnny Boychuk scored with a slapshot after Tavares won the faceoff. Anders Lee helped by screening Stalock. The lone assist went to Tavares.

The Sharks got it back right quick. The Sharks took control of the play in their defensive zone, and the top line was able to carry to puck up ice. Justin Braun disrupted the Islanders defense while Thornton made a perfectly timed pass across to Goldobin on the left wing. Goldobin was right where he needed to be to score his first NHL goal. Assists went to Thornton and Braun.

The Sharks had little time to celebrate as Brent Burns was called for tripping less than aminute later and the Sharks were back on the penalty kill. The Islanders tied the score agan with a briefly contested goal during which Stalock lost his mask. It appears that the puck caught him near the ear and broke a strap. The goal went to Anders Lee, with assists to Ryan Strome and John Tavares.

The whistles kept coming, as Travis Hamonic was called for tripping Pavelksi. The Sharks did not score on that power play.

A shot from Barclay Goodrow hit Ben Smith in the ear, about six minutes into the period. Smith left the game at the next stoppage, leaving the Sharks down by one skater. Smith did not return for the third period.

It took the Sharks a few shifts and a few saves from Stalock but they regained the lead. A big save against Kyle Okposo led to a break out for Matt Nieto and Joel Ward. Nieto carried the puck in and held on to it while Ward made his way to the net. Nieto’s patience paid off as his pass caught Ward at just the right time for Ward to tap it in over Halak’s pad. The goal was Ward’s first as a Shark and assists went to Nieto and Stalock.

The lead lasted about four and a half minutes. Josh Bailey took advantage of a Burns turnover to move the puck out from behind the net. Kyle Okposo found it in the slot and wasted no time throwing it at the net, where Bailey and Frans Nielsen redirected it past Stalock. The goal was Bailey’s and the assists went to Nielsen and Okposo.

The shot count for the period was 12-7 Islanders.

At 3:02 of the third, there was a curious delay for a review of a goal that no one seemed to have seen happen. The review confirmed that it did not happen. It was not clear until later which team did not score it. It turned out to have been a non-goal for the Sharks. The situation room had lost sight of the puck and could not tell if it had gone in.

The Islanders took their first lead at 4:18 of the third, when Okposo broke away after a neutral zone turnover. Stalock made the first save. It looked like Dillon would corral the crafty forward in the corner, but Okposo escaped again and beat Stalock with a wrist shot. The assist went to Josh Bailey.

Near the half way mark of the period, DeBoer put Marleau out with the top line. That was the second game that he started Goldobin there and moved him down late. He also moved Nieto to the second line after Tomas Hertl was hit in the mouth with a puck.

At 11:10, the Islanders took a two goal lead with a hard shot from the slot from Brock Nelson. The shot went past Justin Braun as well as Al Stalock. The goal was unassisted.

The Sharks went to the penalty kill at 12:49 when Braun was called for shooting the puck out of play. They killed that off as the clock ticked down.

DeBoer opted to pull his goalie with over three minutes left and the Islanders made the Sharks pay for that. The net had not been empty for many seconds when Frans Nielsen put the puck in it. It was Nielsen’s 100th career goal. DeBoer put Stalock back in the net.

Final score 6-3 Islanders.

Okposo, Boychuck and Tavares shared the Islanders lead in shots with five apiece. Jaroslav Halak made 22 saves on 25 shots for the win.

Pavelski, Marleau, Tommy Wingels and Brent Burns each had three shots in the game, and no Shark had more. Al Stalock made 27 saves on 32 shots.

The Sharks next play on Monday against the New York Rangers at 4:00 PT.

Week Six Sees Two Struggling Teams in 49ers & Ravens

The San Francisco 49ers are coming off of a tough loss against the New York Giants, as a 4th Quarter comeback from Eli Manning was enough to give the Giants a 30-27 win on Sunday Night Football last week. Despite the loss, the future looks promising for the 49ers as Colin Kaepernick had his best game of the season, going 23 of 35 for 262 yards and two touchdowns.

Kaepernick’s performance brings hope into week six since it’s by far the best he’s looked all year, as the 49ers (1-4) host the Baltimore Ravens, also (1-4).  It’s been a down year for the Ravens as well. Their only win came in week four against the Steelers and they are coming off of a 33-30 loss against the Browns.

Both running backs in the game are questionable, as Carlos Hyde missed two days a practice with a foot injury for the 49ers and Justin Forsett is listed as questionable with an ankle problem. If Forsett can’t go for the Ravens, it’s good news to the 49ers, as he is the fifth leading rusher in the NFL.

The secondary continues to be the biggest issue for the 49ers, as they face another good quarterback in Joe Flacco. His main target at receiver is Steve Smith Sr, who is also questionable for Sunday. If the 49ers front seven can dominate, they should have no problem with Flacco. However, if Flacco gets time in the pocket, it will be a long day for the secondary.

Both teams have had their major issues this year, and it will be a battle of 1-4 teams. The Ravens are the favorites going in, but if Kaepernick can repeat the day he had last week, the 49ers should be lined up for their second win of the year.

FRYS.COM OPEN: Steady Steele still leading after two rounds

By Jeremy Harness

He did not shoot a 63 like he did in the opening round, but Brendan Steele will certainly take it.

The veteran tour player still shot under par nonetheless, and after Friday’s second round at Silverado, he remained on top of the leaderboard by two shots by firing a two-under 70.

As he did in the opening round on Thursday, he got two birdies on the front nine, including one on the very first hole. However, one of those birdies was offset when he bogeyed the par-4 third. However, he birdied the fifth hole to get things back on track quickly.

He birdied holes 10 and 12 as well as the 14th, but he was also brought down by two bogeys at the 13th and 15th holes.

Also keeping pace is Jhonattan Vegas, the Venezuelan native who earned his Tour card back by finishing in the top 25 on the Web.com Tour, who fired a one-under 71 to finish Friday’s proceedings two shots back of the lead.

Making a big move on Friday was Wil Wilcox, who fired a five-under 67 to tie him with Vegas at nine-under par as the weekend rolls around.

He recorded five birdies on the round and did not make a single bogey to make a steady climb toward the top of the leaderboard. He had back-to-back birdies on the third and fourth holes to start his ascent toward the top, and then finished the front nine with a birdie on the par-5 ninth.

It did not stop there, as he also birdied the par-4 10th, and four holes later, he picked up another shot by birdieing the 14th.

Among those who did not make the cut after two rounds was Zac Blair, who was in the final pairing with eventual champion Sang-moon Bae in last year’s tournament here. He shot 75 and 77 in the opening two rounds, and it was evident early on that he did not have the same rhythm that he did in last year’s run.

Quakes Keep Playoff Hopes Alive with Blanking of Sporting KC

By Matthew T.F. Harrington

The San Jose Earthquakes kept their Western Conference playoff hopes alive Friday night at Avaya Stadium, besting Sporting Kansas City 1-0 to pick up a critical three points. Anibal Godoy scored in the 47th minute to put San Jose tied with the Portland Timbers and Seattle Sounders for the final two slots in the West with 47 points riding a three-game lossless stretch.

If Godoy’s goal is a sign of where the football gods’ allegiance lies, the Quakes should start prepping for postseason travel. The difference maker came after Shea Salinas volleyed the cross into the box, looking to connect with Chris Wondolowski, named team Most Valuable Player in a pregame ceremony, on the right post. Wondolowski’s toe flick skittered past a stumbling Kansas City keeper Tim Melia, but was trickling wide left of the goal. There was Godoy to tip in the ball and give San Jose the lead.

Goalkeeper David Bingham held Sporting KC at bay down the stretch, saving all 3 shots he faced to seal the clean sheet for San Jose in his final regular season home contest as starting keeper.

The Quakes still face an uphill climb to lockdown the sixth and final playoff slot. Seattle and Portland still have a game in hand and can pass the Quakes with a victory. Not only that, but San Jose faces conference leaders FC Dallas, winners of 16 this season, on the road in the season finale next weekend at Toyota Stadium.

 

Sharks Beat Devils 2-1, Start Season 4-0

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks won their fourth in a row to start the season. They needed overtime and a shootout to defeat the New Jersey Devils 2-1. Goaltender Martin Jones set a new shutout record for the franchise, spanning from the team’s first game of the season to the final minutes of the fourth game. Regulation goals were scored by Patrick Marleau for the Sharks and Adam Henrique for the Devils. The game was a far cry from the trouncing that they gave to the Washington Capitals, but in light of recent injuries, it was a good win.

Earlier Friday, the Sharks announced that they would be without the services of forwards Logan Couture and Joonas Donskoi. Head coach Peter DeBoer opted to make wholesale changes to his lines when he lost the top top six forwards. Bringing Ben Smith in as fourth line center, he moved Chris Tierney to the third line between Tommy Wingels and Matt Nieto. Tomas Hertl moved to the second line between Patrick Marleau and Joel Ward. Nikolay Goldobin took Donskoi’s place next to Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski.

Near the end of the game, DeBoer moved the more experienced Barclay Goodrow to that top line. Patrick Marleau took on some additional penalty killing minutes in Couture’s absence, while Paul Martin took the point on power plays. The number of adjustments required spoke to the importance of Couture to the team.

The Sharks’ penalty kill streak ended at 15, and Martin Jones set a new shutout streak for the franchise. The game was not pretty but it did keep their winning streak alive.

Less than three minutes in, the new second line of Hertl, Joel Ward and Patrick Marleau scored. The goal featured a good board battle won by Hertl, followed by a smart pass from Ward to a well-positioned Marleau. All in all, that line looked good.

Martin Jones has not given up a goal since 1:49 into the Sharks’ first game of the season on October 7. Shutouts in game against the Ducks and the Capitals put Jones in a position to break Al Stalock’s shutout record of 178:55, 45 seconds into Friday’s game. He did that and set the new one at 234:33. A couple of pucks got by him during that time, only to have the goals waived off, but it is still a tremendous record.

Jordin Tootoo and Mike Brown took matching roughing penalties at 8:58 of the period but the four-on-four minutes did not change the score. The first period ended with the score still 1-0 Sharks, and the shot count 10-5 Sharks.

Early in the second period, Tomas Hertl had a scoring chance thwarted by a slash to the hands from Adam Larsson. No penalty was called but Hertl looked a little sore. That hand could bear watching. The first power play of the game went to the Devils at 14:01 of the second. Joe Pavelski was called for hooking. The Sharks killed it off, keeping their penalty kill record perfect at 12-0.

With 2:06 left in the period, Goldobin drew a penalty against Jon Merrill. The ensuing power play highlighted how the Sharks were losing some momentum. They let Stephen Gionta escape the zone for a short-handed chance just over half way through the power play.

Gionta saw his rebound go to Josefson, who put it in the net, but the goal was waived off because Gionta made contact with Martin Jones before the shot went in. The contact was initiated while Gionta was still outside the crease, and ended with Gionta falling over Jones in the crease. The contact certainly slowed Jones down, but calls like that are going to make this season interesting. It was probably worth a coach’s challenge, but Devils head coach John Hynes did not make one.

At the end of the second period, shots were 23-17 Sharks, with the 1-0 score unchanged.

Less than two minutes into the third period, the Devils were back on the power play after Justin Braun was called for holding the stick. With 43 seconds left in the power play, Brenden Dillon shot the puck out of play in the defensive zone and gave the Devils a two man advantage. The Sharks survived the five-on-three and were about to kill the second penalty when Marc-Edouard Vlasic shot the puck out of play and joined Dillon in the box. The second two man advantage would only last 17 seconds. Chris Tierney managed to clear the puck out during the short five-on-three. Matt Nieto cleared it next, letting the team refresh their lines. The Sharks managed to steal the puck in the neutral zone shortly after that, getting a quick short-handed chance for Pavelksi. Several quick clears by the Sharks frustrated the rest of the Devils power play.

Jones made his 100th consecutive save once the teams were back at even strength.

Chris Tierney and Tommy Wingels had a good chance around the nine minute mark but Corey Schneider stopped it. Tierney had a very good game and proved that he is a great option for the Sharks in that third line center spot.

The Sharks penalties were not done, as they were called for too many men with under five minutes left in the third. The Martin Jones shutout streak ended with a power play goal from Adam Henrique. The score was still tied at the end of regulation.

The Sharks only had a 32-28 lead in shots as overtime started. Thornton, Pavelski and Burns started for the Sharks in three-on-three. Next came Marleau, Hertl and Vlasic. DeBoer put Tierney on the third unit with Wingels and Martin.

With 11.3 seconds left in overtime, Burns tripped Henrique and went to the box. The 4-on-3 power play looked good for New Jersey but they ran out of time.

The Devils shot first, starting with Adam Henrique (goal). Jacob Josefson shot second (save) and Mike Cammalleri went third (miss) .
The Sharks’ shooters were: Joe Pavelski (goal-smokin’ shot, top shelf), Brent Burns (goal-very slippery backhand). No third shooter was needed for San Jose.

The shot leaders for the Sharks were Joe Pavelski, Brent Burns and Paul Martin with four apiece. Burns (30:38) and Martin (30:09) led the team in ice time by a sizeable margin.

The Sharks next play Saturday in Brooklyn against the New York Islanders. The game will start at 4:30 PT.