That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Diversity and Inclusion? Giants voted Yes for the A’s to leave

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred seen here on Thu Nov 16, 2023 addressing the media during an owners meeting in Orlando Fla. Manfred has been questioned about his stance on leaving Oakland a very diversified region for Las Vegas. Some have asked why Manfred is leaving a diverse community after saying baseball is trying to be more diverse and improve it’s minority fans, players and employees. (AP file photo)

Diversity and Inclusion? Giants voted Yes for A’s to leave

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–In 1989, the same year the Athletics swept the Giants in four games in the World Series with the Loma Prieta Earthquake, Oakland A’s owner Wally Haas ceded the San José territorial rights to the San Francisco Giants.

Giants owner Bob Lurie was frustrated in getting a new stadium for the Giants in San Francisco. At the time, a group of investors led by Vince Naimoli and a group of investors from St. Petersburg had agreed with the Giants to move them to the Tampa Bay Area.

However, the National League owners voted against the acquisition. Answering some fans’ questions: Owners can vote Yes or No when another team plans to move. Last November, the League 30 owners voted unanimously in favor of the Oakland A’s moving to Las Vegas, exceeding the 75% approval requirement.

Among these owners was the signature of Charles P. Johnson (or another Giants top executive with the blessings of Mr.Johnson, owner of the San Francisco Giants). Had the Giants voted “No,” that would at least have been a symbolic act of courage that I believe Bay Area baseball fans had respected and appreciated, keeping the rivalry with the team that plays in Oakland and the importance of keeping the Bay Area a two-team Major League market, which it is.

But that was not the case; the Giants swallowed the relocation pill the Commissioner had served all the owners in baseball. After all, from the beginning of this ordeal, one of the leading proponents of the A’s leaving Oakland is Mr.Rob Manfred, the Commissioner of Major League Baseball.

The two Bay Area teams have won 7 World Series combined while playing in this great area we love called The Bay Area. The Giants have won three since moving from New York, and the A’s have won four since moving from Kansas City.

Diversity and Inclusion (something the MLB Commissioner’s Office in New York professes all the time) obviously won’t apply to “inclusion” for the A’s in the two-team Bay Area baseball market. So much for Diversity and Inclusion. How about Deception and Hypocrisy? Cynics will quote this famous line from The Godfather: “It is not personal; it’s just business.”

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Golden State Warriors podcast with David Zizmor: Warriors could very well catch Kings for a playoff spot as they head in different directions

Its raining threes as the Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry takes a shot against the Los Angeles Lakers forward Cam Reddish (5) and guard Austin Reaves (15) at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Tue Apr 9, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the Warriors podcast with David Zizmor:

#1 The Warriors are coming on strong and may not need the play in and could get a first round playoff series.

#2 Incredible game against the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena in the Southland as the Warriors hit 26 three pointers that was the most three pointers that the Lakers have given up in their history.

#3 Golden State tips off against the Portland Trail Blazers tonight in Portland. The Trail Blazers are 21-58 and are 14th in the Western Conference and have lost eight of their last ten games. How much of a struggle has the Blazers been on since the departure of former Blazer and star player Damian Lillard who now plays for the Milwaukee Bucks.

Join David Wednesdays for the Warriors podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Kings Blow 20 Point Lead; Lose to Thunder 112-105; Sabonis double double streak ends at 61 games

The Oklahoma City Thunder forward Chet Holmgren(right) drives on the Sacramento Kings Domantas Sabonis (left) at the Paycom Center in Oklahoma City on Tue Apr 9, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

After leading by as much as 20 points, the Sacramento Kings (45-33) lost to the OKC Thunder (53-25) 112-105. We have seen them blow hefty leads lately in the second half of games. De’Aaron Fox had a terrific game with 33 points but ugly play at the end of the game was the difference. Sacramento just could not finish this game.

Game recap: The Kings were still without Malik Monk who is still out with a sprained right MCL and from some reports is healing very well. Sacramento had a great opening quarter leading after 12 minutes 31-28 in this highly competitive contest.

The Kings continued to extend their lead in the second quarter and with 5:31 left in the first half led 51-34. So far in this game the Kings had played a quality first half of basketball. With 18.2 left in the first half, the Kings had their largest lead of the game 64-44. At the half Sacramento took a 64-45 lead into the locker room.

De’Aaron Fox had a banner first half with 21 points and was 5 of 10 from beyond the arc and Keon Ellis was having a stellar game with 20 points and was 6 of 8 from three-point-land. The Kings had 14 triples in the first half.

Points from beyond the arc we’re making a huge difference in this game. The Kings were shooting at 44% while the Thunder were struggling shooting 22%. The Kings needed to come out with the same energy in the second half.

They had recently squandered a 21 point to the Knicks ultimately losing the game and they can ill afford a repeat of that game. The second half would be two of the most important quarters they have played all season.

With all that was riding on this game, the Kings came out flat in the third quarter. The Thunder, who are one of the best third quarter teams in the league, cut the Kings 19 point lead to three points going into the fourth quarter 87-84 and it will all hinge on how Sacramento would respond in the final quarter.

The Thunder took a two-point lead to start the fourth quarter and history was rearing it’s ugly head for the Kings. It had been a disastrous third quarter for Sacramento; they looked like an entirely different team unable to hit a bucket.

They took five shots in a row in the early minutes of the fourth quarter missing every one of them. The Thunder took a four point lead but the Kings fought back regaining the lead and it was on as both teams traded the lead back and forth with 7:42 left in the game.

The three’s that were falling for Sacramento in the first half were missing in the second half. With 2:27 left in the game, the Kings had a one point lead 105-104. With 35.7 seconds left in the game the Kings had let this game slip right through their fingers. Ugly mistakes at the end of the game spelled doom for the Kings in the 112-105 loss to the Thunder.

The Kings finished this game with 20 shots from downtown. Fox had 33 points and 8 rebounds but despite the flurry of long balls and Fox’s offense the Kings still lost this game. The Thunder crushed them in the paint and Domantas Sabonis for the first time in forever did not come away with a double double breaking an incredible streak. This was the Kings last road game of the season. They will play their remaining three games at Golden 1.

Game notes: The Kings are currently sitting in eighth place in the Western Conference a half game ahead of the Los Angeles Lakers and one game behind the seventh place New Orleans Pelicans. Tuesday night they took on the Thunderwho are currently in third place in the Western Conference and only one game behind the first place Denver Nuggets and the Minnesota Timberwolves who are tied in the top spot. The Kings could not hold onto a 20 point lead and ended up dropping the lead and the game. The Kings have only three games left.

Thursday night the Kings will take on the New Orleans Pelicans in Sacramento with tipoff scheduled for 7:00 PM.

A’s Beat Rangers For Third Win In a Row 4-3; Langeliers Crushes 3 Home Runs; Oakland now 2 games out of first place

Oakland A’s catcher Shea Langeliers (23) became only the second A’s starting catcher to hit three home runs in a game in A’s history on Tue Apr 9, 2024 at Globe Life Stadium in Arlington. The last starting catcher to hit three home runs in a game was the Philadelphia A’s Mickey Cochrane on May 21, 1925 in a game against the St Louis Browns at Sportsman’s Park in St Louis. (AP News photo)

By Barbara Mason

After winning their first series of the season against the Detroit Tigers this past weekend, the Oakland A’s (4-7) traveled to Texas taking on the Rangers (6-5). They won their third game in a row beating the Rangers 4-3. The A’s pulled this win out in the ninth inning scoring twice to take the 4-3 lead which turned out to be the final. Shea Langeliers had the game of his life belting a trio of homers in the come from behind win.

As this game unfolded we were treated to the Langeliers show. It’s not often that you see a trio of home runs from one guy. His third home run was a two-run drive in the ninth inning that gave the A’s a 4-3 lead and the eventual win.

Texas led 3-2 going into the ninth inning in fact they had led the entire game until that final inning. Seth Brown walked and Langeliers sent a first-pitch fast ball out of the park giving Oakland a 4-3 lead.

The Rangers had the bottom of the ninth inning to try and salvage the game but Oakland’s Mason Miller pitched a perfect 1-2-3 ninth inning for the save. This was by far the most exciting game this season for the A’s extending their win streak to three. Besides the offense from Langeliers, JJ Bleday and Zach Gelof also had hits.

The A’s had great success on the mound in this game. Besides the save from Mason Miller, Michael Kelly threw a perfect eighth inning. Starter Alex Wood went four innings before he was forced to leave the game with a calf cramp. Mitch Spence took over on the mound when Wood left the game. He went 3 innings allowing 2 hits and one run. Michael Kelly and Miller brought this game home for Oakland in the eighth and ninth innings.

Game notes: After a slow start to the season, the A’s took the first game of the series against the Rangers and handed the Rangers a loss and extend their winning streak to three. Oakland’s offense as well as their performance on the mound has been really good. Wood took the mound for the A’s in Tuesday’s game Wood gave up five hits and two earned runs. Eovaldi got the nod for the Rangers pitching 5.2 inning giving up three hits and one earned run..

Wednesday’s game two is scheduled for 5:05 PM at Globe Life Field in Arlington. Ross Stripling will take the mound for Oakland. Cody Bradford will start for the Rangers. The A’s will be in search of their fourth win in a row.

Nats CJ Abrams goes yard with 3 run homer beats Giants 5-3

Ildelmaro Vargas Washington Nationals second baseman (center) takes a leap to avoid the sliding San Francisco Giant Matt Chapman and to attempt completing a double play at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Apr 9, 2024 (AP News photo)

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

By Lewis Rubman

Washington (5-6). 002 010 101. 5. 8. 1

San Francisco (4-8). 010 002 000 3 10 0

Time: 2:41

Attendance: 24,380

SAN FRANCISCO–In the snippet of time since the start of the 2024 season, the home field of your San Francisco Giant has looked more like Playland at the Beach as Oracle Park. It’s been a roller coaster. After splitting their opening series at San Diego, the Giants were swept by Dodgers in Chavez Ravine came home to win two exciting games out of the three they played against the visiting Padres here by the shores of McCovey Cove, which gave Melvin’s mob its first series win of the year.

The Giants were poised to get a significant boost from the mound work of last year’s Cy Young winner, Blake Snell, who, along with Matt Chapman, was a last minute addition to the team’s roster. Those signings took the sting out of what had been an unproductive off season.

But Snell’s debut against the rebuilding Washington Nationals was a debacle, San Francisco’s offense was nowhere in sight, and the fielding left much to be desired. Tuesday night Bob Melvin’s crew had to pick itself up, dust itself off, and start all over again.

They sent the promising left handed rookie Kyle Harrison (1-1,4.91 at game time). The youngster was making his third start, but the first at 24 Willie Mays Plaza, of the season. He was 1-0, 2.66 and had held opponents to a batting average of .195 here before tonight.

His performance in tonight’s exciting 5-3 loss was impressive, especially in the. early innings but faded top adequacy later on. He lasted six innings and threw 93 pitches, 62 of them qualifying as strikes. The three runs he yielded were earned lowered his ERA slightly, to 4.76, and he ended the night with a no decision. He struck out eight Nationals and didn’t walk any.

The Nats had announced Josiah Gray as their starting pitcher, but the all round nice guy and clubhouse leader was placed on the 15 day injured list, owing to a flexor strain in and around the elbow of his right, pitching, arm. His replacement, announced after the Giants had posted their lineup, was Joan Adon, a right handed converted reliever with a five pitch arsenal and a lifetime big league record of 3-18, 6.45 whom they recalled today from their AAA, Rochester Red Wings farm team, although he obviously had joined the team earlier.

The 25 year old Dominican acquitted himself well, holding the Giants to one run, which was earned, on three hits and a base on balls over four innings of work. He notched a pair of strikeouts and threw 72 pitches, 42 for strikes. He left the game, replaced by Roberto García, and was not involved in the decision. The contest became a bullpen game for the capital crew when Jordan Weems replaced García after a 1-2-3 bottom of the fifth.

A walk to Thairo Estrada, Mike Yastrzemski’s second hit of the season, a single in his 21st at bat, and Patrick Bailey’s sacrifice line drive to center put the home team ahead after two innings of play. That didn’t last long.

Harrison, who had retired the first eight Nats he had faced, seven by strikeout yielded a two out single to Jacob Young in the top of the second. He had Young picked off, but the speedy center fielder took off for second and slid beneath LaMonte Wade, Jr.’s throw to Nick Ahjed.

Young repeated his robbery on the next pitch and crossed the plate at a more leisurely pace when CJ Abrams sent a 423 foot blast over the right field fence for his third home run of the season and a 2-1 Washington advantage. Two frames later, Young singled to center and pilfered his third bag of the game and fourth of the season and then scored on Abrams ‘single to right.

San Francisco knotted the score in its half of the fifth. Chapman led off with a single and, after a called third to Estrada, which the video replay showed to have been erroneous, was forced out at second on a dazzling grab and behind the back toss from shortstop Abrams to second sacker Ildemaro Vargas. Bailey’s single to right moved Mike Yastrzemski into scoring position, and Ahmed’s single to right, combined with right fielder Lane Thomas’s errant throw, brought the tying runs in.

Ryan Walker, who relieved Harrison for the seventh, was the victim of bad luck. After issuing a lead off walk to Jesse Winker, he allowed a broken bat Texas League single to Riley Adams, Both runners advanced on an infield out, and Tracy Lipscomb’s sac fly to the right field warning track brought Winker in with the tie breaker, making it a 4-3 game.

Dylan Floro set the Giants down in order in the home seventh, and Taylor Rogers took over for them in the visitors’ eighth, retiring the first two batters he faced, hitting the third with a pitch, and passing the ball to his right handed brother Tyler the Submariner, who got the frame’s final out.

Hunter Harvey followed Flores in the eighth, retired Chapman and Estrada before being forced to leave the game when he was hit by a hard line drive off the bat of Yastrzemski. Kyle Finnegan replaced him, walked Bailey, and got Ahmed on a fly to left center.

Back to back DC doubles by Winker and Adams off Rogers to open the top of the ninth netted a run and seemed to put the game out of reach for SF. It did, but the Giants didn’t make it easy for them. Jung-Hoo-Lee, greeted by loud and premature chants of “MVP” led off with. a sharp single to left.

He moved up 90 feet on another single to left by Wilmer Flores, who had pinch run for Wade in the fifth and remained in the game to play first. Austin Slater then pinch ran for the erstwhile pinch runner. Finnegan got ahead of Soler, 0-2 before SF’s DH worked a full count and drew a bases loading walk.

That brought Conforto to the plate. He quickly fell behind, 0-2, fouled off two pitches, took a ball, and hit a nubber in front of the plate that Finnegan fielded and tossed to Adams for the force at home. It now was Finnegan vs. Chapman. Chapman swung and missed. And then bounced into a 6-4-3 game ending double play.

Weems (1-0, 1.89) was the winning pitcher; Finnegan got the save, his fourth. Walker was charged with the loss, He’s now 1-1, 2.70)

Tuesday, afternoon, at 12:45 the squads will go at it. again. Southpaw Patrick Corbin (0-1, 6.97) will be on the bump for Washington; right Jordan Hicks (1-0 0.75), for San Francisco. The Giants then will fly to St. Petersburg for a day of rest before the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday the 12th.

Tiger’s Treasure Trove: 1978 Topps Greg Minton

1978 Topps Greg Minton (Topps Baseball Gum Chewing Co)

Tiger’s Treasure Trove

1978 Topps Greg Minton

By Tony “The Tiger” Hayes

The question of whether baseball trading cards – the iconic All-American corner store staple- falls into the category of legitimate Modern Art has long been debated by art critics and the card collecting community.

If original mass produced Andy Warhol lithographs of Campbell Soup cans can rival in auction prices as rare bubble gum cards – why is one considered incomparable art and the other frivolous pop culture tchotchkes?

That question is just as debatable as whether the brittle iridescent pink bubble gum that used to come with baseball cards was really edible or not.

But in the spring and summer of 1978 there was no question what kids were getting when they were lucky enough to pull a Greg Minton baseball card from a Topps wax or cellophane pack.

Whether the card was the first one ripped from the top of the stack with a tell tale sugary residue smudge or sandwiched between a Leroy Stanton and John Lowenstein card – it was absolutely clear what you were clutching in your clammy afterschool mitts.

You weren’t likely ever to find the ‘78 Minton card on a field trip to the De Young or the Palace of the Legion of Honor, but the archetypal card was undoubtedly a Work of Art.

The dang Minton showpiece was in fact a full face portrait PAINTING – – you might even call it a Cardboard Rembrandt – – depicting Minton aka the “Moon Man” – then a fledgling Giants right-handed pitcher outfitted in an orange billed Giants cap, and sporting silver wire rimmed eyeglasses, fashionable longish feathered black hair and a matching full mustache.

Despite the fact Minton had only pitched in two games for San Francisco in 1977 – Topps was all in on the 25-year old -so much so they curiously went out of their way to hand craft a completely customized airbrushed card for the Giant.

Minton would later become one of the Giants all-time ranking relief pitchers, but at the time the baseball card in question was produced, the Giants didn’t know what they had in the San Diego raised athlete.

Originally signed by Kansas City, the Orange & Black picked up Minton in a 1973 trade for big league backup catcher Fran Healy.

Minton pitched in 27 games with the big league club between 1975-78, but injuries slowed his progress. A major knee injury in the spring of 1978 slowed his roll that season.

It wasn’t until 1979, that Minton would start to make a big league impact, posting a marvelous 1.81 ERA in 46 games to go with 19 saves. Over one extended 19 game period, Minton did not allow an earned run. A homer-less streak lasted well into the following campaign.

Minton was also a Grade-A clubhouse character who earned his “Moon Man” nickname after a pants-less minor league river rafting adventure left his rear end with sunburn blisters resembling moon craters.

But for all his indelible zaniness and spectacular mound work, Minton’s lasting impression on baseball fans just might be that museum worthy baseball card.

By 1978, finding a sports card with airbush touch-up work was hardly unusual.

The airbrush, a small air-operated tool that sprays atomized paint and dyes had become a popular tool in the sports card industry during the 1970s as more players shifted teams at a more frequent rate than ever before.

Beginning in the early 1970s, the bubble gum card company began painting logos on the caps of players who switched teams after their photos were taken for the next season’s set. Initially, the work often looked slap-dash with little care taken to carefully reproduce cap lettering or matching team colors.

By 1976 however it seemed Topps’ collection of in-house painters had seemingly graduated from art school. An entire sub-set of “Traded” cards featuring players mocked up in their new team colors was introduced that year and a good portion of the artwork on those cards was serviceable.

While some cards were more convincing than others, as a rule the airbrush work on sports cards was not quite as lurid and fake looking as it was in the early days.

Replacement lettering on caps and jerseys had become more accurate looking as the artists began to clearly take more pride in their work.

The 1977 Topps baseball set would see the hobby’s air brushing fad hit it’s peak as the company issued more than 50 cards with add-on accects. Fueling the surge was the introduction of two new expansion franchises in 1977 and the maiden season of MLB wide free agency.

The establishment of the Toronto Blue Jays and Seattle Mariners would task the card company with cobbling together two entire new clubs of players that had to be refitted with new airbrushed gear.

Meanwhile the dawn of the free agent era saw a myriad of veteran big leaguers jump from one club to another during the offseason that separated the 1976 and 1977 campaigns.

The 1977 Topps set for example featured nearly 10 former members of the once mighty three-time World Champion Swingin’ Oakland A’s who had jumped from the Bad Ship Charlie Finley via free agency or the expansion draft.

The most curious card however came in the form of the one issued to the anonymous Rick Jones, a right-handed pitcher selected by the first edition Seattle from Boston in the expansion draft.

The Jones card was a throwback to the earliest days to the Topps cards in which black and white photographs were meticulously painted over in color. The majority of the 1952 Topps set, featuring famous rookie cards of Willie Mays and Mickie Mantle were done in this majestic looking finish.

But by the mid-1970s Topps had long abandoned that style. All the cards images at that point featured color photography, any changes were done with the handy, dandy airbrush kit.

Apparently, however Topps had no color shots of Jones – who made his debut with the Red Sox in 1976 – and the company decided to return to their artistic roots.

But unlike the early 1950s baseball card paint jobs, which mostly presented big leaguers in a flattering, almost stately light , the airbrush job on Jones’ card made the new Mariner look eerie and haunting.

It’s possible that the bubble gum card company received angry letters from mothers across the country complaining about their boy’s developing phobia conditions about the Jones and strived to do better.

The next year they accomplished that goal with the production of the Minton card and a second entirely airbushed card for the Red Sox’s Mike Paxton.

Topps apparently also did not have a color photograph of Minton and were left with just a black and white handout art from the Giants public relations staff.

The Minton card in particular pops with personality and vivid coloring- the artist gave Minton a deep bronze tan.

It became an instant classic.

Today, the card can be found for sale on eBay. While not quite in the Mays and Mantle price range. The Minton card can be had for about one buck.

San Jose Sharks Lose 3-2 In Overtime To Calgary Flames

San Jose Sharks head coach David Quinn stands behind bench with center Kim Kosin (10) and center Mikael Granlund (64) sitting in front at SAP Center in San Jose on Tue Apr 9, 2024 (Bay Area News Group photo)

Tuesday, April 9th, 2024

By Troy Ewers

San Jose, CA – The San Jose Sharks (18-51-9) welcome the Calgary Flames (35-37-5) to SAP Center for their second meeting of three this season, the only one in San Jose on Tuesday night. Last game against the Flames, Sharks won 6-3. Sharks come off a 5-2 loss to the Arizona Coyotes, but one big positive from the game is Mikael Granlund (0g, 1a) extended his season-long point streak to eight games (2g, 7a). Granlund enters the contest against Calgary having tallied 25 points in his past 25 games played (7g, 18a). 

The Sharks who had a 2-2 tie with the Flames let it get away in overtime for a 3-2 loss. The Sharks have now lost 13 of their last 15 games.

First period was exciting for SJ fans even though it wasn’t anywhere near a sell out in the SAP Center. Coach Quinn started the “Lund” line, William Eklund, Fabian Zetterlund, and Granlund and seven minutes and 22 seconds into the period, that line got the first goal of the night.

Zetterlund leads a 2 on 1 breakaway with Eklund and after a crisp pass from Zetterlund, Eklund scored with a backhand shot past the Calgary goalie Dustin Wolf. 1-0 Sharks.

Granlund continued his point streak to nine games and the goal was both Eklund and Zetterlund’s 40th point on the season so far. The whole period was a trade of hits between both clubs, one nasty hit specifically resulting in a boarding penalty for Martin Pospisil when he hit Calen Addison. The Sharks didn’t convert on the power play, but the message was received by the Sharks. San Jose goes into the first intermission up 1-0. 

Second Period was more on the side of Calgary and that’s because the Sharks defense couldn’t keep track of the Flames. San Jose extended their lead early in the second period when Mike Hoffman stole the puck, passed to Jacob MacDonald for a backhand goal, 2-0 Sharks.

Flames come back though as Rasmus Andersson scored after shots on goal were blocked, but with no one in teal picking up the puck on a rebound, Andersson hits the third shot past Blackwood for Calgary’s first goal, 2-1.

The Flames weren’t done capitalizing on San Jose as Nazem Kadri gathered the puck that the Sharks defenders lost in the mix and scored off a snap shot to tie the game up. This was a power play goal coming off a Vlasic tripping call. 2-2 headed into intermission. 

Third Period it appeared Calgary tried to bully the Sharks and it was evident when a couple of times the Flames tried to be aggressive, they got penalized. Miromanov tripped Eklund and set up a power play and then in the last 2 minutes of the game, Coleman cross checked Kyle Burroughs and that earned the Sharks a power play that even bled into overtime.

The Flames killed off their penalty in OT, but it was a Mario Ferraro holding penalty that led to Ilya Solovyov to score in a mix up in front of the net, power play goal, 3-2 Flames and Calgary wins.

Next game for San Jose will be in Seattle against the Kraken, Thursday, April 11th.

NCAA Women’s basketball podcast with Michael Roberson: South Carolina a rarity in college basketball going perfect from end to end

South Carolina Gamecocks center Kamila Cardoso (10) tries to take it to the Iowa Hawkeyes forward Addison O’Grady (left) in the first half of the NCAA Women’s Final Four Championship game at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland on Sun Apr 7, 2024 (AP News photos)

On the NCAA Women’s basketball podcast with Michael R:

#1 It’s all over Michael did you expect the South Carolina Gamecocks to go all the way with a 87-75 win over Caitlin Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes on Sunday?

#2 For South Carolina head coach Dawn Staley what does feel like having gone a perfect 39-0 and defeating the Hawkeyes in a game that North Carolina was in control of.

#3 Kamilla Cardoso had 15 points and went all out and had 17 assists for a career high. Tessa Johnson led all scorers with 19 points and also was a big contributor for the Gamecocks.

#4 How important was Cardoso and Johnson for this team all season long and helping them to have a perfect season. One thing that’s very hard to do in the NCAA is to have a perfect season.

#5 Michael, you got to cover this Women’s Final Four in Cleveland you saw some of the best teams in college basketball over the weekend what are some of your key take aways from this Final Four.

Michael Roberson covered NCAA basketball at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

#5

#2

San Jose Sharks podcast with Troy Ewers: Sharks and Flames battle at SAP Center tonight

San Jose Sharks defenseman Henry Thrun (3) and the Arizona Coyotes right wing Dylan Guenther (11) battle for the puck in the second period at SAP Center on Sun Apr 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the San Jose Sharks podcast with Troy:

#1 Lawson Crouse, Nick Schmaltz and Clayton Keller of the Arizona Coyotes (33-39-5) each had a goal and an assist apiece in which contributed in defeating the San Jose Sharks (18-51-8) 5-2 on Sunday.

#2 In the third period with the score 2-2 tied the Coyotes broke it wide open with three goals from Dylan Guenther, Nick Schmaltz, and Keller which made it 5-3.

#3 The Sharks got a goal a piece in the first and second periods from Luke Kunin and Henry Thrun. It was all the Sharks would get in their scoring efforts for the afternoon.

#4 The Sharks goaltender MacKenzie Blackwood was spent after facing numerous shots and giving up three goals in the third period allowing five and saving 23 shots in loss.

#5 Sharks host the Calgary Flames (34-37-5) tonight here at SAP Center. The Flames have lost three straight games and have lost eight of their last ten games. Meanwhile the Sharks have now dropped 12 of their last 14 games. How do you see this match up tonight?

Troy Ewers is a San Jose Sharks beat writer for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Sacramento Kings podcast with Tony Renteria: Every game counts for Kings in efforts to make post season

The Brooklyn Nets forward Mikal Bridges (1) takes a jump shot against the Sacramento Kings forward Trey Lyles (41) and guard DeAaron Fox (5) in the first half at Barclay Center in Brooklyn on Sun Apr 7, 2024 (AP News photo)

On the Sacramento Kings podcast with Tony R:

#1  With only a handful of games left in the regular season, Sunday night’s game at Barclays Center mattered for the Sacramento Kings and they played like it did, dominating the Brooklyn Nets 107-77 and regaining the eighth seed.

#2 Sacramento’s 30-point blowout win came after back-to-back road losses that caused them to slip to the ninth seed in the Western Conference.

#3 DeAaron Fox scored a team-leading 20 points and Domantas Sabonis had 18 points and 20 rebounds to extend his double-doubles streak to 61 games, the seventh longest in NBA history.

#4 Brooklyn made a comeback effort in the third quarter, outscoring Sacramento 24-13 and cutting the Kings’ lead to 78-64. But the Kings responded with an 18-8 run in the first half of the final quarter. Fox made an impressive two-handed alley-oop dunk with 8:23 to go to give the Kings a 86-66 lead.

#5 The Kings (45-33) continue their road trip facing the Oklahoma City Thunder on Tuesday with tipoff at 5 p.m. PT.’

Join Tony for the Sacramento Kings podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

#1