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Nicasio held Toronto to two earned runs on just four hits Wednesday night, buttook the loss and fell to 4-3. [...] Read more Juan Nicasio news
Nicasio held Toronto to two earned runs on just four hits Wednesday night, buttook the loss and fell to 4-3. [...] Read more Juan Nicasio news
4 minutes ago
Limiting restaurants would be a bureaucratic nightmare fraught with danger
Limiting restaurants would be a bureaucratic nightmare fraught with danger
about 1 hour ago
Ex-Chicago Blackhawk Tony Amonte stirred things up at the Stanley Cup final when he questioned the toughness of 'Hawks winger Marian Hossa.
Ex-Chicago Blackhawk Tony Amonte stirred things up at the Stanley Cup final when he questioned the toughness of 'Hawks winger Marian Hossa.
about 1 hour ago
When Alex Rodriguez struggled in the playoffs last season, he sought help.
When Alex Rodriguez struggled in the playoffs last season, he sought help.
about 1 hour ago
BOSTON -- They may not be dramatic, but changes are coming to the NHL.
BOSTON -- They may not be dramatic, but changes are coming to the NHL.
about 2 hours ago
It was an incredible contest, but the way Game 6 of the NBA championship ended left a sour taste in my mouth, demonstrating again that the world’s top basketball circuit has the worst officiating in professional North American sports.
It was an incredible contest, but the way Game 6 of the NBA championship ended left a sour taste in my mouth, demonstrating again that the world’s top basketball circuit has the worst officiating in professional North American sports.
about 2 hours ago
Cut to black. Sadly, for real this time. True-life tragedy has struck The Sopranos family with the death of Tony Soprano himself, actor James Gandolfini, at age 51.
Cut to black. Sadly, for real this time. True-life tragedy has struck The Sopranos family with the death of Tony Soprano himself, actor James Gandolfini, at age 51.
about 2 hours ago
Major League Baseball has become much more of a pitchers’ league over the last few years. Pitchers are in the midst of their most successful stretch in decades, and they owe much to their mastery of the strikeout. But for all their...
Major League Baseball has become much more of a pitchers’ league over the last few years. Pitchers are in the midst of their most successful stretch in decades, and they owe much to their mastery of the strikeout. But for all their progress, pitchers still haven’t vanquished their mortal enemies. Nothing on this earth can humble a pitcher quite like an unstoppable home run hitter, and that breed has not yet gone extinct. Bleacher Report Pop Culture Lead Writer Gabe Zaldivar and I got together to pay homage to the game’s deadliest home run hitters. They like to travel around but can generally be found in Denver, Toronto, Detroit and Baltimore. If you have any comments, questions or complaints about the absence of a certain Miami slugger, you’re welcome to leave them below. You’re also invited to follow Gabe and me on Twitter, where we tweet like crazy. Follow Zachary: @zachrymer Follow Gabe: @gabezal
about 2 hours ago
Chris Bosh's three-year stay with the Miami Heat has never been easy.The third member of Miami's vaunted Big Three, he's often been reduced to third-wheel status as a player just fortunate enough to be sharing the floor with a pair of Ha...
Chris Bosh's three-year stay with the Miami Heat has never been easy.The third member of Miami's vaunted Big Three, he's often been reduced to third-wheel status as a player just fortunate enough to be sharing the floor with a pair of Hall of Fame teammates. The statistical sacrifices he's made since migrating south in the summer of 2010 have been staggering. The 24.0 points per game scoring average he packed in his luggage has plummeted to just 16.6.He went from a player responsible for nearly 30 percent of the Toronto Raptors plays while he was on the floor in his final season there to one tasked with fewer than 23 percent of Miami's possessions this year.And those are nothing compared to the punitive damages he's been assessed in the court of public opinion. His critics cried that he was too much of a finesse player to effectively man the low block, too soft to withstand the physical rigors of life in the NBA post.The numbers from Miami's season-saving 103-100 win in Game 6 seemingly lend credence to those critiques. In more than 38 minutes of work, Bosh managed just 10 points on 5-of-12 shooting from the field.His San Antonio Spurs counterpart, the 37-year-old Tim Duncan, forced him to attend a complementary post clinic. The ageless wonder erupted for playoff-highs of 30 points and 17 boards, giving his team a tremendous chance to win a game in which Tony Parker's shot was M.I.A. (6-of-23) and Manu Ginobili was more reckless than he'd ever been (career-high eight turnovers).But Miami Bosh had never been a player defined by his statistical output, even if his $17.5 million salary suggests that he should.He's a fiery leader who never bites his tongue when tough talks are needed. But on a night when the Heat came frighteningly close to seeing their title defense bid come to a screeching halt, Bosh let his play do the talking.And the well-spoken star never sounded so brilliant.To be clear, Miami's never even within striking distance without a blistering fourth-quarter effort from LeBron James. The reigning MVP scored 16 of his team-high 32 points in the period, including a 25-foot triple that trimmed San Antonio's one-time 13-point lead to just two with 20 seconds left in regulation.Without Bosh's crunch-time performance, though, James' performance is all for naught. After Spurs sophomore Kawhi Leonard split a pair of free throws following James' three, James fired off another long-range shot. But this one caromed off the front of the rim, kicked off the glass and floated above a pack of black jerseys.But there was Bosh soaring above the smaller Spurs defenders. He snatched the ball over a leaping Ginobili, wrestled it away from some prying San Antonio hands and quickly found a backpedaling Ray Allen, who buried the game-tying three with only 5.2 seconds left on the clock.When the overtime session rolled around, Bosh was the first player to get Miami on the scoreboard. He finished a layup through contact off of a James assist on the Heat's third possession of the period.Miami would go on to score six more points in the period, which proved to be enough thanks to some timely defensive stops keyed by Bosh.A James turnover gave the Spurs the basketball facing a one-point deficit with 40.5 seconds left on the clock. San Antonio went to its MVP candidate Parker, who lost James on a Duncan screen and left Bosh with a brutal matchup on the perimeter.Parker drove hard to his right, then cut off his jets and pulled back for what looked like an open jumper. But the lanky Bosh recovered to the speedy point guard and deflected his potential game-tying shot.The teams traded empty possessions, which forced the Spurs to foul Allen (a career 89.4 percent free-throw shooter) and the 17-year veteran calmly converted both of his foul shots.That left the Spurs with 1.9 seconds to climb out of a three-point hole. It was a tall task for sure, but far from impossible for a team housing the new record holder for the most threes ever made in an NBA Fi
about 2 hours ago
WASHINGTON—The FBI uses drones for surveillance of stationary subjects, and the privacy implications of such operations are “worthy of debate,” FBI director Robert Mueller said Wednesday.He said the law enforcement a...
WASHINGTON—The FBI uses drones for surveillance of stationary subjects, and the privacy implications of such operations are “worthy of debate,” FBI director Robert Mueller said Wednesday.He said the law enforcement agency very seldom uses drones now, but is developing guidelines that will shape how unmanned aerial vehicles are to be used.There will be a number of issues regarding drones “as they become more omnipresent, not the least of which is the drones in airspace and also the threat on privacy,” Mueller said in an appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee.“We already have, to a certain extent, a body of law that relates to aerial surveillance and privacy relating to helicopters and small aircraft . . . which could well be adapted to the use of drones,” Mueller said. “It’s still in its nascent stages . . . but it’s worthy of debate and perhaps legislation down the road.”Drones “allow us to learn critical information that otherwise would be difficult to obtain without introducing serious risk to law enforcement personnel,” the FBI said in a statement following Mueller’s comments at the Senate hearing.The FBI used drones at night during a six-day hostage standoff in Alabama earlier this year. The standoff ended when members of an FBI rescue team stormed an underground bunker, killing gunman Jimmy Lee Dykes before he could harm a 5-year-old boy held hostage.The FBI said its unmanned aerial vehicles are used only to conduct surveillance operations on stationary subjects. In each instance, the FBI first must obtain the approval of the Federal Aviation Administration to use the aircraft in a very confined geographic area.The aerospace industry forecasts a worldwide deployment of almost 30,000 drones by 2018, with the United States accounting for half of them.
about 2 hours ago