Kamis, 30 April 2020

Round 1 Recap: Calgary, BC complete trade; Williams goes first - CFL.ca

TORONTO — The 2020 CFL Draft started off with some excitement as a trade ensued before the first pick had even happened.

Calgary, who held the first overall pick in the draft, decided to swap picks with the BC Lions. GM and president John Hufnagel traded the first overall and the 15th overall pick to the BC Lions, in exchange for their third overall pick and their 12th overall pick.

With the first overall pick, the BC Lions selected linebacker Jordan Williams, who is the first regional combine participant to be taken first overall and the first linebacker to go No. 1 since Winnipeg took Henoc Muamba first in 2011.


» Draft Tracker: Each pick as they happen
»
Mock Draft 2.0: Ferguson weighs in on who will go first overall
»
Scouting Bureau: Final April Rankings
»
How to watch the 2020 CFL Draft live

Williams had an excellent showing a the Ontario Regional Combine in March, posting the best 40-yard dash (4.48 seconds) of the day and showed a 39-inch vertical while going for 20 reps on the bench press and recording a 10-foot, 8.5-inch broad jump. That helped his draft stock immensely, as CFL.ca’s Marshall Ferguson had Williams first overall in his second mock draft.

Next up, Mississauga native Dejon Brissett was selected by his hometown team, the Toronto Argonauts, second overall. The addition of Brissett adds another Canadian to the Argos’ receivers group, joining Juwan Brescacin and Natey Adjei, who also hail from the Toronto area. Brissett is the seventh receiver the Argos have drafted in the first round, joining Brian Jones, J.F. Tremblay, Matt Duboc, Jock Climie, Paul Fedor, and Ted Smale.

Calgary went with a defensive lineman with the third overall pick, selecting Southeastern Lousiana’s Isaac Adeyemi-Berglund.

Edmonton took the first offensive lineman of the 2020 Draft, selecting Buffalo’s Tomas Jack-Kurdyla. Hamilton followed suit, picking O-lineman Coulter Woodmansey out of Guelph with their fifth overall selection. Woodmansey became the highest Guelph player chosen since Rob Maver went 5th overall in 2010. Before that was Mike O’Shea, who was fourth overall in 1993.

Adam Auclair, who was selected sixth overall by Ottawa, became the 11th player from Laval to be drafted in the first round since 2005. Auclair’s selection is the highest for a defensive back since Chris Ackie went fourth overall in 2015.

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2020-05-01 01:08:05Z
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BC trades up to first overall, takes Jordan Williams - CFL.ca

TORONTO — The BC Lions didn’t want to wait for Jordan Williams.

GM Ed Hervey convinced Calgary Stampeders president and GM John Hufnagel to make a pick swap on Monday night, with the Lions giving up their third and 12th overall picks to get BC’s first overall spot and the 15th overall pick.

Williams emerged on the radar of scouts and GMs across the league after a dominant showing at the Ontario regional combine in March. Williams is the first regional combine participant to be taken first overall and the first linebacker to go No. 1 since Winnipeg took Henoc Muamba first in 2011.


» Draft Tracker: Each pick as they happen
»
Mock Draft 2.0: Ferguson weighs in on who will go first overall
»
Scouting Bureau: Final April Rankings
»
How to watch the 2020 CFL Draft live


At the regional combine, Williams posted the best 40-yard dash (4.48 seconds) of the day and showed a 39-inch vertical while going for 20 reps on the bench press and recording a 10-foot, 8.5-inch broad jump.

You can follow the CFL Draft live on TSN1/3/5 for the first two rounds. Join us on CFL.ca for complete coverage of rounds 3-8.

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2020-05-01 00:16:24Z
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NHL pleased with talks about season restart scenarios, Commissioner says - NHL.com

The NHL and the NHL Players' Association have been in constant communication as they consider scenarios for resuming the season, which was paused March 12 due to concerns surrounding the coronavirus.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman speaks to NHLPA executive director Don Fehr regularly. The League and the Players' Association have formed a Return to Play Committee that includes executives and players.

"Having the committee that's been put together with the players is important so that we can get the feedback on the issues that are important to them and how to resolve them, and that we can be communicating how we're focusing on the things we think that need to be done," Commissioner Bettman told NHL Network on Thursday. "It's been extraordinarily collaborative, constructive and cooperative, and I couldn't be more pleased with the interaction that we're having."

Following a virtual committee meeting Wednesday, the NHL and the NHLPA released a joint statement saying they had not made any decisions or set a timeline regarding possible return-to-play scenarios.

"I don't think anybody knows for certain," the Commissioner said Thursday when asked how close the NHL was to resuming the season. "We're going to have to take things one step at a time, because the health and well-being of our players is paramount to anything we're focused on."

The joint statement said that if conditions continue to trend favorably -- subject to potential competitive concerns between disparately situated markets -- the NHL and the NHLPA believe they might be able to allow small group activities in NHL training facilities at some point in the mid-to-later portion of May.

But it said the precise date remained undetermined, and in the meantime, players and staff are expected to continue following the recommendation to self-quarantine that has been in place since the pause began.

"We'd like to be able to get our training facilities open," Commissioner Bettman said Thursday. "We'd like our guys to be able to work themselves back into shape. But this is something we're going to continue to evaluate on a day-to-day basis.

"Our health concerns for the players really fit into two categories: One is obviously COVID-19, and two, whatever we're going to do, we don't want them playing games until they're back in game shape. 

"So we're going to continue to monitor things, and when the guidance from the medical people is right and the governmental authorities are comfortable, then we'll take step one, which is reopening our training facilities."

The Commissioner said the NHL and the NHLPA would remain patient not only about resuming this season but starting next season.

"We have a great deal of flexibility in terms of when we can start," Commissioner Bettman said. "There's no magic for next season of starting in October as we traditionally do. If we have to start in November or December, that's something that will be under consideration.

"We're going to try and make good, prudent, careful judgments. This isn't a race to be first back. When we come back, we want it to be at the right time, for the right reasons, under the right circumstances."

Commissioner Bettman said the pandemic dwarfs everything the NHL and the NHLPA are considering.

"We miss the game," the Commissioner said. "We miss our fans. We miss watching our players play every night. We'd be in the middle of the [Stanley Cup Playoffs] right now. We're focused on trying to do the right things for the good of the game, so we can get back and connect with our great fans as soon as possible.

"But as soon as possible means under the right circumstances, and for that we're going to take our guidance from the governments at all levels and from the medical people."

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2020-04-30 22:14:50Z
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Some Team Execs Pushing For Cancelation Of 19-20 NBA Season - RealGM.com

Some team executives are pushing for an outright cancellation of the 19-20 season in order to focus on safely resuming play next season.

Team owners are concerned with liability issues and are conflicted on whether or not to give up on the current season.

If the NBA cancels the remainder of the regular season and plays the playoffs, non-playoff teams who want to collect the remainder of local TV dollars would lose out.

The NBA league office continues to explore possibilities of resuming the season.

“It is the responsibility of the league office to explore all options for a return to play this season,” the spokesperson told CNBC in a statement. “We owe that to our fans, teams, players, partners and all who love the game. While our top priority remains everyone’s health and well-being, we continue to evaluate all options to finish this season. At the same time, we are intensely focused on addressing the potential impact of Covid-19 on the 2020-21 season.”

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2020-04-30 18:53:00Z
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LeBron James: Nobody Should Be Canceling Anything - RealGM.com

LeBron James made a forceful statement on Twitter in response to the possibility of the NBA canceling the remainder of the 19-20 season.

"Saw some reports about execs and agents wanting to cancel season???" wrote James. "That’s absolutely not true. Nobody I know saying anything like that. As soon as it’s safe we would like to finish our season. I’m ready and our team is ready. Nobody should be canceling anything."

James was responding to a report from CNBC about team executive and agents who expressed concern about whether there will be liability issues if the season resumes.

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2020-04-30 18:48:00Z
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Report: NBA Team Execs, Agents Pressuring League to Cancel Season Amid COVID-19 - Bleacher Report

NEW YORK, NY - MARCH 12: An NBA logo is shown at the 5th Avenue NBA store on March 12, 2020 in New York City. The National Basketball Association said they would suspend all games after player Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz reportedly tested positive for the coronavirus. (Photo by Jeenah Moon/Getty Images)
Jeenah Moon/Getty Images

As the NBA continues to explore ways to possibly resume games amid the coronavirus pandemic, team executives and agents reportedly want the league to cancel the 2019-20 season.

Per CNBC's Jabari Young, multiple team executives have grown "frustrated with the lack of information" from the NBA and are pressuring the league to cancel what's left of this season. 

Young noted that team executives and player agents expressed concern about the challenges that would go into resuming this season. 

One person with a Western Conference team told Young the club has already lost $50 million this season "and doesn't have much incentive to restart the season anymore."

Another executive explained to Young that team owners don't see the financial benefit of resuming this season: "What [owners] are saying is, 'If we return, where is the revenue that is going to justify the additional cost of returning? They are looking at the cost side versus the revenue side. What revenue comes in now?"

One agent told Young he's "surprised" NBA commissioner Adam Silver hasn't canceled the season yet because he typically operates with an abundance of caution. 

LeBron James took to Twitter to say the report isn't true, as far as he knows:

Silver told reporters on an April 17 conference call that the league was "not in a position to make any decisions and it's unclear when we will be."

Per Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium and Tim Reynolds of the Associated Press, the NBA is considering using Walt Disney World Resort as a location to host games if this season is able to resume. 

The NBA is currently targeting May 8 to re-open practice facilities with strict safety measures in place, including no more than four players allowed at a time all equipment being thoroughly disinfected after each use. 

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2020-04-30 17:30:34Z
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Oilers ink D Niemelainen to deal - TSN

EDMONTON — The Edmonton Oilers have signed defenceman Markus Niemelainen to a two-year entry-level contract.

Niemelainen, 21, posted seven points (one goal, six assists) in 55 games last season with Assat in the SM-Liiga, Finland’s top professional league.

He played his first two seasons in the SM-Liiga with HPK, helping them capture the championship in 2019.

The six-foot-six, 190-pound defenceman registered 15 points (three goals, 12 assists), 74 penalty minutes and a minus-13 plus-minus rating over three seasons in the SM-Liiga.

Niemelainen also played with the OHL’s Saginaw Spirit from 2015-2017.

A native of Kuopio, Finland, Niemelainen represented his home country at the 2015 and 2016 world U18 hockey championships, winning a gold medal (2015) and a silver (2016).

Niemelainen was Edmonton's third round draft pick, 63rd overall, at the 2016 NHL draft.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 30, 2020.

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2020-04-30 16:10:02Z
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Cincinnati Bengals release veteran quarterback Andy Dalton - Sportsnet.ca

The Cincinnati Bengals have released veteran quarterback Andy Dalton, the team announced Thursday.

“Andy will always hold a special place with this franchise, and I know that he holds a special place in my heart,” team president Mike Brown said in a statement. “This is a hard day for our club because we know and appreciate what a consummate professional Andy has always been. We respect and appreciate Andy, and we thank him.”

With Dalton’s release, the Bengals will have $17.7 million in salary cap space.

The 32-year-old has played all nine seasons of his career with the Bengals. He was drafted by Cincinnati in the second round of the 2011 NFL Draft.

Dalton is also one of 10 quarterbacks in NFL history to have thrown over 3,000 yards in each of his first three seasons.

Last season, Dalton threw for 3,494 yards, 16 touchdowns and 14 interceptions in 13 games.

“Andy will always be considered a key member of the Bengals’ organization,” Bengals head coach Zac Taylor said in a statement. “His teammates and coaches appreciate his leadership and his commitment to winning. Just as importantly, Andy and his wife JJ are leaving a lasting impact in the community with the incredible work their foundation has done over the years. Andy and his family have meant a lot to this team and this city, and we wish them the best in the future.”

The Bengals selected LSU quarterback Joe Burrow as the No. 1 pick in the 2020 NFL Draft last week. In a recent RapSheet + Friends podcast, Burrow said Dalton called to welcome him to Cincinnati.

Now Dalton joins a free agent market that also includes veteran quarterbacks Cam Newton and Joe Flacco.

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2020-04-30 13:39:00Z
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U.S. could be in for 'a bad fall and a bad winter,' Fauci warns - CTV News

A second round of the coronavirus is "inevitable," the nation's top infectious disease doctor says, but just how bad it is will depend on the progress the U.S. makes in the coming months.

"If by that time we have put into place all of the countermeasures that you need to address this, we should do reasonably well," Dr. Anthony Fauci said. "If we don't do that successfully, we could be in for a bad fall and a bad winter."

If states begin lifting restrictions too early, Fauci says he predicts the country could see a rebound of the virus that would "get us right back in the same boat that we were a few weeks ago," adding that the country could see many more deaths than are currently predicted.

So far, more than 1 million Americans have been infected and at least 58,355 have died. A leading model predicts more than 72,000 people will die in the US by early August.

Being able to test for the virus, track cases and isolate every infected American will be key factors in ensuring that second wave isn't as deadly, Fauci says.

The U.S. continues to lag behind in testing, according to a new report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The nation has performed 16.4 tests per 1,000 people, according to the report. Spain and Italy, with the second and third highest number of cases after the US, have conducted 22.3 and 29.7 tests per 1,000 people respectively.

Fauci says the federal government needs to provide strategic guidance and assistance to help states up their number of conducted tests. He hopes he can guarantee everyone who needs a test can get one by the end of May or early June.

"The truth is that we're going in the right direction," he said. "But we need to continue to partner in a very active collaborative way with the states, we need to help them the same way they need to do the execution."

HOW REOPENINGS WILL AFFECT VIRUS NUMBERS

In Georgia, where Gov. Brian Kemp began lifting restrictions on small businesses such as salons and bowling alleys last week, experts say the death toll will likely see a sharp rise as a result.

"There are a couple of conditions that really need to be met before you can safely lift social distancing restrictions," CNN Medical Analyst Dr. Celine Gounder said Tuesday.

Those factors include a 14-day decline of cases and deaths, a hospital capacity for expected patients and the ability to do contact tracing and testing, she said.

"Georgia doesn't meet any of the criteria," Gounder added.

Youyang Gu, the researcher behind one of the models shared by the US Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, projects the number of daily deaths in the state will nearly double by early August.

The model assumes social distancing will relax slightly as the state continues to reopen. The number of deaths per day in Georgia will jump from 32 fatalities on May 1 to a projected 63 people dying each day by August 4, the model forecasts.

The researcher's findings fall in line with what's predicted by another model that's often been cited by the White House.

Dr. Chris Murray, director of the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, said they've upped their August death toll for the US by about 7,000 since last week.

The change, Murray says, comes from both longer peaks experienced by states and signs that states are becoming more active again.

Some businesses in South Carolina, Alaska and Oklahoma reopened last week. Restaurants in Tennessee opened with restrictions this week while retails outlets will open at 50% capacity Wednesday.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced all retail stores, restaurants, movie theaters, malls, museums, and libraries will be allowed to reopen Friday but must remain at 25% capacity.

AIRLINES WILL PROVIDE MASKS

Since officials have now recommended Americans wear face masks in public to prevent further spread, some airlines say they'll provide the masks for passengers.

American Airlines and United Airlines both said they'll be providing masks for passengers beginning in May.

"We are not mandating that passengers wear a mask however we strongly encourage travelers follow CDC guidance to wear a face covering when social distancing is difficult," United Airlines spokesperson Nicole Carriere told CNN. "By providing the masks, we're making it that much easier for them to do so."

Meanwhile, in three major New York City area airports, terminal access will be restricted to ticketed passengers, airport employees and others who need to enter the airport for business, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey announced Tuesday.

The measure will be enforced at John F. Kennedy Airport, LaGuardia Airport and Newark Liberty Airport.

"Due to Covid-19 related shifts in flight and passenger activity, changes in the airports' operational footprints, security, cleaning and maintenance protocols, and social distancing directives, the Port Authority will temporarily limit terminal access at the region's three major airports," the Port Authority said in a statement.

Correction:

This story has been updated to correct the description of Anthony Fauci's medical expertise

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2020-04-30 03:26:17Z
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Rabu, 29 April 2020

NHL, NHLPA say no new firm timeline for return of 2019-20 season - Sportsnet.ca

The NHL and NHLPA issued a joint statement on Wednesday saying that, despite reports and speculation over the league’s next steps in returning to play, no decisions or timeline have been established yet.

According to the statement, recent developments in some NHL club’s local communities have prompted the league and the players’ association to look ahead to Phase 2 of the transition back to playing.

Phase 1, which is currently still in place, involves a period of self-quarantine by both players and hockey staff.

A date to proceed to Phase 2, wherein players might return to small group activities in NHL club training facilities, has not yet been decided.

The statement went on to say that, if conditions surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic continue to trend favourably, advancing to Phase 2 may be possible at some point in mid-to-late May.

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2020-04-30 00:05:00Z
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NHL targets mid-to-late May for opening facilities; advises on player travel - TSN

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The NHL hopes to move ahead to “Phase 2” and begin opening team practice facilities for small group workouts in the “mid-to-later portion of May,” the league said Wednesday in a memorandum distributed to teams and players.

“While the precise date … remains tentative and as yet undetermined, we do feel that we may be able – provided we continue to trend favorably – to move to ‘Phase 2’ at some point in the mid-to-later portion of May,” deputy commissioner Bill Daly wrote in the memo.

Daly wrote that the league’s plans for Phase 2 will be subject to “potential competitive concerns as between disparately situated markets.”

That was one of the big concerns among teams with the NBA’s plan, released to teams earlier this week, which intended to open some team facilities no earlier than May 8. Each club is facing different local government restrictions. In some markets, the restrictions are beginning to be eased, while other hotspots are still facing lockdown conditions.

Any return to play plan would need to be approved by the NHL Players' Association. The joint NHL-NHLPA Return to Play committee was scheduled to meet again virtually on Wednesday, after players have begun to voice their concern about being away from their families for an extended period of time on Tuesday.

In Wednesday's memo, the NHL also advised players who are currently sheltering outside of their team’s city should “consider whether to plan to return to their club cities,” noting that they may face a mandatory 14-day quarantine once they arrive there.

Travel may prove most difficult. The U.S.-Canada border remains closed to non-essential travel. Air Canada does not have any flights scheduled to cross the border through May 22.

Players currently positioned at home in Europe may not have the ability to fly to their NHL city commercially until June at the earliest.

Wednesday's memo comes as groups of NHL players have only recently returned home. For instance, a group of Swedish-born NHLers met in Nashville just last week to share a chartered jet back to Scandinavia. They may now have to make a similar arrangement to return back to North America with few other options available.

Hockey’s international flavour is one reason why the NHL faces the stiffest challenge among North American major pro sports leagues to resume the season. A quarter of the league’s 31 franchises are based in Canada, while nearly one-third of the NHL’s active players this season (304) hail from Europe, including large blocs from Sweden (113), Russia (50), Finland (49) and the Czech Republic (33).

After Phase 2, which includes players training in small groups at team facilities, Phase 3 involves the opening of training camps, and Phase 4 would mark the return to game play.

As previously reported on TSN's Insider Trading, the NHL has plenty of runway to complete the 2019-20 season, as the next 2020-21 campaign does not need to begin until mid-December to still allow for a full, 82-game season.

Until a firm date is established and more formal details set the framework for Phase 2, Wednesday’s memo effectively extended the league’s directive for players and teams to self-quarantine. A more formal announcement with that extension could come on Thursday, when the current directive expires.

Wednesday marked Day 48 since the NHL hit pause on the season on March 12.

Contact Frank Seravalli on Twitter: @frank_seravalli

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2020-04-29 22:49:47Z
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Trudeau says federal officials in talks with CFL about $150M request - CBC.ca

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is in discussions with the Canadian Football League, which is seeking financial support to help with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trudeau told reporters Wednesday that support for the league is an "important issue" for the CFL and its fans.

"We are currently looking at how we can support various organizations. We recognize that this is an important issue for the league and for many Canadians and we are continuing our discussions with them," Trudeau said.

"The CFL has approached us about support. We know it's important to them and important for many Canadians and those discussions are ongoing."

The prime minister's comments come a day after The Canadian Press reported that the CFL is seeking up to $150 million in federal assistance.

League commissioner Randy Ambrosie said the proposal involves $30 million now to manage the impact the novel coronavirus outbreak has had on league business and up to another $120 million in the event of a lost 2020 campaign.

Ambrosie said the CFL's long-term future would be in peril if the 2020 season was wiped out.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, the CFL acknowledged its "unique" financial predicament.

"If concerns about large gatherings in stadiums persist, our future itself could be in jeopardy. We are working to meet this challenge with both optimism and pragmatism," the statement says.

The CFL also said it wants to earn any money it receives from the government and eventually pay taxpayers back by using all the tools at its disposal, including "community and public education programs across the country, the use of [its] digital channels, stadiums and broadcasts for advertising and promotion, and tourism initiatives surrounding the Grey Cup and other CFL events."

The league also said as an important piece of Canadian culture, it feels obligated to do anything it can to maintain itself among the uncertainty.

"We hope our next Grey Cup will be one of our most important — a signal to the world that Canada, as we know it and love it, is truly back."

Ambrosie later released a letter to season ticket holders on Wednesday, addressing the matters of federal aid and continued uncertainty regarding the upcoming regular season.

The CFL was founded in 1958 following the merger of two previous leagues, and its iconic Grey Cup championship trophy was first awarded in 1909.

This year's Grey Cup is scheduled for Nov. 22 in Regina. The CFL championship also involves a week of festivities in the host city.

The CFL hasn't given up on staging a 2020 season, but it has postponed the start of training camps, which were to open next month. It has also pushed back the beginning of the regular season — which was scheduled to begin June 11 — to July at the earliest.

However, many provincial governments have said there will be no sports events with large crowds this summer. That was reinforced by Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer, in a Wednesday briefing.

"For the next while, I cannot see a single chief medical officer of health across this country who's going to say that these mass gatherings are going to be there," Tam said. "Of course we'll evaluate things as we're going along, month by month, but when we say we're easing into it, that's definitely not easing into it.

"So mass gatherings will not be part of our lives for a while."

Some sports leagues have suggested the idea of resuming play without fans, but Ambrosie said that's a scenario that would be hard for the CFL to adopt because gate revenues are vitally important.

There has been no indication yet that the CFL or any of its teams have asked provincial governments for help.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, whose province is home to the Calgary Stampeders and Edmonton Eskimos, said Wednesday he wants the league "to come out of this as a vibrant part of Canada's sports life.

"I've not personally received any communications from the Stamps or the Eskimos, but I'd be happy to reach out to them and see how they're coping through this, because obviously the season this year is going to be at least somewhat compromised."

B.C. Premier John Horgan, an avowed sports fan, said he's open to the idea of subsidies for professional sports because they provide a "tremendous economic stimulus," though he added he has yet to see any such proposals.

"There's positive consequences of having activity, there's negative activity of it stopping," Horgan said Wednesday. "We'll take a close look at everything that comes forward.

"There are other priorities that are certainly higher, but there is a negative economic consequence to not seeing our professional sports underway this summer."

From November: Andrew Harris has historic Grey Cup night:

Andrew Harris became the first player to win both Most Outstanding Player and Most Outstanding Canadian.  The defence also came up big in Winnipeg's 33-12 win over Hamilton. 2:37

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2020-04-29 22:06:00Z
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Trudeau says federal officials in talks with CFL about $150M request - CBC.ca

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is in discussions with the Canadian Football League, which is seeking financial support to help with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trudeau told reporters Wednesday that support for the league is an "important issue" for the CFL and its fans.

"We are currently looking at how we can support various organizations. We recognize that this is an important issue for the league and for many Canadians and we are continuing our discussions with them," Trudeau said.

"The CFL has approached us about support. We know it's important to them and important for many Canadians and those discussions are ongoing."

The prime minister's comments come a day after The Canadian Press reported that the CFL is seeking up to $150 million in federal assistance.

League commissioner Randy Ambrosie said the proposal involves $30 million now to manage the impact the novel coronavirus outbreak has had on league business and up to another $120 million in the event of a lost 2020 campaign.

Ambrosie said the CFL's long-term future would be in peril if the 2020 season was wiped out.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, the CFL acknowledged its "unique" financial predicament.

"If concerns about large gatherings in stadiums persist, our future itself could be in jeopardy. We are working to meet this challenge with both optimism and pragmatism," the statement says.

The CFL also said it wants to earn any money it receives from the government and eventually pay taxpayers back by using all the tools at its disposal, including "community and public education programs across the country, the use of [its] digital channels, stadiums and broadcasts for advertising and promotion, and tourism initiatives surrounding the Grey Cup and other CFL events."

The league also said as an important piece of Canadian culture, it feels obligated to do anything it can to maintain itself among the uncertainty.

"We hope our next Grey Cup will be one of our most important – a signal to the world that Canada, as we know it and love it, is truly back."

The CFL was founded in 1958 following the merger of two previous leagues, and its iconic Grey Cup championship trophy was first awarded in 1909.

This year's Grey Cup is scheduled for Nov. 22 in Regina. The CFL championship also involves a week of festivities in the host city.

The CFL hasn't given up on staging a 2020 season, but it has postponed the start of training camps, which were to open next month. It has also pushed back the beginning of the regular season — which was scheduled to begin June 11 — to July at the earliest.

However, many provincial governments have said there will be no sports events with large crowds this summer. That was reinforced by Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer, in a Wednesday briefing.

"For the next while, I cannot see a single chief medical officer of health across this country who's going to say that these mass gatherings are going to be there," Tam said. "Of course we'll evaluate things as we're going along, month by month, but when we say we're easing into it, that's definitely not easing into it.

"So mass gatherings will not be part of our lives for a while."

Some sports leagues have suggested the idea of resuming play without fans, but Ambrosie said that's a scenario that would be hard for the CFL to adopt because gate revenues are vitally important.

There has been no indication yet that the CFL or any of its teams have asked provincial governments for help.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, whose province is home to the Calgary Stampeders and Edmonton Eskimos, said Wednesday he wants the league "to come out of this as a vibrant part of Canada's sports life."

"I've not personally received any communications from the Stamps or the Eskimos, but I'd be happy to reach out to them and see how they're coping through this, because obviously the season this year is going to be at least somewhat compromised."

ICYMI: Andrew Harris has historic Grey Cup night:

Andrew Harris became the first player to win both Most Outstanding Player and Most Outstanding Canadian.  The defence also came up big in Winnipeg's 33-12 win over Hamilton. 2:37

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2020-04-29 21:03:00Z
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Trudeau says federal officials in talks with CFL about $150M request - CBC.ca

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is in discussions with the Canadian Football League, which is seeking financial support to help with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trudeau told reporters Wednesday that support for the league is an "important issue" for the CFL and its fans.

"We are currently looking at how we can support various organizations. We recognize that this is an important issue for the league and for many Canadians and we are continuing our discussions with them," Trudeau said.

"The CFL has approached us about support. We know it's important to them and important for many Canadians and those discussions are ongoing."

The prime minister's comments come a day after The Canadian Press reported that the CFL is seeking up to $150 million in federal assistance.

League commissioner Randy Ambrosie said the proposal involves $30 million now to manage the impact the novel coronavirus outbreak has had on league business and up to another $120 million in the event of a lost 2020 campaign.

Ambrosie said the CFL's long-term future would be in peril if the 2020 season was wiped out.

The CFL was founded in 1958 following the merger of two previous leagues, and its iconic Grey Cup championship trophy was first awarded in 1909.

This year's Grey Cup is scheduled for Nov. 22 in Regina. The CFL championship also involves a week of festivities in the host city.

The CFL hasn't given up on staging a 2020 season, but it has postponed the start of training camps, which were to open next month. It has also pushed back the beginning of the regular season — which was scheduled to begin June 11 — to July at the earliest.

However, many provincial governments have said there will be no sports events with large crowds this summer. That was reinforced by Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer, in a Wednesday briefing.

"For the next while, I cannot see a single chief medical officer of health across this country who's going to say that these mass gatherings are going to be there," Tam said. "Of course we'll evaluate things as we're going along, month by month, but when we say we're easing into it, that's definitely not easing into it.

"So mass gatherings will not be part of our lives for a while."

Some sports leagues have suggested the idea of resuming play without fans, but Ambrosie said that's a scenario that would be hard for the CFL to adopt because gate revenues are vitally important.

ICYMI: Andrew Harris has historic Grey Cup night:

Andrew Harris became the first player to win both Most Outstanding Player and Most Outstanding Canadian.  The defence also came up big in Winnipeg's 33-12 win over Hamilton. 2:37

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2020-04-29 18:23:00Z
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CFL began process of requesting federal assistance on April 2 - Sportsnet.ca

While the Canadian Football League went public Tuesday about its request for up to $150 million from Ottawa, the CFL actually began the process of getting federal government funding back on April 2.

Beginning that Thursday until the last known contact between the CFL and the federal government on April 20, there was a series of seven separate communications on the league’s behalf, with three different federal government ministries. Early in their conversations with the federal government, there was communication with Catherine McKenna, the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities.

Then came Tuesday evening and the revelation by CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie to The Canadian Press of the league’s financial request. Ambrosie told CP that the pitch for funding is a three-phase proposal with up to $120 million alone to be for relief in case of a lost season this summer and fall. Many team and league officials do not believe the 2020 campaign has a chance of playing out due to the unlikelihood that health officials will give the go-ahead for such large public gatherings due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lead Off with Ziggy and Scotty Mac

CFL seeking financial assistance from federal government

April 29 2020

With the CFL being such a gate-driven league, that would present a major problem for its financial bottom line.

Ambrosie has insisted that the CFL would find ways to pay back the $150 million if the government grants the request to help keep the league afloat. The league and its teams would not write a cheque to re-pay the funds — rather, the CFL has proposed an in-kind “payback” by involving players in the community and in charitable and government-sponsored programs, such as social programs, tourism videos and public health initiatives.

On Tuesday morning, Ambrosie went on Sportsnet 590 The Fan and said, in part: “I’ve chosen philosophically not to go down that rabbit hole” of the season being cancelled. Ambrosie went on to say that he’s “hoping we can have a football season and Grey Cup in 2020,” which makes sense from the league’s public positioning standpoint when approaching the federal government for the nature of the tiered funding they’re after.

Good Show

Randy Ambrosie: Not a high likelihood CFL starts without fans in seats

April 28 2020

Ambrosie also made this point during the radio interview: “The bigger issue is the complexity of playing at all,” based on what health officials will let teams do. It’s hard to believe upwards of 100 players and staff being on the field in close proximity in a collision sport will be permitted amidst physical-distancing protocols.

Officials from different CFL teams have feared that the league could close business until large gatherings like concerts and games in stadiums are permitted by the government. That would likely be when there is a widely public and accessible vaccine for COVID-19, which in a best-case scenario would be in time for the 2021 season, although there is no way of knowing for sure when that may happen.

Which is why the CFL had to throw up this Hail Mary with Ottawa when the economic realities became more and more clear last month.

April 2 was a busy day between the league and public officials and represented the first time the CFL had communication with any federal government department since the pandemic hit. There was contact on the CFL’s behalf to Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED) and Canadian Heritage (PCH). Both the director and chief of policy innovation at ISED were contacted and that same day there was communication with Rebecca Caldwell, the Director of Policy at PCH, and Mathieu Bouchard, who is the Chief of Staff at PCH.

By April 6, just a week after Prime Minister Trudeau announced a new wage subsidy program to cover all businesses whose revenues have dropped by at least 30 per cent because of the pandemic, there was contact on the league’s behalf to McKenna.

All remained quiet between the CFL and the federal government until April 17. It was then that there was communication with Caldwell and Bouchard at Canadian Heritage. Three days later, more with Kelsey MacDonald, who is the Senior Policy Advisor at ISED.

Officially, the topics of discussion between the CFL and the different divisions of the federal government were about small business, economic development and sports.

The chief revenue streams for the CFL are market-dependent. Generally, ticket sales and money from television-rights fees are the two main drivers, although the highest-end organizations can do well with sponsorship and apparel.

The Saskatchewan Roughriders represent the flagship franchise of the CFL and in recent years have done about a half-million dollars a year in profit on merchandise, while their ticket revenues — depending on team success — is in the $17-million range. At the lowest level, it is believed that the Montreal Alouettes and Toronto Argonauts have been operating with a deficit well below $10 million annually. Saskatchewan is a community-owned team, with their records and financials public, while the Als and Argos are privately owned.

In addition to making an economic case for the need for funding with the pandemic crushing its business, part of the message to Canadian Heritage has been that the CFL is as much a cultural institution in this country as it is a professional sports enterprise.

It does appear that the COVID-19 crisis is the reason for the CFL’s interest in federal money. Public records show no government funding was received by the league during the last completed financial year.

The league has gone with Crestview Strategy, a long-time partner, to lobby on its behalf with the federal government. Two Crestview consultants, Jason Clark and Gabriela Gonzalez, are on the file.

The Trudeau government has continued to provide funding to businesses since the COVID-19 crisis began. As of this week, the federal aid package has increased to $145 billion in direct support of workers and families, $85 billion in tax deferrals for individuals and businesses, and $586 billion in credit, liquidity and capital relief.

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2020-04-29 05:08:00Z
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IOC official disagrees on need for vaccine to hold 2021 Olympic Games - TSN

SYDNEY (AP) — The head of the IOC’s coordination commission for the Tokyo Olympics said Wednesday he disagrees with suggestions by some scientists and doctors that a vaccine for COVID-19 is needed to hold the games.

John Coates, an International Olympic Committee member from Australia who is a lawyer, said he had seen the opinion but didn’t agree.

“The advice we’re getting from WHO (World Health Organization) says we should continue to plan for this date and that is what we’re doing, and that’s not contingent on a vaccine,” Coates told the Australian Associated Press. “A vaccine would be nice. But we will just continue to be guided by WHO and the Japanese health authorities.”

On Tuesday, Japan Medical Association president Yoshitake Yokokura said it would only be possible for the Olympics to go ahead in July 2021 if the infections were under control, not only in Japan, but globally.

“In my view, it would be difficult to hold the Olympics unless effective vaccines are developed,” Yokokura said.

Coates offered no details how 11,000 Olympians and 4,400 Paralympians from more than 200 nations and territories could safely enter — and exit — Japan without spreading the virus. They would be housed together in the Athletes Village.

They would also be accompanied by thousands of staff members and coaches, and thousands more technical officials who have to run the events. Add to this thousands of world broadcasters, who pay billions for the rights to the Olympics — a critical element, particularly if the Olympics are held with limited numbers of spectators.

Coates said a lot of work had been done since the postponement and the target was still to have 43 venues for the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics.

Coates was speaking in Australia a day after Yokokura told a video media conference of his concerns.

Devi Sridhar, a professor of Global Health at the University of Edinburgh, also said holding the Olympics may depend on finding a vaccine. The same could apply to the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

According to Johns Hopkins University data on Wednesday, Japan had reported about 13,700 cases of COVID-19 with 394 deaths.

When the delay was announced last month, IOC President Thomas Bach and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe decided the Tokyo Games would not be held beyond the summer of 2021.

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2020-04-29 12:27:42Z
52780752538519

Selasa, 28 April 2020

Gaetan Haas signs one-year extension with Edmonton Oilers; where does that leave Riley Sheahan? - Edmonton Journal

Article content continued

On the downside, while he demonstrated NHL speed right off the hop, NHL strength was another matter. He lost more than his share of battles and wound up on the seat of his pants more times than a few. Presumably this was one of a few lessons he learned of the narrow-ice game this season, and will surely be a focus of his current and future off-ice regimen. Ideally he would also work to improve a poor 42% win rate in the faceoff circle to make that righty stick a little more valuable.

Haas played a little under 10 minutes a game, over 95% of that time at even strength. He scored just 0.81 points per 60 minutes at 5v5, ranking 374th among the 398 NHL forwards who logged 300+ minutes. Marginal fourth-line production. That doesn’t include his first career point which came 4v4, a nifty set faceoff play and pass to Joakim Nygard for a key goal in a third-period comeback win over the Kings. His first career goal was equally key, as his deft deflection with under 5 minutes to play earned the Oilers a point with a chance for another vs. Arizona. He scored another tying goal in Boston that jumpstarted a comeback win. And while the game was already in the bag, his nifty penalty shot tally put the cherry on top of an 8-3 Oilers rout of the Flames .

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2020-04-29 02:26:42Z
52780753655958

Gaetan Haas signs one-year extension with Edmonton Oilers; where does that leave Riley Sheahan? - Edmonton Journal

Article content continued

On the downside, while he demonstrated NHL speed right off the hop, NHL strength was another matter. He lost more than his share of battles and wound up on the seat of his pants more times than a few. Presumably this was one of a few lessons he learned of the narrow-ice game this season, and will surely be a focus of his current and future off-ice regimen. Ideally he would also work to improve a poor 42% win rate in the faceoff circle to make that righty stick a little more valuable.

Haas played a little under 10 minutes a game, over 95% of that time at even strength. He scored just 0.81 points per 60 minutes at 5v5, ranking 374th among the 398 NHL forwards who logged 300+ minutes. Marginal fourth-line production. That doesn’t include his first career point which came 4v4, a nifty set faceoff play and pass to Joakim Nygard for a key goal in a third-period comeback win over the Kings. His first career goal was equally key, as his deft deflection with under 5 minutes to play earned the Oilers a point with a chance for another vs. Arizona. He scored another tying goal in Boston that jumpstarted a comeback win. And while the game was already in the bag, his nifty penalty shot tally put the cherry on top of an 8-3 Oilers rout of the Flames .

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2020-04-29 01:36:33Z
52780753655958

Saints, Winston agree to one-year deal - TSN

It's official.

The New Orleans Saints announced Tuesday evening that they have agreed to terms with quarterback Jameis Winston on a one-year deal.

Terms of the announcement were not immediately available, but it was reported over the weekend that Winston's deal would be team-friendly.

New Orleans also announced over the weekend they had agreed to terms with quarterback Taysom Hill on what is effectively a two-year deal.

It was a roller coaster season for Winston in 2019 as he led the league in passing yards at 5,109 and threw 33 touchdowns but also tossed a league-high 30 interceptions. Winston's yardage total also becomes less impressive when factoring in that he led the NFL in total passing attempts at 626.

Drafted No. 1 overall by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2015, Winston has a combined record of 28-42 as a starter. It was little change from the franchise's state before he arrived as Tampa has not made the playoffs since 2007.

The Bucs signed Tom Brady to a two-year deal early in the off-season, ending any chance Winston would get one final shot at starting in Tampa.

The Alabama native took home the Heisman trophy at Florida State in 2013, becoming the youngest to win the award at 19 years and 342 days. That mark has since been broken by Baltimore Ravens quarterback and former Louisville Cardinal Lamar Jackson.

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2020-04-28 22:15:54Z
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Dennis Rodman trade: How Michael Jordan's Bulls dealt their backup center for the NBA's best rebounder - CBS Sports

Will Perdue was a solid NBA player, who averaged 4.7 points per game across a 13-year career. There's nothing wrong with that kind of production, especially when you're playing with Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls. Plenty of players would trade places with him just for a chance at one of his four championship rings. He just isn't the sort of player one would expect to be traded for a Hall of Famer. 

But on October 3, 1995, Perdue was dealt straight up for Dennis Rodman, who was still in his prime from a production standpoint. There were no draft picks involved. No other players. Not even a bit of cash. Chicago gave up a backup center and received a Third-Team All-NBA forward. In a modern NBA that routinely sees superstars traded for packages featuring several elite young players and valuable draft assets, such a deal is practically unthinkable. 

The deal was the result of perhaps the most precipitous non-injury-related decline in trade value in NBA history. In the 1993 offseason, Rodman demanded a trade from the Detroit Pistons and was dealt to the San Antonio Spurs. The return for Detroit was substantial: 24-year-old All-Star Sean Elliott. In two years, Rodman managed to go from a player worthy of being traded for a young star to one who could only net a backup center. In those two years, his numbers were largely steady, he received numerous on-court accolades, and he suffered no career-altering injuries. 

So how did the Bulls manage to snag Rodman for such a historically low price? There were three principal factors driving down Rodman's trade value, so we'll start with the obvious:  

1. Rodman's erratic off-court behavior

Perhaps San Antonio should have recognized the risk in trading for Rodman based on his behavior during his final season in Detroit. Rodman was extremely close with former Pistons coach Chuck Daly, whose resignation in 1992 seemingly sparked a change in the former Defensive Player of the Year. Rodman skipped training camp in 1992 and was fined $68,000. He was suspended three games for refusing to go on a road trip. But the low undoubtedly came in February of 1993, when he was found asleep in his truck outside of The Palace at Auburn Hills with a rifle. Rodman described the events in ESPN's documentary about him, "Rodman: For Better or Worse" as the beginning of a transformation.

"When I put the gun to my head, I wasn't trying to shoot Dennis Rodman," he said. "I was trying to change the old one so that the new one could come out."

The new Rodman may be best-known for dating Madonna, dying his hair and becoming one of the NBA's most notorious partiers, but it was his conduct as a basketball player that ultimately irked the Spurs. He was fined a total of $32,500 during his first season in San Antonio for four separate incidents and was suspended a total of three games. He headbutted multiple opposing players, including then-Bull Stacey King, and things only got worse from there. 

Rodman's second season in San Antonio reads like a Mad Lib. In November, he threw a bag of ice at Spurs coach Bob Hill after being ejected from an exhibition game. He separated his shoulder in a motorcycle accident. He took a leave of absence from the team, was late to games and teams events and was again suspended on multiple occasions. Things came to a head in the 1995 playoffs. 

In the middle of Game 3 of San Antonio's second-round series against the Los Angeles Lakers, Rodman took off his shoes and sat down by the training table. He did not join team huddles, instead choosing to simply watch the game. Hill did not put him back on the floor in Game 3, and then-Spurs general manager Gregg Popovich suspended him for Game 4. In his biography, "Bad as I Wanna Be," Rodman viewed the decision as one approved by the entire team. 

"The players wanted to take a stand against me," Rodman wrote. "Management wanted to take a stand against me. The whole organization wanted to send a message to me."

Rodman viewed that as the moment in which he knew he would not return to San Antonio. Spurs star David Robinson made the team's sentiment at that point perfectly clear. 

"I want him back," Robinson said according to the New York Times. "But with the right frame of mind."

Rodman was not in the right frame of mind, and that was the final straw. San Antonio was so fed up with his antics that it resolved to trade him. But at that point, interest was virtually non-existent. His behavior was a big reason for that, but there was another driving factor in that soft market. 

2. The Spurs had no leverage whatsoever

The NBA knew that Rodman was not long for San Antonio. The Spurs not only considered making him available in the 1995 Expansion Draft, but may have released him outright had the Bulls not come along with a trade, according to the Los Angeles Times. They were extremely fortunate that they did, because the Spurs simply didn't have anywhere else to send Rodman. 

Never has the NBA had a greater abundance of talent at the power forward position than the mid-1990's. Considering Rodman's age (34 during the 1995 offseason), it stood to reason that only a contender would be interested. It just so happened that every winning team was set at power forward ... except Chicago. Besides Rodman's Spurs, nine teams finished above the Bulls in the 1994-95 standings. Four of them had power forwards that made the All-Star Game in 1995 (Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Shawn Kemp and Larry Johnson). Orlando had just stolen Horace Grant from the Bulls. Houston had just won a championship with Robert Horry. The Knicks (Charles Oakley), Lakers (Elden Campbell) and Pacers (Dale and Antonio Davis) all had solid veterans that weren't going to be displaced. San Antonio had nowhere to trade Rodman except Chicago. 

And the Bulls were hardly a slam dunk. There was a major hangup that could have nixed the deal in its infancy.  

"Scottie [Pippen] was totally against it," Michael Jordan explained in "Rodman: For Better or Worse." "Which I understood because when we played Detroit, he and Scottie had some really heated battles. Scottie didn't like him."

Pippen's issues with Rodman stemmed from a dirty foul in the 1991 Eastern Conference Finals. 

Rodman explained to Darnell Mayberry of The Athletic that the animosity was so severe that after the trade was completed, Bulls coach Phil Jackson forced him to apologize to Pippen. With this in mind, the Spurs hardly had room to negotiate. Chicago was taking a risk in the first place by bringing Rodman onto Pippen's team. They weren't going to pay San Antonio anymore than they had to for the privilege. 

Especially considering how much they were going to have to pay Rodman to be their power forward. Financial concerns easily could have killed the trade before it happened. 

3. Rodman's contract situation complicated things

Rodman said in his documentary that by the time he was traded to the Bulls he was "nearly broke." When he met with Bulls leadership, "All he wanted to talk about was how much he was going to get paid," Phil Jackson explained in his book, "Eleven Rings." At the time, Rodman was going through a divorce and living beyond his means despite what was a fairly healthy salary for the time period. 

In 1995, Rodman was entering the final season of a long-term contract he signed as a member of the Pistons. That deal guaranteed him a salary of $2.5 million. As small as that might seem by modern standards, the cap for the 1995-96 season was only $23 million. In making around 11 percent of the salary cap, Rodman's 1995-96 salary would be the equivalent of around $11.9 million today. 

That posed a problem in making a trade work under the salary cap. How many contenders nowadays have $11.9 million in salary that they're eager to trade for a risk as great as Rodman? Any player earning nearly as much as Rodman was too valuable to be traded for a player with as little value as Rodman. So not only did the Spurs need to find a team willing to take Rodman, but they had to find one that had enough bad salary to send back to them for a trade to be legally allowable. And that's where the Bulls came in. 

Chicago's frontcourt was pillaged in 1994 free agency. Starting power forward Horace Grant left for Orlando. Starting center Bill Cartwright joined the Seattle SuperSonics. Key backup Scott Williams departed as well, so with almost no meaningful talent left up front, the Bulls moved to secure one of their few remaining big men. Perdue, whom they had selected No. 11 overall in 1988, was in line for a bigger role, so the Bulls rewarded him with a bigger contract. Chicago handed him a six-year deal worth in excess of $12 million. That contract was big enough to be dealt straight up for Rodman, and when Luc Longley emerged as Chicago's starting center during the 1994-95 season, Perdue became expendable. 

That it was expiring created another problem for potential trade partners. If Rodman lived up to his promise, he would require a hefty contract extension. At 35 years old and given his general instability, that would have been an even greater risk than the trade. A Rodman contract gone wrong could have ruined the finances of a normal team. Fortunately, Chicago was not a normal team. 

The Bulls were so wildly profitable in the 1990s that they regularly spent far above the cap. Jordan alone received salaries in his final two Chicago seasons that were greater than the entire cap. At this point, there was no max contract, and teams could re-sign their own players without limits thanks to Bird Rights. Jordan's deal ensured that Chicago had no aspirations of creating cap space moving forward, so they lost no flexibility paying Rodman. He received a one-year, $9 million contract for the 1996-97 season, and then a $4.6 million pact for the 1997-98 season. So with no major financial concerns in acquiring him, the Bulls went ahead and executed the deal. 

Never in NBA history have the stars aligned so perfectly for a contending team to make a blockbuster trade. For the Bulls to get a player of Rodman's caliber in exchange for a backup, they needed him to systematically destroy his trade value over the course of two years in an era in which players of his position were plentiful and few teams could afford to absorb his contract. It was a one-in-a-million fluke that allowed the Bulls to add a third Hall-of-Famer to their legendary Jordan-Pippen duo, and fortunately for the sake of competitive balance, it is one that is unlikely to ever repeat itself. 

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2020-04-28 22:03:35Z
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Dennis Rodman trade: How Michael Jordan's Bulls dealt their backup center for the NBA's best rebounder - CBS Sports

Will Perdue was a solid NBA player, who averaged 4.7 points per game across a 13-year career. There's nothing wrong with that kind of production, especially when you're playing with Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls. Plenty of players would trade places with him just for a chance at one of his four championship rings. He just isn't the sort of player one would expect to be traded for a Hall of Famer. 

But on October 3, 1995, Perdue was dealt straight up for Dennis Rodman, who was still in his prime from a production standpoint. There were no draft picks involved. No other players. Not even a bit of cash. Chicago gave up a backup center and received a Third-Team All-NBA forward. In a modern NBA that routinely sees superstars traded for packages featuring several elite young players and valuable draft assets, such a deal is practically unthinkable. 

The deal was the result of perhaps the most precipitous non-injury-related decline in trade value in NBA history. In the 1993 offseason, Rodman demanded a trade from the Detroit Pistons and was dealt to the San Antonio Spurs. The return for Detroit was substantial: 24-year-old All-Star Sean Elliott. In two years, Rodman managed to go from a player worthy of being traded for a young star to one who could only net a backup center. In those two years, his numbers were largely steady, he received numerous on-court accolades, and he suffered no career-altering injuries. 

So how did the Bulls manage to snag Rodman for such a historically low price? There were three principal factors driving down Rodman's trade value, so we'll start with the obvious:  

1. Rodman's erratic off-court behavior

Perhaps San Antonio should have recognized the risk in trading for Rodman based on his behavior during his final season in Detroit. Rodman was extremely close with former Pistons coach Chuck Daly, whose resignation in 1992 seemingly sparked a change in the former Defensive Player of the Year. Rodman skipped training camp in 1992 and was fined $68,000. He was suspended three games for refusing to go on a road trip. But the low undoubtedly came in February of 1993, when he was found asleep in his truck outside of The Palace at Auburn Hills with a rifle. Rodman described the events in ESPN's documentary about him, "Rodman: For Better or Worse" as the beginning of a transformation.

"When I put the gun to my head, I wasn't trying to shoot Dennis Rodman," he said. "I was trying to change the old one so that the new one could come out."

The new Rodman may be best-known for dating Madonna, dying his hair and becoming one of the NBA's most notorious partiers, but it was his conduct as a basketball player that ultimately irked the Spurs. He was fined a total of $32,500 during his first season in San Antonio for four separate incidents and was suspended a total of three games. He headbutted multiple opposing players, including then-Bull Stacey King, and things only got worse from there. 

Rodman's second season in San Antonio reads like a Mad Lib. In November, he threw a bag of ice at Spurs coach Bob Hill after being ejected from an exhibition game. He separated his shoulder in a motorcycle accident. He took a leave of absence from the team, was late to games and teams events and was again suspended on multiple occasions. Things came to a head in the 1995 playoffs. 

In the middle of Game 3 of San Antonio's second-round series against the Los Angeles Lakers, Rodman took off his shoes and sat down by the training table. He did not join team huddles, instead choosing to simply watch the game. Hill did not put him back on the floor in Game 3, and then-Spurs general manager Gregg Popovich suspended him for Game 4. In his biography, "Bad as I Wanna Be," Rodman viewed the decision as one approved by the entire team. 

"The players wanted to take a stand against me," Rodman wrote. "Management wanted to take a stand against me. The whole organization wanted to send a message to me."

Rodman viewed that as the moment in which he knew he would not return to San Antonio. Spurs star David Robinson made the team's sentiment at that point perfectly clear. 

"I want him back," Robinson said according to the New York Times. "But with the right frame of mind."

Rodman was not in the right frame of mind, and that was the final straw. San Antonio was so fed up with his antics that it resolved to trade him. But at that point, interest was virtually non-existent. His behavior was a big reason for that, but there was another driving factor in that soft market. 

2. The Spurs had no leverage whatsoever

The NBA knew that Rodman was not long for San Antonio. The Spurs not only considered making him available in the 1995 Expansion Draft, but may have released him outright had the Bulls not come along with a trade, according to the Los Angeles Times. They were extremely fortunate that they did, because the Spurs simply didn't have anywhere else to send Rodman. 

Never has the NBA had a greater abundance of talent at the power forward position than the mid-1990's. Considering Rodman's age (34 during the 1995 offseason), it stood to reason that only a contender would be interested. It just so happened that every winning team was set at power forward ... except Chicago. Besides Rodman's Spurs, nine teams finished above the Bulls in the 1994-95 standings. Four of them had power forwards that made the All-Star Game in 1995 (Charles Barkley, Karl Malone, Shawn Kemp and Larry Johnson). Orlando had just stolen Horace Grant from the Bulls. Houston had just won a championship with Robert Horry. The Knicks (Charles Oakley), Lakers (Elden Campbell) and Pacers (Dale and Antonio Davis) all had solid veterans that weren't going to be displaced. San Antonio had nowhere to trade Rodman except Chicago. 

And the Bulls were hardly a slam dunk. There was a major hangup that could have nixed the deal in its infancy.  

"Scottie [Pippen] was totally against it," Michael Jordan explained in "Rodman: For Better or Worse." "Which I understood because when we played Detroit, he and Scottie had some really heated battles. Scottie didn't like him."

Pippen's issues with Rodman stemmed from a dirty foul in the 1991 Eastern Conference Finals. 

Rodman explained to Darnell Mayberry of The Athletic that the animosity was so severe that after the trade was completed, Bulls coach Phil Jackson forced him to apologize to Pippen. With this in mind, the Spurs hardly had room to negotiate. Chicago was taking a risk in the first place by bringing Rodman onto Pippen's team. They weren't going to pay San Antonio anymore than they had to for the privilege. 

Especially considering how much they were going to have to pay Rodman to be their power forward. Financial concerns easily could have killed the trade before it happened. 

3. Rodman's contract situation complicated things

Rodman said in his documentary that by the time he was traded to the Bulls he was "nearly broke." When he met with Bulls leadership, "All he wanted to talk about was how much he was going to get paid," Phil Jackson explained in his book, "Eleven Rings." At the time, Rodman was going through a divorce and living beyond his means despite what was a fairly healthy salary for the time period. 

In 1995, Rodman was entering the final season of a long-term contract he signed as a member of the Pistons. That deal guaranteed him a salary of $2.5 million. As small as that might seem by modern standards, the cap for the 1995-96 season was only $23 million. In making around 11 percent of the salary cap, Rodman's 1995-96 salary would be the equivalent of around $11.9 million today. 

That posed a problem in making a trade work under the salary cap. How many contenders nowadays have $11.9 million in salary that they're eager to trade for a risk as great as Rodman? Any player earning nearly as much as Rodman was too valuable to be traded for a player with as little value as Rodman. So not only did the Spurs need to find a team willing to take Rodman, but they had to find one that had enough bad salary to send back to them for a trade to be legally allowable. And that's where the Bulls came in. 

Chicago's frontcourt was pillaged in 1994 free agency. Starting power forward Horace Grant left for Orlando. Starting center Bill Cartwright joined the Seattle SuperSonics. Key backup Scott Williams departed as well, so with almost no meaningful talent left up front, the Bulls moved to secure one of their few remaining big men. Perdue, whom they had selected No. 11 overall in 1988, was in line for a bigger role, so the Bulls rewarded him with a bigger contract. Chicago handed him a six-year deal worth in excess of $12 million. That contract was big enough to be dealt straight up for Rodman, and when Luc Longley emerged as Chicago's starting center during the 1994-95 season, Perdue became expendable. 

That it was expiring created another problem for potential trade partners. If Rodman lived up to his promise, he would require a hefty contract extension. At 35 years old and given his general instability, that would have been an even greater risk than the trade. A Rodman contract gone wrong could have ruined the finances of a normal team. Fortunately, Chicago was not a normal team. 

The Bulls were so wildly profitable in the 1990s that they regularly spent far above the cap. Jordan alone received salaries in his final two Chicago seasons that were greater than the entire cap. At this point, there was no max contract, and teams could re-sign their own players without limits thanks to Bird Rights. Jordan's deal ensured that Chicago had no aspirations of creating cap space moving forward, so they lost no flexibility paying Rodman. He received a one-year, $9 million contract for the 1996-97 season, and then a $4.6 million pact for the 1997-98 season. So with no major financial concerns in acquiring him, the Bulls went ahead and executed the deal. 

Never in NBA history have the stars aligned so perfectly for a contending team to make a blockbuster trade. For the Bulls to get a player of Rodman's caliber in exchange for a backup, they needed him to systematically destroy his trade value over the course of two years in an era in which players of his position were plentiful and few teams could afford to absorb his contract. It was a one-in-a-million fluke that allowed the Bulls to add a third Hall-of-Famer to their legendary Jordan-Pippen duo, and fortunately for the sake of competitive balance, it is one that is unlikely to ever repeat itself. 

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMihwFodHRwczovL3d3dy5jYnNzcG9ydHMuY29tL25iYS9uZXdzL2Rlbm5pcy1yb2RtYW4tdHJhZGUtaG93LW1pY2hhZWwtam9yZGFucy1idWxscy1kZWFsdC10aGVpci1iYWNrdXAtY2VudGVyLWZvci10aGUtbmJhcy1iZXN0LXJlYm91bmRlci_SAYsBaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY2Jzc3BvcnRzLmNvbS9uYmEvbmV3cy9kZW5uaXMtcm9kbWFuLXRyYWRlLWhvdy1taWNoYWVsLWpvcmRhbnMtYnVsbHMtZGVhbHQtdGhlaXItYmFja3VwLWNlbnRlci1mb3ItdGhlLW5iYXMtYmVzdC1yZWJvdW5kZXIvYW1wLw?oc=5

2020-04-28 21:44:27Z
52780747449997