Monday, October 31, 2016

Autopsy reveals alcohol, cocaine in Marlins pitcher’s system

Miami Beach, Florida – Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez had cocaine and alcohol in his system when his boat crashed into a Miami Beach jetty, according to toxicology reports released Saturday.

It’s not clear whether Fernandez was driving when the boat crashed Sept. 25, killing the 24-year-old baseball star and two of his friends. But Fernandez had a blood-alcohol content level of 0.147, well above Florida’s legal limit of 0.08, according to autopsy reports released by the Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Associate Medical Examiner Kenneth Hutchins listed the cause of death as “boat crash” for Fernandez, 27-year-old Emilio Jesus Macias and 25-year-old Eduardo Rivero.

Each man had suffered blunt force injuries to his head and body, Hutchins wrote.

Toxicology reports showed both Macias and Rivero also had alcohol levels below the state’s legal limit, while Rivero also had cocaine in his system.

The bodies had a strong odor of alcohol on them when they were recovered by divers, and investigators also found evidence the boat was speeding when it slammed into the jetty, according to a search warrant affidavit released this week by the Miami-Dade County State Attorney’s Office.

The affidavit said officials also had recovered a receipt for alcohol from American Social Bar & Kitchen, where the trio had been before the crash.

Fighters live up to name in claiming Japan Series title

Hokkaido Nippon Ham's Haruki Nishikawa hits a sayonara grand slam in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 5 of the Japan Series. | KYODO

HIROSHIMA – The Hokkaido Ham Fighters’ never-say-die attitude culminated in a Japan Series title on Saturday night in Hiroshima.

Hideki Kuriyama lauded his team’s resilience after Nippon Ham clinched its third title in franchise history with a 10-4 win over the Hiroshima Carp in Game 6.

During the regular season, the Fighters were down, but not out, in the Pacific League pennant race. They erased what was once an 11½-game deficit to the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks to win the league title, and used the perks they earned to beat the Hawks again in the Climax Series.

“I said it when we won the league championship, we had such a tough season, but we didn’t give up, even though we had a huge deficit to overcome, and we made it all the way here, said Kuriyama. “We grew a little in every single game.”

Never give up, never give in, never say die.

The Fighters lived by that creed, united in the belief no mountain was so high it couldn’t be scaled.

So when Nippon Ham faced adversity in the form of a Carp team that held a 2-0 lead in the Japan Series, and was looking as if it might snatch a third in Sapporo behind veteran pitcher Hiroki Kuroda, there was no panic. The Fighters rallied to win Game 3 in 10 innings, and just kept on winning.

“The two games we lost and the games in Sapporo, those could’ve gone either way,” Kuriyama said.

Game 6 could’ve as well, until the Fighters finally scored a KO in the eighth inning.

The score was tied at 4-4 when Nippon Ham strung together three two-out singles to load the bases. From there, Sho Nakata drew a walk, reliever Anthony Bass drove in a run and Brandon Laird hit a grand slam. All of a sudden, the Fighters were up 10-4 and their hard work was six outs away from paying off.

Nippon Ham’s triumph required the contributions of a number of players. That was no more apparent than in the bullpen, where the relievers stepped up to face down the Carp hitters, who as a group were statistically the best in Japan.

“It’s a humbling experience to be down there,” said Bass, who was chosen as one of the outstanding players of the series. “There’s a lot of great pitchers in the bullpen. We picked each other up all series long. I was just fortunate enough to kind of have, if you want to say the hot hand, but it’s been a fun season.

“Credit to the Carp’s bullpen, they’ve been lock-down all year. They’ve got a great bullpen. It’s just we got things going our way at the end. Everyone’s just kind of been doing their job.”

With the bullpen keeping things close, the Fighters eventually found the big hits they needed. Shohei Otani came up with the first, a walk-off single in Game 3. Then it was Laird hitting a two-run homer in the eighth inning of Game 4. Those two hits came after game-tying hits by Sho Nakata. Then in Game 5, Haruki Nishikawa put Nippon Ham in the driver’s seat with a sayonara grand slam.

Before the series, all the focus was on Otani, who had an 11-strikeout performance, though while allowing three runs, in Game 1 (his only appearance on the mound) and finished the series with four doubles among his six hits at the plate.

Otani played a role, but it was the sum of the Fighters’ parts, coming through in big moments, that added up.

The Fighters simply made more plays when it counted. There was Luis Mendoza throwing five heroic innings of relief in Game 5, and Bass shining in each of his appearances to the tune of three wins. When the Fighters needed big hits at home, Nakata was there to deliver, and third-base coach Kazuyuki Shirai’s call to send Kensuke Tanaka home on Hiromi Oka’s shallow sacrifice fly to tie Game 5 in the seventh inning was among the most pivotal of the series. And those were just the tip of the iceberg.

Kuriyama preached belief after the game. The Fighters always believed the turning point was right around the corner, and four out of six times in this Japan Series it was.

They believed in one another, and believed that together there was no deficit that couldn’t be overcome.

As it turns out, as the Hawks and Carp can both attest to, that turned out to be true, and the Fighters now have the titles to prove it.

“This is a young team and we had to move forward together and we could not have won unless each one of us grew,” Kuriyama said. “So even though we became the best in Japan, we still have a long way to go. We are going to keep moving forward from tomorrow.”

Indians move one win away from World Series glory

Cleveland starting pitcher Corey Kluber delivers during the Indians' 7-2 win over the Cubs in Game 4 of the World Series at Wrigley Field in Chicago on Saturday. | USA TODAY / VIA REUTERS

CHICAGO – One more win and baseball fans everywhere might finally believe in these Cleveland Indians.

That’s all it will take for Corey Kluber & Co. to clinch this World Series.

Kluber pitched six sparkling innings on short rest for his second victory this week and the Indians beat the Chicago Cubs 7-2 Saturday night, taking a 3-1 lead and nearing their first championship since 1948.

Jason Kipnis hit a three-run homer in his hometown and Carlos Santana connected for the first of his three hits as manager Terry Francona’s team won for the second straight day at Wrigley Field.

Trevor Bauer gets the ball Sunday night when the visiting Indians try for the franchise’s third World Series title against Jon Lester and the faltering Cubs.

“I think we like the position we’re in, but the task isn’t done yet,” Kluber said. “We still have one more game to win, and we’re going to show up tomorrow and __play with the same sense of urgency we’ve played with until this point. We don’t want to let them build up any momentum and let them get back in the series.”

Still, not bad for a team that seemed like an underdog all year long.

The Indians topped the defending champion Royals and star-studded Tigers for the AL Central title, then came the postseason. No one thought they would beat Big Papi and Boston, outslug Toronto or ever end their drought before the charmed Cubs, who led the majors with 103 wins.

Well, look who is on the brink of hoisting the hardware.

“We’ve got one more to get and it’s probably going to be the hardest victory of the year, but this is a special night for me and this team to take the first two here,” said Kipnis, who grew up a Cubs fan on the north side of Chicago.

Kipnis had three hits and scored two runs as Cleveland moved to 10-2 in this postseason. Francisco Lindor contributed an RBI single, helping Francona improve to 11-1 in the World Series.

The Indians now will try to bring another crown to Cleveland, adding to the one LeBron James and the Cavaliers earned earlier this year.

“We have a ways to go. We’re not done,” Francona said.

Dexter Fowler doubled and scored in the first for the Cubs, and then homered against Andrew Miller in the eighth. Fowler’s drive to left-center was the first homer for Chicago in the World Series since Phil Cavaretta connected in Game 1 in 1945 and the first run allowed by Miller during his dominant postseason.

In between Fowler’s two hits, the Cubs came up empty every time they had a chance to put any pressure on Cleveland.

“So we made mistakes. Absolutely, we made mistakes tonight,” manager Joe Maddon said. “That was part of it. But then again, we just have to do more offensively to give ourselves a chance.”

The Indians won for the second straight day at Wrigley — those two wins matched the Cubs’ entire total of World Series victories in more than a century of playing at their famed ballpark.

“They’re obviously doing something right, taking advantage of our mistakes and my mistakes,” Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant said.

Pitching on three days’ rest for the second time, Kluber allowed five hits, struck out six and walked one. The steady, stoic right-hander, who struck out nine in a dominant performance in Game 1, improved to 4-1 with a 0.89 ERA in five playoff starts this year.

Francona put Santana at first after starting him in left in Game 3, and Mike Napoli was out of the starting lineup for the time in the playoffs. And just like the rest of October, the decision worked out quite well for the Indians.

Santana led off the second with a drive to right against John Lackey, tying it at 1. Santana’s third homer of the playoffs silenced the crowd of 41,706, and the Indians seized the momentum from there.

Two throwing errors on Bryant, including one on Kluber’s infield single, led to an unearned run that put Cleveland ahead to stay. Kipnis connected for his second playoff homer in the seventh, pointing to his friends and family in the stands after powering the Indians to a 7-1 lead.

“We’re mortals. We’re baseball players. It’s what we live for,” Kipnis said. “At this kind of stage it’s what we all dream about.”

Most regrettable NBA Draft picks in every first-round spot

The NBA Draft arrives Thursday, which gives teams around the league a chance to search through a pile of prospects to locate a player with the uncommon combination of size, skill, desire and intelligence to become a successful player in the league.

Sometimes, they whiff.

They make big mistakes at the top of the first round and they make mistakes at the bottom. The ones at the top hurt more. Except for those that allow a Draymond Green or someone of that ilk to slip into the second round.

We’ve gone through each of the first-round selections made during the lottery era and determined which was the poorest choice at every spot, from 1 to 30.

Not every player was the weakest chosen in his spot.
 
Sometimes, it’s even worse to select a mediocre player with a Hall of Famer just sitting there, begging to join your team.
 

Overview: Giddens was a surprising choice as a first-rounder given that he never was a high-end shooter as a college player. At 6-5, he made only 35 percent of his college 3-point tries in four seasons at Kansas and New Mexico. He bounced between the NBA and D-League a few times but played only 38 games and 247 minutes at the highest level.

No, Grizzlies' Mike Conley is not apologizing for taking largest contract in NBA history

GFX-Mike-Conley-FTR-103116
Mike Conley Jr. (SN graphic/Getty Images)

NEW YORK — Mike Conley Jr.’s choice of clothing for his trip to Madison Square Garden for a game against the Knicks wasn’t what his old coach Lionel Hollins had recommended right after he signed the largest contract in NBA history this summer. The Grizzlies point guard, with his five-year, $152.6 million deal, wore a white hoodie with a photo montage of Muhammad Ali on the chest.

“I told Mike after I congratulated him on the contract, “get on your knees and thank God you had the leverage to get this kind of money, and one other thing: You better put on a flak jacket,” Hollins said. “I told Mike, from here on that’s a big target on your chest.”

After a wild summer of spending in the NBA, thanks to an unprecedented leap in the salary cap to a record $94 million, nobody is wearing a bigger bulls-eye than Conley. He knows it and as, he told Sporting News at his locker late after the Grizzlies fell to the Knicks, he’s fine with it.

Really.

“I’m already hearing about it,” he said.

During the Grizzlies loss, as Conley sat on the bench during this restricted-minutes phase of his season — he’s still recovering from an Achilles tendon injury that ended his 2015-16 season — he was serenaded with chants of “overrated.” That’s tame compared to what he might face down the road when he goes into some of the toughest arenas in the NBA, which he lists as Golden State, Toronto and, it almost goes without saying, Philadelphia.

“It doesn’t bother me, at all,” he said. “It’s part of it. I’m in a blessed situation. When I hear the talk, when I look on my phone and see messages on Twitter about it, it really pushes me, to be honest. So I know it’s going to come. There’s gonna be a lot of talk about it all season, no question. But it’s already here. I almost look forward to playing on the road, for that very reason.”

If any player is cut out emotionally to deal with the fallout, Conley is the one. He just turned 29. Through thick and thin over the last nine seasons quarterbacking his perennial playoff team, he hasn’t shown any rabbit ears or the thin skin that Kevin Durant has been displaying as he’s started his new career with the Warriors.

“When it comes to the kind of person he is, I wish I had 15 Mike Conleys on the roster,” said Ed Stefanski, the Grizzlies’ vice president of player personnel. “He’s got both his feet on the ground. He’s as solid as you can get. He’s the real deal, on and off the court.”

But it’s his new deal, the one that blew the NBA away, that is going to present Mike Conley with the kind of challenges he’s never had to face before. His previous contracts made him rich to the tune of $54.5 million, but not necessarily famous. Nobody ever called Conley, Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph “the big three” as they reached the 2013 Western Conference finals vs. the Spurs or even went up 2-1 on the Warriors in the 2015 West semifinals.

That was the series when Conley played with a broken bone in his face and wore a mask. The Griz’ trio won its share of games playing old-school, inside-out, grind-it-out hoops. The 3-point shot? What’s that? But as Conley is the first to admit, “I’ve never been a target. I’ve never messed around with any fans. I’ve never yelled at anybody.”

No, he isn’t Russell Westbrook.

Playing a superstar position, Conley is steady but not flashy. He’s never made an All-Star Game, as everyone was quick to point out when he scored his new deal. You rank the top point guards on most scouts’ scorecards, and he doesn’t crack the first six. But he’s still a top 10 player at his position, meaning 20 teams would love to have him. He’s smart, can shoot, he knows how to set up teammates, makes the right plays and understands the balance required to play the position.

His previous salary reflected those qualities, as he made $9.5 million last season, not far off Stephen Curry’s current $11 million. Under the old cap, $70 million per team, he was widely viewed as a $15 million-a-year player. But with the cap jumping almost $25 mil per team, and with the Mavericks, Knicks and Spurs lining up for his services, Conley became an unrestricted free agent at just the right time. It was the perfect storm of the July spending spree, when teams handed out close to $2 billion, a record.

With Dallas ready to make him a max offer, Conley had the leverage he needed to get the best deal possible from the Grizzlies, a max-salary deal that gives him an extra $40 million compared to the Mavericks’ offer and pays him $26.5 million this season. Then he’ll make $28.5 in 2017-18, $30.5 in 2018-19 and $32.5 mil in 2019-20. He’ll top out at $34.5 million in year five, almost $1.5 million more than Michael Jordan’s best deal.

Sure, by the old standard it’s crazy money, but Conley didn’t cause nearly the splash that Durant did by leaving Oklahoma City to form the NBA’s newest super-team in Oakland. Conley’s contract set the record for a deal covering more than two years, but it did not trigger nearly the reaction that came when LeBron James announced that he was re-upping with the Cavaliers for at least two more seasons, starting at $31 million this season, the second-highest single-season salary, after Jordan. Next season James will shatter Jordan’s record of $33 million (set in 1997-98, his final season with the Bulls) by taking home $33.3 million. James also has a third year, at his option, at $35.6 million, but by then he is expected to be enjoying the first $40-million-per-year salary via a new collective bargaining agreement.

James and Durant’s money, everyone understands those figures. Even Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert might privately concede that LeBron is underpaid. But Conley’s new money still takes one aback, as can be said about the near-max deal landed by the Raptors’ DeMar DeRozan. The chant Conley heard in the Garden isn’t that far off for a very good playmaker who will get you 16-17 points a night and five to six assists. The Grizzlies knew they had to bring back Conley, with Gasol committed long term and Randolph having a season to go on his deal.

At this stage, Memphis is still not a destination for prime free agents. Geography, as general manager Chris Wallace admits, works against his team. So owner Robert Pera was all-in, throwing more money at Conley than ever imagined and also ante-ing up $95 million over four years for Chandler Parsons. It’s called the price of doing business in Memphis.

“With the amount of money that was available because of the new cap, that’s just natural for people to look at, with all of these other new contracts and say, ‘It’s hard to figure out,’” Stefanski said. “It looks like guys were overpaid, but it’s all about the new flush of money that was available in the market place. I had one GM say to me about all of the inflated salaries, ‘Maybe Mike Conley got a lot of money, but at least you know that he can play.’”

But for the first time in his career, he’ll hear about it when he doesn’t play well.

“If he has a bad stretch of games, then he really will catch a lot of flak and he’ll have to deal with all the talk,” Hollins said on SiriusXM NBA Radio. “Because now, the expectations for Mike are going to be different. People are going to look at him and say, he’s getting all of this money, he should be shooting like a $30-million-a-year player. Why is he scoring 17 points a night and not 37? It’s all going to be about the money. It’s not going to change how Mike plays. But I don’t think he’s going to let it faze him, at all.”

It’s not like Conley is going into this with his eyes closed. He knows what’s coming. He got his first taste of it on Saturday night as he went up against Derrick Rose, a fellow point guard who has faced criticism for many reasons, including his own massive contract. He’s now rich and famous for being the Player With The Biggest Contract In The History Of The NBA. First time Mike Conley has ever had this title, one he never saw coming in a million years.

“I’ll show people what I can do,” Conley said. “The way I look at it, this is a new opportunity for me. I can’t wait.”

Cavaliers vs. Rockets game time won’t change despite World Series Game 6

James-Harden-Kevin-Love-Getty-FTR-103116
James Harden and Kevin Love. (Getty Images)

The Rockets-Cavaliers NBA game Tuesday will tip off as scheduled after the league denied Houston's request for an earlier start to minimize potential conflict with Game 6 of the World Series, ESPN.com reported Monday, citing an unidentified source.

Rockets-Cavs is scheduled to start at 7:10 p.m. ET at Quicken Loans Arena with Game 6 between the Cubs and Indians set to begin slightly less than an hour later next door at Progressive Field.

Players share the same underground tunnel for access to both venues.

According to ESPN.com, the Rockets will receive a police escort to the Cleveland airport immediately after the game so they can get to New York, where they play the Knicks on Wednesday night.

None of the NBA's national broadcast partners will carry Tuesday's game, though it will be on NBA TV, so there was some flexibility on start time.

The issue likely was that no matter how early the game would've tipped off, the area around the adjacent sports venues was going to be challenging because of traffic and fans gathering for a potential Indians victory that would clinch the team's first World Series title since 1948.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Granderson earns Clemente Award

Curtis Granderson receives the Roberto Clemente Award before Game 3 of the World Series on Friday at Wrigley Field. | USA TODAY / VIA REUTERS

CHICAGO – Winning the Roberto Clemente Award meant a lot to Curtis Granderson. Accepting the honor in front of his parents in his hometown made the moment even sweeter for the New York Mets outfielder.

Granderson received baseball’s biggest honor for sportsmanship and community involvement before Game 3 of the World Series on Friday night at Wrigley Field. Granderson is from the Chicago suburb of Blue Island and played college ball at the University of Illinois-Chicago.

“It’s really cool to get a chance to be here with my mom and dad, who made me who I am today,” he said.

“Chicago’s always been home. Though I’ve played for teams outside of Chicago, but this is what helped me to get me where I am today.”

The 35-year-old Granderson helps run baseball clinics and character development programs through the Grand Kids Foundation, which he created in 2007. He made a $5 million donation to UIC for the construction of indoor/outdoor baseball facility that opened in 2014.

The three-time All-Star also helps raise money for several charities in New York and has been active with the Mets’ military appreciation work.

“He really is a deserving recipient of this great award,” commissioner Rob Manfred said.

Clemente, a longtime Hall of Famer for the Pirates, died on New Year’s Eve in 1972 while on a charter plane that crashed after takeoff. The plan was carrying relief aid to Nicaragua following an earthquake.

Fighters wrap up Japan Series title with dramatic eighth-inning fireworks

Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters manager Hideki Kuriyama receives the traditional doage (victory toss) after the team defeated the Hiroshima Carp 10-4 in Game 6 of the Japan Series on Saturday. | KYODO

HIROSHIMA – A pitcher getting it done on the mound and at the plate helped the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters bring home a championship, just like everyone expected.

Not many had reliever Anthony Bass as said pitcher. What third baseman Brandon Laird did, that was pretty much business as usual.

The Fighters broke open a tense contest in the eighth inning, with a bases-loaded walk drawn by Sho Nakata, an RBI single by Bass and a grand slam courtesy of slugger Laird, and returned to the NPB summit with a 10-4 win over the Hiroshima Carp in Game 6 of the Japan Series on Saturday night at Mazda Stadium.

“We were on a mission this year” said Laird, who was named Japan Series MVP. “We had a long season, went through our ups and downs, but we overcame them. Look at us now, we’re Nippon champions, it feels great.”

The Fighters won their first Japan Series title since 2006, rebounding to win four straight games after dropping the first two in Hiroshima.

“We never got down even after losing the first two games of the series,” said manager Hideki Kuriyama. “We were able to win all three games at home and the momentum was with us when we came back to Hiroshima.”

Bass threw two scoreless innings to earn the win in relief. He struck out three and walked a batter. Bass finished the series with a 3-0 record, 0.00 ERA and eight strikeouts in 6 2/3 innings.

“I feel like I did my job, so I was happy with that,” Bass said. “More important is winning the championship. That’s why I signed here in Japan. I wanted to be part of a championship.”

The Fighters are champions for the third time in franchise history, also winning in 1962 and 2006. Their win continues the dominance of the Pacific League in the Japanese Fall Classic. Since 2003, PL teams have won 11 of the past 14 Japan Series titles. Nippon Ham accounted for the only losses in 2007, 2009 and 2012.

The Fighters got it right this time. Wrapping things up in Hiroshima was the cherry on top, as Nippon Ham entered the game just 2-11 on the road in the Japan Series since 2006.

“Definitely feel like we’re on top of the world right now,” Bass said. “Everyone put a lot of hard work in all season long, leading up to this. We faced a good team in the Carp. It wasn’t an easy series by any means. But we found a way to win, and it feels great.”

They won without calling on Shohei Otani again. Otani, who many thought would make another appearance in the series, either at the plate or on the mound, didn’t __play Saturday. He was on deck in the eighth, but was called back to the dugout after Nakata drew his bases-loaded walk.

The Fighters would’ve likely started Otani in Game 7 had they lost. The team would’ve faced an emotional scene Sunday against retiring Carp hero Hiroki Kuroda. The veteran pitcher had mostly held Nippon Ham in check before leaving Game 3 with an injury.

“We faced Kuroda after we took the consecutive losses (in Games 1 and 2), but I was thinking that our players would’ve gone in the game on pure spirit,” said Kuriyama. “In a way, we took advantage of Kuroda’s energy. I really respect him. Maybe he wanted to pitch one more game, but if we were to __play one more game, I’m not sure we could’ve won, so forgive me for that.

“I really don’t feel like we’ve actually done it. I need to sit back and reflect on it. But more than the Japan Series title, one of our goals was for the fans to have fun with each game.”

Laird’s grand slam was his third home run of the series. The Nippon Ham infielder, who had a tiebreaking two-run homer in the eighth inning that helped win Game 4, drove in seven runs during the Japan Series.

“I was just looking to have a good at-bat, just try to get a pitch I could hit,” Laird said of Saturday’s grand slam. “To get a big hit like that was unbelievable.”

He dedicated his performance to his grandfather.

“I’m just trying to do my best each and every day,” he said. “I’m playing for my grandfather right now, and I know he’s looking down proud. So thank you, grandpa.”

Laird gave his trademark sushi pose after the game and was joined during the award ceremony by Bass, Nakata and Haruki Nishikawa, who earned outstanding player honors. The Carp’s Brad Eldred was given the Fighting Spirit Award as the best player from the losing team.

Nippon Ham did all its damage in the eighth with two outs. Nishikawa, Takuya Nakashima and Hiromi Oka each singled to load the bases against Carp reliever Jay Jackson with the score knotted at 4-4.

Jackson walked Nakata to force in the tiebreaking run. Bass then hit for himself and delivered a single to center that tacked on another run.

“He walked the previous guy, so I was taking a strike and then looking for the fastball,” Bass said. “I haven’t swung in a long time, so I was just trying to start as early as I could. He left a fastball over the plate, and I just hit it.”

Bass pumped his fist wildly in celebration when he reached first base.

“I don’t know what came over me there in the eighth inning,” Bass said. “But it’s been fun. It’s a long season, and that’s why we work.”

Otani, who was 6-for-16 with four doubles during the series, was on deck during Nakata’s at-bat with Bass’ spot due up. But Bass said the plan was for him to hit for himself.

“The plan was, I was hitting 100 percent,” Bass said. “It was kind of like a fake out, I think.”

Laird then connected on a 135-kph slider to put the game away. His home run in Game 4 was also off Jackson, who was charged with the loss on Saturday.

The Carp, who won the Central League pennant for the first time since 1991, were trying to win their first Japan Series title since 1984.

Staff writer Kaz Nagatsuka contributed to this report.

Tribe blank Cubs, take 2-1 lead

Cleveland's Coco Crisp hits an RBI single against Chicago in the seventh inning of Game 3 of the World Series on Friday night at Wrigley Field. | AP

CHICAGO – Cody Allen, Andrew Miller and the Cleveland Indians’ nasty bullpen shut down a Wrigley Field party 71 years in the making.

Allen escaped a ninth-inning jam and the Indians set a major league record with their fifth shutout this postseason, holding off the Chicago Cubs 1-0 Friday night for a 2-1 lead in the World Series.

The crowd began forming beyond the ivy-covered walls in the early morning, all revved up for the first Series game at Wrigley since 1945.

Fans were roaring after a two-out error by first baseman Mike Napoli helped Chicago put runners on second and third in the ninth. Allen silenced the neighborhood ballpark, striking out co-NL Championship Series MVP Javier Baez to end it.

“We know we’re going to have our hands full to beat these guys, and tonight was a good example,” manager Terry Francona said. “I mean, that was as close a ballgame as you’re ever going to find, and we found a way to manage to win that game.”

Pinch hitter Coco Crisp stroked an RBI single in the seventh off Carl Edwards Jr. And that was all Cleveland needed.

Indians starter Josh Tomlin went 4⅔ innings with his dad Jerry watching from the stands in a wheelchair just two months after circulatory malformation left him paralyzed from the chest down. Miller, Bryan Shaw and Allen took over.

The Cubs have been blanked four times in the last eight games this postseason. Their first 1-0 loss in the World Series since Babe Ruth and the Boston Red Sox beat them in 1918 came on a night when the wind was blowing out.

“I actually told Miller we were going to win 1-0 tonight,” Napoli said. “Everything you saw on the TV was the wind was blowing out and there’s going to be a bunch of runs scored. . . . I turned to him and was like, ‘We’re going to win 1-0 tonight.’ “

Cleveland now has a chance to take a commanding 3-1 lead with ace Corey Kluber starting Game 4 on short rest Saturday and coming off a dominant performance in the opener. John Lackey pitches for Chicago.

Not since they lost Game 7 against Detroit in 1945 had the Cubs hosted a World Series game. The last time they won one? That was two days earlier when they beat the Tigers in 12 innings.

Decades of disappointment and curses gave way to a major league-leading 103 wins and hope for the Cubs that their first championship since 1908 is on the way.

But just as they did against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLCS, they will have to rally from a 2-1 deficit if they are finally going to win it all.

“We have seen good pitching,” manager Joe Maddon said. “The one component of our team that’s going to blossom over the next couple years is the offensive side. I think what you’re seeing on defense and arm strengths and baserunning abilities, that’s going to be pretty much static. But the part that’s going to keep getting better is what we’re doing at the plate. So this is a great experience for us.”

Miller got the final out for Tomlin in the fifth, stranding a runner at second. The ALCS MVP then struck out Dexter Fowler, Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo in the sixth.

Shaw worked the seventh and exited after Fowler singled with two outs in the eighth. Allen fanned Bryant to end the inning.

Rizzo opened the ninth with a single and took second on a one-out grounder. Jason Heyward followed with a grounder that Napoli misplayed, but at least the big guy kept the ball in front of him and kept the tying run from scoring.

Heyward stole second without a throw before Allen fanned Baez for this sixth save this postseason.

Two more wins and the Indians will claim their first championship since 1948. The Cubs still need three more for the first crown in 108 years.

“It’s just good chemistry over here and our guys kept their poise,” Crisp said. “Our pitching did a great job, their pitching did a great job over there and that’s what type of series this is going to be, it seems like.”

It was quite a scene in and around the ballpark, one generations of long-suffering Cubs fans had never witnessed.

They started flooding the streets surrounding Wrigley hours before the gates opened. By mid-afternoon, the blocks outside the 102-year-old ballpark were a sea of blue.

Fans carried “W” signs and took selfies near the famed marquee and statues of the late Harry Caray, Ernie Banks and Ron Santo, cherished figures in Cubs lore who would have loved nothing more than to be part of this.

There were red roses near the feet of all three. There were also four green apples on Caray’s statue — three on top of the base and one in his left hand — in a fitting tribute. After all, the famed broadcaster promised after the final game in 1991: “Sure as God made green apples, someday, the Chicago Cubs are going to be in the World Series — and maybe sooner than we think.”

But this just wasn’t Chicago’s night.

The Cubs’ Kyle Hendricks, dominant in the clinching NLCS victory over Los Angeles, exited with the bases loaded in the fifth after he hit Chicago-area product Jason Kipnis.

Justin Grimm then got Francisco Lindor to ground into 4-6-3 double __play and gave a huge pump of the right fist as the crowd roared.

Bulls can make noise in East if new pieces continue to mesh

rondo-rajon-102916-us-news-getty-ftr
Rajon Rondo (Getty Images)

This year’s version of the Bulls is vastly different than the ones of recent seasons, and through two games of this season that’s a good thing.

In a 118-101 over the Pacers on Saturday, six different Bulls scored in double figures with Doug McDermott leading the way with 23 on 9-of-14 shooting.

Rajon Rondo scored just six points but dished out 13 assists, while Jimmy Butler and Dwyane Wade scored 16 and 14 points, respectively. Even Robin Lopez imposed his will with 12 points and nice defensive play.

Nah pic.twitter.com/FABb2wnzdC

— Chicago Bulls (@chicagobulls) October 30, 2016

If the new pieces in the Windy City continue to mesh as well as they have through two games, Chicago can certainly make more noise in the Eastern Conference than anticipated before the season began.

Studs of the Night

Avery Bradley was pivotal in a 104-98 Celtics win over the Hornets. Bradley scored a team-high 31 points on 11-of-19 shooting with eight 3-point makes. One more 3-pointer and Bradley would have tied a Celtics single game record held by Antoine Walker.

The Bucks' Giannis Antetokoumpo was a fantasy monster again in a win over the Nets. The Greek Freak finished with 21 points, 11 rebounds and an impressive first-half highlight reel.

Check out some of Antetokounmpo's first half dunks! #OwnTheFuture pic.twitter.com/aw06WbqWfZ

— NBA (@NBA) October 30, 2016

Dud of the Night

Jeremy Lin didn’t do the Nets any favors in his team's 110-108 loss to Milwaukee. The historically all-or-nothing guard finished with 12 points on 4-of-16 shooting and made just one of seven attempts from 3-point range.

Highlight

Saturday's highlights are a thing of beauty for Knicks fans as Derrick Rose looks like his old, ankle-breaking self and Kristaps Porzingis is still a freak on the floor.

What's next

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Starters Nomura, Masui slated to square off in Game 6

Carp hurler Yusuke Nomura, seen interacting with fans on Sunday at Mazda Stadium, and his Hiroshima teammates face a 3-2 deficit in the best-of-seven Japan Series. | KYODO

HIROSHIMA – One win away from his team’s first Japan Series pennant in 10 years, Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters manager Hideki Kuriyama has opted not to start ace Shohei Otani in Saturday’s Game 6 at Mazda Stadium.

Instead, the game will see Game 2’s starters duke it out again with Central League wins leader Yusuke Nomura going for the Hiroshima Carp against Hirotoshi Masui, the former closer who went 6-1 with a 1.10 ERA in eight starts during the regular season.

“The only thing that matters is winning,” Nomura said. “I intend to go to the mound and take them in the best way. I need to take care of their leadoff hitters. If we can’t take it to Game 7, we can’t be No. 1 in Japan.”

If it does go to Game 7, things could be very emotional at Mazda Stadium, since that would set up 41-year-old Carp legend Hiroki Kuroda with a chance to clinch the Japan Series before his home fans in the final game of his career.

Kuroda appeared to be suffering no ill effects from the cramping and hamstring tightness that forced him to leave his start on Tuesday.

“I’ll prepare completely, so I can deliver the ultimate performance should I take the mound,” he said.

Unlike Sapporo Dome, where a third of the crowd was tinted red-clad Carp supporters, there will likely be few at Mazda Stadium wearing the Fighters’ blue and white — except in the visitors’ cheering section high above the left-field foul line.

“It’s pretty much just going to be Carp fans and that’s an amazingly big advantage,” Kuroda said.

Hiroshima went 49-20 at Mazda Stadium during the regular season and is 5-1 there in the postseason, but it is going to need all the help it can get, since less than a third of the teams trailing 3-2 in the best-of-seven series have come back to win, and only a few have overcome three straight defeats to win it all.

In Game 2, Nomura allowed an unearned run over six innings, while Masui surrendered four runs — two earned — in his 5-1/3 innings. Overall, Hiroshima’s starting pitchers have allowed just four runs over 30-1/3 innings compared to 11 runs in 24-2/3 innings and a 2.92 ERA for Nippon Ham’s first pitchers out of the chute.

The difference for the Fighters has been their bullpen — the most effective crew in Japan this season has allowed four runs in 19-1/3 innings in the Japan Series. Due to some awkward fielding behind them, Hiroshima’s bullpen has surrendered 10 runs in 14 innings, leading to three late game-winning rallies for Nippon Ham in Sapporo.

The Nippon Ham relief corps is also a little fresher, with just one pitcher, Anthony Bass, having worked in four of the five games, while two of Hiroshima’s key relievers, Takeru Imamura and Jay Jackson have pitched in all five.

Hawks’ Imamiya recovering from elbow surgery

FUKUOKA – Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks infielder Kenta Imamiya will be sidelined for three months after undergoing right-elbow surgery, the Pacific League club announced Friday.

The 25-year-old, who batted .245 with 10 home runs and 56 RBIs during the regular season, had loose fragments removed from the joint and is expected to be ready for the start of next season.

Imamiya has won the Golden Glove the past three seasons at shortstop, awarded to a player in each position in both the PL and the Central League.

Hillman to manage SK Wyverns

SEOUL – The SK Wyverns, one of 10 Korea Baseball Organization franchises, signed a two-year contract with former Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters manager Trey Hillman, Yonhap News Agency reported Thursday.

According to the report, the 53-year-old American becomes the first manager in the Korean professional baseball league with managerial experience in Nippon Professional Baseball and Major League Baseball.

Hillman served as manager of the Fighters from 2003 to 2007, leading the Pacific League club to its first Japan Series title in 44 years in 2006.

After leaving Japan, Hillman managed the Kansas City Royals for three seasons (2008-2010). He then had stints as a bench coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers and, most recently, for the Houston Astros for the past two seasons.

Ranking 25 best NBA stars to change teams in their primes, from Wilt to KD

Kevin Durant is 27 years old. Don't forget that. Here is a former NBA MVP who is widely considered one of the three best players in the world, hitting free agency and changing teams to go to a powerhouse. This does not happen very often.

Let's be more specific. It's happened eight other times in NBA history — well, minus the part where the in-his-prime super-duperstar is going to a 73-win team.

Sporting News' Adi Joseph examined the entire history of the NBA to pick the 25 best players to change teams in their primes. (That meant double-counting a few players, LeBron James and Wilt Chamberlain most prominent.) The debate is fascinating, though, because all these free agency signings and trades were absolutely monumentous — as big as Durant's, in some cases.

Special thanks for some contextual help to Basketball-Reference and ProHoopsHistory.net, which is run by SN contributor Curtis Harris. Also special thanks to the dozens of NBA history books that we've read over the years, and to SN's Sean Deveney, David Steele and Mike DeCourcy, who helped compile the list that you can read by sliding right now.