Red Right 88

In Cleveland, hope dies last

Liverpool hoping its FA Cup runneth over

Liverpool’s Andy Carroll is never going to be worth the £35 million the team paid for him, but for one day at least it sure felt like it.

Carroll’s header at the 87 minute mark helped put Liverpool into its first FA Cup final since 2006 as the Reds beat Everton at Wembley Stadium on Saturday.

“I’ve had some criticism but I kept on going and to get the winner here is a great feeling,” Carroll said in published reports. “I had a few chances and I probably should have scored earlier but I had to wait until the end. It’s the best feeling ever. We worked hard and getting a goal at the end there was great.

“I believed in myself every day and I got my chance here. I’ve started two games and scored two goals, so it’s great.”

Liverpool will face the winner of Sunday’s match between Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur in next month’s final.

(Photo by Reuters)

A Case for Morris Claiborne

Forget Trent Richardson, Justin Blackmon, Ryan Tannehill or Brandon Weeden.

If the Cleveland Browns want to win, they need to draft LSU cornerback Morris Claiborne.

How do we know this? Because while big-time offenses may sell tickets, they don’t win championships.

Cold Hard Football Facts found that 53 teams in pro football history scored more than 30 points a game in a single season (46 from the NFL, three from the AAFC and four from the AFL). Of those 53 teams, 39 did not win a championship.

Of those 53 teams, 31 of them have played in the past 50 years and only five won championships – the 1991 Redskins; 1994 49ers; 1998 Broncos; 1999 Rams and 2009 Saints.

So while the Browns definitely need to do something to help the offense, they don’t need to do it with the fourth pick in the draft – the offense can wait its turn.

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Tribe Contracts & Knowing Your Audience

The Cleveland Indians bought an extra year with Carlos Santana on Tuesday, reaching a deal with the catcher on a five-year contract worth $21 million.

The deal avoids any salary arbitration issues in the coming years and guarantees the Tribe will have at least one extra year of Santana’s services, if they choose, as the contract includes a club option for 2017, which would have been the first year that Santana would have been eligible for free agency.

If he plays all the way through the deal, Santana will be approaching 32 years of age when he hits free agency and the Indians will have a better understanding of his value and maybe they will have the money to resign him if they so choose (hey, stranger things have happened).

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It’s your turn now, Josh

Josh Tomlin takes the mound for the Indians tonight against Chicago looking to follow the lead of his fellow starting pitchers.

Despite losing two-of-three to Toronto over the weekend, Tribe starters Justin Masterson, Ubaldo Jimenez and Derek Lowe combined to give up just three earned runs in 22 innings of work (a tidy 1.23 ERA).

All three starters have gone at least seven innings, with Lowe hitting that mark Sunday on the way to giving up five hits and zero earned runs.

“When Lowe is on, it’s pretty hard for guys to lift the ball,” manager Manny Acta said in published reports. “And he did a fantastic job of getting ahead of hitters.”

Now it’s Tomlin’s turn to play “anything you can do I can do better.” The pitchers’ performance during the opening weekend is reminiscent of last year as the Indians rode solid starting pitching in building an early division lead.

After a rough opener last season, the Indians went 12-2 including an 11-game stretch where the starters threw 74 innings and gave up just 15 earned runs – a 1.82 ERA. They’ve also went an average of 6.2 innings in their starts.

If they can repeat that over the next couple of weeks it will help the team buy time until the offense (hopefully) decides to join the rest of the team in the regular season.

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The Song Remains the Same for Tribe

Things seemed oddly familiar on Saturday when the Cleveland Indians took on Toronto.

Strong solid pitching? Check.

Ubaldo Jimenez carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning and left the game after pitching seven innings of one-hit, two-run ball.

“One of the main keys was that I was throwing my breaking pitches for strikes,” Jimenez told The Beacon Journal. “I think as I went along, that is what worked. I was able to throw every one of my breaking pitches for strikes. Carlos Santana called a great game. Whatever he put down, I went with that.”

We never doubted Jimenez for a moment.

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A Clevelander talks Celtic football

In European soccer, there are several storied rivalries, but any discussion of the best rivalries has to include the one between Celtic FC and Rangers in the Scottish Premier League.

Founded in Glasgow’s East End in 1888, Celtic FC has been hugely successful within Scottish football. In 1967, Celtic became the first British team to win the European Cup, famously beating Inter Milan 2-1. They were runners-up to Feyenoord.

Celtic, which has won 42 league titles, 35 Scottish Cups and 14 League Cups, is well on its way to claiming another championship this season, holding an 18 point lead with six games remaining. (Update: Celtic clinched the league title on Saturday with a 6-0 win over Kilmarnock)

Rangers were founded in 1872 in Glasgow and the two clubs, separated by just four miles, have shared a great rivalry over the past 124 years.

Rangers are currently in administration however, and with debt that could top £134 million, the club is in danger of going bankrupt and possibly ending one of the best rivalries in soccer.

Interested in learning more about the rivalry, we turned to Sean McLaughlin, a lifelong Clevelander and Celtic fan, who was gracious enough to sit down for a virtual Q&A about the club.

Sean, who you can follow on Twitter @SeanMcL216, is a member of the Celtic Supporter Club that meets on match days at PJ McIntyre’s on Lorain Avenue in Kamm’s Corners. The club can be found on Twitter (@clevelandceltic) and on Facebook.

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Tribe so close to a perfect day

It was so close to being the perfect game for the Cleveland Indians in Thursday’s home opener against Toronto.

But in the end it all fell apart.

For eight innings the game played out exactly the way the Indians wanted it, showcasing the blueprint for how the Tribe will have to play to win this year.

Justin Masterson was sublime while working eight innings of two-hit, 10-strikeout baseball; his only mistake a solo homerun ball given up to Jose Bautista. Hey, no shame in that.

A three-run homer by Opening Day superstar Jack Hannahan (the third in his career) in the second inning was the key hit the Indians were looking for in building a four-run lead after two innings.

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Hopes and Fears for the Tribe in 2012

Spring training is finally over, the Cleveland Indians are back at Progressive Field to open the season against Toronto and take on, over the next 162 games, the supposedly unbeatable Detroit Tigers in the American League Central.

That means it is time to embrace our hopes and confront our fears about the upcoming 2012 season for the Tribe.

Head to The Cleveland Fan for all the details.

(Photo by The Plain Dealer)

Could be better, could be worse

The NFL and Nike unveiled the new uniforms for the 32 teams on Tuesday and the Browns uniforms are essentially unchanged.

It shouldn’t really come as any surprise as the Browns have one of the iconic uniforms in the league. Plus, as Paul Lukas points out at ESPN.com, the league isn’t going to just let Nike come and make any changes without a team saying it is OK. Lukas writes that, “Nike is just a vendor supplying a service to a client, and in this case the client is the NFL, whose team owners are some of America’s most conservative businessmen. They’re not the sort of people who want their teams to look, for lack of a better term, wacky.”

It definitely could have been much worse.

The one disappointment is the gloves the Browns will use. We like how Nike makes the gloves show an image when you put both sides together, but would it have killed the NFL to use the Brownie Elf?

Who would argue with that?

The most important thing to remember, of course, is that the uniforms themselves don’t matter, what’s important is the players inside the uniforms.

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LSU cornerback Morris Claiborne reportedly scored a four (out of 50) on his Wonderlic test at the NFL Combine. According to ESPN, his score is the lowest known result by a draft prospect since Iowa State running back Darren Davis reportedly received a 4 in 2000.

“I haven’t talked to anybody about it. All I know is that (Claiborne) was from a complicated defensive system and he flourished in it. I’ve never seen any sort of deficiency in him,” Claiborne’s agent, Bus Cook, told ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter. “I’m sitting here in shock at what you’re telling me. And if it is true, how does that get out? I thought the commissioner was going to put safeguards on this information and there would be severe discipline if it ever did get out. I don’t know if he scored a 4 or a 40. All I know is he’s a great kid, he’s smart, and I’ve been thoroughly impressed with everything about him.”

Our reaction is: who cares? We’re still cool with the thought of the Browns drafting Claiborne and teaming him with Joe Haden in the secondary. As long as he knows to hit the guys in black and gold extra hard, the rest is irrelevant.

More importantly, there is little evidence that the Wonderlic has any value in predicting how a player will perform in the NFL.

According to ESPN.com, a 2009 study by professors from Fresno State University, the University of Georgia and Towson State found no connection between Wonderlic scores and performance during the first three years of a player’s NFL career. The group studied 762 players from the 2002, 2003 and 2004 draft classes.

John W. Michel, an assistant professor at Towson University who co-authored the study, told The Washington Post: “We found in no cases was cognitive ability related to (football) performance. We did find a negative relationship for tight ends and defensive backs. For defensive backs, it was the most pronounced; basically, the lower you scored on the Wonderlic, the better you performed.”

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Finally, it turns out its not only the win totals that are dropping for the Washington Redskins – attendance is also on the decline.

The team announced they are cutting 4,000 seats from FedEx Field, bringing the seating capacity to 79,000. As recently at 2010 the stadium sat 91,000.

But it’s OK but the Redskins reportedly are a team that wants to “win now” – just without the win part and with fewer fans in attendance.

(Photo by The Associated Press)

Is There a Problem, Ubaldo?

Cleveland, we may have a problem.

Lost in all the hoo-ha about Tribe pitcher Ubaldo Jimenez hitting Colorado piss-ant Troy Tulowitzki with a pitch on Sunday is the fact that Jimenez doesn’t look any better than he did last season, when he went 4-4 with a 5.10 ERA with the Indians after being acquired in a trade with the Rockies for top pitching prospects Drew Pomeranz, Alex White and Joe Gardner.

For the rest, head over to The Cleveland Fan.

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