Sharks lose controversial Game 4 in Triple Overtime, tying series with Nashville
/The goal that could have been. (Photo by Mark Humphrey)
The goal that could have been. (Photo by Mark Humphrey)
For this week's edition of "The Battery," Brett Thomas, Alex Jensen and Scott Tully dive into the Warriors' and Sharks' playoff drama, local NFL and much more.
The future.
By Connor Buestad | connor@section925.com
On May 1st, Demetris Robertson shocked the college football world by signing with the California Golden Bears. Living deep in the heart of Georgia, the Savannah Christian High senior figured to be a lock to stay in the SEC and play for the Bulldogs. That, or head to South Bend and play for Notre Dame, or any of the other 28 schools that extended offers to the star wideout.
For a time, Robertson was committed to Alabama, but he never went as far as to sign with the Crimson Tide. Instead, Robertson opened up his recruitment and let the Golden Bears in. Now two months after national signing day, Robertson was the last 5-star recruit to sign with a college for the 2016 season.
At 6-feet, 175 pounds, Robertson is scary athletic. Multiple outlets have pegged him as the best wide receiver in the nation for his age. Moreover, his natural physicality leads some people to speculate he could also play some defense in college.
Wherever Sonny Dykes decides to line up Robertson for the Bears, there figures to be some added electricity in Strawberry Canyon come next fall.
βI am excited to take my talents to the University of California, Berkeley,β Robertson said at a press conference in Atlanta. βThe first reason is that the education was a big part of my decision. I wanted to keep that foundation. When I went there, it felt like home. Me and the coaching staff have a great relationship. Thatβs where I felt were the best of all things for me.β
BOOM!!!!!! Want to officially welcome @d_rob4 to the Cal Family. Told you Cal is here to stay! pic.twitter.com/R77OGQag7b
— Coach Jacob Peeler (@PeelsJP) May 1, 2016
VIDEO: Check out loads of exclusive film of new #Cal Bears commit Demetris Robertson @d_rob4 #GoBears https://t.co/tgzbvXcv9X
— Rivals.com (@Rivals) May 2, 2016
(photo by Ezra Shaw)
(photos by Christian Petersen)
By Connor Buestad | Connor@Section925.com
Technically speaking, Devin 'The Dream' Haney isn't allowed to fight in a professional boxing match until he is a legal adult. However, still only 17-years-old, Haney has managed to fight five times already (he's undefeated).
Raised in Oakland, Haney fought his first four fights in Mexico, where apparently, there's no age rules. On April 9th, Haney fought for the first time on U.S. soil under a special permit from the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
Haney's first fight in America was no slouch. Held at the MGM Grand as part of the Manny Pacquiao vs. Timothy Bradley undercard, Haney fought and beat 25-year-old Rafael Vazquez of Puerto Rico. Young Devin won 40-36 on all three scorecards, showing his raw speed and flash throughout.
To avoid distractions, Haney has since moved out of Oakland and into new digs in Las Vegas where he trains with the infamous Floyd Mayweather Sr.
Full video of the Haney-Vazquez bout is below. See for yourself how bright The Dream's future really is.
Captain Joe Pavelski celebrates his game-winning goal in Game 2 at the Shark Tank (photo by Tony Avelar)
By AP
The Nashville Predators frustrated Joe Pavelski and San Joseβs top line for much of the night, forcing turnovers, blocking shots and limiting chances.
That all changed with one big shift late in the game that put the Sharks in control of their second-round series.
Pavelski scored the tiebreaking goal with 2:40 left in regulation and Martin Jones stopped 37 shots to lead San Jose to a 3-2 victory over the Nashville Predators on Sunday night and a 2-0 series lead.
βI donβt think it was our lineβs best game, by any means,β Pavelski said. βOur last shift, you take a look, thereβs three minutes left, itβs tied, you hope for a chance.β
He got one and San Joseβs captain delivered just as he always seems to do in the biggest moments.
Joe Thornton started the sequence by sending a cross-ice pass to Matt Nieto, whose initial shot was stopped by Pekka Rinne. But Pavelski knocked the rebound in for his sixth goal of the playoffs to give the Sharks a lead they wouldnβt relinquish.
βThose guys, Iβm sure theyβd be the first to tell you, they didnβt spent a lot of time in the offensive zone tonight like weβre used to,β Sharks forward Logan Couture said. βBut, when we needed a big goal, those guys stepped up and they did it for us.β
Couture added a power-play goal and Thornton scored an empty-net goal that proved crucial when Ryan Johansen scored with 3.6 seconds left for the Predators.
Mattias Ekholm tied the game earlier in the third and Johansen scored late for Nashville, but the Predators head home from California in much worse shape than they did in the first round when they won the first two games in Anaheim on the way to taking the series in seven games. Pekka Rinne made 22 saves.
βI think we were better team out there tonight,β Ekholm said. βWe were just as good as they were tonight. They got a lucky bounce in the end and scored the game winner.β
Game 3 is Tuesday night. San Jose won the most road games in the NHL this season and all three in Los Angeles in the first round.
Rinne had helped keep Nashville in the game long enough to get the equalizer midway through the third. With San Jose leading 1-0, Rinne robbed Nick Spaling with a pad save on a 2-on-1 with San Jose short-handed.
A few minutes later, Ekholm got the equalizer when his shot from the high slot got past a screened Jones to make it 1-1.
The Sharks scored first following an odd penalty late in the second period. Nashville defenseman Roman Josi tried to rush off the ice after a bad line change to avoid a too many men penalty, but jumped into the Sharks bench because he couldnβt reach his own in time.
βI was trying to change, right when I was changing, the puck came up to our bench and came up to me,β Josi said. βI tried to get off, but it was too late.β
That move shocked the San Jose players but didnβt avoid the penalty and the Sharks made Nashville pay for the mistake. Early on the ensuing power play, Brent Burns fired a point shot on net that Rinne stopped with his pads. But Couture jumped on the rebound and knocked it in with 1:24 left for his third goal of the series.
Burns and the rest of the Sharks had struggled to get shots on net before that with Nashville blocking five shots by Burns before he finally got one to Rinne off a deflection by Pavelski.
Even when they did manage to get shots through the defense, Rinne was there to stop them. His best sequence came early in the second period when Joonas Donskoi slid a pass to Couture, whose shot from the slot was stopped by Rinne. Donskoi got the rebound and appeared to have an empty net to shoot at but Rinne slid over to make another save.
The power-play goal by Couture was San Joseβs third in its first five chances with the man advantage this series as special teams have played a major role in the Sharksβ success the past two games
San Jose even killed a penalty for too many men in the ice shortly before Coutureβs goal as Nashville fell to 2-for-31 on the power play this postseason.
(Photo by Jonathan Daniel)
By Charlie Wheary
Seeing as how Thursday was a national holiday, The NFL Draft, I figured Iβd give you a quick snapshot of what transpired. Starting with my man Jared out of UC Berkeleyβ¦
You stole my heart last August, Jared and youβll be stealing it for years to come in the NFC West. His only alleged knock was small hands, small hands?! This kid has all the intangibles, first and foremost humility. Heβs got a bazooka for an arm, Einstein intellect, and he can run. Iβm still crying the Niners didnβt somehow trade up.
Carson Wentz is a wild card. I like my quarterbacks facing NFL prototypes and youβre not going to find that in Fargo, North Dakota. Having said that, he may be able to make the transition, but Iβm just not sold. Whoβs ever even been to North Dakota? Hasnβt Canada annexed them already? You sort of look left at Mount Rushmore and say, good luck up there guys. Down here we call them buffalo, not bison.
Joey Bosa at three blew my mind! Did you see him at the combine? I nicknamed him Joey Slowsa. Terrible motor, played around an entire NFL team, beat my Oregon Ducks to a pulp, so Iβm not biased at all. Still, a complete stretch at 3. Good luck in all your future endeavors, San Diego.
Thank you Dallas! You glorious morons, for bucking the one rule of the NFL draft: You never, ever, ever take a running back in the first round. Everyone had Ezekiel Elliot on their board, and I get it, letβs collectively assemble and make dumb decisions. Itβs like a Donald Trump party! Sorry, I had to go there. Loved the βBoys giving in and grabbing a running back, it made my day.
Best player and future Hall of Famer: Jalen Ramsey. He gets gifted to JAX at no. 5. Far and away the most polished and best player of this draft. The kid flies to the ball and makes plays. Take it to the bank, youβll be seeing him in Honolulu for years to come. Love this pick, heβs my favorite behind Goff.
Ronnie Stanley at no. 6 surprised me. Obviously because of the Tunsil fiasco. I think this a safety pick for the Ravens. Iβm not sure how much Tunsil smoking something out of a gas mask hurt his chances, but Iβm not sold on Stanley. Slow off the ball and no motivation scares me.
BOOOOYA San Francisco!!! The Niners never draft a single one of my favorites; finally they changed course. Deforest Buckner is going to absolutely terrorize Goff, Carson Palmer, and Russell Wilson for years. Duck fans loved this guy from the get-go, and for good reason. Trent Baalke, you done well good sir.
Like Jack Conklin a lot at no. 8 to Tennessee. I preferred him over Stanley and Tunsil. The most pro-ready and experienced OT. And no headaches whatsoever.
Leaonard Floyd is probably the guy Iβd most want to share a foxhole with. 6β² 6β³, 244 lbs, and runs a 4.65 forty. Pure athlete and should fit in perfectly on the banks of Lake Michigan.
Not sure about the G-Men taking Eli Apple. I guess Apple in the Big Apple makes sense? Big stretch, when he was a late first rounder at best. My sister Deidre may strike me down, but are you kidding me Giants?!! Bad pick.
Now for a quality pick, that New York should have made, Tampa swoops in and grabs Vernon Hargreaves III. Gamer, pure gamer. You get a 4.4 guy to wreak havoc on Cam Newton, Drew Bress, and Matt Ryan. Big need and Tampa filled it.
Not gonna lie, I have absolutely no idea about Sheldon Rankins going to New Orleans at 14. Uhh he went to Louisville. Thatβs a city in Kentucky and I hear they have good BBQ. Moving along.
Steal of the draft. Laremy Tunsil was the #1 pick of the NFL draft one month ago. This pick reminds me of Randy Moss years ago falling to the Vikings because he inhaled something of questionable influence. Thatβs not a character concern in my eyes. Heβs gonna be a stud in the league.
Karl Joseph is tiny. He runs a 4.55 40, which lineman can run. And he played in an abysmal Big-12. Gotta love those Raiders! Have fun with that one, wait arenβt you guys moving to Vegas? Bad pick.
Corey Coleman to Cleveland is a wild card in my eyes. Heβs a burner but heβs also only 5β 11β³, which makes me nervous. If Iβm drafting receiver this early, I want speed and height. But itβs Cleveland, they never really pay attention to logic.
Love Taylor Decker to Detroit. Heβs gigantic, huge wingspan, and now a little comfort for Matt Stafford. I think he could kill a grizzly bear with his bare hands. Great pick.
Another bizarre pick goes to Atlanta at 17. Keanu Neal? With all the corners and safeties still on the board youβre gonna draft a Keanu? I canβt stop saying, βUtahβ¦gimme 2!β
Colts as they always do, identify a need, adjust accordingly, and draft correctly. Ryan Kelly is the best center out there and the Colts pulled the trigger. Theyβre like the Anti-Raiders, they just do it right, year in year out.
Shaq Lawson, besides having one heck of a name, is up there on my list of quality picks. Heβll fit in perfectly in Buffalo, not just because Rex Ryanβs son plays for Clemson where he scouted him for a year.
Another Buckeye? Unreal the pro talent Ohio State had this last year. Iβm not sold on Darron Lee though, but apparently the New York Jets are. Little undersized and slow off the ball. But what do I know, they killed Oregon in the natty a year ago.
Will Fuller is an interesting pick at 21 for Houston. I like his hands and speed but not sure how you grab him with Doctson and Treadwell still on the board. Should complement Deandre Hopkins, but itβs a stretch for me.
Which brings us to my favorite receiver of the draft. Josh Doctson crushed it at TCU consistently week in and week out. Best route runner, big hands, perfect guy for Washington. Desean may have a little company in the capital.
Laquon Treadwell to Minnesota was a given. Teddy Bridgewater needs a little help on the edge and this is the guy to do it. Iβm a little nervous about the knee injury against Auburn a year ago, but he seems good to go.
William Jackson III seems ready to go for Cincinatti, I just didnβt see much of him playing at Houston. Another guy Iβve heard nothing but good things about, but know nothing.
The Pittsburgh Steelers grabbing Artie Burns at 25 was a steal. Besides football, he ran track, the hurdles mind you. Pure speed and complete athlete. The knock is heβs got raw talent, but you can figure that out pretty quick in the Steel City. You canβt teach speed.
The Broncos trading up for Paxton Lynch made sense, but again, I donβt dig quarterbacks from small schools. Memphis did play some quality opponents, but itβs not the Pac-12 over SEC. Good BBQ, mediocre competition.
Not to sure how Myles Jack is still on the board especially with the Packers drafting his teammate Kenny Clark at 27. I think this is another safe, no worries pick. I hate that style of drafting, but the Packers always know what theyβre doing.
Iβm still shaking my head at the Niners trading up to take a guard who they could have nabbed in the third round. Remember all those kind words from earlier Trent Baalke, off the table!!! Moronic trade and just a friendly reminder how much we despise the Ninerβs front office.
I love Nkemdiche more than you know, and it is going to be painful having to gameplan his attack for my Niners. Absolute stud, hall of fame game. Arizona just got a blank check from the rest of the NFC to book the conference.
Vernon Butler sounds like he should be a waiter at a steakhouse. Iβm not sure about his game, being a Louisiana Tech guy. But do the Panthers really need any more help?That team is vengeful after that Super Bowl loss.
Seattle trades down and grabs the better guard that San Francisco passed on. Germain Ifedi is 74 feet tall and 19,000 pounds of pure anger. Just google a picture of him, it looks like heβd punt you 200 yards if he wanted to, nice work on passing on him SF. SMH, SMH, SMH, Baalke!!!
So thatβs your first round sports fans. More fun tomorrow!
Roll Tide.
A Bay Area native, Charlie Wheary owns and operates the blog "The Rolling Tide." Wheary is best known for playing wideout for Kenny Dorsey in high school, circa 2000.
In this edition of "The Battery," St. Mary's basketball announcer Alex Jensen joins host Brett Thomas to discuss the Warriors' response to injury, the Sharks' triumph over L.A., and all the questions surrounding Thursday's NFL Draft.
NBA aficionado Evan Raskin chats with Connor about the NBA Playoffs here in the middle of Round 1. The two discuss Steph Curry's knee injury, the Eastern Conference, OKC, San Antonio, and more.
Former CAL infielder Josh Satin joins host Brett Thomas inside the Section925 Podcenter to talk about Satin's professional baseball career in New York and now in the Padres' organization. The Los Angeles native also reflects on Kobe Bryant's 20-year career and ponders Jared Goff in a Rams jersey.
For this edition of the Seciton925 Podcast, Connor heads deep into the heart of Warriors country to discuss NBA basketball with the students of Del Rey Elementary. The group of 5th graders hold a roundtable discussion on topics ranging from bandwagon Dubs fans, Steph's ankles, Draymond Green's defense, and the Warriors' potential move to San Francisco.
In this edition of "The Battery," Brett Thomas hosts a four-man roundtable with Jensen, Tully and Buestad. The group discusses the Sharks and Warriors and their first round playoff tests, not to mention some of Tully's bad beats on the midweek college football gambling circuit.
Sophomore catcher Brett Cumberland is leading the pac in round trippers. (photo by Phillip Downey/DailyCal.org)
By Connor Buestad | Connor@Section925.com
Sophomore Brett Cumberland had yet another big night at the plate for the Golden Bears on Tuesday, going 2-5 on the evening including a double and a home run. The power hitting catcher is leading the PAC-12 in homers with 11th long balls on the year.
With the win over rival Stanford, CAL improves to 22-11 overall and 9-6 in conference. The Bears will welcome in the University of Arizona for a three game set at Evans Diamond starting this Friday night. The Wildcats are 22-14 overall and 7-8 in conference play.
Unfortunately for the Bears, ace pitcher Daulton Jefferies (6-0, 42 innings, 47 strikeouts) is currently out of commission with a strained sub-scapular muscle in his throwing arm. The time-table for his return is roughly another two weeks. In the meantime, Ryan Mason will take the ball on Friday nights, followed by Jeff Bain and Matt Ladrech.
.@bcumboslice speaks on his performance that led the team to a 5-2 win over Stanford! #GoBears pic.twitter.com/4IHsubRIEW
— #LetsGo (@Cal_Baseball) April 20, 2016
THE FIELD OF 64: Newest projections OUT with a new national seed, 3 new hosts: https://t.co/Xj9cd3rigd @NCAACWS pic.twitter.com/LcIAmRMHip
— D1Baseball.com (@d1baseball) April 20, 2016
Longtime CAL beat writer Ryan Gorcey (www.BearTerritory.net) joins Connor to talk all things Golden Bears. Gorcey tells us who he thinks is the frontrunner to be the new starting QB in Berkeley, explains new developments in the CAL hoops saga, and updates us on the baseball team along their road to Omaha.
βI thought he looked like he has all spring. Heβs a very electric, explosive guy. Very hard to tackle. Plays with a very low center of gravity. Very tough and physical. Strong, especially for a kid who should be in high school right now. We expect him to make a lot of plays, and he made them. He gives us another dimension. β
Don't sleep on @CalFootball's Vic Enwere this #Pac12FB season ππ
— Pac-12 Network (@Pac12Network) April 16, 2016
Watch live: https://t.co/YfMNDWLu5w https://t.co/q988K1s4bw
Blue scores once again on a 32-yard pass from Kline to Stovall! #GoBearshttps://t.co/8ehJS1yqJB
— Cal Football (@CalFootball) April 16, 2016
Post #SpringScrimmage interview with @Melstovall11 https://t.co/fi5V4vGojc #GoBears #CalFamilyhttps://t.co/HPtGk6sxZr
— Cal Football (@CalFootball) April 17, 2016
Post #SpringScrimmage interview with @zachklineqb https://t.co/oFAdBIWoD2 #GoBears #CalFamilyhttps://t.co/XI5sSgZpF1
— Cal Football (@CalFootball) April 17, 2016
#TBT to senior night in Haas Pavilion! Congrats on history, @SteveKerr. #CalFamily #Warriors pic.twitter.com/DOOE0fmOkF
— Cal Men's Basketball (@CalMensBBall) April 14, 2016
#Cal CF @aknappyboii was 4-6 with 2 RBI in today's win, and he shares his thoughts in #KnappTime #GoBears #LetsGo pic.twitter.com/h5SlAZiUjP
— #LetsGo (@Cal_Baseball) April 17, 2016
(How about the web gem from the ball boy?!)
(photos by Thearon W. Henderson, Nhat V. Meyer and Jose Carlos Fajardo)
Double techs called on Patrick Beverley and Steph Curry https://t.co/07SdQLs0eY
— The Cauldron (ICYMI) (@CauldronICYMI) April 16, 2016
βThereβs gonna be some physicality, some back and forth. Hopefully the league hasnβt gone too far in the other direction where thatβs not a part of Playoff basketball. Thatβs fun. I like that back and forth. β
Former Warriors general manager and head coach Garry St. Jean comes inside the Section925 Podcenter to talk basketball with Jon Wheeler and host Tripper Ortman. St. Jean shares a wide range of stories from his life in basketball including his time working with Don Nelson, coaching Bobby Hurley, and much more...
For this edition of "The Battery," Brett Thomas comes to us solo on the day the Warriors try to complete an historic 73-9 season. Born and raised in the Bay, Thomas delves into how great the current Warriors truly are. BT also takes the liberty to discuss the great career of Kobe Bryant and breaks down what he sees on the horizon for Jordan Spieth after his second place finish at Augusta.