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Michigan coach Sherrone Moore's texts with cheating scandal ringleader to be released; how does he feel?

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Michigan coach Sherrone Moore's texts with cheating scandal ringleader to be released; how does he feel?

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Michigan football head coach Sherrone Moore is facing allegations of NCAA violations in his first season at the head of the program. 

Moore was just promoted to head coach in January after Jim Harbaugh left to lead the Los Angeles Chargers, taking over a program that had just been put on three years’ probation along with a fine and recruiting limits for a wide-ranging sign-stealing scandal from last season. 

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Moore, who was an assistant on the staff since 2018, was accused of deleting text messages with former Michigan football staffer Connor Stalions. Stalions resigned amid accusations of being the primary actor in the sign-stealing that violated NCAA bylaws. The coach addressed these allegations to reporters on Tuesday for the first time. 

“I’ll just say this: I look forward to them being released,” Moore said of his text messages with Stallions. 

Moore said he has and will continue to cooperate with the NCAA in its investigation, declining further comment when asked for more details.

Michigan defensive coordinator Jesse Minter, right, watches against East Carolina with analytics assistant Connor Stalions in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Sept. 2, 2023. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

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Earlier this month, the NCAA sent a notice of allegations that claimed Moore deleted 52 messages with Stalions in October after reports of the investigation into the allegations came out.

Stalions, according to multiple reports, purchased tickets to games around the country while directing a network of individuals to video-record the sidelines of future Michigan opponents on game days. 

Stalions reportedly purchased tickets to more than 30 games at 11 different Big Ten schools over the previous three seasons. 

COWBOYS’ MICAH PARSONS DECLARES HE WILL ‘TAKE A BREAK’ FROM FOOTBALL AFTER 2027 TO PREP FOR 2028 OLYMPICS

The scandal resulted in Harbaugh being suspended for the final three games of the 2023 regular season by the Big Ten, in which time Moore served as the interim head coach. Moore also served as interim head coach for the first three games of that season due to a separate violation of NCAA bylaws by the program. 

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JJ McCarthy and Jim Harbaugh

J.J. McCarthy  and head coach Jim Harbaugh of the Michigan Wolverines celebrate their victory against the Washington Huskies during the CFP National Championship game at NRG Stadium on Jan. 8, 2024, in Houston, Texas. (Jamie Schwaberow/Getty Images)

Harbaugh left the program to return to the NFL after the 2023 team finished a perfect 15-0 with a national championship victory over Washington. Harbaugh has since been accused of not cooperating because he denied the NCAA’s request to view relevant messages and phone records from his personal cellphone. Harbaugh could also face a “show-cause” restriction if he ever tries to return to college football.

Moore has been left to deal with the ongoing investigation at Michigan while he tries to prepare the defending national champions for its first season in an expanded Big 10 conference that will include its former title game opponent, Washington, and a handful of other former PAC-12 schools. 

Meanwhile, Stalions will be featured in a new installment of the Netflix docuseries “Untold,” titled “Sign Stealer,” the company announced in July

It’s scheduled to be released on Aug. 27, just four days before Michigan’s first game of the season.

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With Olympic gold secured, could Team USA players potentially team up in the NBA?

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With Olympic gold secured, could Team USA players potentially team up in the NBA?

SOMEWHERE OVER THE ATLANTIC OCEAN — Now for the question you know you’ve been dying to ask for three weeks about the Team USA men’s basketball “Avengers”: With their gold-medal mission accomplished, which players on this star-studded squad are going to join forces on an NBA team down the road?

With the national team’s rich history of such things, it’s only natural to wonder. The Miami Heat-les trio of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh that teamed up in 2010 had USAB roots, as they grew close while playing together in the 2006 FIBA World Cup in Japan and Beijing Olympics in 2008.

The Golden State Warriors dynasty had a similar story, with Kevin Durant, Andre Iguodala and Stephen Curry bonding in Turkey at the FIBA World Cup in 2010 then finding a way to come together six years later (Iguodala and Durant were also together on the 2012 Olympic team in London). Just last week, longtime NBA veteran and ESPN commentator Kendrick Perkins claimed that James Harden, while playing for Team USA at the London Olympics, was strongly encouraged by his superstar teammates to leave his sixth-man role with the Oklahoma City Thunder that summer and pursue a more worthy role elsewhere (he would be the centerpiece of the Houston Rockets by that October).

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But the tricky part about this phenomenon, and the thing that makes it so hard to handicap whether we’ll see a super team spawned out of the Paris Games, is that you’d need telepathic powers to figure out if any of these All-Stars are truly thinking about playing together down the road. This sort of process isn’t typically linear, with other developments needing to unfold on each player’s respective NBA squad before those Team USA connections come into play. What’s more, the freedom that comes with free agency, more often than not, plays a part.

Yet when it comes to the relationships that appear to have grown these past four weeks — from Las Vegas to Abu Dhabi, London, Lille and the City of Light — there are a few worth highlighting and monitoring.

But the thing to remember, and the factor that always plays a pivotal part when stars decide to align, is that it all starts with the competitive status of their current team. To that end, we begin with two legends in advanced age who have eight NBA championships between them but whose teams were home by the end of April.

LeBron and Steph

This one gets top billing because of what went down at the February trade deadline, when we learned Curry’s Warriors made an unsuccessful bid to the Lakers for LeBron. That sort of breadcrumb, one that was so fascinating to consider after all the years they’d spent as rivals during all those Cavs-Warriors NBA Finals face-offs, tells you two things that still remain relevant.

  1. Curry had given a thumbs-up to the idea, which reflects a level of comfort between the two even before they worked so beautifully together en route to Olympic gold.
  2. The Warriors clearly had intel suggesting this was a pitch worth making. At the time, James was approaching his (possible) free agency, and there seemed to be enough questions as to whether he’d want to stay in Laker Land that it led to a conversation between Golden State owner Joe Lacob and the Lakers’ Jeanie Buss.

James signaled he’d rather stay put, and the whole idea died on the vine as a result. But he would go on to sign a two-year, $101.4 million deal, one that includes a player option in the second year and a no-trade clause. Point being, the same Warriors-Lakers dynamics could be there again this upcoming season — especially if the Lakers are struggling in the kind of way that makes James rethink his strategy in these final few years. As a relevant sidenote, Team USA/Warriors coach Steve Kerr seemed to click with James all the way through as well.

There’s one massive problem with that plan, though: Bronny James now plays for the Lakers. It’s hard to imagine LeBron wanting to go anywhere now that his son is wearing the purple and gold. So, could the 36-year-old Curry become so fed up with the diminished help around him in Warriors World that he heads for the exits and somehow pairs up with the 39-year-old James and fellow Team USA star, 31-year-old Anthony Davis?

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It seems unlikely, what with Curry’s stated goal of playing his entire career with the Warriors. But he’s a competitor of the highest order, one who just saw his team say goodbye this summer to his beloved backcourt mate, Klay Thompson, this summer while failing in its pursuits of Paul George and Lauri Markkanen. With that backdrop, it’s worth a reminder that he made this ominous comment to Yahoo! Sports’ Vincent Goodwill while at Team USA’s Las Vegas training camp in early July.

“It’s always been my goal, and I’m saying that sitting in this chair right now,” Curry said about retiring with the Warriors. “But like you said, life, and especially life in the NBA, it is a wild environment, and things change quickly.”

In terms of Curry’s contract, he has two seasons left ($55.8 million and $59.6 million) and is eligible to add one more year on an extension this summer. Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. made it clear what the organization wants, telling our Anthony Slater that Curry can have “whatever he wants” and that he is “pretty confident he will be a Warrior for life.”

Again, it’s nearly impossible to see how these kinds of superstar pairings might get manifested in advance. There’s the Father Time factor to consider as well, as there’s no way of knowing how long James or Curry can stay elite enough to make these sorts of power plays worthwhile.

But this much we know: Curry and James played beautifully together in the Olympics, with James (who was named MVP) consistent throughout and Curry becoming an American hoops hero by saving Team USA in those last two spectacular games.

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The fact that they clearly enjoyed each other’s company — constantly goofing around at practices and celebrating with such joy together after the biggest of wins — is of equal importance.

When it was over, after Curry put France to bed with that 3-point flurry and said “Nuit, Nuit” before closing the door, James decided to post the picture that perfectly captured their shared spirit.

KD and Steph

The news conference after the Team USA gold-medal game — with Kerr, Curry and Kevin Durant all raving about one another on the same podium — was the kind of thing I never could have imagined five years ago. It happened from start to finish, with Durant and Curry sharing a mutual admiration society news conference at the start of the Olympics as well.

When Durant left Golden State for Brooklyn in free agency, there was a fair amount of shared baggage from their three years spent together. You don’t have to be Dr. Phil to figure that out, as Durant came very close to winning three consecutive championships — within a torn Achilles tendon, in fact — yet chose to head for the exits. But feelings evolve over time, and Curry and Durant spent the entire Team USA journey sharing the kind of deep reverence that was there during the best of times in their Warriors days.

On Curry’s side, it was notable the first-time Olympian would routinely reference Durant’s three gold medals (now four) and standing as the best Team USA player of all time. Durant, in turn, spoke glowingly about who Curry was, and remains, both on and off the floor.

Yet while the Warriors are clearly on the prowl for another big-time star, and with a known commodity like Durant certainly fitting that bill, Phoenix Suns owner Mat Ishbia emphatically insisted the 35-year-old wasn’t going anywhere in late June in response to speculation of a possible Durant departure.

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But how might Ishbia feel if they fall short again? Or Durant, fellow Team USA member Devin Booker or Bradley Beal, for that matter? Only time will tell, but the Suns’ first-round loss to Minnesota in last season’s playoffs wasn’t the sort of start any of them envisioned in their first season together.

Booker and … Kerr?

When the gold-medal game news conference was nearing an end, after they all fielded several questions about Curry, Durant and James, Kerr grabbed the microphone and announced that he had one more thing on his mind.

“Devin Booker is an incredible basketball player,” said Kerr, who chose to start Booker for every Olympic game en route to him averaging 11.7 points (team-best 56.5 percent from 3) and 3.3 assists. “Nobody asked about him, (but) he was our unsung MVP. I just wanted to say that.”

Curry, in turn, posted Kerr’s quote on his Instagram story and added the caption, “Damn straight!!!” while tagging Booker’s account.

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For someone like Kerr, who is typically bound by the NBA’s tampering rules that tend to suppress an opposing coach’s public enthusiasm for another team’s stars, the Team USA environment allows him to speak his mind in the kind of way that could aid a recruiting effort one day. That’s not to say it was his intent, as Kerr seemed deeply genuine about Booker’s contributions. Even still, it’s a pretty convenient way to show a star player like Booker the kind of love he’ll never forget.

What’s more, the truth about the Suns is that rival teams are monitoring the desires of Durant and Booker. The Rockets, to cite one example I reported in late June, are among those teams that have Booker on their wish list.

But again, Ishbia has pushed back hard on this premise that these Suns will fail and he’ll be forced to blow it up amid all that pressure from the unforgiving luxury tax. They’re more invested in Booker than anyone else, with his contract running four more seasons for a combined total of approximately $220 million, and the notion of him being available anytime soon seems very unlikely. To hear Booker tell it at Team USA’s Vegas training camp in early July, he’s every bit as invested in this Suns group as Ishbia.

“I mean, I’ve never seen an owner do something like that before,” Booker said when I asked him about Ishbia’s tweet about Durant. “It just shows you what type of guy Mat is. He’s all in (on) the group that we have. We believe in the group that we have and the talent that we have.

“It’s not easy to win (a title), so I think having that hurt together and that experience together in the playoffs is going to help us moving forward. …Boston went through it (before winning it all in June). Obviously the (Celtics’) addition of Jrue (Holiday last summer) helped out a lot. But yeah, moving forward, you know, you live and you learn, and I think experience is the best teacher.”

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The rest

Truth be told, we could workshop these fascinating scenarios all day.

Anthony Edwards and Durant became fast friends who were dynamic together in Team USA’s second unit, so does that mean the 23-year-old Minnesota Timberwolves star might find a way to persuade his favorite player to force a trade to his (frigid) part of the country? Don’t count on it — from either side. After Minnesota’s run to the Western Conference finals last season, and with Edwards’ star on a meteoric rise, it’s so-far-so-good for him with his current core.

Joel Embiid was desperately in need of help a few months ago, but the Philadelphia 76ers are all set for their next push after landing George in free agency and re-signing Tyrese Maxey.

Could Heat big man Bam Adebayo — whose running mate, Jimmy Butler, can be a free agent next summer — find the help he so desperately needs among his Team USA pals? Perhaps, but there are no visible dots to connect just yet.

The list, fanciful though it might be, goes on.

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(Top photo of Stephen Curry and LeBron James: Aris Messinis / AFP via Getty Images)

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River Ryan to have Tommy John surgery, becoming third Dodger to have procedure this year

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River Ryan to have Tommy John surgery, becoming third Dodger to have procedure this year

The Dodgers announced on Tuesday that River Ryan will undergo Tommy John surgery, a procedure that will likely sideline the promising young right-hander for the entire 2025 season.

Ryan, 25, had a 1.33 ERA and 18 strikeouts in 20⅓ innings of four major league starts this season and, according to manager Dave Roberts, was “making a case” to be part of the team’s pitching plans down the stretch with his high-velocity fastball and swing-and-miss slider/curveball combination.

But Ryan was pulled in the fifth inning of Saturday’s 4-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in Dodger Stadium with an elbow injury that was later diagnosed as ulnar collateral ligament strain.

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Ryan’s injury is the latest blow to a short-handed pitching staff that continued a particularly alarming pattern of injuries among young Dodgers pitchers. According to Baseball Prospectus, the Dodgers have lost more time and value from the pitchers and position players who have gone on the injured list this season than any team in baseball.

The Dodgers were already without homegrown arms Dustin May and Tony Gonsolin, who had Tommy John surgery last year, and Emmet Sheehan and Kyle Hurt, who underwent the elbow ligament replacement procedure this season.

Right-hander Bobby Miller, 25, also missed two months of this season because of a shoulder injury, and right-hander Yoshinobu Yamamoto, 25, has been sidelined since June 16 because of a rotator-cuff strain.

In addition, veteran right-hander Walker Buehler is working his way back from his second Tommy John surgery, two-way star Shohei Ohtani is recovering from a second major elbow surgery that will prevent him from pitching this season, and veteran left-hander Clayton Kershaw was out for the first four months of 2024 while he recovered from shoulder surgery.

Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes said the organization has launched a thorough review to determine if there is a common thread to the causes of such injuries and if there are better ways to prevent them in the future.

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“We’re trying to figure out, is there an acute thing, is there an overarching issue to get at?” Gomes said. “Right now, I wish I had more answers, but we continue to dig. I think we’re seeing it across the industry, and we feel it more acutely when it happens to us, but I don’t think that this is all that unique.

“Are there any external studies from Major League Baseball? Should we do one? How do we best get at it, because it’s not a simple problem to solve, right? There are so many factors … like, what if we acquire somebody who gets hurt? What happened before then? Were they in our system the whole time? We just don’t know.”

Ryan was critical of MLB’s pitch clock while discussing his injury, saying it “definitely makes you speed up a lot,” and it “starts to take a toll” with only 15 seconds between throws. Gomes said that could be one factor in the proliferation of injuries.

“You could start this in the COVID year [2020], maybe that’s the kickoff,” Gomes said. “Maybe injuries are exactly the same [as before COVID], I don’t know. But there are so many things that have helped contribute to the problem.

“Some of them are out of our control, some of them are within, so it’s trying to figure out what it is. Is it COVID? Is it the lockout and shortened spring training [in 2022]? Is it the pitch clock? There are just a lot of factors. And for every argument, you could have a counter, and that’s why it’s such a challenging problem.”

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Hayes inspired a USWNT turnaround – but expectations remain as high as ever

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Hayes inspired a USWNT turnaround – but expectations remain as high as ever

PARIS — The USWNT was on message all Olympics. Joy and belief. Trust and confidence. A fresh start under Emma Hayes.

After winning gold on Saturday at Parc des Princes in Paris, while many of the questions the players faced were about the game and the emotions and the medals around their necks, there were still a few that lingered on the past — especially last summer and the turnaround of this team over the past year from their worst World Cup finish to the top of the podium again.

The thing about this team, though, no matter what they accomplish, there’s always an eye to the future.

“We know there’s so much more in us, there’s so much more potential in the way we can play, the way we can break down opponents,” USWNT captain Lindsey Horan said in the final press conference, itching to don her goggles and start spraying champagne in the locker room with the rest of the squad to celebrate their 1-0 win over Brazil in the gold medal match.

“My gosh, the way the team is now and seeing the potential for 2027, it’s very exciting.”

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USWNT captain Lindsey Horan says there is much more to come from this side (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

As much as the players have left the narrative around 2023 behind, it will shadow them for a while yet — at least until 2027 begins and a result comes there. That same old pressure is back, the expectations the same as ever: win, win, and win some more.

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What we learned from Emma Hayes’ victorious USWNT at the Paris Olympics

Under head coach Hayes, though, it feels like there is a new pressure valve that wasn’t there before. There are karaoke machines, nail technicians, coffees, her being forced into watching more TikToks than she ever expected (or wanted). She’s met them where they are, as players and as people.

“We’ve been having so much fun,” forward Trinity Rodman said on Saturday after the match. “But again, we still push each other hard. There’s a misconception of, ‘Oh, they laugh and dance all the time at training. They’re not serious.’ We just proved to everyone that we are and that we take this very seriously.”

Maybe this Olympic gold proves they can have it all: the performances on the field, the goofiness off it, and joy threading through every moment, even as they had to find new depths in the summer heat of France against some of the best teams in the world.

If this team meshed so well in such a short period of time, if Hayes got so much right in her first 10 games as manager that it resulted in a gold medal, then maybe it’s more than fair to be thinking about three years down the line.

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USWNT on goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher: ‘We’re making her a little more mushy gushy’

But first, there’s so much that needs to happen between now and the next World Cup, which takes place in Brazil. Though FIFA has confirmed a schedule of international windows and competitions, from 2025 to 2029, a lot is still unknown — and there’s nothing firmed up about when World Cup qualifiers would be in 2026.

In the immediate future, everyone goes back home. Players will get a break, but there’s the rest of the NWSL season to play. Hayes noted at one press conference she still hasn’t even packed up her stuff at Chelsea’s facilities due to the speed at which she departed her previous role. There’s at least a little time here for a breather.

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Hayes will now have a little bit of downtime (Carl Recine/Getty Images)

U.S. Soccer has the next four games booked, including three home matches in a row during the October window (back-to-back friendlies against Iceland in Austin and Nashville, then another against Argentina in Louisville).

Then they’ll head back to Wembley, this time with Hayes as their manager. The last time the USWNT played in England’s national stadium in London, it was a narrow loss to the Lionesses that came in the wake of the release of Sally Yates’ report into systemic abuse across the NWSL. This November, there should be no additional context needed, just a head-to-head that should be fodder for bragging rights for a while, maybe even into 2027.

Most importantly, Hayes and her technical staff, the players, and the federation have some space to intentionally start building — not just for 2027, but across the youth teams, their relationship with the NWSL, USL Super League and other international pro leagues, and more.

Hayes knows that expectations are as high as ever. And her days of being “a heart surgeon in the middle of emergency surgery” are finally over. She said Saturday that she believed she joined the USWNT at the right moment.

“Trust me, I know what this jersey means,” she said Saturday. “But I’m not going to let it strangle me, far from it.”

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Back when Hayes first officially started her role in May, she worked hard to reframe the conversation from results to process, from the team’s worst-ever FIFA world ranking (they dipped to fifth) to what they could achieve.

“Are the USA at their best possible position today?” she asked at a lengthy sitdown with reporters upon her arrival in the States. “No, but it’s about where we finish when we need to that matters to me. So I want to focus on that instead of where we are in the world rankings, where we are in comparison to Spain.”

The only gap she was interested in then was the one she saw between their play on the field and what they could be at their full powers. On Saturday, not even a full three months into her tenure, she was asked what she makes of that gap now.

Hayes smiled. “We are so excited at our potential,” she answered.

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“We are so looking forward to the things we can do together. Of course, tonight we have a gold medal, but it doesn’t mean it ends there. We want so much more for ourselves because we’re competitors. But we’re just at the beginning. About 75 days in, baby.”

And with that, it was time for them to join the party surely already raging in the locker room. Goggles were waiting. The pressure might always still be there, but it could wait for another couple of days. After all, there’s 1,046 to go until the first kick in Brazil.

(Top photo: Carl Recine/Getty Images)

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