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South Carolina's Shane Beamer rips 'lazy narrative' concerning Spencer Rattler amid fall in draft: 'Bullcrap'

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South Carolina's Shane Beamer rips 'lazy narrative' concerning Spencer Rattler amid fall in draft: 'Bullcrap'

Six quarterbacks were selected in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft. But, former South Carolina Gamecocks signal caller Spencer Rattler had to wait until the fifth round to learn his NFL fate.

The New Orleans Saints used the 150th overall pick on Rattler on Saturday. But Shane Beamer, Rattler’s former coach, took issue with how far the quarterback had fallen in the draft. He suggested that unfavorable scouting reports and pre-draft narratives contributed to 149 players being drafted ahead of Rattler.

“Such a tired , lazy narrative. And bullcrap,” Beamer wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Sep 9, 2023; Columbia, South Carolina, USA; South Carolina Gamecocks head coach Shane Beamer congratulates South Carolina Gamecocks quarterback Spencer Rattler (7) after a touchdown against the Furman Paladins during the second quarter at Williams-Brice Stadium. (Jeff Blake-USA TODAY Sports)

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Beamer proceeded to highlight Rattler’s leadership skills and described the 23-year-old as a “great player.”

“None of the NFL teams that called me said that….And any team that thinks that clearly hasn’t done their research He dealt w adversity at OU in a class way , came to SC , was a great player and was voted by his TEAMMATES as a captain …TWO YEARS IN A ROW He’s a great person , great player and some team is getting a future starter today.”

JETS SELECT ALABAMA DEFENSIVE BACK AS 2024 NFL DRAFT’S ‘MR. IRRELEVANT’

Some analysts and mock drafts projected Rattler would land in the second or third round.

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Beamer later congratulated Rattler for landing in New Orleans.

“Thanks for the amazing moments we’ve shared together since 2019 at @GamecockFB & Oklahoma…. You’re a great teammate , player & person ! You got a great one @Saints -Your best [football] is in front of you @SpencerRattler,” Beamer wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Spencer Rattler throws against Georgia

Spencer Rattler #7 of the South Carolina Gamecocks passes during the first half against the Georgia Bulldogs at Sanford Stadium on September 16, 2023 in Athens, Georgia.  (Todd Kirkland/Getty Images)

Rattler suggested he was content to be selected at any point in the draft.

“At the end of the day it’s a blessing to get picked wherever,” Rattler said on Saturday. “I knew we were waiting around a day or two but I had faith that I would be picked today. … I was very happy the Saints came and picked me, what a great feeling.”

Spencer Rattler plays against Notre Dame

Spencer Rattler #7 of the South Carolina Gamecocks looks to pass against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish during the second half of the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl at TIAA Bank Field on December 30, 2022 in Jacksonville, Florida.  (James Gilbert/Getty Images)

NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported that Rattler’s appearance on a reality show may have negatively impacted his draft stock. In 2019, Rattler was a high football player and was featured on Netflix’s docuseries “QB1: Beyond the Lights.”

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“This is kind of weird to say, honestly,” Rapoport said. “Rattler did a reality show in high school called QB1: Beyond the Lights. It did not make him look great, and it is unbelievable how many different teams mentioned to me the image of him in that show and that they can’t get it out of their heads, which I think would be a public service announcement to all 17-year-olds. But it is fascinating as teams weigh whether or not to draft him.”

Rattler started his college football career at Oklahoma, before transferring to South Carolina. He finished his college career with 10,807 passing yards and 77 touchdowns.

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Novak Djokovic wears bicycle helmet to Italian Open training session after getting hit in the head with bottle

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Novak Djokovic wears bicycle helmet to Italian Open training session after getting hit in the head with bottle

Novak Djokovic wasn’t taking any chances this weekend. 

The Serbian tennis star showed up to the Foro Italico in Rome on Saturday sporting a bicycle helmet as he signed autographs for fans with a smile. 

Serbia’s Novak Djokovic takes part in a training session during the Men’s ATP Rome Open tennis tournament at Foro Italico in Rome on May 11, 2024. (TIZIANA FABI/AFP via Getty Images)

“Today I came prepared,” he said in a post on social media. 

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The decision to wear protective gear followed a scary scene at the Italian Open just a day earlier. 

After a 6-3, 6-1 win over French qualifier Corentin Moutet, Djokovic was exiting the clay court when he stopped to sign autographs for fans. That’s when an aluminum water bottle fell from the crowd above, hitting Djokovic directly on the top of his head. 

He collapsed to the ground where he appeared to hold his head for several minutes before eventually exiting the court. 

Novak Djokovic reacts during a match

Novak Djokovic of Serbia reacts during the Men’s Singles second round match against Corentin Moutet of France during Day Five of the Internazionali BNL D’Italia 2024 at Foro Italico on May 10, 2024, in Rome, Italy. (Giampiero Sposito/Getty Images)

NOVAK DJOKOVIC INJURED AFTER BOTTLE FALLS ON HIS HEAD WHILE SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS

“While leaving center court after his match, Novak Djokovic was hit on the head by a water bottle while signing autographs. He received medical attention and has already left the Foro Italico to return to his hotel. His condition is not a cause for concern,” organizers said in a statement.

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Djokovic released a statement of his own on X calling the incident an “accident.” 

“Thank you for the messages of concern. This was an accident and I am fine resting at the hotel with an ice pack. See you all on Sunday.”

Novak Djokovic arrives at a training session

Serbia’s Novak Djokovic takes part in a training session during the Men’s ATP Rome Open tennis tournament at Foro Italico in Rome on May 11, 2024. (TIZIANA FABI/AFP via Getty Images)

Tournament organizers later shared a video revealing that a fan leaning over to greet Djokovic was responsible for the incident. Video showed the water bottle falling out of a backpack he was wearing as he leaned over the stands. 

Despite it all, Djokovic, 36, appeared to be in good spirits as he arrived at the sports facility in Rome on Saturday. He won his first match on Friday after taking nearly a month off. 

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The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Letters to Sports: Lakers need to clean house after playoff exit?

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Letters to Sports: Lakers need to clean house after playoff exit?

Let me get this straight. The Lakers, coached by Darvin Ham, are eliminated in the first round by the defending NBA champs and Ham is a bum. The Clippers, led by Tyronn Lue, are ousted in the first round by a mediocre Mavericks team and Lue is a coaching genius. Sounds to me like LeBron, the GFOAT (Greatest Finger Pointer of All Time) is looking for an enabler, not a coach. How many more coaches and teammates does James have to throw under the bus until the cowardly lion, Rob Pelinka, says enough is enough?

Mark S. Roth
Playa Vista

::

I’ve been around for 58-plus years and have never seen an organization disrespect the wrong people every year and stupidly make the same mistakes over and over (except for the one I work for).

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The coach coaches and does not play, yet when you have a player, regardless of who it is, undermining the coach it’s very hard to get everyone on the same page. To go through coaches like toilet paper is a bleeping embarrassment!

Clean house Lakers and sell soon. I’m so sorry Dr. Buss that your dream has turned into this nightmare.

Kelly Mark Ritchie
Calabasas

::

You filled your letters column last week with clueless expressions and a laughable minuscule “Sports Report” poll blaming LeBron James for the Lakers’ first-round exit.

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In fact, James is the biggest reason the Lakers were competitive, and had they been competently coached, they could have beaten the Nuggets and would now be advancing through the playoffs.

Ham’s panicked lineup experimentation and foolish substitutions were hurdles that the players were unable to overcome despite their laudable efforts. The Lakers were right to fire Ham.

As to the fans who want James gone, please root for another team and leave the Lakers to those of us who understand the game!

Ray McKown
Torrance

::

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Why even waste time and print space covering the Lakers’ coaching search? There is no search. LeBron will pick the next coach. Just like he will decide who the Lakers sign in free agency or trade for, who they will draft (undoubtedly his son), and probably how much beer will cost at the arena next season. He calls the shots because team management is too afraid to not let him for fear that he might be offended and “take his talents elsewhere.”

Bob Fanelli
Whittier

::

So Darvin Ham has lost his job. From reading websites like the L.A. Times, ESPN and the Athletic, it would appear the players no longer believed in Ham. At that point it’s not about right or wrong, fair or unfair. Once a coach loses the locker room, they’re done. It’s over. You can’t put toothpaste back in the tube. Ham isn’t a bad coach, but he was no longer the right coach.

Michael Forrest
Porter Ranch

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::

If, as Bill Plaschke says, the Lakers should consider hiring Becky Hammon as their next coach, it will take an enlightened owner like Jeanie Buss to take such a bold step as hiring the first female head coach in the NBA. With history as our guide, the decision will still come down to what general manager LeBron James wants.

Ron Yukelson
San Luis Obispo

::

The Lakers need to follow the Chargers’ playbook when hiring a coach: a coach with enough cachet to command attention.

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Andrew Rubin
Los Angeles

::

Hey, did you hear about the new theme song that Jeanie Buss and Rob Pelinka released? “Who you gonna call — Coach Busters?”

Gary Engstrom
Seal Beach

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Aldridge: Timberwolves are using throwback defense to stump the Nuggets

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Aldridge: Timberwolves are using throwback defense to stump the Nuggets

One suspects Michael Malone isn’t surprised by what he’s seeing.

The Denver Nuggets coach was taught first-hand about championship-level defense by his late father, Brendan, a lifer in the game and a longtime assistant coach for the Detroit Pistons. He was on Chuck Daly’s staff for the 1989 and 1990 championships. Most relevantly, Brendan Malone was the defensive mind behind “The Jordan Rules,” the Pistons’ blueprint for how to keep Michael Jordan from dominating playoff games, the way Denver’s Nikola Jokić does now.

The Rules were pretty simple, actually.

Detroit’s Hall of Fame guard Joe Dumars, one of the best on-ball defenders of that era, would do everything he could to keep Jordan from getting to his favorite spots on the floor, contesting when Jordan rose for a jumper. If and when Jordan beat Dumars or other Detroit defenders off the dribble, they would funnel Jordan into the paint, where any number of long-limbed and ornery Pistons defenders were waiting: Bill Laimbeer, Rick Mahorn, John Salley, Dennis Rodman, James Edwards. They would converge on Jordan like a pack of jackals, forcing him to shoot over their length. If Jordan tried to elevate, one or more of them would send him hurtling to the ground.

Over the course of a six- or seven-game series, the overt physicality would wear Jordan down. If Jordan didn’t get offensive help from elsewhere, the frustration between him and his Bulls teammates would only grow. It took Chicago years of playoff futility before it finally vanquished Detroit in 1991.

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Accordingly, Michael Malone knows full-well the psychological underpinnings of what the Minnesota Timberwolves have done to his defending NBA champion Nuggets in the first two games of their Western Conference semifinals series.

Minnesota hasn’t just won the important moments in the first two games in Denver to take a 2-0 series lead back to Minnesota, where a raucous crowd at Target Center awaits Friday and Sunday nights. The Wolves have taken the Nuggets’ heart as well, the way the Pistons — and, ultimately, Jordan’s Bulls — used defense to demoralize and rattle opponents.

“You can’t lose the game and the fight. You have to win one of them,” Denver’s Reggie Jackson said after Game 2.

There were the long, seemingly limitless arms of Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, jumping Denver’s Jamal Murray at midcourt in Game 2, attacking him with relentless energy and movement — while not fouling him. They forced a 24-second violation early in the second quarter Monday night.

There was Rudy Gobert’s defensive paint presence in Game 1, before Gobert missed Game 2 to be with his girlfriend for the birth of their first child and before he won his fourth NBA Defensive Player of the Year award. In Game 2, without Gobert, the Wolves didn’t miss a beat, with Karl-Anthony Towns and Naz Reid, neither of whom was known as a shutdown defender before this season, each putting a physical body on Jokić all game.

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For someone who has lamented the surgical, years-long campaign by the NBA to remove all but the most rudimentary elements of defense from the game, culminating in not-watchable All-Star Games in recent years, watching the Wolves harass and disrupt the Nuggets has been delightful. It is like putting a VHS tape into a Panasonic PV-V4522, watching NBC’s vaunted Thursday night lineup, circa “A Different World”/”Cheers”/”L.A. Law,” and washing down dinner with a Bartles and Jaymes cooler.

Mama, I’m home.

You can still play defense in the NBA, if you’re allowed to do so.

The league’s de-emphasis on calling every little bit of contact, as its officials did the first half of the season, hasn’t harmed the game one bit in the postseason. In fact, the playoffs have been spectacular, with plenty of offensive wizardry on display, starting with Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards. But there’s also been Jalen Brunson, Luka Dončić, Kyrie Irving, Donovan Mitchell, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Tyrese Maxey, Paolo Banchero, Tyrese Haliburton … do I need to go on?

Minnesota has dominated, and won, its first six playoff games with its ferocious defense, just as Oklahoma City and Boston have. Minnesota defenders aren’t pushing and shoving or hacking; they’re moving their feet, beating the Nuggets to their favored spots on the floor and not giving up those spots easily. The Wolves aren’t doing anything dirty. They’re just making manifesting misery for their opponent.

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This was Denver’s second possession of Game 2.

“He threw it away,” said TNT’s all-world play-by-play man, Kevin Harlan, of Jokić. But Jokić didn’t throw it away — Kyle Anderson punched the ball out of Jokić’s hands with his off hand, just as the Joker started his post-up move.

This Denver possession was three minutes into the game.

Murray is limited with his calf injury. But he, like all the Nuggets, feast off opponents who double-team Jokić. That’s Denver’s whole raison d’être: Jokić’s brilliance with the ball, slicing up defenses with his 360-degree view of what’s happening on the floor. This time, Towns inhaled Murray’s drive, with guard Mike Conley swiping at the ball down low.

David Adelman, who’s been Michael Malone’s right-hand man as his top assistant coach, has surely seen this before.

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His father, Hall of Fame coach Rick Adelman, had to try to traverse the Pistons and the Bulls with his great Portland Trail Blazers teams, led by Hall of Famer Clyde Drexler, in the 1990 and 1992 NBA Finals, respectively. Portland got both the best of Detroit’s defense and the Bulls’ venerated “Dobermans” — the moniker for Chicago’s defense, conjured up by Bulls assistant coach Johnny Bach.

The Dobermans, initially, featured Jordan, Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant. When Grant left for Orlando in free agency after Chicago’s first three-peat, Chicago reached for Rodman — who, by then, had worn out his welcome in San Antonio. Rodman, in a totally different way from Grant, lifted the Bulls’ defense even higher; Chicago led the league in defensive rating in his first season (1995-96), and the Bulls were top five in each of his three seasons there, all of which ended in championships.

Jordan was, especially early in his career, amazing in his defensive anticipation. He was Defensive Player of the Year in 1988, using his long arms like a scythe, cutting the ball away from opposing ballhandlers.

Pippen, though, made Chicago impenetrable.

His length, smarts, physicality and ability to jump passing lanes made him one of the best all-time defenders. Chicago used him everywhere, against anyone, from Magic Johnson to Charles Barkley.

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The Wolves have played like those Pistons and Bulls teams. They’ve made it hard for their opponents to do what they want. They haven’t given an inch. The game is at its absolute best when a simple question is answered: Who can, with their talent and will and coaching and toughness, overcome the physical objections of their opponent?

Minnesota’s defense has been sophisticated in its planning and well-executed in real time. Like other teams in the Jokić Era, the Wolves often aren’t guarding him with their center.

In Game 1, they dropped Gobert into a roaming position off Denver’s power forward — usually Aaron Gordon — and let Gobert stray to protect the front of the rim. That led to Gobert, in what may have been the key play in Minnesota’s win Saturday, being free to tip and steal a Jokić lob to Gordon out of the dunker spot with three minutes left and the Wolves clinging to a five-point lead. The Wolves got out in transition, and Edwards got fouled, making two from the free-throw line. What could have been a three-point game was instead a seven-point game.

Minnesota’s had the top-ranked defense in the league all season. It allowed the fewest points in the league (106.5 points per game) and was No. 1 in opponents’ effective field goal percentage (51.5), which accounts for the extra value of 3-pointers.

Different sites have different ways to determine stats like defensive rating. No matter the source, the Wolves are top-ranked in that category.

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StatMuse has Minnesota No. 1 in defensive rating at 109.0, an edge of more than two full points over second-place Orlando (111.3). It’s the biggest gap between the top- and second-ranked defense in that category as StatMuse determines it, in eight years, since the 2015-16 San Antonio Spurs held a 2.4-point edge on the second-place Atlanta Hawks (101.4). Minnesota had the best defensive rating this season at 108.4, according to NBA.com’s calculations, 2.2 points ahead of the Boston Celtics. Basketball-Reference.com has Minnesota at the top in both its unadjusted and adjusted (for schedule) defensive ratings metrics.

You can’t implement “The Jordan Rules” now; the NBA has legislated most of the physicality that was at the heart of them out of the game. That’s OK. Everything has to evolve. But the relentless defense, in spirit and body, that was at the heart of Detroit’s championship teams — and then Chicago’s — is still applicable. Minnesota’s showing that it can coexist with the incredible offensive talents in today’s game.

It’s a fight. Metaphorically speaking, of course.


Required Reading

(Photo: Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)

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