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Home Blog Page 8628

NHL News: Flames name Craig Conroy as general manager


The Calgary Flames named Craig Conroy the team’s general manager on Tuesday.

Conroy, 51, had served as the team’s assistant general manager. The former Flames captain also spent parts of nine seasons with the club during his playing career.

“We conducted an extensive search process and today we are thrilled to introduce Craig Conroy as our general manager,” said Don Maloney, the Flames’ president of hockey operations.

“It is rewarding for the organization to learn that the most qualified individual for the position has been preparing in house. Craig brings a fresh approach; high energy; he is a tremendous communicator; decisive; a worker; and he is relationship driven. His passion for the Flames and the community are unmatched. Craig is ready for the challenge to lead our team to the Stanley Cup.”

Conroy replaces Brad Treliving, who mutually parted ways with the Flames last month.

“Thank you to the Flames ownership group for the confidence and trust they have demonstrated by providing me with this opportunity. Also, to (Calgary Sports and Entertainment president and CEO) John Bean and Don Maloney for the very detailed process that has brought us to this moment,” Conroy said.

“Over the course of the past 12 years, I’ve put in the time in every aspect of our hockey operations to prepare myself for today. I’m ready to accept this challenge and promise our fans that our team will do the work required to make them proud on the journey to deliver a championship.”

The Flames finished 38-27-17 in 2022-23, two points out of the wild card in the Western Conference.

Also on Tuesday, the Flames announced former Toronto Maple Leafs general manager Dave Nonis joined the team as senior vice president of hockey operations and assistant GM.

“I’m excited to join the management group in Calgary and assist in building a Stanley Cup winning team here,” Nonis said.

–Field Level Media

PGA News: Michael Block: Text from Jordan biggest surprise of new-found fame

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Michael Block had a funny feeling that his life was never going to be the same. He was right.

Block’s accomplishments at the PGA Championship over the weekend commanded the attention of the sporting world, including one of the greatest living athletes in any sport.

“Getting a text from Michael Jordan today, that’s — I’m a big Jordan guy my whole life,” Block said Tuesday. “I was a little kid in Iowa saving 100 bucks for a pair of Jordans back in the day. Pretty darn cool, to say the least.”

Block, the head professional at Arroyo Trabuco Golf Club in Mission Viejo, Calif., was one of 20 PGA pros to qualify for last week’s major and tied for 15th at Oak Hill Country Club in Pittsford, N.Y. That automatically got him into next year’s PGA Championship, no qualification necessary.

He made a hole-in-one at his fourth-to-last hole of the tournament and hours later received a sponsor’s exemption into this week’s PGA Tour stop. The “Block Party” will continue at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

Speaking ahead of the tournament Tuesday, Block said Jordan wanted to tell him “what he saw is why he loves the game of golf so much.”

The 46-year-old is used to hobnobbing with famous athletes, though. In Southern California he plays with the likes of Patrick Cantlay, the fourth-ranked player in the world. Block told reporters Tuesday he has a friendship with Albert Pujols, who visited a course Block plays at in Orange County, Calif., while he played for the Los Angeles Angels. Block’s friend paired him with Pujols.

“So played with Albert, and I shot like 64 or something like that, and he’s like, we need to play,” Block said. “We need to keep playing some golf. He goes, ‘You want to play tomorrow?’ I’m like, ‘Yeah.’ So we’ve become good buds.”

Now he’s invited to Pujols’ wedding. Just another day in the life of the man whose golf game and charming attitude won over the crowd at Oak Hill and the everyday golfers watching on TV.

“It’s just weird now where I come up through a gate and the guys at the gate are screaming ‘Block Party’ when I’m going through, and the guy making me an omelet gave me knuckles and said I did awesome last week,” Block said. “I mean, that’s the part where it’s a little beyond me at this point. So it’s cool, but I’m trying to enjoy it.”

Block has received sponsor exemptions into PGA Tour events before — he will also take part in the RBC Canadian Open next month in Toronto — but this week is his first time visiting Colonial, the longest-standing non-major venue on tour.

“I absolutely love it. The people have been amazing,” Block said. “The invitation was fantastic, obviously from Charles Schwab and everyone here. I’ve only been here on property for 20 hours in town, and everyone has been absolutely endearing.

“The course fits my eye. A lot of cuts off the tee. You’ve got to be pretty straight. And the greens are perfect. I’ve got a nice little ryegrass around the green. To be honest, it fits me a lot better than it did last week.”

Being a longtime teaching professional in the Southern California area, Block had earned something of a “legend” status, according to California native and world No. 7 Max Homa.

“It’s a major. Everyone is as prepared as you could possibly be, and to go and beat basically everybody, all but 14 people, I mean, that’s awesome,” said Homa, who had played a professional tournament with Block some years back. “It shows you how much game he’s got. It shows you his mental fortitude.

“Again, as much as all that was impressive, just the joy he had while playing and all of that was — I think that’s what stuck out the most.”

–Field Level Media

PGA News: Max Homa hopes Colonial’s $20M renovation doesn’t wreck ‘cool vibe’

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Max Homa trusts the architects who are in charge of the Colonial Country Club’s $20 million renovation, but he has one message for them.

Don’t mess too much with a great thing.

The Colonial is the longest-standing non-major venue on the PGA Tour, but a long-planned major renovation will begin shortly after the final putt drops at the Charles Schwab Challenge on Sunday.

Homa is one of eight top-20 players who made the trek from last week’s PGA Championship in Rochester, N.Y. to Fort Worth, Texas because of his fondness for Colonial. Dubbed “Hogan’s Alley” for Ben Hogan, who won four of the first seven editions of the event, Colonial is steeped in golf history.

“Mr. Hogan has his clubs here. He made this place. Them two are synonymous, and that’s special,” Homa said Tuesday. “Obviously we come to a lot of pretty amazing places out here, and we’re lucky to play some tremendous golf courses, but you add some of the history to it, it makes it even more special.

“It’s always a cool vibe here. The city turns out really nicely for it. It has some meaning to the area, which is cool.”

Homa said he doesn’t know much about the renovation plans, but that it’s “scary” to see a course with a great layout undergo significant changes and that “it gets you a little anxious for it.”

“When you come to a golf course you like and respect how it’s laid out, that adds to, I think, a lot of people’s love for this place,” he said. “It’s nice to see that it stands the test of time, and it’s done such a good job of being a mainstay on this tour.

“I’m sure they’ll make some great decisions. But I do think that they don’t need to do much at all to this place. If you want to re-grass it, that’s one thing, but the holes themselves are awesome.”

Homa said that he’s also looking forward to a more laid-back week after grinding for four days just to tie for 55th at Oak Hill. He played the week after a T43 at the Masters, but Homa admitted he didn’t want to be at Hilton Head and used the extra time after missing the cut to work on his game.

That work led to a T8 in his only other start between the year’s first two majors. Homa, who has a pair of victories this season, enters the week ranked seventh in the world and is one of the pre-tournament favorites.

“Last week I learned so much about what I need to improve on, not just physically, but mentally,” he said. “I think this (week) provides a great opportunity to work on those things.

“Everything’s under such a microscope at a major for yourself that you see where you got exposed, and you can put that to good use immediately, having this event for me right after that.”

–Field Level Media

LPGA News: Nelly Korda (back) pulls out of Mizuho Americas Open

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Citing back pain, LPGA star Nelly Korda announced that she will miss next week’s inaugural Mizuho Americas Open in Jersey City, N.J.

“Never fun or easy news to share but I have made the decision to withdraw from next week’s tournament at the advice of my medical team to address pain in my back,” Korda wrote on social media Monday night. “We are working on a treatment plan to ensure I’m back to 100 percent soon for the remainder of the exciting season ahead. Thank you everyone for the support.”

Korda, 24, is an eight-time winner on the LPGA Tour and former world No. 1. She and South Korea’s Jin Young Ko have traded the No. 1 ranking multiple times this season, with Ko currently leading Korda by .01 average ranking points.

In her most recent start, Korda missed the cut at the Cognizant Founders Cup. She placed third at the first major of the season, the Chevron Championship. Her next scheduled start is at the Meijer LPGA Classic June 15-18, one week before the next major, the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship.

Korda dealt with a blood clot in her arm early in the 2022 season and missed four months of action while recovering.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Reports: Ohio State hires former Dolphins HC Joe Philbin as analyst


Joe Philbin, the former head coach of the Miami Dolphins and Super Bowl-winning offensive coordinator of the Green Bay Packers, has joined Ohio State’s staff as an analyst, ESPN and On3 reported Tuesday.

Philbin, 61, is returning to the college ranks for the first time since 2002, when he worked at Iowa. He was most recently the Dallas Cowboys’ offensive line coach for the past three seasons.

Philbin was the offensive coordinator for the Packers from 2007-11 and helped them win their only Super Bowl of the Aaron Rodgers era in 2010. He coached Miami 2012-15 and was fired four games into his fourth season with a 24-28 record.

After two seasons on the Indianapolis Colts’ offensive staff, Philbin returned to the Packers’ OC position in 2018. He spent four games as their interim head coach following Mike McCarthy’s firing, going 2-2 in those games.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Cancer treatment complete, Saints TE Foster Moreau begins OTAs


New Orleans Saints tight end Foster Moreau participated in the first day of organized team activities on Tuesday, roughly two months after being diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Moreau told reporters that his treatment was complete and expressed gratitude that the Saints and general manager Mickey Loomis remained interested in signing him as a free agent after his diagnosis.

“I’m just sitting there with (Saints team doctor) Dr. John Amoss, and he just starts to describe to me the different symptoms that I’m showing,” Moreau said. “Obviously, that primary symptom of having an enlarged lymph node in my left clavicle … I went home, cried. It was a really tough moment.

“It was so much stress that it kind of built up through the entire free-agency process, and then all that melted away into a completely different mountain that now had to be climbed. But we got over it and watched the film and decided to get better.”

Moreau had a rare and slow-moving form of Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and treatment included receiving a drip infusion “for about six to eight hours, (for) one day, probably a month and a half ago.” He then received medication via shots.

“The day after the diagnosis, the day after the physical, my agent got a call from Mickey Loomis and he said, ‘We’re still interested in him. We still value him as a player and even more as a person,'” Moreau said.

“That was so comforting for me, knowing that regardless of where I went through this process, there was a real good chance I wind up here.”

It was also comforting because Moreau is a New Orleans native who played his college ball at LSU. A fourth-round pick of the Raiders in 2019, Moreau also got to follow his former Las Vegas teammate Derek Carr to New Orleans.

“I don’t want to undersell what that man just walked through,” Carr said of Moreau. “It’s pretty scary news and a pretty scary thing to go through and for him to be out there already, I’m not going to get into his business but it’s pretty miraculous. I know he’s thankful.”

Moreau did not want too much attention for what he went through, implying most cancer patients have it much rougher than he did.

“My quality of life did not change,” Moreau said. “I’ll continue to fight this as long as I need to and as many times as I need to fight this and then go back into remission I will, and that’ll be a life sentence for me. But in terms of the struggle that I had to face, was more mental than anything.

“The real heroes are the kids in the children’s hospitals that are really fighting with real chemotherapy, real radiation. Those are the strong ones.”

In four seasons with the Raiders, Moreau played in 61 games (34 starts) and caught 91 passes for 1,107 yards and 12 touchdowns. He had career highs of 33 receptions and 420 yards in 2022, with two touchdowns.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Broncos sign former Packers NT Tyler Lancaster


The Denver Broncos added depth to their defensive line by signing former Green Bay Packers nose tackle Tyler Lancaster on Tuesday.

Terms of the deal were not revealed.

Lancaster signed nearly one year after inking a free-agent contract with the Las Vegas Raiders last May. After being hurt last summer, Lancaster was initially placed on injured reserve before being cut via undisclosed injury settlement with the team. He ultimately missed the entire 2022 season.

Lancaster, 28, played the previous four seasons in Green Bay, posting 110 tackles in 59 career games (21 starts) for the Packers, who signed him as an undrafted free agent in 2018 out of Northwestern.

The Broncos ranked seventh in the NFL in total defense in 2022, allowing 320 total yards per game, while finishing last in the AFC West at 5-12.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Giants sign C John Michael Schmitz, finish inking draft class


The New York Giants finished signing their entire 2023 draft class, announcing Tuesday that they signed center John Michael Schmitz to his rookie contract.

Schmitz, selected with the team’s second-round pick (No. 57 overall), inked the customary four-year contract based on his draft slot. His contract will run through the 2026 season, as will all of New York’s class except cornerback Deonte Banks, whose first-round deal will include the mandated fifth-year team option.

Schmitz, 24, is the expected favorite this season to start in the middle of the Giants’ oft-challenged offensive line with both Jon Feliciano (San Francisco 49ers) and Nick Gates (Washington Commanders) having signed elsewhere this offseason.

The former Minnesota Golden Gophers stalwart started 35 games in college, including the final 31 of his career, and was named to the first-team All-American and All-Big Ten teams in 2022.

Last season, the Giants went 9-7-1 and made their first postseason trip since 2016, ranking fourth in the NFL in rushing by averaging 148.2 yards per game. But they also allowed 49 sacks in the regular season, fifth-most in the league.

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Bucs tee up QB change in OTAs, adapting to Baker Mayfield


Dangerous talent assessments are often made when players are in shorts and T-shirts during NFL offseason practices, but Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles saw some fine work from new quarterback Baker Mayfield in a polo.

“He’s a good golfer,” Bowles said after Tuesday’s organized team activity session in Tampa. “Everything else, I kind of knew. I’ve known him for a couple years now so everything else is not a surprise to me.”

Mayfield signed with the Buccaneers and is competing with Kyle Trask to start in 2023. Tampa Bay won the NFC South but Tom Brady retired in February.

Mayfield is on his fourth NFL team. The former No. 1 pick of the Cleveland Browns was traded to the Carolina Panthers prior to last season, and joined the Los Angeles Rams upon being waived.

Not much about on-field performance will be evident this month, but Bowles said he knows Mayfield is getting his rounds of golf in right now.

“He’s better than me, so that makes him a great golfer. I’m not a very good golfer, so it doesn’t take much – the bar is low. But I think he’s a very good golfer,” Bowles said, adding Mayfield played golf with Bruce Arians and others have told the team about his strong tee-to-green game. “I have not experienced that myself – I am not a great golfer. I don’t golf with those types. I golf with kind of the scrubs and we kind of just have fun and go from there.”

Mayfield said he won’t react to outside perspective of the move or arbitrary opinions such as a set of preseason power rankings that listed the Buccaneers No. 30.

“It’s May,” Mayfield said Tuesday of his reaction to the rankings.

Bowles said the strongest endorsement of Mayfield will come from teammates. So far, the signs are positive.

“He’s eager to learn,” Bowles said. “He’s got a bunch of energy every day. Guys gravitate towards him. He’s learning the system just like Kyle is and they’re helping each other out.”

Wide receiver Chris Godwin doesn’t see a leader in the clubhouse on the QB competition. He was one of several players to note a lot is different without Brady and offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich, who was fired.

“Honestly, it’s just different. Any time you have a new quarterback, it’s different,” Godwin said. “Obviously, we don’t know who that guy is going to be yet but it doesn’t feel weird – it just feels like you’re getting reps with a bunch of guys. I get to work on my own skill development, get to work with the receivers and then for us, we have to handle our business regardless of who’s throwing the ball. We kind of discuss those things – let’s make the play when the ball comes our way, let’s make the play. I think Kyle and Baker have both done a great job so far – it’s a friendly competition, there’s no animosity.”

–Field Level Media

NFL News: Jets QB Aaron Rodgers sits with pre-practice calf injury


Aaron Rodgers was feeling right at home with the New York Jets before he tweaked his right calf at the start of organized team activities on Tuesday.

The injury is minor, and Rodgers said he shifted to taking a “vet day” but remained on the field for the workouts to watch backup Zach Wilson operate the offense.

“I just tweaked my calf in a little pre-practice conditioning,” Rodgers said with an ear-to-ear grin. “I don’t know. I don’t think it’s too serious.”

A momentary setback in the grand scheme, Rodgers said he’s feeling more confident and comfortable with his decision to join the Jets in a trade last month from the Green Bay Packers.

“I have an excitement about coming down Jets Drive. Every day, there’s been something that’s been a special sign that reminds me I’m in the right place,” Rodgers said Tuesday afternoon.

Rodgers hasn’t participated in OTAs in three years, spending offseasons away from Green Bay to train and dabble in other activities.

He said he felt it was important to attend this week to assist first-year offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett’s installation of the offense. Rodgers played in the system with the Packers, where Hackett was an assistant coach.

Rodgers said he’s enjoying his exposure to head coach Robert Saleh.

“I’ve been telling friends of mine when they ask what it’s like, I really enjoy the freedom of expression. Guys are themselves all the time,” Rodgers said. “He allows for the silliness at times. The latitude of that personal expression, which is so important … he does a good job balancing the accountability with the freedom for guys to be themselves.

“It’s simple too. This game can get complicated by the gurus who often believe they’ve made up football. There’s a lot of them around the league. They’re all good-hearted people. But at its core, this is a simple game. Rob does a good job of keeping things simple with us.”

–Field Level Media