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Government to Review Northwestern Bid to Unionize

northwestern-universityWASHINGTON (AP) — The National Labor Relations Board has granted Northwestern University’s request that it review its ruling that football players at the university are essentially employees of the school with full collective bargaining rights.

It said a previously scheduled vote by Northwestern football players on whether to unionize could go forward Friday but ballots would be impounded for now.

The Chicago office of the National Labor Relations Board ruled on March 26 that Northwestern scholarship football players are essentially employees of the school — and thus have the right to form a union and exercise full collective bargaining rights. Northwestern is appealing the potentially far-reaching decision, insisting that its scholarship athletes are students first and don’t have collective bargaining rights.

The full five-member federal board is now weighing the appeal request.

Nebraska Signs Georgetown’s Moses Abraham Ayegba

Moses Ayegba (32)
Moses Ayegba (32)

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Moses Abraham Ayegba (EYE-eg-buh) of Georgetown has signed transfer papers to play at Nebraska for one season.

Ayegba will graduate from Georgetown with a degree in economics next month and be eligible to play for the Cornhuskers in 2014-15.

The 6-foot-9, 247-pound Ayegba played in 31 games for the Hoyas last season, averaging 1.9 points and 2.8 rebounds. He was second on the team with 23 blocked shots.

Nebraska coach Tim Miles said Thursday that Ayegba provides a physical presence inside and can affect the game on the defensive end with his rebounding and shot blocking. Miles said Ayegba is capable of improving on the offensive end.

Nebraska assistant Kenya Hunter coached Ayegba for three seasons on Georgetown’s staff.

Baer To Be Inducted In Omaha Sports Hall of Fame

10-10-09 Tri-City Storm Indiana IceKEARNEY, Neb. – The man who brought hockey to the heartland will be enshrined in the Omaha Sports Hall of Fame Thursday night.

Ted Baer, the original owner of the Tri-City Storm from 2000-06, will be a member of the eighth class of inductees. Baer is credited with starting the Storm franchise, and maintaining ownership for seven years.

The Omaha businessman got his start in the USHL when he purchased the Lancers in 1987. During his ownership, he moved the team to the Ak-sar-ben Coliseum and won six Clark Cup championships, four Anderson Cup titles and one national championship.

Baer was also recognized by the USHL with the Distinguished Service Award in 2007.

Although he has had success in hockey, Baer is also a bowling enthusiast, and is a member of three bowling Halls of Fame, including the Council Bluffs Bowling Hall of Fame, Omaha Bowling Hall of Fame and State of Nebraska Bowling Hall of Fame.

The induction ceremony and banquet for the class of 2014 takes place at the Scott Conference Center on the campus of the University of Nebraska Omaha.

Baer is one of 11 inductees, including former NFL players Chris Bober and Rik Bonness, gymnasts Phil Cahoy Sr. and Phil Cahoy Jr., former UNO hockey coach Mike Kemp, former NBA player Mike McGee, Creighton basketball star Christy Neneman, soccer standout Heather Taggert-Long, NCAA All-American basketball player Dean Thompson Jr. and the 1963-65 Omaha Ryan/Pepsi Baseball Team.

For more information, head to omahasportshalloffame.com.

The Storm are now preparing for the USHL Entry Draft, which takes place from May 5-6. A two phase, multiple-day event, the draft will allow the team to reload with new players for the upcoming 2014-15 season.

NCAA Board Endorses More Power for Big Schools

NCAA-Logo-College-SportsINDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The NCAA’s board of directors endorsed a proposal Thursday giving schools in the five largest football conferences more autonomy and more voting power in changing rules within the organization.

The changes would allow the wealthiest schools to adopt some legislation on their own, including provisions for money beyond what current scholarships cover, up to the full cost-of-attendance, expanded insurance coverage and money to help families travel to NCAA tournaments.

The proposal would affect the 65 schools in the ACC, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC.

NCAA President Mark Emmert supports the move. A formal vote is expected in August. If passed then, the transition could begin this fall.

The board also approved allowing schools to provide unlimited meals and snacks to athletes.

Royals Dominated by Kluber in 5-1 Loss to Indians

kc-royals

CLEVELAND (AP) — One by one, the Royals went to the plate and came back empty.

Corey Kluber had them flailing and failing. They missed the right-hander’s pitches, popped them up or hit weak groundouts against Cleveland’s starter.

He controlled them — completely.

Kluber struck out a career-high 11 and allowed Kansas City just four hits in his first complete game, leading the Indians to a 5-1 win over the Royals.

“He handcuffed us,” Royals manager New Yost said. “He threw a great game. We couldn’t do anything with him, nothing all day long.”

Kluber (2-2) didn’t walk a batter and let Cleveland manager Terry Francona give some needed rest to his bullpen. Kluber is the first Cleveland pitcher with a complete game, 11 strikeouts, no walks and no earned runs since Len Barker’s perfect game in 1981.

David Murphy and Asdrubal Cabrera delivered two-run hits in the Indians’ five-run fifth off Bruce Chen (1-2), who controlled Cleveland’s lineup for four innings.

“Obviously I’m not very happy with the fifth inning,” said Chen, who had retired 11 straight heading into the fifth. “I wasn’t able to make good pitches. Early in the game I was mixing my pitches well. There were some key at-bats where I could have made better pitches.”

The Royals scored their only run — and unearned one — off Kluber in the seventh when Omar Infante singled and scored when Indians first baseman Nick Swisher made a half-hearted attempt at Mike Moustakas’ grounder, which got by him for an error and rolled all the way into the right-field corner.

Other than that, Kansas City’s hitters were unable to do much against Kluber, whose previous long outing was 8 2-3 innings last July against the White Sox. He’s 3-0 in four career starts against the Royals.

“He put it to us,” said Alex Gordon, who went 0 for 4 and struck out to end the game. “Give him credit. You look at our offense today and say we stunk. That’s how it was.”

Chen coasted through four innings, dominating the Indians with a mix of off-speed pitches before they touched him for five runs and chased him in the fifth.

The left-hander gave up a leadoff single to Cabrera in the first but clamped down on the Indians until the fifth when Carlos Santana led off with a double, snapping an 0-for-16 slide with just his third hit in 48 at-bats. Michael Brantley followed with a single to center for his team-leading 19th RBI, giving Cleveland a 1-0 lead.

The Indians didn’t stop there as Murphy slapped a two-run single to left, and Cabrera made it 5-0 with his double down the left-field line to end Chen’s outing. It was Cleveland’s biggest inning this season.

“It’s part of the game,” Chen said. “I have to be more consistent. The first four innings I was able to establish all my pitches. I just need to do it the whole game.”

Kansas City managed just one hit off Kluber in the first four innings, and then the Royals ran their way out of a scoring chance in the fifth.

Alcides Escobar singled with two outs and Jarrod Dyson followed with a base hit. Escobar hesitated rounding second, and his indecision cost him as Brantley threw him out from center trying to take third.

The Royals turned a nifty double play to end the first.

With a Cabrera at third, first baseman Eric Hosmer fielded Jason Kipnis’ hard grounder, stepped on first and threw home. Catcher Brett Hayes made a sweeping tag on Cabrera, who was called out. Crew chief Bill Miller called for a review to see if Hayes had blocked the plate, but the call was confirmed.

NOTES: Royals 1B coach Rusty Kuntz returned to the team after undergoing surgery on his broken left arm. Kuntz was struck during pregame batting practice on Monday. He had a plate and eight screws inserted. There’s no timetable on his return to the coaching box. … The Royals open a three-game series in Baltimore on Friday with Yordano Ventura (1-1) facing Ubaldo Jimenez (0-3). … Royals RF Nor Aoki is batting .111 (5-for-45) on the road and .441 (15-for-34) at home. … Slumping catcher Salvador Perez got the day off. He’s in a 1-for-26 slide.

Tickets on Sale Monday for July’s College HR Derby

College Home Run DerbyOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Tickets will go on sale Monday for the fifth annual College Home Run Derby at TD Ameritrade Park on July 3.

Prices are $8 for children ages 3 to 12, $12 for fans 13 and older or $35 for a family of four. Tickets can be purchased at the CenturyLink Center box office, by calling Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000, or online at www.Ticketmaster.com.

Participants will be drawn from a pool of players who are among the nation’s home run leaders this season.

The event starts at 7:30 p.m. and will be followed by a fireworks show.

Rice’s Michael Aquino won last year’s derby.

Sanchez’s Slam in 11th Helps Giants Beat Rox 12-10

colorado-rockiesDENVER (AP) — Hector Sanchez hit two of San Francisco’s six homers, including a grand slam in the 11th inning Wednesday that gave the Giants a wild 12-10 victory over the Colorado Rockies.

With the Giants on the verge of being swept in a three-game series at Coors Field for the first time in 12 years, Sanchez drove a fastball from Chad Bettis (0-1) into the bushes behind center field. The backup catcher also hit a solo homer in the eighth.

Michael Morse also hit two homers: a solo shot in the second and a three-run homer the following inning. Brandon Hicks and Brandon Belt also went deep as the Giants rallied from a 5-1, second-inning deficit.

Jean Machi (4-0) earned the win with a perfect 10th. Sergio Romo struggled in a non-save situation, surrendering a two-run homer to Justin Morneau but retiring Brandon Barnes on a game-ending 5-4-3 double play.

Selig Says Clarification Coming on Ball Transfers

mlb bigCHICAGO (AP) — Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig says the sport’s playing rules committee is working to clarify the rule on transfers by fielders on forceouts, which has caused some controversy in the first season of expanded instant replay for umpires.

Attending a game at Wrigley Field on Wednesday marking the 100th anniversary of the ballpark, Selig said he has not spoken with committee chairman Sandy Alderson, the New York Mets general manager.

Selig expects to hear back about clarifying the rule, adding “given the fact it’s new, yes, we’ve had a little glitch here and there, but not much, and nothing that really affected a game,” Selig added.

With instant replay, there has been increased scrutiny on when fielders have control of throws as they step on bases for forceouts and then transfer the ball to their hands for throws in attempts to turn double plays.

“I think it’s done great,” Selig said. “I don’t think it’s been a can of worms at all. In fact, I think for something new, it’s been unbelievably good.”

Clady Blazing the Comeback Trail in Denver

Ryan Clady
Ryan Clady

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — As far as Peyton Manning is concerned, wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders isn’t the only offensive reinforcement summoned to help Denver get another crack at winning the Super Bowl.

Manning suggested Ryan Clady is almost like a free agent acquisition since he hardly played last year.

The star left tackle suffered a season-ending left foot injury in the second week of the season, not long after signing a five-year, $52.5 million contract.

Now he’s on the comeback trail. Although he has no timeline for getting back on the field, Clady said he’s eager to return to form and make up for all that time he missed last year.

North Platte American Legion Baseball Announces the 2014 Hall of Fame Class

North Platte American Legion Baseball First NationalsThe North Platte American Legion Baseball program has announced that three individuals and a state championship winning team will be inducted into the program’s Hall of Fame in 2014.

This year’s class includes one player, one state championship team, and two individuals who donated countless hours to making North Platte American Legion Baseball what it has become.  This year’s class includes Jack Raetz (posthumously), Mick Hayes, Steve Gullion and the 1994 Midget Post 163 baseball team. They will be inducted during the North Platte American Legion Baseball Hall of Fame weekend, May 2-3.

The Hall of Fame weekend will begin at 4:30 pm Friday May 2nd at Bill Wood Field with an intra-squad scrimmage of the current Legion teams followed by an alumni vs alumni game at 7:30 pm.  In between innings they will honor the Hall of Fame inductees.  Admission is free.

Saturday May 3rd, the American Legion 4-person golf scramble will begin at Lake Maloney Golf course with a shotgun start at 12:30 pm.  Following the golf tournament, there will be a banquet honoring the 2014 North Platte Legion Baseball Hall of Fame inductees.  The golf tournament cost is $65.00 which includes the banquet. Tickets for the banquet only are $20.00.   All past Legion players are invited to come out and participate and the entire community is welcome as well.

North Platte American Legion Baseball has had a long and distinguished run in North Platte, with the program officially starting around 1960.  Hundreds of players and fans, along with dozens of coaches and others truly dedicated to the program have been involved in American Legion Baseball.  In 2013 the Board of Directors decided a Hall of Fame to honor these outstanding individuals should be started.  The inaugural class included two coaches, two players and two individual volunteers.

The First Nationals will start their regular season Sat May 17th when the Seniors travel to Scottsbluff. The Juniors host Scottsbluff at Bill Wood Field in North Platte at 1:00 pm.  The Juniors will be home over Memorial Day weekend and the Seniors will be home Monday May 26th. First pitch for the Seniors is at 2:00 pm.

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