Jordan-Shaq factor: Early grades for the top 15 picks in 2019 draft

While keeping the Jordan-Shaq Factor in mind, we have made some early grades for the first 15 players selected in the 2019 NBA Draft.

With each new NBA draft class, there’s always hope—argumentatively speaking—that one select rookie will one day become the next Shaq or the “Air Apparent.” And that’s still a problematic prognostication, especially this early in a rookie’s career. (It’s almost impossible if we’re honest.)

But Michael Jordan, who dropped 45 against San Antonio in only his ninth game, and Shaquille O’Neal, who was averaging double-doubles with ease at the same point, do highlight a key benchmark: Grading rookies this early in the season, looking for signs of possible elite talent, can be done.

So, while keeping that Jordan-Shaq Factor in mind, let’s take a look at the early grades for the top 15 picks from the 2019 draft.

15th pick: Sekou Doumbouya

(Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images)

Taken out of the French League by the Pistons, Sekou Doumbouya is only 18 years old—that’s young. But if he’s developed in the G League and becomes something close to one of the NBA stars he looks up to—Pascal Siakam—then look out!

Early Grade: TBD

Sekou Doumbouya :: Romeo Langford :: Tyler Herro :: P.J. Washington :: Cam Johnson :: Cam Reddish :: Rui Hachimura :: Jaxson Hayes :: Coby White :: Jarrett Culver :: Darius Garland :: De’Andre Hunter :: R.J. Barrett :: Ja Morant :: Zion Williamson

Jerry Palm discusses where Tennessee is most likely to go bowling

Tennessee will return to action in Week 13.

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KNOXVILLE – Tennessee (5-5, 3-3 SEC) will return to action in Week 13 following an open date.

The Vols will play at Missouri (5-5, 2-4 SEC) with kickoff slated for 7:30 p.m. ET.

A win would make Tennessee bowl eligible with a regular season finale home contest against Vanderbilt awaiting on Nov. 30.

Ahead of the Tennessee-Missouri game, Jerry Palm of CBS Sports provided his thoughts on where the Vols could go bowling in the postseason.

If UT finished the regular season with a 7-5 or 6-6 record, Palm views Tennessee’s bowl destination the same with six or seven wins.

“Their record does not really matter,” Palm told Vols Wire.

Palm mentioned Tennessee’s destination most likely “depends more on whether the Music City Bowl prefers Louisville (6-4, 4-3 ACC) or Kentucky (5-5, 3-5 SEC).”

“I think the Music City Bowl or Liberty Bowl are most likely,” Palm said of Tennessee. “The Texas Bowl and Belk Bowl are also in play with an outside chance at the Gator Bowl.”

Palm currently has Tennessee projected to play Louisville in the Music City Bowl on Dec. 30.

Bengals WR Auden Tate carted off with injury vs. Raiders

After catching a pass on third down, Tate got hit from behind and folded forward before landing on his back.

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Auden Tate needed a cart to leave the field after taking a hit in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game against the Oakland Raiders.

After catching a pass on third down, Tate got hit from behind and folded forward before landing on his back. He attempted to get up but trainers made him stay down.

Tate had been a breakout presence for the Bengals this year under a new coaching staff. Entering the day, he had 30 catches for 427 yards and a score, establishing himself as a big-play artist who went up and made acrobatic catches.

The 2018 seventh-round pick had four catches for 56 yards on the day before leaving the game.

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MSU LB accuses Michigan of ‘poor class,’ ‘poor sportsmanship’

So which one is the poor sport? After Michigan’s thumping of rival MSU, 44-10, on Saturday, there was a lot of celebration by the home team, while the Spartans were literally waved off the field by the victorious Wolverines. The game was filled with …

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So which one is the poor sport?

After Michigan’s thumping of rival MSU, 44-10, on Saturday, there was a lot of celebration by the home team, while the Spartans were literally waved off the field by the victorious Wolverines.

The game was filled with plenty of unsportsmanlike conduct and personal foul penalties, and Michigan State’s Jacub Panasiuk was ejected from the game after notching two of the sort, with a late hit on Michigan QB Shea Patterson sealing his early departure from the game.

In the postgame, Wolverines safety Josh Metellus praised his team for keeping its composure, noting that MSU was engaging in extracurricular activities beyond the whistle.

Par for the course in this rivalry.

“I’m pretty pleased, because I feel like we’re way more classier than them,” Metellus said. “They try to take it to a level that isn’t playing football. We play football over here – I don’t know what they do over there, but we play football, and it showed today.”

But Michigan waving MSU off the field? That was apparently a bridge too far.

According to the Lansing State Journal, former Detroit (MI) King standout and MSU linebacker Tyriq Thompson took exception to the Wolverines shunning the Spartans off the field in the postgame as they simultaneously trotted the Paul Bunyan Trophy around the stadium. Thompson also accused Michigan of poor class and lacking sportsmanship.

“I think it was a little bit of poor class on their part, poor sportsmanship to come over to our sideline barking how they were,” Michigan State linebacker Tyriq Thompson said. “It comes with the game, with the rivalry. It is what it is. Still, it’s just terrible taste.”

In the aftermath, Michigan made no bones or apologies for the gesture. LB Josh Uche went as far as to tell FOX Sports that MSU had no right to be on their field after the drubbing.

Naturally, Michigan fans will likely point to last season’s pregame antics by the Spartans, where MSU was late to its stadium walk, uncharacteristically wore their helmets, and didn’t break the chain for particular Wolverines on the field. The Big Ten found MSU culpable in the matter, reprimanding the program for incident.

The Spartans again wore their helmets upon arrival, this time as they got off the buses at Michigan Stadium.

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Sixers coach Brett Brown has high praise for Tobias Harris after win

Philadelphia 76ers coach Brett Brown had high praise for Tobias Harris after a win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.

While the Philadelphia 76ers as a team had received their fair share of criticism over the past few weeks, one guy who received it the most was Tobias Harris. The Sixers forward was mired in a tough shooting slump before showing some signs in the second game of the road trip and then breaking out on Sunday in a 114-95 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Harris had 27 points on an efficient 12-for-14 shooting and helped put the final nail in the coffin in the fourth quarter after Cleveland was looking to make one final push. Coach Brett Brown did not want to insert Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid back into the game and he trusted Harris to close it out.

Brown stated:

He was our bell-ringer tonight. When you’re looking up and you’re up 25 points going into the fourth, I don’t want to play Joel and I really don’t want to play Ben Simmons. To Cleveland’s credit, they cut it to 17…15 and we went to Tobias two or three times in a row. I think he personally went on an 8-0 run and kind of moved the game away from that danger zone that it felt like it was getting to. You’re always nervous about playing the heavyweights minutes in a game that you think you should close out. He came in and sure made it a lot easier to justify the decision to not go with Joel, as an example in the fourth period.

This is the type of play the Sixers were expecting with Harris when they brought him back on a lucrative deal in the offseason. He has the talent to play as well as he did on Sunday and it’s all about putting it together now. If he can build off of this, then the Sixers are really going to be in a good place. [lawrence-related id=19383,19377,19371]

Rams Week 11 inactives: Robert Woods (personal) out vs. Bears

Robert Woods is inactive against the Bears, leaving Cooper Kupp as the only starting wide receiver who’s active.

The Los Angeles Rams will need all hands on deck against the Bears on Sunday night with several players battling injuries. They’re already without Rob Havenstein (knee) and Brandin Cooks (concussion), who were ruled out earlier in the week, while Brian Allen (knee) is out for the year, too.

Robert Woods is a shocking scratch for Sunday night, as he will be inactive. He was healthy all week and did not appear on the injury report, so this came out of nowhere. That leaves Cooper Kupp as the only starting wide receiver who is active against the Bears.

According to the team, Woods is not at the Coliseum for the game and is dealing with a personal issue.

It’s worth noting that the Rams did add Nsimba Webster to the 53-man roster on Saturday, waiving John Kelly to make room for him. Perhaps the Rams knew Woods wouldn’t be able to play on Sunday, and they didn’t need to disclose anything since the final injury report came out on Friday.

On the bright side, both Tyler Higbee and Gerald Everett are active for Sunday’s game against Chicago, as is Austin Blythe. Blythe and Kupp came down with a stomach bug on Friday and weren’t certain to play, though Sean McVay expected them to.

For the Bears, running back David Montgomery is also active. He was said to be a game-time decision and he’s healthy enough to play against the Rams.

Fox Exec says network will have ‘best of the best,’ own ‘PBC belts’

Bill Wanger, executive vice president of programming for Fox Sports, appeared on the Chris Mannix podcast last week to discuss boxing.

Al Haymon may stay tight-lipped when it comes to the media, but Bill Wanger apparently has no such qualms.

Wanger, the executive vice president of programming at Fox Sports, appeared on the Chris Mannix boxing podcast last week and, well, he had a few interesting things to say. Wanger expounded on everything from the network’s multi-year deal with Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions to his thoughts on the boxing landscape at large.

Here are some snippets.

On sharing fighters with Showtime

Given that longtime cable broadcaster Showtime also has a multi-year deal with the PBC, one of the biggest questions in the past year was how Haymon went about apportioning his roster to satisfy the needs of both networks. When Mannix brought up this specific point, Wanger was blunt about Fox having the “premier package.”

“Our deal with the PBC is to be in the premier position and to have the premier package,” Wanger said. “So a lot of who takes what between Fox and Showtime is already taken care of in the contractual process. … We have a contract with the PBC with a certain number of fights to be in the premier position. At the end of the day, that’s what we’re going to have. We’re not too worried about that.”

When Mannix asked Wanger to clarify what he meant by “premier,” Wanger responded, “At the end of the day, we get the best fights and the top stars. Showtime will have what they’re going to have. But Fox will have the best of the best.”

On making fights with rival networks and promoters

Another topic was boxing’s fragmented business. Mannix suggested the possibility of more cross-promotional events, in which fighters would appear  on rival networks. Wanger doesn’t see that as a priority for the network, citing PBC’s vast roster as a sign of its “self-sufficiency.”

“The PBC and Fox have 99 percent of the top fighters,” Wanger said. “Yes, there are a few on the other platforms, but we’re totally self-sufficient. Those guys are actually having difficulty making the fights they need for their fighters, whether its Terence Crawford or Canelo (Alvarez) and so on and so forth.”

Wanger would not confirm or deny a reported joint pay-per-view deal between Fox and ESPN to showcase the projected rematch of Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury in 2020, but he made it clear that each network has their own corporate agenda to adhere to. 

“I think that in this new dynamic, this new world of DAZN in the business and ESPN in the business and PBC in the business with Fox and Showtime, yeah there is rooting interest (for certain fighters and fights), quite selfishly,” he said.

On the likelihood of an Errol Spence-Terence Crawford showdown

Wanger poured cold water over a potential Errol Spence-Terence Crawford welterweight title-unification fight. He made it clear that Spence has no reason to rush into a fight with Crawford, not when he has other options at his disposal within the PBC roster, including Danny Garcia, Keith Thurman, and Manny Pacquiao.

“With regards to Errol, the PBC has a stacked welterweight division and there are plenty of fights that Errol can have well before he needs to fight Terence Crawford,” Wanger said. “And again if Errol and his team have a desire to fight Terence Crawford, a deal can be made.

“Errol’s gotta take care of business inside the PBC family, and … once he does that (and) the time is right and he wants to fight Terence Crawford, they’ll make the fight.”

On PBC creating their own title belts

Mannix took Wanger to task for Fox’s refusal to recognize WBO welterweight titleholder Crawford on graphics depicting the top titleholders in the division. Wanger offered a somewhat circular rationale, stating that they feel the WBA, WBC, and IBF belts are “the most important belts” because they’re “the ones that have traditionally been around the longest (and) are the ones we will recognize.” Mannix mentioned the fact that Fox leaves out the WBO but recognizes a secondary title from the WBA, at which point Wanger dropped this nugget:

“You know what we’re going to do with the PBC, and we’re on our way to do this … as things fall in the place. We are going to have a PBC belt and a PBC champion, lets say of the heavyweight division. So play this out, Andy Ruiz (a PBC fighter) beats Anthony Joshua again and eventually you have Andy Ruiz and Deontay Wilder fighting for the PBC heavyweight title. You could do that potentially with the welterweights, you could do that at 154 pounds, you could do that at 168 pounds.”

Wanger did not clarify whether this meant that the PBC would no longer collaborate with the three other sanctioning bodies. In any case, it’s clear that Wanger believes that insofar as the heavyweight (on the condition that Ruiz beats Joshua), welterweight, junior middleweight and supper middleweight divisions are concerned, there is no reason for the PBC to branch out to make fights.

On Jermall Charlo fighting potentially on a different platform.

The PBC doesn’t have depth in the middleweight division. When Mannix pointed out that most of the top 160-pound fighters are on DAZN, which has left WBC titleholder Jermall Charlo out of the mix, Wanger hinted that you may see Charlo hopping over to another network for the time being.

“Yeah, Al’s taking care of Jermall and putting him on a path where he might not be on our platforms for the next few fights, but he’ll come back,” he said.

LeBron James, Lakers celebrate Anthony Davis Haute Living cover

LeBron James, Anthony Davis and a few others celebrated the occasion at a party with some of the world’s most expensive cognac.

If the Los Angeles Lakers come out to a strong start tonight against the Atlanta Hawks, perhaps they can credit a night of hanging out and sipping on extremely expensive cognacs as a key to their success.

LeBron James one of a few Lakers teammates to join Anthony Davis at a celebration his a cover story about him in the luxury magazine Haute Living, where they were honored by the magazine and then gifted some Hennessy XO as well as Louis XIII, a cognac that goes for over $3,000 in some places online. Avery Bradley and DeMarcus Cousins were some of the other Lakers in attendance at the event, according to photos.

(Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for Haute Living)

Times are good with the Lakers and the drinks were flowing last night. Davis spoke earlier this week about making sure to have fun in every game with LeBron James, but the time off the court appears to be pretty fun as well.

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Bears Week 11 Inactives: David Montgomery active vs. Rams

The Bears released their inactives ahead of tonight’s game against the Rams, and rookie RB David Montgomery is ACTIVE.

The Chicago Bears (4-5) released their inactives ahead of tonight’s primetime showdown against the Los Angeles Rams (5-4), and it’s good news regarding rookie running back David Montgomery.

Montgomery is officially active against the Rams. He rolled his ankle during Wednesday’s practice, and he was a game-time decision heading into a do-or-die conference game.

Bradley Sowell is also active against Los Angeles with the Bears thin at the tight end position. Last season, Sowell scored Chicago’s only touchdown of the game on a play dubbed Santa’s Sleigh. Could we see part two tonight?

Tight ends Trey Burton (who was placed on injured reserve Saturday) and Adam Shaheen along with linebackers Danny Trevathan and Isaiah Irving had previously been ruled out against the Rams.

Lots of NFL fans thought Carson Wentz got an arm sleeve tattoo. He did not.

Not a tattoo.

Carson Wentz and the Philadelphia Eagles were coming off a bye week before Sunday’s showdown with Tom Brady and the New England Patriots and many football fans watching the game on TV thought the Eagles QB spent some of that time off getting a sleeve tattoo on his right arm.

He did not.

The QB, who has been having trouble with the Patriots’ stingy/physical defense, was simply wearing a camouflage arm sleeve on his throwing arm. Did it look like a big tattoo? Maybe at first glance but it quickly became easy to spot that it wasn’t some new ink.

See for yourself:

Yup, not a tattoo.

Fans still seemed confused, though: