Tamorrion Terry indicted in Georgia nightclub shooting from 2018

Former Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Tamorrion Terry was among 11 people indicted in a Georgia nightclub shooting that took place in 2018.

After the Seattle Seahawks waived wide receiver Tamorrion Terry on Wednesday, it came out that Terry had been indicted for the murder of 21-year-old Za’Quavia Smith. Ten others were also named as defendants by the grand jury in the incident which is alleged to have occurred in June of 2018.

The murder occurred as part of a mass shooting at the Studio 2.0 Nightclub in Ashburn, Georgia. At least seven other people were reported to be injured in the incident.

Despite occurring three years ago, it was not until this week that a grand jury handed down the indictment. Terry and the others have been charged with felony murder, so it is safe to say that he will not be returning to the NFL anytime soon.

[lawrence-related id=73512]

Report: Lakers will prioritize adding more shooting to the roster this offseason

The Los Angeles Lakers reportedly want to add better shooting options during free agency.

It’s no secret the Los Angeles Lakers need to add capable shooters to bolster the roster for next season.

The Lakers ranked 21st in the league in 3-point shooting during the regular season, and the percentage deteriorated during the playoffs.

Los Angeles shot 35.4 percent from deep in the regular season but mustered a 29.9 percent rate in six playoff games.

Head coach Frank Vogel tried bringing in Markieff Morris and Ben McLemore as adjustments since the regular rotation — other than LeBron James — simply couldn’t convert looks, even if they were open.

The struggles manifested on the big stage, and now it’s a problem the front office must address for next season.

On an episode of The Jump on ESPN, Lakers reporter Dave McMenamin discussed how shooting will be a priority in the offseason:

It’s got to be shooting, shooting and more shooting…If you don’t have shooters around LeBron and AD [Anthony Davis], what’s the point of having LeBron and AD? You limit what they’re able to do and how they’re able to help a team win. And so that’s on Rob Pelinka to figure out which one of these guys potentially could be part of it moving forward. A Ben McLemore, a Wes Matthews or see what else is out there.”

Both McLemore and Matthews will be unrestricted free agents when the market opens on Aug. 2 and are possibilities to return next season.

McLemore came late in the year after the Houston Rockets bought out his contract. He shot 36.8 percent from deep in 21 regular-season games but didn’t log many minutes in the playoffs because of his defensive deficiencies.

Matthews’ percentage took a hit compared to his production in previous years. He shot 33.5 percent in L.A. after shooting 36.4 percent with the Milwaukee Bucks last season, 37.2 percent in 2018-19 and 38.1 percent in 2017-18.

Players like Doug McDermott, Nicolas Batum and Reggie Bullock are proven shooters at the forward position that the Lakers could potentially snag.

Regardless of who, Los Angeles urgently needs to add better shooters to surround James and Davis while the championship window is open.

[pickup_prop id=”7715″]

[vertical-gallery id=40179]

[mm-video type=video id=01f7q12wyzrqnkt84xav playlist_id=01f09kz5ecxq9bp57b player_id=01eqbvq570kgj8vfs7 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01f7q12wyzrqnkt84xav/01f7q12wyzrqnkt84xav-f9bf7747db7c09ec9ede4a48deb97bff.jpg]

Louis Nix returns home but damage remains

Former Notre Dame star Louis Nix is out of the hospital after being shot but plenty of concerns, both mental and physical remain.

Star defensive lineman on Notre Dame’s 2012 team that finished the regular season 12-0 before getting blown out by Alabama in the BCS National Championship Game has returned home after being shot while filling his car tire with air nearly two weeks ago.

Part of the bullet that nearly reached Nix’s heart remains in his lung.

“Apparently there are a lot of people walking around with pieces of a bullet or whole bullets inside of them,” Nix told Eric Hansen of the South Bend Tribune. “I’ve got some nerve issues too. Because my (fractured) sternum is still healing, I can’t lift anything over 10 pounds or do even one push-up.”

Perhaps even scarier is how Nix described the mental toll being shot has taken on him when in public.

“I went out shopping with my girl to get my mom a birthday gift, and it was crazy,” he said. “You wouldn’t think you’d feel like that, but I was just paranoid being around people. People coming up from behind me, coming out of nowhere. I felt like I just needed to see everything and it was kind of emotional in the moment.”

In Hansen’s piece, Nix also points out that his current employer, Cintas Corporation, is paying for him to see a therapist and hopefully work through this issue.

Nix’s mother set up a gofundme page to help pay for any medical expenses as well as the work Nix will miss.  That page has raised over $41,000 to date and can be visited here.

More college coaches should follow Dan Mullen’s example on social justice

When prompted, head coach Dan Mullen gave a shockingly genuine and well-considered response to what’s going on in our country.

Speaking to the media on Thursday, Gators coach Dan Mullen was asked a question that didn’t involve football. It didn’t involve the logistics of practice, and it didn’t involve the ongoing novel coronavirus pandemic.

Instead, Mullen was asked about Jacob Blake, the 29-year-old Black man who was shot seven times in the back by police in Kenosha, Wis., but survived, albeit paralyzed from the waist down. The shooting sparked intense protests in Kenosha this week.

When faced with questions about issues that extend beyond the scope of the gridiron, especially when those questions address complex social issues, coaches often respond in one of two ways.

They either feign ignorance of the issue, offering some cliche about team unity and focusing on the game, or they provide vague platitudes that aren’t specific or targeted enough to potentially upset their (often conservative) fanbase.

Mullen did neither of those things. When prompted, he gave a shockingly genuine and well-considered response to what’s going on in our country. He did so with a level of sincerity and degree of introspection almost never seen from highly paid college coaches.

He talked about his own experience, and how he’s educated himself on the struggle of Black Americans for equal treatment under the law and equity within society.

“When Black Lives Matter come out and then people want to fight and say all lives matter, right? You look at that and say, ‘ok, yeah I can see how that makes sense.’ Then you go educate yourself and go back and think about different things. Someone wrote an article, I read it somehwere, when the Boston Marathon bombing came out and the Boston Strong shirts came out, right? Well why isn’t everybody strong? Why does it only have to be Boston that gets to be strong, right? Of course all lives do matter but that’s not what we’re talking about right now. We’re talking about this specific situation where we’re seeing racial injustices happen. We’re trying to draw light to that. We’re not trying to say other things aren’t important. We’re trying to draw light to this. When you can draw on things from a lot of examples, like people all of a sudden want to jump and say I have to be on a side now, just educate yourself. What we’re trying to do is educate ourselves about the social injustices that are happening. It doesn’t mean, when you say Black lives matter it doesn’t mean I’m forgetting about other people…”

In an era where college coaches are painfully tight-lipped when it comes to expressing opinions that extend outside their purview, this amount of candor from Mullen on how his opinions have changed is fairly remarkable.

That’s not to say Mullen’s statement was perfect. It was very clear he was walking on eggshells to avoid saying anything too controversial. For example, according to a tweet from the Gainesville Sun’s Graham Hall, Mullen said in the wake of the Blake shooting, it’s important to “educate ignorant people.”

But Mullen’s lack of specificity in describing the beliefs he’s condemning could allow someone who holds them to feel unchallenged, as Alex Kirshner, formerly of Banner Society, points out here.

However, I generally disagree with Kirshner’s criticisms of Mullen. Were his comments PR-laundered? Certainly. Could he have been stronger in his stating his beliefs? Sure.

But to get hung up on this kind of coachspeak, which is ubiquitous in college sports, misses the forest for the trees.

The fact is, Mullen’s statement is stronger than those of almost any of his peers.

Compare Mullen’s comments on the necessity of keeping an open mind and educating yourself with comments from other coaches.

Coaches like Clemson’s Dabo Swinney, who provided justification in June for assistant coach Danny Pearman using the N-word at practice.

“I would fire a coach immediately if he called a player an N-word. No questions asked,” Swinney said Monday. “That did not happen. Absolutely did not happen. It has not happened. Coach Pearman was correcting D.J., and another player was talking to D.J., or D.J. was yelling at the player, and D.J. said something he probably shouldn’t have said. He said, ‘I blocked the wrong f—ing N-word,’ and Coach Pearman thought he was saying it to him, and he’s mad, and he reacted, and in correcting him, he repeated the phrase.

“And [Pearman] said, ‘We don’t say we blocked the wrong f—ing N-word.’ And he repeated it. He shouldn’t have done that. There’s no excuse for even saying that. But there is a big difference. He did not call someone an N-word.”

Or Oklahoma State’s Mike Gundy, who wore a t-shirt for One America News, a far-right news outlet whose anchors have been critical of the Black Lives Matter movement, with one going as far as to call it a “farce.”

Gundy later apologized, saying he was “disgusted” when he learned the network’s position on Black Lives Matter, though he had praised the content of the network months prior.

Mullen, on the other hand, demonstrated an open mind towards these issues and even hinted at evidence of personal growth, though his lack of specificity made it hard to gauge exactly how far he’s come on the issue of racial justice.

Still, Mullen jumped into an uncomfortable arena and handled it gracefully. As a man tasked with leading young men, many of whom are Black, he deserves credit for that.

That isn’t to say his work here is done. For Mullen’s words of affirmation for the cause to ring true, it would help to see more pointed criticism toward the model of amateurism, which exploits college football’s primarily Black player base for profit.

But for the time being, Mullen’s comments should provide an example for coaches around the country on how to publicly address the issues of racial equality. And if more people in Mullen’s position followed suit, it could help lead to change in this country.

[lawrence-related id=17201,20046]

Why we still shouldn’t trust Giannis Antetokounmpo’s 3-point shooting

Giannis isn’t exactly a great three point shooter…yet

To say Giannis Antetokounmpo has never been the NBA’s best shooter is a  massive understatement. Once he picks up the ball and chucks it at the basket like a shot put, that’s a win fore the defense.

They’d rather him do that than have him gliding to the rim and casually dunking all over the defense. That strategy has worked against him relatively speaking — he did win the MVP last season, after all.

But that broken jumper is part of the reason why the Raptors were able to turn the tables on the Bucks midway through their playoff series last year. It was a legit weakness. At least until now, it seems.

That said… I still don’t really trust it.

Giannis is a better, but inconsistent, shooter

Defenses should still give Antetokounmpo all the cushion they need to stop him from getting to the rim. That’s where he’s most dangerous at, obviously.

But even on top of that, his 3-point shot isn’t prolific, by any means. He’s shooting 30 percent on 4.9 attempts per game. For a player of his caliber, that’s more than enough to give defenses pause. But a dive a bit deeper into the numbers says this shooting might not last.

Right now, Antetokounmpo’s three point field goals are coming after three to six dribbles according to NBA.com’s stats database.  He’s shooting 34.1% on those, which is just a dip below league average. That’s a good number and it gets even better. He hits 37.5 percent of his 3-pointers when he takes just one dribble.

Most of his makes from deep are pull-up shots like this one.

Those dribbles on his makes are used to establish his rhythm and make the shot all one smooth-ish motion. It’s still not a great jumper, but it’s good enough.

When he grabs the ball off the catch, he’s still lining the shot up and getting his feet right. When he catches the ball, it’s like he’s still loading up.

His shot has made some progress, but it’s still inconsistent enough that you’ll live with it as a result if you’re the defense. He only shoots 30 percent for a reason.

Defenses should still give him this shot

Here’s where the concern comes in: He’s only hitting 15.4 percent of his spot-up attempts and is only taking 0.9 threes per game without a single dribble. That’s typically the easiest three you can take — especially from the corner. Yet he doesn’t take them and, when he does, he doesn’t hit them.

There’s a theme here. Antetokounmpo isn’t a great stand-still shooter. He’s shot under 30 percent from 3-point range after not taking a single dribble in five of the seven years of his career. The only two he was above 30 percent were his rookie year when he shot 32 percent and the 2017-18 season when he shot 34.5 percent.

He’s got the ball in his hands for most of the game, so he’s largely able to pick and choose what shots from deep he’s going to take. But pull-up 3’s are hard, even when no one is guarding you.

The Bucks, as a team, are shooting 37.9 percent off of one dribble but 30 percent from deep off of three to six dribbles. The more they dribble, the worse the shot quality gets.

Giannis is becoming a threat from deep, but he’s not a great one. So while he’s shooting a bit more, it’s not quite a wrap for the rest of the NBA just yet. If he keeps progressing like this, though? Good luck.

Fight over LSU-Bama game results in shooting, attempted murder charge for Oregon man

The SEC game apparently meant so much to one man in Bend, Oregon that he shot his friend in the head as an argument over the contest escalated.

The SEC game apparently meant so much to one man in Bend, Oregon that he shot his friend in the head as an argument over the contest escalated.