Saturday, May 31, 2014

Stanley Cup playoffs: Kane leads Blackhawks past Kings, into Game 7 - SportingNews.com

LOS ANGELES — Patrick Kane skated to a patch of open ice near the painted Stanley Cup logo and fired a long, low shot at the Los Angeles net, hoping to hit an invisible hole.

His Chicago Blackhawks teammates weren't shocked when he found it.

MORE: Western Conference gallery | Chicago's Game 5 win | 'Lucky' Rangers

Kane's career has been defined by his brilliance in the Blackhawks' biggest moments, and his tiebreaking goal with 3:45 to play in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals will rank among the best.

"There's still not much room out there in this series," Kane said. "Right now, you have to take advantage of your opportunities when you do get space."

Almost nobody seizes an opportunity like Kane, who scored two goals and set up Duncan Keith's tying goal with 8:26 left as the Blackhawks forced a decisive seventh game with a 4-3 victory over the Los Angeles Kings on Friday night.

Game 7 is Sunday night in Chicago. The winner hosts the New York Rangers on Wednesday night.

After trailing with less than nine minutes to play in Game 6, the defending Stanley Cup champion Blackhawks avoided elimination for the second straight game in an already memorable playoff series between two NHL powers at the top of their games. Chicago is heading home with a chance to advance thanks to the forward who saves his best for the brightest lights.

"It's amazing what he can do in these big games when our season is on the line," Chicago captain Jonathan Toews said about Kane. "Nobody else seems to be able to do it the same way he does. It's pretty amazing."

Kane, who won the Conn Smythe Trophy last season, had one point in the series' first four games. He has scored seven more in Chicago's consecutive dramatic victories, capped by Kane's dangle for a seeing-eye goal past Jonathan Quick, the 2012 Conn Smythe winner.

"I didn't see anything off the rush," Kane said. "I took it up the line and tried to get a shot through. I think (Andrew Shaw) was in front getting a great screen. Luckily, it went in."

The conference finals rematch between the NHL's last two champions will be decided in a winner-take-all Game 7 — the third of the postseason for the Kings, who are 6-0 in elimination games this spring.

Both teams blew late leads in the third period, and Drew Doughty was primed to be Los Angeles' hero with a tying goal and a tiebreaking assist on Alec Martinez's score with 12:22 left. But after Kane took control, Corey Crawford came up with several late saves as Chicago hung on.

"There is the 'Wow' factor in this series, especially the last two games," Chicago coach Joel Quenneville said. "We've got two competitive teams that have experience in the situation. It's been amazing. I mean, as good as it gets."

Chicago trailed 3-1 in the conference finals after its second straight loss at Staples Center on Monday, but the Blackhawks prolonged the series with an epic double-overtime victory in Game 5.

Crawford made 26 saves and exchanged harsh words with counterpart Jonathan Quick as the Blackhawks won for the ninth time in their last 11 elimination games.

"I'm frustrated, but I'm over it pretty quickly," said Quick, who made 21 saves. "And we've got another game to play, Game 7. We've had two chances to close out this series, and we are not going to blow a third one."

Dwight King scored an early goal and Doughty played 26 minutes in another dynamic game for the Kings, who were half a period away from clinching their second trip to the Stanley Cup finals in three years.

Chicago led 2-1 entering the third after getting goals from Kane and Ben Smith early in the second period, and Staples Center echoed with worry until Doughty tied it with 14:28 left with a wrist shot past a screened Crawford for his third goal in four games.

Doughty then fed Martinez for a low shot through traffic, putting the Kings ahead 3-2 and setting off a deafening celebration. A few minutes later, it turned to silence when Keith and Kane beat Quick.

"We get the privilege of playing with a guy like that every day and seeing what he can do," Keith said of Kane. "You know when it comes down to crunch time, him and Johnny (Toews), I don't know if there are two other guys I'd rather have on my team."

But Kane was just one problem for Los Angeles' normally solid defense, which gave up numerous scoring chances.

"I feel like I'm a broken record here, but we've got to be sharp in our own end," Martinez said. "We weren't making plays that we normally make. We've got to be quick to contact on them. We weren't very sharp."

Crawford exchanged contact and angry words after the second-period horn with Quick, who had just been hit by Shaw. Crawford shook his glove and blocker at his waist, miming his willingness to fight.

NOTES: The Blackhawks went with seven defensemen for Game 6, dressing Sheldon Brookbank for the first time since May 13. Kris Versteeg and Peter Regin were scratched. ... Kings owner Phil Anschutz made a rare appearance at Staples Center. Prospective new Clippers owner Steve Ballmer and point guard Chris Paul also attended the game.

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Spurs-Thunder Game 6 Preview: Home sweet home again? - CBSSports.com

Will the Thunder pick it up at home again? (USATSI) Will the Thunder pick it up at home again? (USATSI)

More postseason coverage: Playoff schedule, results | Latest news, notes

Previewing Game 6 of the Spurs-Thunder Western Conference finals.

1. The Facts: 8:30 p.m. ET (TNT). Follow the action here. Everybody is healthy enough to play.

2. Where We Are: Remember all of the questioning about whether or not the San Antonio Spurs were headed for a repeat of the 2012 Western Conference finals when they went up 2-0 on the Oklahoma City Thunder before dropping the next four? Game 5 in San Antonio squashed any chance of that happening. We've had five blowout victories in this series after the Spurs were all over the Thunder in Game 5. The Spurs won Game 1 and Game 2 in convincing fashion before the Thunder rolled back in Game 3 and Game 4 behind the dramatic return of Serge Ibaka from his calf injury.

But none of that athletic advantage for OKC mattered in Game 5. The Spurs started out small with Matt Bonner in the lineup for Tiago Splitter in an attempt to pull Ibaka away from the rim. With the floor spread, the Spurs did what they do to pretty much every team in the NBA: they put them on their heels. Instead of getting a big portion of their points inside, they used dribble penetration as a ruse in an effort to bomb away from the 3-point line in their easy victory.

3. The Big Number: 13. The Spurs were the most accurate team from 3-point range this season by knocking down 39.7 percent of their long-distance attempts. In Game 5 against the Thunder, they knocked down 13-of-26 from downtown, which almost guarantees them a victory this year. The Spurs are 10-2, including the playoffs, when they make at least 13 3-pointers in a game. When they make at least 50 percent of their threes, they're 13-3. You have to find a way to run this team off the 3-point line and contest everything.

4. Key Adjustment: Perhaps the Thunder should also go small? Whatever happened in Game 5 clearly didn't work for the Thunder and maybe it was a bit of an aberration to some degree, but OKC was chasing the ball all night and couldn't catch up. Would a smaller lineup play into the hands of the Spurs or could it accentuate the athletic advantage that has mostly carried them against the Spurs the last two years? Most people would advocate for less Kendrick Perkins in the lineup for OKC, so it's not a hard sell by any means. But the Thunder have to be able to run the Spurs off the 3-point line while still protecting the rim and a smaller lineup could accomplish that if they can keep their defensive balance.

5. The Big Story: A playoff series doesn't truly start until the home team loses a game. That's the old cliché. At this point in the Western Conference finals, that won't apply at all. If the Thunder lose Game 6, they're going home. If the Spurs lose at home in Game 7, it's over anyway. But why has home court advantage come roaring back in this playoff series after being absent from much of the postseason? Will it keep up in Game 6 to ensure we get a Game 7 in San Antonio? And if we do get that Game 7, do the Thunder even have a chance on the road?

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Phoenix-born singer Tito Torbellino killed in Mexico - azcentral.com

Police reported that two gunmen entered the restaurant and shot Rascon at close range.

Phoenix native Tomas Tovar Rascon, or Tito Torbellino as the Mexican banda music singer billed himself, was shot to death Thursday in a restaurant in Ciudad Obregon, Sonora, according to the Associated Press.

Police reported that two gunmen entered the restaurant and shot Rascon at close range.

He had been scheduled to perform Friday at Expo Obregon, sharing the bill with Reik and Maria Jose.

Rascon was in Phoenix last week to celebrate his birthday .

The singer posted a birthday photo with his family on Facebook, writing: "Thanks to God for another year of my life and for everything that he has given me. Thank you to my children, family, friends and my loyal fans everywhere. Thank you for all the presents and wishes. I didn't think I would get to this age. I promise to be calmer and less careless. Ha ha ha. On my way to Bakersfield to do what I like, singing for my public. The celebration is just starting."

In another Facebook post that day, he wrote, "Happy on my birthday. Even my son was with me. Thank you to everyone in Phoenix."

His last area performance was May 23 at Ocean's Seven in Scottsdale.

Read or Share this story: http://azc.cc/1gOsLer

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Scout Willis, Rihanna, & More Shocking Topless Instagram Moments - Hollywood Life

Celebrities Instagram Topless

Courtesy of Instagram

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GAMETHREAD: LSU vs SLU, 2pm, ESPN3 - And the Valley Shook

LINEUPS

LSU

RF Laird

SS Bregman

LF Fraley

DH McMullen

C Scivicque

1B Moore

2B Hale

CF Stevenson

3B Ibarra

Southeastern

CF Seward

C Fisher

RF Gobold

3B Hoffman

DH Midyett

1B Roberson

SS Menard

LF Cedotal

2B Williams

SLU- RHP Andro Cutura (10-2, 1.72 ERA, 99.2 IP, 19 BB, 95 K)

LSU- LHP Jared Poche' (9-3, 2.21 ERA, 69.2 IP, 23 BB, 43 K)

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GAMETHREAD: LSU vs SLU, 2pm, ESPN3 - And the Valley Shook

LINEUPS

LSU

RF Laird

SS Bregman

LF Fraley

DH McMullen

C Scivicque

1B Moore

2B Hale

CF Stevenson

3B Ibarra

Southeastern

CF Seward

C Fisher

RF Gobold

3B Hoffman

DH Midyett

1B Roberson

SS Menard

LF Cedotal

2B Williams

SLU- RHP Andro Cutura (10-2, 1.72 ERA, 99.2 IP, 19 BB, 95 K)

LSU- LHP Jared Poche' (9-3, 2.21 ERA, 69.2 IP, 23 BB, 43 K)

Steve Ballmer

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Jay Carney steps down as White House press secretary - Washington Post (blog)

File: White House press secretary Jay Carney (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

File: White House press secretary Jay Carney (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

President Obama announced Friday that Jay Carney will step down as White House press secretary after more than three years and be replaced by his deputy Josh Earnest, who worked on the Obama campaign in 2008.

Carney, 49, a former Time Magazine White House correspondent, joined the administration in late 2008 as spokesman for Vice President-elect Biden. He was promoted to Obama's chief spokesman in February 2011, replacing Robert Gibbs.

Earnest, 39, has been Carney's top deputy and regularly fills in for the press secretary during daily briefings at the White House and aboard Air Force One when the president leaves Washington. Carney said Earnest would travel with Obama to Europe next week, and the press secretary said he would formally leave his job in mid-June.

Carney cited spending time with his wife, television journalist Claire Shipman, and children as a reason for his departure, but he did not disclose future career plans. Obama made the surprise announcement in the briefing room, cutting off Carney during an answer to a question about Ukraine.

"Jay has become one of my closest friends and is a great press secretary and a great adviser," Obama said. "He's got good judgement, he has good temperament and he's got a good heart. And I'm going to miss him a lot. I will continue to rely on him as a friend, an adviser after he leaves to spend as much of his summer as he can with his kids before he decides what's next for him."

Carney developed a reputation among his former peers as a disciplined and even-tempered spokesman who rarely disclosed news by mistake or made mis-statements that were damaging to the White House. Carney sparred with reporters regularly, as they pressed him on camera to respond to world crises, domestic politics and White House scandals.

 Josh Earnest speaks during the April 4 daily news briefing at the White House . (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Josh Earnest speaks during the April 4 daily news briefing at the White House . (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Obama recalled Earnest's work on his 2008 campaign, noting that he served as communications director in Iowa. "In that role, you'd find him spending an extra hour or two helping young staffers make phone calls or knock on doors," the president said. "There was no task that was too small, no detail too unimportant for Josh to attend to."

Earnest is well regarded among White House reporters, and he was long viewed as a likely Carney replacement. Some reporters had speculated last year that Obama might someday replace Carney with Jen Psaki, a former White House deputy communications director and Obama's 2012 campaign spokeswoman who now serves as the State Department spokeswoman. Obama has not had a woman serve in the role of top spokesperson at the White House, although Jennifer Palmieri is the communications director, a top behind-the-scenes position in the press shop.

"More often than not people say to me, 'You have the hardest job or you have one of the hardest jobs,'" Carney said. "And I'm not saying it's easy every day, but I love it. It's an important interaction that takes place here. It's not always pretty. It could certainly be better. But to be a part of it is an honor and a joy for me. So no matter how tough the briefing is, I walk out of here having been glad to stand here."

Brendan Buck, former spokesman for House Speaker John A. Boeher (R-Ohio), often sparred with the press secretary, but Friday he wrote on Twitter that Carney had "a great run. Incredibly tough job, and rarely made a misstep."

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Kings face another test of seven after Game 6 loss to Blackhawks - Los Angeles Times

Did anyone truly think that the Kings and Chicago Blackhawks would manage to settle the issue in four, five or six games?

Of course not.

And so, one of the more entertaining playoff battles in recent years will continue on for a few more days, drifting into early June.

The deciding game became required when Chicago scored twice in the final 8:26 to erase a one-goal lead and wrested Game 6 from the Kings, 4-3, on Friday night at Staples Center.

Chicago star Patrick Kane set up the tying goal by defenseman Duncan Keith and scored the game-winner, both in the third period. That was after he scored the goal that made it 1-1 in the second period.

Step up, Game 7.

Not only have the Kings been down this road this postseason, the path is well-worn. This will be their third road Game 7, following previous adventures at San Jose in the first round and at Anaheim in the second. They are the lone team to beat the Blackhawks at United Center this postseason, winning Game 2.

"Both teams are competing like hell in those areas," Kings Coach Darryl Sutter said. "There's not much of a difference or gap in these two clubs…. Just a third round and a better opponent."

The Kings once led three games to one in the series and it is now tied at three games each, with Game 7 on Sunday in Chicago. The Kings aren't the only Houdini-like team in the postseason. Last year, Chicago rallied from a 3-1 series deficit against the Detroit Red Wings and this postseason overcame a 2-0 hole against the St. Louis Blues in the first round.

It's almost as though the Kings have found their spiritual match in the Blackhawks. Kings defenseman Drew Doughty and Kane took turns owning the third period. Before Kane unleashed, again, Doughty inched the Kings closer to another spot in the Stanley Cup Final with some dizzying excellence, scoring and setting up a goal by Alec Martinez in the span of 2:06, to make it 3-2 with 12:22 to play.

Then Kane took over.

He had one assist in the first four games and has collected seven points in the last two. Kane said in his TV interview after the game that he had to make amends for having been on the ice for two earlier goals by the Kings. On the game-winner, he took a drop pass from linemate Brandon Saad, moved cross-ice and curled into the middle and shot it through a ton of traffic with 3:45 remaining, making it 4-3.

"There were some great plays in the third period by a lot of great players. Kane made a couple," Sutter said. "Keith made one. Drew made a couple."

Still, Doughty wasn't jumping on the Kane Express.

"You know what, yeah, last game he got four assists, but I didn't think it was like he dominated the game," he said. "The stat sheet tells a different story than the actual game."

Kings captain Dustin Brown took a more conventional look at Kane's abilities.

"I think it was what we allowed 88 to do in the third period," Brown said, noting Kane's number. "You give him time and space and he's going to make plays and that's what he did. So that's on us. We've got to limit his time and space. The last two games, we've backed off of him and allowed him time with the puck."

The teams have displayed similar character. Chicago dethroned the Kings last spring and hasn't been willing to go quietly into the night this time.

"I don't think anything motivates you like having your back against the wall," said center Jonathan Toews, the Blackhawks captain. "Potentially walking into a game where your season might end. I think every single guy in this room thinks about that, lets it sink in a little bit, and we realize how great this opportunity is.

"We worked very hard to get here and you don't want to let it just slip away. We thought about that the last few days and worked very hard to get back in this series. We have a chance to stay alive and keep playing hockey for a little while longer."

Kings center Jarret Stoll was matter-of-fact about the situation, pointing out that Game 7 was up for grabs, despite the recent past.

"It's obviously what's happened this playoff season," he said. "Those are different rounds, different teams, different buildings. We understand that. We understand we've got to have our best game to win this series."

lisa.dillman@latimes.com

Twitter: @reallisa

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Friday, May 30, 2014

Spurs continue home-court domination, blow out Thunder in Game 5 - SI.com

The Spurs went undefeated at home in May and won each game there by at least 17 points.

Greg Nelson/SI

SAN ANTONIO -- A large snake was found in the visitors' locker room, Rodeo of the Year banners clog the rafters, the Coyote mascot has a gatling gun to shoot free t-shirts from, a man dressed as Jesus sits near the three-point line blessing every possession, the courtside crowd uses each referee's first name while screaming complaints and the upper decks are full of waving flags and bouncing "Ole! Ole! Ole!" chants. This is the AT&T Center, the 2014 playoffs' most horrific house of horrors, a humongous concrete egg in which the Spurs just completed a perfect 7-0 May, setting an NBA record by winning each game by at least 17 points.

The two-time defending champion Heat have yet to lose at home during the postseason, and yet the Spurs' home-court dominance has still been the league's best. San Antonio has welcomed three of the league's 12 best teams by point differential -- Dallas, Portland and Oklahoma City -- to the heart of Texas over the last six weeks and racked up a 9-1 record, stifling three high-powered offenses while picking apart defenses seemingly at will. The average score of those 10 games -- the one loss to Dallas included -- has been Spurs 110, Opponent 94, and that league-best 16-point spread is actually generous to their victims. Staying within striking distance at halftime in this building has been a real chore, and San Antonio hasn't been seriously pushed into the fourth quarter in weeks.

San Antonio's latest shellacking -- a 117-89 victory over Oklahoma City in Game 5 that gave the Spurs a 3-2 series lead in the Western Conference finals -- was another beautiful, complete game. This was high-level basketball against a high-caliber opponent, the type of game in which the Spurs, who were trucked by the Thunder just two days ago, look unbeatable. And yet this wasn't even their largest victory at home in the series, and it was the fifth time in their last seven home games that they've won by at least 22 points. The drumbeat of exceptional plays is so steady that it ironically has become unexceptional. The Spurs are in that weird place again, all by themselves at the desert junction of breathtaking and ho-hum. Pay attention, though, because Manu Ginobili is liable to whip a no-look tumbleweed to Tim Duncan through traffic at any moment.

Six or seven hours up Interstate-35 and the Chesapeake Energy Arena court was collapsing in on the Spurs, the shooters were cold, the dribblers were panicking and an unstoppable Russell Westbrook was bursting into the "Best NBA player not named LeBron James or Kevin Durant" conversation. Back in San Antonio, the ball moved effortlessly, Danny Green, Ginobili and Patty Mills were taking turns burying threes again, and Westbrook was slamming a canister of chalk off the sideline table in frustration and bowing his head while spitting out one-word responses during his media session. In Oklahoma, the Thunder have won by an average of 11 points. In San Antonio, the Thunder have been blown out by an average of 27.

"This is the craziest series I've ever been involved in," Duncan said, and he's been involved in a few.

Watch: Westbrook's emphatic dunk vs. Spurs

Up in Oklahoma, there was no answer to Serge Ibaka. Down in Texas, he was practically invisible, posting just six points (on 3-of-10 shooting) and two rebounds. Up north, Duncan struggled to leave his mark on the action and found himself resting during an extended stretch of Game 4 garbage time. Down here, he posted 22 points (on 8-of-13 shooting), 12 rebounds and two blocks, once again looking like the best big man on the court.

"I have no clue, honestly," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said, when asked to explain why the two teams have played such different games when the venue switches. "Both [teams] look like they feel pretty comfortable playing at home. So that's why we've opted not to go to OKC [for Game 6]."

You can't blame him for wanting to stay put. When it comes to home games during the playoffs, San Antonio now ranks No. 1 in the league in offensive efficiency, field goal percentage, three-point percentage, defensive rebounds, opponent points in the paint, and opponent fast-break points, among other categories. They rank a measly second in defensive efficiency and assist-to-turnover ratio, among others.

Popovich made some tweaks, starting Matt Bonner in the first half and Boris Diaw in the second half in place of his usual starter Tiago Splitter, in an effort to cut into Ibaka's interior effectiveness by adding a shooting presence. The 2014 Coach of the Year also used Kawhi Leonard on Westbrook for much of the game, hoping that the best athlete in his starting five could find some success in slowing down the league's most explosive point guard. Both moves paid off just fine, and certainly neither backfired, even though Bonner didn't score or grab a rebound in 17 minutes and Westbrook still finished with 21 points, seven assists, four rebounds and three steals.

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But, as Thunder coach Scott Brooks noted, those adjustments didn't dictate the result. The totality of San Antonio's collective play did.

"Their adjustment [was] they played a much better game," Brooks said. "That is a good team that scores in bunches and they close out quarters, and they get you running after the ball. You have to be able to contain that basketball. ... We gave them everything they wanted. They got the dribble drive, they got the three-point line, and they got to the free-throw line."

Ginobili was magical, scoring 19 points (on 7-of-9 shooting) and dishing six assists. He scored five points in a two-for-one situation to close the first half -- following up a patented running lefty layup with a three-pointer -- that pushed San Antonio's lead to double digits entering the break. In the third quarter, he was a man possessed, calling for the ball, screaming at Mills to get into the correct position, taking off from way outside for a dunk attempt that wound up blocked, knifing through the paint, burying a three, and whizzing a pass to Duncan that traveled a few inches away from Steven Adams' head.

As the lead hit 20 points, the sing-song serenading chants started pouring down, the t-shirt machine gun was ominously rolled out and the Thunder bench simultaneously got the glassy-eyed glaze that tends to accompany the realization that their hole is too deep for any amount of digging to matter.

Oklahoma City took some solace from the fact that it will be home for Game 6 on Saturday, but there is no longer any escaping the task that stands before it now that its season is once again on the brink. Holding serve would only guarantee the Thunder a daunting Game 7, a fourth chance to keep things competitive at the AT&T Center.

"If we want to get to where we want to go, we've got to win in San Antonio," Durant said, a line that probably belongs in the "easier said than done" Hall of Fame.

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Miami Heat's Chris Andersen says he's a game-time decision - MiamiHerald.com

Heat center Chris Andersen, sidelined the past two games, said Thursday that his thigh bruise has improved but remained noncommittal about whether he will be able to play in Game 6 on Friday night.

“I’m not limping anymore,” he said.

He added that he doesn’t feel much discomfort and regardless, “I’ve got a high tolerance for pain.”

Andersen was limited in practice Thursday and called himself a game-time decision.

Players defended by Andersen are shooting just 31.5 percent against him in this postseason, by far the lowest (or best) of any Heat frontcourt player, according to synergysports.com.

PLAYERS FINED

The NBA fined Pacers guard Lance Stephenson $10,000 and center Roy Hibbert $5,000 for flopping during Game 5. Stephenson’s fine was larger because he was penalized $5,000 for flopping earlier in the series.

Indiana forward Paul George was fined $25,000 for criticizing the officiating after Game 4.

• The fact that the Heat practiced Thursday after a road game the night before was highly unusual.

“Everybody’s a little ornery,” Chris Bosh said. “Everybody got in late. The ideal situation, we stay in bed all day.”

• Even though most of the five fouls against LeBron James in Game 5 were hardly egregious, James and other Heat people did not publicly question the officiating, choosing to avoid a fine.

Among those rising to James’ defense: ESPN’s Bill Simmons, who said superstars should be afforded more respect and shouldn’t be called for the type of ticky-tack fouls that James was whistled for.

Conversely, the Heat’s eight free-throw attempts tied for the fewest in a playoff game by any team since Miami shot eight against Chicago in a first-round game in 2006.

Heat coach Erik Spoelstra attributed that to the Pacers’ defense.

“We have to be committed to get our attacks,” he said.

• More evidence of how things can change from the regular season: Hibbert, who shot 2 for 10 against Udonis Haslem in the regular season, is 8 for 15 when Haslem is in the game in this series but 13 for 35 when Haslem is out of the game.

Hibbert is a plus-28 with Haslem in the game and a minus-41 with Haslem on the bench.

• The Heat, which has the 26th and 55th picks in the June 26 draft, on Thursday reportedly worked out forwards Casey Prather (Florida) and Khem Birch (UNLV), and guards Jordan Adams (UCLA), Jordan Clarkson (Missouri) and Bryce Cotton (Providence).

BY THE NUMBERS

• Bosh’s 21 shots were his most in a playoff game since joining the Heat. Before Game 5, the Heat was 10-0 all-time when Bosh took at least 20 shots in any game.

• James’ teams in Miami and Cleveland are 0-9 in playoff games when he scores fewer than 15 points. … The Heat went 15 for 31 on three-pointers, only the fourth time in NBA playoff history that a team lost a game after making at least 15 threes.

• According to Nielsen Media, 24.6 percent of Dade/Broward homes with TV sets watched the game — the highest Heat rating of the postseason. The rating peaked at a 31.3 during the game’s final minutes.

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There's international drama over the pic of Kate Middleton's bare bum - Washington Post

Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge walks at the Kranji Commonwealth War Cemetery, to pay her respects to the war dead, in Singapore September 13, 2012. REUTERS/Nicolas Asfouri/Pool

Kate Middleton in Singapore in 2012. (REUTERS/Nicolas Asfouri/Pool)

This one begins with a German tabloid, a Duchess in a summer dress and a bare bum.

On a recent trip to Australia, Prince William and his wife Kate Middleton were ambling toward their helicopter when a gust of wind stirred Middleton’s dress — and an international controversy.

Far away, a curly-haired Australian photographer named Diane Morel had just snapped a picture of Middleton. At the time, she didn’t know what she had. “It wasn’t until I got home,” she told the Sydney Daily Telegraph, “and I popped my camera card into the computer that I realized what I had captured.”

But there it was: Kate Middleton’s behind.

This clearly was a valuable commodity. But what to do with it? British tabloids, which are usually keen to publish just about anything, are famously hesitant to run images that scandalize their royalty. But a German tabloid named Bild had no such reservations.

Hailing Middleton’s tuchas as a “beautiful bum,” it ran the picture of a moment it called “short but magical.”

And this drama was off to the races.

Even the Daily Mail couldn’t believe the horror of it all. ”It’s terribly sad for Kate that her pert derriere will now be the image that forever marks any recollection of her and William’s triumphant tour,” the Daily Mail wrote in an editorial, asking Middleton to be a little more decent in public. “How mortifying for any woman to be pictured in such an unedifying way.”

While the royals are pretty serious about being photographed showing skin, they aren’t historically concerned with baring it in the first place. A similar saga emerged last year when a French magazine called Closer ran pictures of a topless Middleton. She had been sunbathing with Prince William. As the Guardian humorlessly put it: “The most intimate [photo] showed the duchess topless and having sun cream rubbed into her buttocks by William.”

The royal couple wasn’t pleased. The magazine was investigated by French authorities for invasion of privacy and ultimately ordered to relinquish all images of the naked Duchess of Cambridge.

This go-round, however, things are a little different — the nudity was captured in the public domain. Bild is refusing to back off its pics — which it ran again yesterday beside images of Kim Kardashian’s rear end — and other outlets have now joined the fray.

Much to the dismay of many Brits, Rupert Murdoch’s Daily Telegraph in Australia just invoked the royal behind in an article telling the British to cool it.

“Over the decades the media have been consistently fairly kind to the royal family — the British media almost universally respectful of the royal decree that the royal family’s privacy should be maintained and their dignity upheld as it is in the best interests of the royal family,” columnist Annette Sharp wrote. “But it seems a bit ridiculous to expect the rest of the world’s media to follow suit, particularly in a world in which flesh and commercialism go hand in hand.”

But don’t tell the royal family that. According to the Daily Star, the duchess is “furious.”

“Kate realizes she has a very public life,” said an anonymous source. “But she does believe she’s entitled to a certain amount of privacy. She doesn’t expect to see her naked [expletive] splashed across a German tabloid. She’s furious. She and Prince William are once again considering their legal options.”

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Spurs continue home-court domination, blow out Thunder in Game 5 - SI.com

The Spurs went undefeated at home in May and won each game there by at least 17 points.

Greg Nelson/SI

SAN ANTONIO -- A large snake was found in the visitors' locker room, Rodeo of the Year banners clog the rafters, the Coyote mascot has a gatling gun to shoot free t-shirts from, a man dressed as Jesus sits near the three-point line blessing every possession, the courtside crowd uses each referee's first name while screaming complaints and the upper decks are full of waving flags and bouncing "Ole! Ole! Ole!" chants. This is the AT&T Center, the 2014 playoffs' most horrific house of horrors, a humongous concrete egg in which the Spurs just completed a perfect 7-0 May, setting an NBA record by winning each game by at least 17 points.

The two-time defending champion Heat have yet to lose at home during the postseason, and yet the Spurs' home-court dominance has still been the league's best. San Antonio has welcomed three of the league's 12 best teams by point differential -- Dallas, Portland and Oklahoma City -- to the heart of Texas over the last six weeks and racked up a 9-1 record, stifling three high-powered offenses while picking apart defenses seemingly at will. The average score of those 10 games -- the one loss to Dallas included -- has been Spurs 110, Opponent 94, and that league-best 16-point spread is actually generous to their victims. Staying within striking distance at halftime in this building has been a real chore, and San Antonio hasn't been seriously pushed into the fourth quarter in weeks.

San Antonio's latest shellacking -- a 117-89 victory over Oklahoma City in Game 5 that gave the Spurs a 3-2 series lead in the Western Conference finals -- was another beautiful, complete game. This was high-level basketball against a high-caliber opponent, the type of game in which the Spurs, who were trucked by the Thunder just two days ago, look unbeatable. And yet this wasn't even their largest victory at home in the series, and it was the fifth time in their last seven home games that they've won by at least 22 points. The drumbeat of exceptional plays is so steady that it ironically has become unexceptional. The Spurs are in that weird place again, all by themselves at the desert junction of breathtaking and ho-hum. Pay attention, though, because Manu Ginobili is liable to whip a no-look tumbleweed to Tim Duncan through traffic at any moment.

Six or seven hours up Interstate-35 and the Chesapeake Energy Arena court was collapsing in on the Spurs, the shooters were cold, the dribblers were panicking and an unstoppable Russell Westbrook was bursting into the "Best NBA player not named LeBron James or Kevin Durant" conversation. Back in San Antonio, the ball moved effortlessly, Danny Green, Ginobili and Patty Mills were taking turns burying threes again, and Westbrook was slamming a canister of chalk off the sideline table in frustration and bowing his head while spitting out one-word responses during his media session. In Oklahoma, the Thunder have won by an average of 11 points. In San Antonio, the Thunder have been blown out by an average of 27.

"This is the craziest series I've ever been involved in," Duncan said, and he's been involved in a few.

Watch: Westbrook's emphatic dunk vs. Spurs

Up in Oklahoma, there was no answer to Serge Ibaka. Down in Texas, he was practically invisible, posting just six points (on 3-of-10 shooting) and two rebounds. Up north, Duncan struggled to leave his mark on the action and found himself resting during an extended stretch of Game 4 garbage time. Down here, he posted 22 points (on 8-of-13 shooting), 12 rebounds and two blocks, once again looking like the best big man on the court.

"I have no clue, honestly," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said, when asked to explain why the two teams have played such different games when the venue switches. "Both [teams] look like they feel pretty comfortable playing at home. So that's why we've opted not to go to OKC [for Game 6]."

You can't blame him for wanting to stay put. When it comes to home games during the playoffs, San Antonio now ranks No. 1 in the league in offensive efficiency, field goal percentage, three-point percentage, defensive rebounds, opponent points in the paint, and opponent fast-break points, among other categories. They rank a measly second in defensive efficiency and assist-to-turnover ratio, among others.

Popovich made some tweaks, starting Matt Bonner in the first half and Boris Diaw in the second half in place of his usual starter Tiago Splitter, in an effort to cut into Ibaka's interior effectiveness by adding a shooting presence. The 2014 Coach of the Year also used Kawhi Leonard on Westbrook for much of the game, hoping that the best athlete in his starting five could find some success in slowing down the league's most explosive point guard. Both moves paid off just fine, and certainly neither backfired, even though Bonner didn't score or grab a rebound in 17 minutes and Westbrook still finished with 21 points, seven assists, four rebounds and three steals.

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But, as Thunder coach Scott Brooks noted, those adjustments didn't dictate the result. The totality of San Antonio's collective play did.

"Their adjustment [was] they played a much better game," Brooks said. "That is a good team that scores in bunches and they close out quarters, and they get you running after the ball. You have to be able to contain that basketball. ... We gave them everything they wanted. They got the dribble drive, they got the three-point line, and they got to the free-throw line."

Ginobili was magical, scoring 19 points (on 7-of-9 shooting) and dishing six assists. He scored five points in a two-for-one situation to close the first half -- following up a patented running lefty layup with a three-pointer -- that pushed San Antonio's lead to double digits entering the break. In the third quarter, he was a man possessed, calling for the ball, screaming at Mills to get into the correct position, taking off from way outside for a dunk attempt that wound up blocked, knifing through the paint, burying a three, and whizzing a pass to Duncan that traveled a few inches away from Steven Adams' head.

As the lead hit 20 points, the sing-song serenading chants started pouring down, the t-shirt machine gun was ominously rolled out and the Thunder bench simultaneously got the glassy-eyed glaze that tends to accompany the realization that their hole is too deep for any amount of digging to matter.

Oklahoma City took some solace from the fact that it will be home for Game 6 on Saturday, but there is no longer any escaping the task that stands before it now that its season is once again on the brink. Holding serve would only guarantee the Thunder a daunting Game 7, a fourth chance to keep things competitive at the AT&T Center.

"If we want to get to where we want to go, we've got to win in San Antonio," Durant said, a line that probably belongs in the "easier said than done" Hall of Fame.

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Linda Robertson: Indiana Pacers making things tougher for Miami Heat - MiamiHerald.com

One of the Pacers’ slogans is, “Indiana’s game, Indiana’s team.”

Basketball tradition and passion reign in a state that ought to have a hoop on its license plates to go with the one in practically every driveway.

Indiana gave us John Wooden, Oscar Robertson, Bobby Knight and Larry Bird. So the Pacers were not going to be eliminated from the playoffs on their home court without a fight.

Indiana, riding the hot hand of Paul George, held off Miami 93-90 before their relieved fans inside Bankers Life Fieldhouse and narrowed the Heat’s Eastern Conference finals lead to 3-2 on Wednesday night.

At the least, the Pacers forestalled the Heat’s march to a fourth straight NBA Finals appearance. At the most, they added suspense to a one-sided series.

Indiana still needs to win two in a row, starting with Game 6 in Miami on Friday. It will take a miracle to dig out of that hole. Then again, this is the land of (ital)Hoosiers(ital).

The Pacers got help from an unlikely source: LeBron James. Not only was James saddled with five fouls and consigned to the bench midway through the third quarter, but he hesitated on a possible game-tying drive to the basket in the closing seconds. James, anticipating the impediment of 7-0 Roy Hibbert, instead dished to Chris Bosh, who missed from his sweet spot in the right corner.

His choice to defer rather than finish was somewhat reminiscent of James, circa 2011, but both he and Coach Erik Spoelstra defended his pass for a potential game-winning shot.

“I think he saw C.B. open for a count in the corner, his corner, so he went for the kill,” Spoelstra said. “We’ll take that. It was actually good to see that poise.”

James said he would do it again.

“It’s like playing cards – that’s why they’ve got backs on them: You don’t know what’s going to happen,” he said. “We got a great look, and if C.B. makes that shot and we get a stop, we’re headed to the Finals.”

There was a flurry of ifs at the end of this thriller we’d been anticipating since the series started. What if Shane Battier hadn’t made an uncharacteristic error in fouling George? What if Miami had played tougher defense down the stretch? What if the Heat had capitalized on the Pacers’ missed free throws? What if an open Lewis had taken the final three-pointer?

With James fidgeting and fuming on the bench for all but 24 minutes, the henchmen tried mightily, and came very, very close, but could not win without the King.

Lewis was nearly the hero, nailing six three-pointers, including two in the closing minutes that kept Miami within striking distance. The ageless Ray Allen added 15 points. Bosh and Dwyane Wade scored in double figures and combined for 18 rebounds. Even Michael Beasley came in for a three-minute contribution.

But George finally decided to live up to his reputation as a budding superstar by pouring in 37 points – 21 in the fourth quarter. George, reduced to the role of facilitator by the Heat’s double teams in the past three games, pulled his team back from the cliff. He was sharp on defense, too, making six steals on a night when the Pacers intensified their pressure and forced Miami into 17 turnovers.

“Coach told me green light, stay on green,” George said. “D[avid] West kept telling me, ‘Don’t keep no bullets in the chamber.’ So I came out firing. My teammates found me and I got hot.”

The Pacers whined about the officiating after their Game 4 loss. George called it “home cooking” in Miami. West derisively referred to “new rules.”

Indiana Coach Frank Vogel told his players to stop making excuses and grow up. Beat the big brother.

They prevailed in the mad concluding minutes of a game of seesaw jerks, but the Heat was, essentially, playing with one hand tied behind its back. Even when James was in the game, he was out of sorts and off target. He made only two of 10 shots and scored seven points, with three turnovers and two rebounds.

Human splinter Lance Stephenson tried again to get under James’ skin. In one instance, he blew into James ear as they stood next to each other, and he wasn’t murmuring sweet nothings. He kept his motor mouth running the whole game. He also eavesdropped on a Miami sideline conference.

“That’s Lance being Lance,” George said. “I hope his breath wasn’t too bad for ‘Bron.”

James was assessed his fifth foul when he dove into Stephenson as they pursued a loose ball with 8:34 left in the third. The crowd went from disgusted to ecstatic. A huge break – James out again after just 14 minutes of action. He’d already missed a chunk of the second quarter when he picked up his third foul.

Miami fell to 13-4 in closeout games in the Big Three era. Indiana, which blew leads in Games 2 and 3 and blew up in Game 4, got back to the tactics that got it this far.

Indiana made a conscious effort to drive the ball inside and outmuscle the Heat, as they had when they played to their strengths in their Game 1 victory. They were determined to make this a grind. They played at a deliberate tempo, pounding the ball low to Hibbert, spinning hooks in the lane, utilizing the backboard with scoops from under the net. They outscored the Heat 42-22 in the paint and won the rebounding battle by seven.

George Hill awoke from his slumber and flitted to the rim like a moth to a porch light bulb. Hibbert and West collected 29 points and 22 rebounds after poor performances in Game 4, and Indiana got to the free throw line 22 times to Miami’s eight.

The Pacers, however, again reverted to their weakness – a loss of concentration. Remember Evonne Goolagong’s “walkabouts” in her tennis matches? It’s an apt comparison for the Pacers, who seem to forget the gameplan. They made careless passes, lofted dumb bombs, dithered on the perimeter, missed free throws.

Then, what seemed a godsend for the flailing Pacers. James was forced to sit when he picked up his third foul six minutes prior to halftime. He waited with a dejected look on his face, but didn’t need to worry. As usual, the reinforcements came through. In fact, they played better without him.

After a three-pointer by Allen prompted an Indiana timeout, an ebullient James came close to bear-hugging the five guys jogging off the court.

James played only 10 minutes and scored a mere two points in the half. Yet Miami outscored Indiana by seven with James on the bench, and secured a 42-33 halftime edge.

The game was a supreme test of Miami’s Big Two and supporting cast. They came within three points. They’ll have to pause now, and wait another 48 hours before attempting to become the first team since the 1987 Celtics to make a fourth straight trip to the Finals. They really do not want to go back to Indiana for a deciding Game 7. They tend to thrive under that type of pressure.

Nobody said chasing history would be a sprint.

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Spurs continue home-court domination, blow out Thunder in Game 5 - SI.com

The Spurs went undefeated at home in May and won each game there by at least 17 points.

Greg Nelson/SI

SAN ANTONIO -- A large snake was found in the visitors' locker room, Rodeo of the Year banners clog the rafters, the Coyote mascot has a gatling gun to shoot free t-shirts from, a man dressed as Jesus sits near the three-point line blessing every possession, the courtside crowd uses each referee's first name while screaming complaints and the upper decks are full of waving flags and bouncing "Ole! Ole! Ole!" chants. This is the AT&T Center, the 2014 playoffs' most horrific house of horrors, a humongous concrete egg in which the Spurs just completed a perfect 7-0 May, setting an NBA record by winning each game by at least 17 points.

The two-time defending champion Heat have yet to lose at home during the postseason, and yet the Spurs' home-court dominance has still been the league's best. San Antonio has welcomed three of the league's 12 best teams by point differential -- Dallas, Portland and Oklahoma City -- to the heart of Texas over the last six weeks and racked up a 9-1 record, stifling three high-powered offenses while picking apart defenses seemingly at will. The average score of those 10 games -- the one loss to Dallas included -- has been Spurs 110, Opponent 94, and that league-best 16-point spread is actually generous to their victims. Staying within striking distance at halftime in this building has been a real chore, and San Antonio hasn't been seriously pushed into the fourth quarter in weeks.

San Antonio's latest shellacking -- a 117-89 victory over Oklahoma City in Game 5 that gave the Spurs a 3-2 series lead in the Western Conference finals -- was another beautiful, complete game. This was high-level basketball against a high-caliber opponent, the type of game in which the Spurs, who were trucked by the Thunder just two days ago, look unbeatable. And yet this wasn't even their largest victory at home in the series, and it was the fifth time in their last seven home games that they've won by at least 22 points. The drumbeat of exceptional plays is so steady that it ironically has become unexceptional. The Spurs are in that weird place again, all by themselves at the desert junction of breathtaking and ho-hum. Pay attention, though, because Manu Ginobili is liable to whip a no-look tumbleweed to Tim Duncan through traffic at any moment.

Six or seven hours up Interstate-35 and the Chesapeake Energy Arena court was collapsing in on the Spurs, the shooters were cold, the dribblers were panicking and an unstoppable Russell Westbrook was bursting into the "Best NBA player not named LeBron James or Kevin Durant" conversation. Back in San Antonio, the ball moved effortlessly, Danny Green, Ginobili and Patty Mills were taking turns burying threes again, and Westbrook was slamming a canister of chalk off the sideline table in frustration and bowing his head while spitting out one-word responses during his media session. In Oklahoma, the Thunder have won by an average of 11 points. In San Antonio, the Thunder have been blown out by an average of 27.

"This is the craziest series I've ever been involved in," Duncan said, and he's been involved in a few.

Watch: Westbrook's emphatic dunk vs. Spurs

Up in Oklahoma, there was no answer to Serge Ibaka. Down in Texas, he was practically invisible, posting just six points (on 3-of-10 shooting) and two rebounds. Up north, Duncan struggled to leave his mark on the action and found himself resting during an extended stretch of Game 4 garbage time. Down here, he posted 22 points (on 8-of-13 shooting), 12 rebounds and two blocks, once again looking like the best big man on the court.

"I have no clue, honestly," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said, when asked to explain why the two teams have played such different games when the venue switches. "Both [teams] look like they feel pretty comfortable playing at home. So that's why we've opted not to go to OKC [for Game 6]."

You can't blame him for wanting to stay put. When it comes to home games during the playoffs, San Antonio now ranks No. 1 in the league in offensive efficiency, field goal percentage, three-point percentage, defensive rebounds, opponent points in the paint, and opponent fast-break points, among other categories. They rank a measly second in defensive efficiency and assist-to-turnover ratio, among others.

Popovich made some tweaks, starting Matt Bonner in the first half and Boris Diaw in the second half in place of his usual starter Tiago Splitter, in an effort to cut into Ibaka's interior effectiveness by adding a shooting presence. The 2014 Coach of the Year also used Kawhi Leonard on Westbrook for much of the game, hoping that the best athlete in his starting five could find some success in slowing down the league's most explosive point guard. Both moves paid off just fine, and certainly neither backfired, even though Bonner didn't score or grab a rebound in 17 minutes and Westbrook still finished with 21 points, seven assists, four rebounds and three steals.

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But, as Thunder coach Scott Brooks noted, those adjustments didn't dictate the result. The totality of San Antonio's collective play did.

"Their adjustment [was] they played a much better game," Brooks said. "That is a good team that scores in bunches and they close out quarters, and they get you running after the ball. You have to be able to contain that basketball. ... We gave them everything they wanted. They got the dribble drive, they got the three-point line, and they got to the free-throw line."

Ginobili was magical, scoring 19 points (on 7-of-9 shooting) and dishing six assists. He scored five points in a two-for-one situation to close the first half -- following up a patented running lefty layup with a three-pointer -- that pushed San Antonio's lead to double digits entering the break. In the third quarter, he was a man possessed, calling for the ball, screaming at Mills to get into the correct position, taking off from way outside for a dunk attempt that wound up blocked, knifing through the paint, burying a three, and whizzing a pass to Duncan that traveled a few inches away from Steven Adams' head.

As the lead hit 20 points, the sing-song serenading chants started pouring down, the t-shirt machine gun was ominously rolled out and the Thunder bench simultaneously got the glassy-eyed glaze that tends to accompany the realization that their hole is too deep for any amount of digging to matter.

Oklahoma City took some solace from the fact that it will be home for Game 6 on Saturday, but there is no longer any escaping the task that stands before it now that its season is once again on the brink. Holding serve would only guarantee the Thunder a daunting Game 7, a fourth chance to keep things competitive at the AT&T Center.

"If we want to get to where we want to go, we've got to win in San Antonio," Durant said, a line that probably belongs in the "easier said than done" Hall of Fame.

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NBC should be rooting for Blackhawks to beat Kings - Chicago Tribune

They won't admit it, but privately NBC will be rooting for the Blackhawks to pull off the comeback against the Kings this weekend.

Having the Hawks in the Stanley Cup Final is huge for NBC. Not as much with the Kings.

With the Rangers and Kings still alive, Chicago technically is the nation's No. 3 TV market in terms of overall viewers during the playoffs. But thanks to the avid following for the Hawks, the town is a clear-cut No. 1 in terms of delivering hockey viewers.

The numbers tell the story. Before Thursday's Rangers-Montreal game, New York was averaging a 4.1 rating for Rangers games during the playoffs; Los Angeles is at 1.7 for Kings games. Meanwhile, Chicago checks in at a robust 13.4 for Hawks playoff games.

While being careful not to play favorites in the Western Conference finals, NBC announcer Mike Emrick knows what the Blackhawks have meant to the NBC in recent years.

"It's a magical time for hockey in Chicago," Emrick said. "There's a passion that is hard to discount. Even Mr. Fix-it on Saturday morning is talking Blackhawks hockey."

The rating for the Hawks' overtime victory in Game 5 really hammers it home. The game pulled a 16.3 rating in Chicago. It only did a 3.0 rating in Los Angeles even though the Kings had a chance to clinch a bid to the Stanley Cup Final.

Here's a further breakdown of the numbers: 1 rating point in Chicago is worth approximately 35,000 homes; 56,000 homes in Los Angeles, the No. 2 market. That means Game 5 was seen in 576,000 homes in Chicago compared to 169,000 for Los Angeles. To put it in further perspective, the Chicago rating accounted for an astounding 39 percent of the national rating for NBCSN.

The 3.0 rating for Game 5 actually was considered good for Los Angeles. However, even though the Kings were founded in 1967, and were a Stanley Cup winner in 2012, hockey still flies mostly below the radar out there. The land of the stars still prefers ice in their drinks, not necessarily in their sports.

When the Kings won the 2012 Final in six games over the Devils, the series averaged 3 million viewers per telecast, the worst since 2007. Los Angeles averaged a 7.2 for the six games.

Contrast those numbers to Chicago in the 2013 Final, when the Game 6 clincher pulled a 30.2 rating here (1.05 million homes). Thanks to strong ratings in Boston, the entire series averaged 5.8 million viewers per game, the highest since 1994.

The Blackhawks' drawing power also goes beyond Chicago. They might be No. 1 in terms of national appeal.

The Rangers also are up there. NBC and the NHL salivate at the notion of a second straight Original 6 Final.

Cubs radio: As reported here previously, the Cubs soon will announce their new radio deal with WBBM-AM 780, beginning with the 2015 season. The two sides reportedly are ironing out final details, and WGN is not expected to match WBBM's offer.

Remote patrol: Chicago basketball fans will want to set the DVR for "The84Draft," a new NBA TV documentary on June 9 at 8 p.m. A good portion of the film obviously will focus on the Bulls getting Michael Jordan with the third pick. But it's not all about No. 23. That draft produced four Hall of Famers out of the NBA — Jordan, Akeem Olajuwon, Charles Barkley and John Stockton. … Former Illinois and recently retired Giants offensive lineman David Diehl is on the fast track with his new career. Fox Sports named him as a game analyst for its NFL coverage next year. … Marv Albert told Awful Announcing that he will give up his NFL play-by-play duties on CBS next year. He wants to concentrate only on basketball. … What was the top-rated sports event last weekend? If you answered Game 3 of the Heat-Pacers series or the Indianapolis 500, you're wrong. NASCAR rules, as the Coca-Cola 600 on Fox pulled in 7 million viewers.

Ed Sherman writes at shermanreport.com. Follow him @Sherman_Report.

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There's international drama over the pic of Kate Middleton's bare bum - Washington Post

Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge walks at the Kranji Commonwealth War Cemetery, to pay her respects to the war dead, in Singapore September 13, 2012. REUTERS/Nicolas Asfouri/Pool

Kate Middleton in Singapore in 2012. (REUTERS/Nicolas Asfouri/Pool)

This one begins with a German tabloid, a Duchess in a summer dress and a bare bum.

On a recent trip to Australia, Prince William and his wife Kate Middleton were ambling toward their helicopter when a gust of wind stirred Middleton’s dress — and an international controversy.

Far away, a curly-haired Australian photographer named Diane Morel had just snapped a picture of Middleton. At the time, she didn’t know what she had. “It wasn’t until I got home,” she told the Sydney Daily Telegraph, “and I popped my camera card into the computer that I realized what I had captured.”

But there it was: Kate Middleton’s behind.

This clearly was a valuable commodity. But what to do with it? British tabloids, which are usually keen to publish just about anything, are famously hesitant to run images that scandalize their royalty. But a German tabloid named Bild had no such reservations.

Hailing Middleton’s tuchas as a “beautiful bum,” it ran the picture of a moment it called “short but magical.”

And this drama was off to the races.

Even the Daily Mail couldn’t believe the horror of it all. ”It’s terribly sad for Kate that her pert derriere will now be the image that forever marks any recollection of her and William’s triumphant tour,” the Daily Mail wrote in an editorial, asking Middleton to be a little more decent in public. “How mortifying for any woman to be pictured in such an unedifying way.”

While the royals are pretty serious about being photographed showing skin, they aren’t historically concerned with baring it in the first place. A similar saga emerged last year when a French magazine called Closer ran pictures of a topless Middleton. She had been sunbathing with Prince William. As the Guardian humorlessly put it: “The most intimate [photo] showed the duchess topless and having sun cream rubbed into her buttocks by William.”

The royal couple wasn’t pleased. The magazine was investigated by French authorities for invasion of privacy and ultimately ordered to relinquish all images of the naked Duchess of Cambridge.

This go-round, however, things are a little different — the nudity was captured in the public domain. Bild is refusing to back off its pics — which it ran again yesterday beside images of Kim Kardashian’s rear end — and other outlets have now joined the fray.

Much to the dismay of many Brits, Rupert Murdoch’s Daily Telegraph in Australia just invoked the royal behind in an article telling the British to cool it.

“Over the decades the media have been consistently fairly kind to the royal family — the British media almost universally respectful of the royal decree that the royal family’s privacy should be maintained and their dignity upheld as it is in the best interests of the royal family,” columnist Annette Sharp wrote. “But it seems a bit ridiculous to expect the rest of the world’s media to follow suit, particularly in a world in which flesh and commercialism go hand in hand.”

But don’t tell the royal family that. According to the Daily Star, the duchess is “furious.”

“Kate realizes she has a very public life,” said an anonymous source. “But she does believe she’s entitled to a certain amount of privacy. She doesn’t expect to see her naked [expletive] splashed across a German tabloid. She’s furious. She and Prince William are once again considering their legal options.”

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Thursday, May 29, 2014

LeBron On Stephenson Blowing In His Ear - ESPN

INDIANAPOLIS -- LeBron James staggered to his bench with a mixed look of amusement and bewilderment on his face, as if he'd just been the victim of some sort of practical joke.

"Can you believe this?" James said as he took a seat, his teammates eyeing him and not really sure what to say.

Actually, there was a word in between "you" and "believe" added for emphasis.

During a rather prolific period last season, James once went 250 consecutive minutes without being called for a foul. During a two-week stretch in 2009, he was called for a total of three fouls in nine games, including five consecutive games without drawing a whistle. A full week of NBA basketball without a single foul.

[+] EnlargeLeBron James

Joe Robbins/Getty ImagesLeBron James didn't have much success scoring in Game 5, held to seven points.

In seven of his 11 seasons, James has averaged fewer than two fouls per game, including this season, when he settled at 1.6, slightly up from his 1.4 last season. In his 153-game playoff career, he's averaged about 2.3 fouls a game.

It is with context that you can understand the shock and awe James was experiencing when he was yanked less than four minutes into the second half with the number five displayed on the scoreboard next to his foul total.

Never in James' career had he been called for five fouls in just 13 minutes on the floor. It never happened in his high school career, either. Same for his international career. Alas, the documents from Riedinger Middle School are incomplete, but if it did happen, James can't remember it.

Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals was certainly unusual, as James' historic foul trouble opened the door for the Indiana Pacers to capture a 93-90 victory and extend the series, which they now trail 3-2.

The last memory of this game probably will be those James fouls, perhaps unfairly more than Paul George coming up with one of the finest performances of his career when he blitzed the Heat for 31 of his career playoff high 37 points in the second half to save the Pacers' season. 

That or the image of Lance Stephenson -- who only Wednesday morning announced he had learned his lesson about trying to bait James with shenanigans -- blowing in James' ear during a stoppage in play in the second half.

In the locker room after the game, George wasn't watching the highlights of his two 3-pointers in the final two minutes that gave the Pacers their winning margin -- he was watching the slow-motion replays of Stephenson's latest maneuver aimed to annoy James.

"I hope his breath wasn't too bad for LeBron," George said.

"I blew in my wife's ear before," James said. "That was definitely a defensive tactic."

"That's the second time that's happened to you," said Dwyane Wade, remembering that Stephenson used the same tactic with James in the conference finals last season. Of course, Wade remembered, but then again, how could he forget?

Bottom line, though, is that despite those James fouls, the ear-blowing act and Stephenson's irking Heat coach Erik Spoelstra by joining a team huddle to eavesdrop, the game was tied with four minutes to play.

No matter how some in the Heat camp may have howled at a couple of the fouls James was hit with, when he was on the court for 24 minutes, he wasn't very good. He shot just 2-of-10 and finished with just seven points, the lowest playoff output of his career, circumstantial asterisk or not.

James was in for those last four minutes and may have even gotten away with a shove or two on Stephenson, who was guarding him rather effectively. The Heat had their chances to solidify their spot in the Finals, but they couldn't get a stop, mostly because George was so hot with his jumper, and they couldn't execute on the final play when they had the ball down just two points.

At one point in the game, Spoelstra was so desperate with his lineup that he called on both Toney Douglas and Michael Beasley, two end-of-bench players whom he didn't dream he'd be using in the middle of a close road conference finals game.

The Heat knew it, too. Unlike the Pacers, who couldn't resist the catnip of complaining about officiating when the Heat got 34 free throws in Game 4 (they had eight in Game 5 after George's $25,000 fine for a "home cooking" reference), the Heat accepted that things don't always go the way of the road team and they'd missed a chance.

It may be odd for James to be in deep foul trouble, indeed, but the Heat got six 3-pointers from Rashard Lewis. He'd been just 3-of-21 on 3-pointers in the playoffs coming in and was relegated to being celebrated for his nebulous plus/minus success in the series. The basketball gods often provide such ebb and flow.

Had the Heat been informed before the game, for instance, that they'd get a combined 25 points from James and Lewis, they'd have probably considered that just about right. The long-standing playoff veterans know this, and it makes the outcome easier to understand if not totally digest.

"The game is reffed by the refs. They ref how they see it. We play it, and you live with the results," James said. "We were still in a position to win."

James, in fact, had the ball in his hands with 10 seconds left down two points. He got separation on George, who was on him for that vital play, and went toward the rim.

This moment instantly reminded some of Game 1 of the conference finals last season, when James beat George on a drive and scored at the rim, mostly because Pacers coach Frank Vogel had pulled rim protector Roy Hibbert from the game because he knew Chris Bosh would be on the perimeter. Vogel has lived with that mistake for a year and learned from it.

Hibbert was in the game this time, and when James headed to the rim, Hibbert left Bosh and positioned himself in front of the rim. Like a computer processing binary code, James instantly passed to Bosh in the corner for a 3-pointer the instant he saw Hibbert make his choice.

James has been making this same play for years: He lost his first conference finals game in 2007 when he made the same play to the same corner for Donyell Marshall in a game in Detroit. Marshall missed that shot. Bosh, who has a strong clutch 3-point shooting résumé, missed as well. The Pacers had it defended nicely, rotating defenders over to help and challenge.

"We know the types of sets that they like to run," Vogel said. "We didn't want to give up the rim to LeBron, as we did the last time."

James treated the outcome like he'd treated the fouls, with disappointment but acceptance. In addition to being a basketball player, James loves to play cards. He'd calculated the odds and moved on, not just with the missed Bosh game winner at the end, but the extreme outlier situation that had him glued to the bench for 24 miserable minutes.

"It's like playing cards, that's why they got backs on them. You don't know what's going to happen," James said. "I trust myself that I'm going to make the right play to help us win. And win, lose or draw, you live with that."

Memorial Day 2014

Memorial Day

Miami Heat

LG G3

Scout Willis