Hurricanes trade Boucher, Alt to Flyers for Pither

The Carolina Hurricanes announced today that the team has acquired center Luke Pither from the Philadelphia Flyers in exchange for goaltender Brian Boucher and defenseman Mark Alt. Pither will be assigned to the Charlotte Checkers of the American Hockey League (AHL).

Pither, 23, has totaled 25 points (11g, 14a) and 18 penalty minutes in 35 games with Trenton and Wheeling of the ECHL this season. The Burketon, Ont., native signed as a free agent with the Flyers on March 4, 2010, after totaling 250 points (104g, 146a) in 307 games during a five-year Ontario Hockey League (OHL) career with Kingston, Guelph, Belleville and Barrie. In two seasons with Adirondack of the American Hockey League (AHL), Pither (6’0”, 186 lbs.) has notched 30 points (11g, 19a) in 106 games.

The Carolina Hurricanes open their 2012-13 regular-season schedule on Jan. 19 at Florida, and play their home opener on Jan. 22 against the Tampa Bay Lightning at PNC Arena. For information on 2012-13 Carolina Hurricanes ticket packages, please visit www.CarolinaHurricanes.com, or call 1-866-NHL-CANES.

Karmanos sends open letter to Hurricane fans

Dear loyal fans:

Long before I was the owner of a National Hockey League franchise, I was a hockey fan. My passion for watching our great game has only grown as I’ve watched our team over the years, reaching the highest of highs when the Hurricanes brought North Carolina its first major league championship in 2006. As a fan, I understand how frustrating it is not to be able to watch your team in action. With the resolution agreed upon this weekend, we will finally have the chance to see the 2012-13 Carolina Hurricanes on the ice. I sincerely apologize for the delay, and for the hurt that it caused you as a fan.

This past summer, our organization took major steps toward giving our team a better chance to compete for the Stanley Cup. Our team had a need at forward, and we were able to bring in two elite-level players to fill that need. Jordan Staal is a big, physical center who is just 24 years old and entering the prime of his career. We feel that Jordan is the perfect fit for our organization, which is why we signed him to a 10-year contract in July, ensuring he will be a fixture on the ice and in our community for a long time. Alexander Semin is one of hockey’s most talented players, and our staff did a great deal of scouting and research to get a grasp on the effect he could have in our lineup. The addition of these two high-end players to a lineup that already includes Eric Staal, Jeff Skinner and Cam Ward makes this an exciting time for fans of the Hurricanes, myself included.

Again, I apologize for the delay to the start of the season, and thank you for your patience throughout this process. It’s time to play hockey, and I can’t wait to see what this team has in store for us this season.

Sincerely,

Peter Karmanos Jr.
Owner

Two former Panthers teammates die a day apart

A pair of former Carolina Panthers teammates died over the weekend.

Northern Arizona University assistant football coach Jeff Lewis, who played in seven games at quarterback for the Panthers from 1999-2000, died at age 39 of an undisclosed pre-existing condition.

Bryan Stoltenberg, an offensive lineman who played in 42 games with 18 starts for the Panthers, died at age 40. He recently underwent surgeries after a car accident in December. An autopsy is expected to reveal he died of a blood clot.

“We are very saddened to learn the news of the passing of former players Jeff Lewis and Bryan Stoltenberg,” the Panthers released in a statement. “Both men always represented the team and organization in the best possible manner, and our thoughts and prayers go to their families.”

Should the Redskins have picked Wilson instead of RG3?

After rookie Russell Wilson led the Seattle Seahawks past the Robert Griffin III led-Redskins, the question comes to mind: Should the Redskins have picked Wilson instead of RG3? After all, the Redskins had to give up high draft picks to get Griffin, who ended the season with a nagging knee injury. Wilson, a former NC State quarterback, was chosen in the third round and is still in the playoffs.

Against the Redskins, Wilson completed 15 of 26 passes for 187 yards and ran eight times for 67 more while Griffin struggled after aggravating the knee injury.

While Griffin has brought back excitement to Washington, he is a career-ending injury away from setting the Redskins back years.

An economics editor based in DC, Neil Irwin, says that Wilson is a more valuable quarterback than Griffin.

He wrote, “The cost of a player is not just what he is paid, but what was given up to hire him. Opportunity cost matters. And Griffin did not just fall into the Redskins’ lap. The team traded not merely its own 2012 first-round draft pick to get him, but its 2012 second-round pick and first-round picks in 2013 and 2014. In other words, three extra opportunities to gain very good players at a below-market price were handed over to the St. Louis Rams in order to get Griffin.

“So on one hand, Griffin offers surplus value of around $8 million a year for as long as he stays healthy and remains on his rookie contract. But you also have to subtract the surplus value that the team would have gained from those three other players. As Kevin Meers wrote at the Harvard College Sports Analysis Collective, Griffin will need to have performance on par with sure-fire Hall of Famer Tom Brady, winner of three Super Bowls, to be worth what the Redskins traded away for him.

“Contrast that with the winning quarterback in Sunday’s game. Russell Wilson, also a rookie, was the eighth highest performing quarterback this season, which would make him worth something like Ben Roethlisberger’s $9.9 million. Instead, as a third-round draft pick, Wilson cost the Seahawks only $545,0000. That $9.4 million in surplus value is not only higher than Griffin’s, but the Seahawks didn’t have to trade anything away to get him, so you don’t have to subtract any opportunity cost.

“For much of the Daniel Snyder era, the Redskins have premised their team building strategy around big, flashy free agent signings. There was at least an interesting case to be made then, at a time that top draft picks were overpaid given the uncertainty around their performance that it was a good strategy. Given the economics of the NFL, the new collective bargaining agreement made draft picks dramatically more valuable. That makes the decision to trade so many of them away seem foolhardy, even as good as Griffin has been.

“To become a perennial playoff team like the Patriots, Steelers, Packers, or Ravens, the Redskins will need to find more players who give consistently more performance than their pay would suggest—and it will be hard to get those players without any first-round draft picks. Instead, to strengthen its weak secondary and replace aging stars, Snyder and his crew will have to fire up the jet to hit the free agent market and pay established players their full market value, which doesn’t really solve anything, as it is not a place that bargains are easily found.”

Bryant, Francis, Guthridge among NC Sports Hall of Fame inductees

The North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame announced its 2013 inductees Monday and it includes former UNC football player Kelvin Bryant, former Carolina Hurricane great Ron Francis, former UNC basketball coach and assistant Bill Guthridge and noted photographer Hugh Morton.

The 11 new members are Bryant, Francis, Guthridge, Morton (deceased), Wade Garrett, Tommy Helms, Marion Kirby, Rich McGeorge, Bob Quincy (deceased), Marty Sheets and Mildred Southern.

The class of 2013 will be honored at the 50th annual induction banquet on May 2, at the Raleigh Convention Center.

KELVIN BRYANT: The Tarboro native was one of the most explosive running backs in Carolina football history even though he was plagued throughout his four-year career at Chapel Hill with injuries. Yet for his career, Bryant averaged 5.5 yards per carry. He finished with one carry short of 600 and was at the top of his collegiate game in his sophomore and junior years. As a sophomore, he split time with Amos Lawrence at tailback giving the Tar Heels one of the most dynamic duos at the position in ACC history. For his part, Kelvin ran for 1,039 yards, including an 81-yard run against Virginia and a 199-yard game against Duke. Then he exploded onto the national spotlight as a junior getting 211 yards on 19 carries in the season opener against East Carolina, a game in which he scored an ACC-record six touchdowns. He had five more touchdowns a week later against Miami of Ohio and four in the third game against Boston College. He didn’t play in the fourth quarter in any of those games. He finished the season by averaging 6.7 yards per carry and became the school’s third all-time rusher and scorer. As a pro, he was the USFL Player of the Year in 1983 and MVP in the championship game. He also played for the Washington Redskins where his coach, Joe Gibbs, once said, “When he’s healthy, he’s the best I’ve ever seen at coming out of the backfield.” He won a Super Bowl ring with the Skins for the 1987 season.

RON FRANCIS: A Canadian and a National Hockey League Hall of Fame inductee, Francis has found a home in the Raleigh area where he has lived for more than a decade. Now an associate head coach and director of player personnel for the Hurricanes, Francis retired from the ice after the 2004-05 season. Today he stands second only to Wayne Gretzky in career assists (1,249), fourth in career points (1,798), third in games played (1,731) and 21st in career goals (549). He won two Stanley Cups and his No. 10 shirt has been retired by the Carolina Hurricanes. In his career, he was selected to the NHL All-Star team four times, won the Alka-Seltzer Plus Award, the Frank J. Selke Trophy, the Lady Byng Trophy three times and the King Clancy Memorial Trophy. He still ranks No. 1 all time in Whalers/Hurricane franchise history in points, goals, assists and games played.

BILL GUTHRIDGE: The ultimate assistant coach, Bill was Dean Smith’s first lieutenant for 30 years and succeeded Smith as the head coach of the Tar Heels. In his three seasons at the helm, the Tar Heels had records of 34-4, 24-10 and 22-14 for a cumulative 90-28 mark. He was named National Coach of the Year in 1998 after leading UNC into the Final Four. As an assistant to Smith, he declined repeated opportunities to leave the side of his old friend to head up programs on his own. At Carolina, he was famous for his ability to teach the fundamentals of pivot play to the big men in the program, and he was the team’s shooting coach.

WADE GARRETT: The Lexington native was the premier fast-pitch softball pitcher in an era when men’s softball was enjoying its greatest popularity in North Carolina. Wade pitched for 20 years for Champion Paper of Canton and recorded 358 victories (among them an astonishing 40 no-hitters), had but 83 losses and in one streak of just over 78 innings was unscored upon. He was a member of the All-State or All-South team 15 times, was all-region ten times, appeared in ten world tournaments and was also chosen all-world. He is a member of the North Carolina Softball Hall of Fame. Wade remains a resident of Lexington.

TOMMY HELMS: The Charlotte native was an integral part of Cincinnati’s “Big Red Machine” of the 1960s and 1970s manning the second base position on a team that included Pete Rose, Johnny Bench and Tony Perez. Helms was the National League Rookie of the Year in 1966 and was a member of the National League All-Star team in 1967 and 1968. As one of the most reliable infielders in the senior circuit, Helms won Gold Gloves in 1970 and 1971. Though he is remembered as a Cincinnati Red, he also saw time with Houston, Pittsburgh and Boston. He had a career batting average of .269 and wound up managing the Reds in parts of two seasons as the successor to Rose.

MARION KIRBY: A 1964 graduate of Lenoir-Rhyne College, where he played on a national championship football team, Kirby has established himself as one of North Carolina’s top high school coaches. After a year as a graduate assistant at East Carolina, Kirby became the head football coach in Edenton where he posted a mark of 59-14-3 and won three conference titles. He then moved on to Page High School and established the Pirates as a state powerhouse for more than 20 years. His Page teams went to the playoffs 16 times and won 12 league titles. They won state 4-A championships in 1980, 1983, 1984 and 1985 and were runners-up in 1982. In all, 25 of his teams won at least seven games and his career record stands at 278-65-8. He was selected to build Greensboro College’s football program from scratch and later became athletic director at Guilford College. He is a member of the Lenoir-Rhyne Sports Hall of Fame and for many years served as secretary-treasurer of the North Carolina Coaches Association.

RICH McGEORGE: A 1971 Elon graduate, McGeorge was a first-round draft choice of the Green Bay Packers for whom he starred as a tight end for nine seasons. He caught 175 passes in his pro career, most of them from legendary Bart Starr, for 2,370 yards. He played both football and basketball at Elon and at one time held the national NAIA record for catches, 224, and total yards, 3,486. He held most of Elon’s other passing-catching records as well and won numerous all-conference, all-district and All-American awards. He also led the Elon basketball team in scoring in 1969 with an average of 16.8 and was an all-conference selection for the 22-8 Christians his senior season. When he graduated, McGeorge held Elon’s career field goal percentage record at 59.8 percent and was the team’s leading rebounder with 688 boards. He was part of a team that made 51 consecutive free throws in a district playoff game against N.C. A&T. He served as an assistant football coach at both Duke and Florida then spent seven years on the staff of Don Shula of the Miami Dolphins. He is a member of the Elon Sports Hall of Fame, the NAIA Football Hall of Fame and in the summer of 2012 was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

MARTY SHEETS: One of the most highly decorated Special Athletes in the world. He holds 250 Special Olympic medals in an array of sports at the local, state, national and world level. He has won gold, silver or bronze in swimming, skiing, tennis and power lifting at the world level, and golf at the 2007 national level. He and the late singer John Denver were chosen to lead the U.S. delegation into the World Games opening ceremonies in 1987, he was featured on ABC Wild World of Sports in 1991, began a 15-year run on the golf committee of Special Olympics in 1993, chosen to sit with President Clinton at the opening of the 1995 World Games and in 2007 he was chosen by Special Olympics founder Eunice Kennedy Shriver to join her and four other athletes in a Special Olympics portrait. It hangs in the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery in Washington. A number of state and community awards have been conferred upon Marty including the Order of the Long Leaf Pine in 2000, and the Distinguished Citizen Award from the Division of vocational Rehabilitation Services. The PGA Tour honored him as its Volunteer of the Year award in 2006.

MILDRED F. SOUTHERN:
The matriarch of tennis in the South, and particularly North Carolina. The Winston-Salem native has served North Carolina and Southern tennis as well as the USTA in general in a variety of capacities from association president, to referee, to ranking committees and as a competitor who has been at the top of her game in various age groups for years. She has won a variety of national, regional and state championships and was nationally ranked almost continuously from 1983 through 1997. Has been presented more than a dozen national, regional and state honors. Southern won state titles in 1971 and 1973 and won state championships every year from 1975 through 1997, frequently three or more. She also won Southern championships every year from 1981 through 1997. She owns 16 national titles. Southern is arguably North Carolina’s all-time most decorated tennis champion and volunteer. The top award for teams competing in Southern Tennis is the Mildred F. Southern Cup, and the building that houses the North Carolina Tennis Association in Greensboro is named for Southern and her husband.

The Sports Hall of Fame, established in 1963, is on permanent exhibit at the N.C. Museum of History.

UNC’s Hatchell to speak at Raleigh Sports Club Wednesday

UNC women’s head basketball coach Sylvia Hatchell will be the guest speaker at the Raleigh Sports Club Wednesday. After more than 1,000 career games and 36 seasons of coaching, Hatchell belongs to some exclusive clubs.

She was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2004. She is one of only four head coaches in Division I history to reach the 800-win plateau. She is the third-winningest active coach in the nation. She has been named national coach of the year three times and has led teams to at least 20 wins 27 times, fourth-most nationally.

Tommy Evanoff, an Athens Drive football player, will be recognized as the Student Athlete of the Week.

The Forks Cafeteria cater a Southern buffet starting at 11:30 a.m. at the RSC luncheon at Highland United Methodist Church, located at 1901 Ridge Road at the intersection of Lake Boone Trail, just inside the beltline.

Annual dues for the remainder of the 2012-13 season will be $30. This is 1/2 off the normal membership fee so that we can encourage visitors to join the “best sports club in the nation.

The weekly attendance fee remains $15 while guest fees will be $25 each. Pick sheets and door prizes will be held.

To learn more about the RSC watch this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UePabzdajM or go to the club’s web site here.

Even after Griffin was banged up, Redskins could (should) have won

Redskins phenom QB Robert Griffin III helped lead the the team to a 14-0 lead over Seattle on two dominating drives in the first quarter of the NFL playoff game Sunday. After aggravating his previous knee injury, the Skins managed just 11 yards in the second quarter. That’s when Coach Mike Shanahan should have removed Griffin from the game.

Griffin’s limited mobility, which is a key part of his game despite having a rifle arm as well, was a huge detriment to the Redskins offense. The playbook got much smaller against the Seahawks and when the Skins started getting bad field position, it was just about over even though the Redskins held a 14-13 lead in the fourth quarter.

Shanahan should have started Kirk Cousins in the second half. Sure, give Griffin the second quarter to see if he could go – he deserved that much considering the excitement he has brought to Redskins’ fans. There is so much unhealthy Jesus-like devotion to Griffin that the fans weren’t even clamoring for a more healthy Cousins, who after all led the Skins to one win as a sub and one win as a backup, to enter the game.

Perhaps the Redskins wouldn’t have beaten the Seahawks with Cousins starting the game but the Redskins were up 14-0 and rolling when Griffin aggravated his injury. The Redskins could have and should have won with Cousins in that situation.

It wasn’t until Griffin became incapacitated after not being able to get on a fumble that laid on the ground in front of him for what seemed like an eternity that Cousins came in. By that time, Seattle was up 24-14 and time was almost out. The Seahawks could afford to just bring everybody after Cousins to rush the fellow rookie.

I’m not sure if Shanahan was overly enamored of Griffin or if he were hoodwinked by Griffin who boldly proclaims that the Redskins are his team and he should be out there with them. He even disagreed with Hall of Famer Sonny Jurgensen who told him in the locker room that sometimes you have to step aside when you’re not 100 percent for the betterment of the team.

Griffin certainly has a big ego but I think he is a team player who really thought he could lead the team to victory. In the first quarter, he was 6 of 9 for 68 yards and two touchdowns. His quarterback rating dropped from 97 to 5.9 after that when he completed 4 of 10 for 16 yards and an interception.

With a 14-0 cushion and Albert Morris running at will, the Redskins, again, could have and should have beaten the Seahawks with Cousins in the game.

Below are several links to articles about the situation but my favorite was an article by Dan Graziano of ESPN.com.

Graziano wrote that there was a stadium full of people (and I was one of them) who could tell the Redskins’ offense was impotent with this shell of Griffin operating it. He started his piece by writing, “He should have come out of the game. It’s really that simple, and it’s not hindsight.

“Anybody who watched Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III hobble through the second and third quarters of his team’s season-ending 24-14 playoff loss to the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday at FedEx Field could see that (A) he was badly hurt and (B) he was hurting his team’s chances.”

To read more, please click here.

Other links:

Robert Griffin III knee injury diagnosis unclear

Knee injury brings painful end to brilliant season

Concern begins for Robert Griffin III

Robert Griffin III’s injury leaves so many questions

Is Redskins coach Mike Shanahan to blame?

Robert Griffin III responds to criticism

What they’re saying about State’s bowl loss to Vandy

N.C. State committed five turnovers under interim coach Dana Bible as the Wolfpack fell to Vanderbilt 38-24 in the Music City Bowl.

“First-year coach Dave Doeren has a lot of work to do in his first season. The Wolfpack were outplayed in all three phases of the game, and recruiting will obviously be a priority. NC State went 0-2 against the SEC this year, including a loss to a 5-7 Tennessee team in the season opener.”
Heather Dinich, ESPN

“Under interim coach Dana Bible, N.C. State (7-6) was sloppy and undisciplined, racking up turnovers and penalties to close the season with the same way it started — a loss to an SEC team.”
Joe Giglio, News & Observer

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/12/31/2575717/live-scoreboard-nc-state-vs-vanderbilt.html#storylink=cpy

“Senior QB Mike Glennon (three interceptions) hurt his NFL draft stock with an erratic performance.”
– Larry Hartstein, CBS Sports

“When you get to the point you’re winning nine games, it puts you in a different category. … It’s a big win for our program and big win for these seniors.”
James Franklin, Vanderbilt coach

Rookies lead Redskins to 1st NFC East title since ’99

Alfred Morris and Robert Griffin III were about 10 years old the last time the Redskins won the NFC East title in 1999. The Redskins defeated the Dallas Cowboys Sunday night at home 28-18 in a game that Morris rushed for 200 yards and three touchdowns and Griffin, still suffering from a leg injury, ran for a score. As a result, the Redskins will host Seattle Jan. 6 at 4:30 p.m. in the first round of the NFL playoffs.

It was the seventh straight victory for the Skins since falling to the Panthers at home in early November.

While there are many Redskins fans in the Triangle area, there are also a lot of Russell Wilson fans. Wilson quarterbacks the Seahawks. I’ve gotta think most of the country will be rooting for the Redskins in this one in part because Seattle is in the playoffs due to a bad replacement official’s call that wrongly gave them a win over Green Bay.

Boxscore
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Here’s what they are saying about the Redskins:

Redskins top Cowboys 28-18 for NFC East – Chicago Tribune

Washington Redskins beat Dallas Cowboys for NFC East – NFL.com

Rapid Reaction: Redskins 28, Cowboys 18 – ESPN

Redskins Top Cowboys to Gain Playoff Berth – Wall Street Journal blog

RG3 shines, Romo collapses in finale – Fox Sports

Alfred Morris, Robert Griffin spur Redskins to first NFC East title since 1999 – Yahoo Sports

Cowboys’ season comes to close with Romo’s 3 INTs– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Washington Redskins fans sing a noisy, fitting tribute to rookie Alfred Morris – Washington Post