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Blue Jackets An unloved man wakes up with a hat

Blue Jackets: An unloved man wakes up with a hat trick

Alexander Nylander has gone more unnoticed than expected during his National Hockey League career, but the talented forward has impressed since joining the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Thanks to the Swede's hat trick, the Ohio team completed a tour de force by defeating the Vegas Golden Knights 6-3 on Monday night at Nationwide Arena.

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The eighth overall pick in the 2016 draft, which the Jackets recently acquired in a trade with the Pittsburgh Penguins, shines with his new team with six points in five games.

Nylander notably scored two goals in the third period and scored the winning goal for the first time at the beginning of the period. He then showed off his full speed by catching back a long-range puck and completing his first hat trick in an empty net.

This memorable performance allowed the Jackets to record back-to-back wins for the first time since late November. Justin Danforth, Erik Gudbranson and Yegor Chinakhov scored the other goals for the local favorites.

In his first game since January 11, Jack Eichel didn't record a point for the Knights. The one, recovering from a knee injury, finished the game with a margin of -1 and directed five pucks towards the opponent's cage.

Daniil Tarasov was also very strong between the posts for the Blue Jackets with 37 saves on 40 shots.

Blue Jackets: An unloved man wakes up with a hat trick Read More »

Coyne confirms Harvey Braun for St Petersburg

Coyne confirms Harvey, Braun for St. Petersburg

Dale Coyne Racing has confirmed its driver lineup for the NTT IndyCar Series season opener with seven-year IndyCar veteran Jack Harvey in the No. 18 Honda and rookie Colin Braun in the No. 51 Honda in St. Petersburg. Several drivers will use both cars all year round.

Harvey is expected to compete in 14 races in the #18 and will share the car with Nolan Siegel, who will take the wheel for The Thermal Club, Long Beach, the Indianapolis 500 and Toronto.

Braun, who will race at St. Petersburg and Thermal, is among the oldest IndyCar newcomers in some time, as the 35-year-old comes to the series having led racing and championship programs since his youth in Grand-Am. NASCAR and IMSA.

His official IndyCar debut in St. Petersburg will come with a single day of experience to draw from after his eye-opening test for Coyne on Tuesday at Sebring International Raceway inspired the team to bring in the son of renowned race engineer Jeff Braun Committing to his second entry at the start of the year.

“It has been a busy offseason and we are extremely pleased with our driver lineup for the 2024 season,” said Coyne. “I think we have a great combination of drivers who will work well together, as they showed in our testing at Homestead and Sebring. Jack brings a lot of experience to the team and immediately fit in with us during testing. Like Jack, Nolan is a joy to work with. He impressed us during the Homestead test with how quickly he got up to speed in the car for the first time. We look forward to seeing what they both do this season aboard our 18-year-old car.

“We already know what Colin Braun can do in a sports car and it was great to see him step into our IndyCar last week. He’s jumping in at the deep end and has limited time aboard one of these cars before his first race, but we have confidence in his abilities and can’t wait to see him back in the car in St. Petersburg this weekend.”

For Harvey, the chance with Coyne is a chance for the 30-year-old to restart his IndyCar career, which ended prematurely when his two-year stint with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing was cut short and left three races on the schedule last year.

Of all the drivers expected to drive for Coyne in 2024, Harvey – a pole sitter and strong performer during his five years with Meyer Shank Racing – will be the benchmark and mentor for most of those who will contest parts of the calendar in Coyne Cars.

Beyond the first two races, it is unclear how many more races Braun will compete in the No. 51.

IndyCar and sports car veteran Katherine Legge is rumored to be the team's choice for the Indy 500 and other oval races in the car, but there are still many races left to complete in the 18-race season.

Coyne confirms Harvey, Braun for St. Petersburg Read More »

It feels like the end of Crosby and the Penguins

It feels like the end of Crosby and the Penguins

While the Pittsburgh Penguins wanted to clearly signal to the rest of the National Hockey League (NHL) on Friday that they were in the sellers' camp, they achieved their coup with a bang this weekend, at least on the ice.

Sidney Crosby's gang has come a long way from their glorious era, which was particularly marked by two consecutive Stanley Cups in 2016 and 2017. His visit to Alberta has likely just spelled the end of his hopes of qualifying for the playoffs, and he risks missing a second year in a row.

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Above all, it's the nature of losing and its demoralizing side that doesn't lie. In a 4-3 loss in Calgary on Saturday, the Pens let a two-goal third-period lead squander while giving the Flames the game-winning goal on a silver platter, the result of a widespread mixup in the zone. Defense with 50 seconds left. The next day, Pilot Mike Sullivan's players suffered a 6-1 defeat against Connor McDavid and the Edmonton Oilers, in a meeting in which they offered no resistance.

Regardless of the explanations of the team's hockey players, the team appears to have given up, about ten points behind a playoff spot. General manager Kyle Dubas could therefore liquidate some assets before the trade deadline.

“Obviously we’re fighting for the playoffs,” Sullivan told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette at the end of another setback. With every missed opportunity, the scope for action shrinks. This puts more weight on our shoulders. We understand the circumstances and must respond.”

“We took a tough setback on Saturday and I don’t know if we did everything we could to move forward,” Crosby said. We have to find a way to get out of this.”

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Mission impossible?

The Penguins will try to pull themselves together by hosting the Columbus Blue Jackets on Tuesday, but it will take a lot more than a triumph at the expense of the Eastern Conference's worst team to get back on track. Pittsburgh is ranked 12th and the rumors are getting louder. The name of Jake Guentzel, who is eligible for full autonomy this summer, remains at the center of speculation. Lars Eller could also be an asset to competitors looking for an experienced player capable of performing at the right time.

But as they wait for their CEO's decisions, the club's standard-bearers try to focus on everyday life, as sad as it may be.

“I'm not really thinking about it at the moment. [les transactions]. All I can think about is how disheartening that meeting was. It really hurt us,” said defender Marcus Pettersson.

It feels like the end of Crosby and the Penguins Read More »

Connecting Points Why Kirk Cousins ​​is likely leaving the Vikings

Connecting Points: Why Kirk Cousins ​​is likely leaving the Vikings

  • Connecting Points Why Kirk Cousins ​​is likely leaving the Vikings.png&h=80&w=80&scale=crop

    Kevin Seifert, ESPN Staff Writer March 5, 2024, 10:35 a.m. ET

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      Kevin Seifert is a staff writer who covers the Minnesota Vikings and the NFL for ESPN. Kevin has been covering the NFL for over 20 years and joined ESPN in 2008. He was previously a beat reporter for the Minneapolis Star Tribune and The Washington Times. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia. You can follow him on Twitter @SeifertESPN.

If history is any reliable guide, Kirk Cousins' final days as quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings are upon us.

At this point, it's not hard to connect the dots of conventional wisdom, and the only realistic factor working against it is the possibility – however remote – that Cousins ​​will make a decision that he has never met before.

The first point is in the renegotiated contract that Cousins ​​​​signed last spring, which expires on March 13th. The details of the contract basically mean that if the Vikings want to re-sign him for 2024, they will have to do so before the transfer deadline. The brokerage market opens next Wednesday. If they tried to sign him after that point, his 2024 salary cap hit would include a dead money overlay of $28.5 million.

Signing Cousins ​​before March 13 might have been a possibility if there weren't any obvious suitors around the league. But the second point came up last week at the NFL Scouting Combine. According to ESPN's Dan Graziano and many others, the Atlanta Falcons have made Cousins ​​their top target when he hits the open market. Of course, the Falcons can't officially sign him until his contract expires.

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This brings us to the third connection point. At every step of his career, Cousins ​​has made the decision to maximize — or come close to maximizing — his contractual return. His single-minded pursuit has earned him $230 million in earnings since becoming the full-time starting quarterback in 2015. During that time, he played in three playoff games and compiled a 1-3 postseason record.

No matter what the Vikings could offer him before March 13, would it be enough to convince him not to explore the Falcons' option or to listen to another team that might be interested?

Not even Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell believes that will be the case. In a revealing interview this past weekend on NFL Network, O'Connell made it clear that Cousins ​​will have suitors and that he will almost certainly entertain them.

“The merger has just given everyone else an opportunity to maybe have some conversations, whether that's part of it or not,” O'Connell said. “But I’ve had the dialogue that you have with a player like Kirk Cousins; the relationship we have built over a long period of time. I know Kirk and I know where he is in this whole process. He's earned the right to be a free agent. He played really good football. I think that's him [17-8] since I arrived in Minnesota and trained him. I had a lot of fun coaching him on how well he fits into the offense where we ran our version of the offense with guys like Jordan [Addison] and Justin [Jefferson] and TJ [Hockenson].

“I know Kirk will go through a full trial. He is a process person. Hopefully we will continue to play a strong role in this process and find a way to keep him as a Minnesota Viking. I expect us not to do that.” “We will be the only ones who want Kirk Cousins ​​to be our team's quarterback in 2024.”

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins ​​tore his Achilles tendon in late October and will turn 36 before the start of next season. Mike Dinovo-USA TODAY Sports

O'Connell's response acknowledged a realistic assessment of how Cousins ​​is likely to approach the next few weeks, but also revealed the selling point he had almost certainly already made to Cousins ​​himself: The Vikings could very well be his best chance for success in the Season Represent In the coming years, he will be equipped with a coaching staff he is in touch with and a dynamic array of weapons.

Would cousins ​​see it the same way? He reiterated in January that he hoped to finish his career in Minnesota, even going so far as to say, “At this stage in my career, it's really not about the money anymore.”

However, he indicated that he wanted an offer consistent with his desire to end his career; He turns 36 in August and hopes to play for a few more years. While the dollars may not be “what it’s about,” he said, “it’s about what the dollars represent.”

The cleanest way for the Vikings to express their commitment to Cousins ​​is to fully guarantee his offer for several years. And this is where the fourth point comes into play.

Like O'Connell, general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah has also stated that he wants Cousins ​​back for 2024. But Adofo-Mensah has been more nuanced about how that might happen, as might be expected from a general manager who has to put forward a long-term vision.

“We have our interests,” Adofo-Mensah said. “He has his own. We will sit down at the table to see if we can find a creative solution and meet in the middle. That's what every contract negotiation is all about. And so it will be with him.”

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It would be perfectly fine for a general manager to shy away from giving multiple guaranteed years to a quarterback who turns 36 next season and is recovering from a ruptured Achilles tendon, especially at a time when the floor for established quarterbacks is at a premium Quarterbacks is at $40 million annually. But it gives Cousins ​​a clear path to look for better deals. Should the Vikings attempt to sign him after he hits the market, they would have to overlay the dead money figure of $28.5 million on his new contract, creating a seemingly prohibitive 2024 cap hit.

There could be a strong argument for moving on from an aging quarterback recovering from the first serious injury of his career. Farewell to Cousins ​​would free the Vikings from the six-year burden of having his deal on their books, but it would also expose the lack of succession planning and raise the very real possibility that he will be replaced by someone who performs worse than he will be in Atlanta or elsewhere in the coming seasons.

The timing of Cousins' departure would coincide with a strong draft class of quarterbacks, but with the No. 11 overall pick, the Vikings would almost certainly need a trade up — and sacrifice future draft picks — to get one major league selections from Caleb Williams, Jayden Daniels and Drake Maye. That would leave them fighting for the next division, which includes Michigan's JJ McCarthy, Washington's Michael Penix Jr. and Oregon's Bo Nix. A free agent bridge starter like Sam Darnold could also come into play. Longer-term possibilities could include Justin Fields, Russell Wilson or Ryan Tannehill.

Once hypothetical, these options now seem like the most likely path for the Vikings. Unless Cousins ​​makes an uncharacteristic decision, they will soon have no choice but to move on to Plan B.

Connecting Points: Why Kirk Cousins ​​is likely leaving the Vikings Read More »

Hurricanes Tony DeAngelo is really cheap

Hurricanes: Tony DeAngelo is really cheap

Note to National Hockey League teams looking to sign a right-handed defenseman: The Carolina Hurricanes are all but ready to trade Tony DeAngelo.

It's a difficult season for the offensive guard, who finds himself lower in the pecking order on the team's blue line. According to Daily Faceoff journalist Frank Seravalli, the Canes would like to offer the 28-year-old athlete a change of scenery.

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So they would only need a fifth-round draft pick and could also keep half of DeAngelo's $1.675 million salary.

The American returned to the Hurricanes after the second year of his contract was bought out by the Philadelphia Flyers last summer. After putting up 51 points in 64 games in Carolina in 2021-2022, he only put up 10 points in 27 games this time around.

Hurricanes: Tony DeAngelo is really cheap Read More »

How Damian Lillard and Bucks39 offense went from good to

How Damian Lillard and Bucks' offense went from good to great in comeback win over the Clippers

From the moment he took over as head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks, Doc Rivers dictated clear rules to his players on offense. Not a day goes by without the team hearing three simple words.

“Good to great.”

It's not a difficult concept to understand. The Bucks have a variety of talented offensive players. With Giannis Antetokounmpo, Damian Lillard, Khris Middleton, Brook Lopez and Malik Beasley in the starting lineup and Bobby Portis as a backup, the Bucks can make a good impression relatively easily. But in Rivers' view, the Bucks can only reach their next level as a team if they consistently strive to forego good plays in order to produce great plays on offense.

In the biggest moments of Monday's 113-106 comeback victory, the Bucks (41-21) lived by their coach's motto, finding great shots throughout while making stops on the other end and outscoring the Los Angeles Clippers 40-25 fourth quarter to win their sixth straight game coming out of the All-Star break.

And it all started with Damian Lillard.

On Monday, Lillard was the only member of the Bucks' Big 3 to speak. In the initial injury report filed by the Bucks on Sunday afternoon, Khris Middleton was ruled out for his 11th straight game because of the left ankle sprain he suffered on Feb. 6. Giannis Antetokounmpo was injured late on Monday night. Antetokounmpo arrived at his normal warm-up session two hours before the game, but had to abandon it due to left Achilles tendonitis. This made Lillard the Bucks' main creator on offense against the Clippers.

Looking back on his time with the Portland Trail Blazers, Lillard thrived in this role. Thanks to 13 free throw attempts, he scored 41 points on just 22 shots and added four rebounds and four assists. While Lillard found his feet quickly on Monday, the rest of the roster struggled to figure out how to score enough points to compete with one of the best teams in the Western Conference.

Even though the Bucks only had 73 points in three quarters, Lillard stuck with it. With 8:15 left, Lillard dribbled through traffic and finished through contact at the rim to convert a one-possession game and cut the Clippers' lead to three. And then, with 5:16 left, Lillard hit a stepback triple to bring the Bucks back within three and set the stage for most of Monday's game.

After a defensive stop, Lillard brought the ball up and prepared for the next play.

The step-back 3 on the previous possession had given Lillard 37 of the Bucks' 93 points on the night. No one could have blamed him if he called his own number again, but that's not Lillard's decision. Instead, he used his gravity to create a shot for his teammates.

I guess it's been my typical experience in my career up to this point where I come out, attack, somehow get what I want to get at the start of the game and their attitude is to rush the guys on me or catch or send a double team,” Lillard said. “And it looked familiar. So sometimes I would attack and put pressure on the double team so they didn't think they were just going to take me out of the game.

“And then they would overreact. Sometimes it was a third party who came to the paint shop. And another time I pretended to attack and just make them more aggressive and take them out of the game and then throw it back and try to take advantage of the four-on-three. And that's pretty much all I did. The game slowed down a bit for me because they got aggressive. I know that then you just have to be a decoy and trust the next game.”

For the Bucks, the 15-0 run that turned the game around wasn't just about their offense. After taking a 96-90 lead with 5:33 to go, the Clippers didn't score again for the next three and a half minutes, largely due to the Bucks' zone defense. It certainly helped that the Clippers were on the second night of a back-to-back, but the Bucks kept making the Clippers work offensively in the fourth quarter as the Bucks' zone defense took away the easiest offensive plays and forced the Clippers to give it up try to solve various problems.

After Patrick Beverley's 3-pointer to tie the game, Beverley and Lillard combined on a steal that gave Lillard a tough lay-in and gave the Bucks their first lead since the 3:51 mark of the first quarter.

It was a great example of turning offense into defense, but the Bucks didn't stop there on defense.

On the next possession, the Bucks stuck to their zone defense and ensured another tough outing behind two impressive tries from Brook Lopez and Beverley.

The Clippers have three spectacular isolation players – James Harden, Paul George and Kawhi Leonard – and the zone prevented those three players from working in isolation against weaker defenders in the fourth quarter. However, individuals still need to make plays in the zone, and that's exactly what Lopez did on this play.

When Leonard caught the ball on the right wing covered by AJ Green, Lopez found himself in an impossible position, accounting for both Amir Coffey in the corner and Paul George in the middle of the lane. Leonard's push helped the Bucks find more natural one-on-one matchups, but Lopez was still left alone with Leonard in the middle.

While Leonard pumped Lopez into the air, Lopez's strong fight took away an easy mid-range jumper and forced Leonard to make a move, which is where Beverley came into play. There is little to suggest that Beverley should have left Norm Powell on the left wing, but Beverley has spectacular defensive instincts and has done well in his own right. While Beverley didn't push the ball away from Leonard, his help forced the Clippers' All-Star forward to gather for his shot earlier than desired and gave Lopez a chance to block a shot.

With a chance to extend the lead on the other end, Lillard did his thing again. The veteran point guard started the possession looking for his own shot, but Lillard convinced the Clippers to send him extra help. That opened up the opportunity for second-year guard AJ Green for a 31-foot 3-point attempt.

“I know it’s going in,” Portis said after the game. “If there is a person who throws the basketball back into the shooting bag, I don't even break the glass. I never broke the glass on him. I just go back to defense because I think it goes in every time.”

After Amir Coffey missed a corner 3 on the other side, the Bucks got the ball into Lillard's hands and had him operated on.

The Clippers again sent Lillard extra help and he took his time pulling George and Harden as far away from the basket as possible before making a pass to Lopez. The Bucks big man eyed the floor and then found Green on the left wing. His feet were planted and he caught the ball in rhythm, but Green didn't attempt another three-pointer.

Instead, he threw a pass to Portis on the block with a mismatch.

“Good to great,” Rivers said of the play. “Good to great. I mean, this was as good to great as it gets.

“Because AJ could have shot that. They wanted to get out of his way, but to make the next pass – you know, we show it. This is how we start every film session since I've been here. With good to great, good to great, good to great. And there’s no better good to great action than this.”

After the mid-range jump over Coffey, Clippers coach Ty Lue called a timeout, but it didn't matter. After the timeout, the Bucks leaned on Portis a few more times and the big man delivered a few more throws. Ultimately, Portis finished the night with 28 points and 16 rebounds, which was the first 25-point, 15-rebound performance for a player coming off the bench in the NBA this season.

But while the Bucks had spectacular individual performances from Portis and Lillard, the Bucks won Monday without Antetokounmpo and Middleton, struggling to go from good to great.

“If you just keep trusting, eventually the situation will change,” Lillard said. “We fired a few shots. Bobby had a great game. But I would say I just continued to trust it.

“And at the end AJ hit a big one. (Malik Beasley) scored a big one. Bobby scored a big hit. We just started having guys make those big throws and big plays because they were getting those chances as the game went on, instead of me saying, “I'm not going to throw anymore.” I just kept throwing it and down the stretch. It paid off.”

Ultimately, the Bucks' recent success isn't just about Rivers challenging his offense to go from good shots to great shots. Or the team that plays better defensively and defines tasks and roles more clearly. The Bucks are coming out of the All-Star break with greater success because, organizationally, they decided to go from good to great this season.

Just think back to general manager Jon Horst's opening statement at the press conference where he announced the firing of Adrian Griffin as head coach.

“We believe this is a good team right now and with improvement we have a chance to be great,” Horst said. “We’re looking for a way to really make this a great team. That's up to me. That's up to the players. That’s because of the coaching. And we will continue these efforts.”

Good to great. That's what the rest of the Bucks' season is about.

How Damian Lillard and Bucks' offense went from good to great in comeback win over the Clippers Read More »

NFL Jason Kelce is retiring

NFL: Jason Kelce is retiring

Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce has made a decision regarding his future in football: He is ending his 13-year NFL career.

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The affable football player held a very emotional press conference Monday afternoon to confirm his intentions, all in the presence of his brother Travis, the Kansas City Chiefs tight end.

“I have often been asked why I chose football, what convinced me to pursue the sport, and I have never given a good answer. The best way to explain it is to point you to your favorite song, your favorite book. That’s what you feel, the seriousness and the intensity,” the newly retired man told the media.

“I will never forget that call from Andy Reid [son ancien instructeur-chef] On draft day in 2011. My dad stormed into the room… with tears streaming down his cheeks, I told him that his son's dream had just come true, he said. He remembered too. And two years later, my brother got a call from the same man: He had just been drafted by the Chiefs. This time tears fell on my father and me.

Decision pending

The 36-year-old athlete has been toying with the idea of ​​giving up his helmet and shoulder pads for several years. A documentary was even produced about his 2022 season, where he initially considered retiring after the season.

After the Eagles lost in the first round of the playoffs this year, multiple media outlets reported that Travis Kelce's older brother told his teammates that it was the end for him. However, in his podcast “New Heights,” which he co-hosts with his brother, the offensive lineman indicated that he wasn’t ready to make his decision yet.

“I just don’t think you’re in the right position to really make a decision after a game like that,” Kelce said.

“When it comes time to officially announce what will happen in the future, it will definitely happen and will be a tribute to many people who have meant a lot to me, who have been important to me and who have given me the opportunity. “It helped me have the career I had,” said the future member of the Football Hall of Fame.

Great career

Kelce was drafted by the Eagles in the sixth round of the 2011 auction and became a key cog in their offensive line that year. Since then, he has been selected to seven Pro Bowl games and named to the NFL first team six times. Singer Taylor Swift's brother-in-law also won the Super Bowl in 2017.

“His hard work and determination – he was never drafted in the NCAA before playing for the University of Cincinnati and becoming an underrated NFL sixth-round pick in 2011 – are unmatched,” NFL Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said in a press release . His intelligence and versatility […] put him in a class of his own in his position. His genuine love and care for instructors, teammates and staff impacted everyone who worked with him.”

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Casagrande A new day on Saban39s old podium what was

Casagrande: A new day on Saban's old podium, what was missing

This is an opinion column.

Wearing a hoodie and baseball cap, Kalen DeBoer took the podium.

He smiled. A real challenge, and his first post-practice press conference at Alabama got off to an encouraging start.

Farewell, Tinhorn.

And welcome to a kinder, gentler day in the cave of rat poison.

Need tangible proof of the new era in the press room? Nick Saban's successor was asked about the identity of the starting quarterback after the first spring training on Monday.

And he lived.

“Someone had to do the first few reps with them today when we lined up and we called them that and Jalen did it,” DeBoer responded in part. “So he’s doing everything he can along with the other guys that have gotten those first few reps.”

Not a finger touches the podium. No death stare on media relations. No animal sacrifices. Just a serious answer and move on to the next question.

A new day indeed.

The second floor interview room gained an infamous reputation for years. Step on a landmine of Saban questions and grab a shovel. That's the thing about asking the newly resigned coach a question. It had to be precise and worded in a way that avoided unnecessary comparisons or hypotheses.

It was truly an experience like no other coach. And when the request veered off course, SportsCenter had the footage. It didn't have to be a “bad” question, just a question that lacked discipline could draw ire.

In any case, that is not the case now.

DeBoer stood before a packed room Monday and greeted the esteemed press with a “How are we doing?” and that beaming smile. Flanked by the sponsored bottle of lemonade, there were several clues to the past in the room. The traditional water bottle warning from Cedric Burns — Saban's longtime assistant — was not part of the DeBoer routine.

If we're honest, it's a bit bigger too.

An old minor league baseball roster in 1998 listed DeBoer at 6 feet 3 inches tall. That's correct.

There was also an unintentional nod to the past at one point as DeBoer ran through some of the tentpole maxims for the program.

“Winning, I know this is a results-oriented part,” DeBoer said, echoing his predecessor, “but we really focus on what the winners do.”

The process is alive.

But a large portion of them retreated to South Florida.

The new era will include the availability of assistant coaches beyond those required for bowl games. The media windows will be open for the first time since Saban closed them several years ago.

This means a little more insight not only for the authors, but also for the readers. So that's all you need. Which is nice.

At the same time, something was missing from DeBoer's 15 minutes of time at the microphone on Monday.

Call it Stockholm Syndrome, because I've covered Saban standing in the same spot for more than 14 years, but the threat of a meltdown always added a dose of adrenaline to the proceedings. Sure, that had mellowed out a bit in his final years, but those pressers had the potential to go off the rails at any moment.

Honestly, it was kind of fun.

Kept you on your toes knowing you were one word away from internet shame. Some people jump out of planes for this rush. We raised a microphone.

Twisted, I know.

But those days are over. Not dead and buried two meters underground, but disappeared. GONE.

With improved access, unimaginable under the previous regime, it will undoubtedly be easier to do our work. It will be cool to have human interactions with assistant coaches.

But some of us will miss the pun that asks a question in the chess game with Saban.

And the real weirdos will write wistfully about the times we experienced some old-fashioned ass-munching on live television.

Michael Casagrande is a reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @ByCasagrande or on Facebook.

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