St. Louis Rams will release Quintin Mikell, avoid cap hit

Around The League‘s Gregg Rosenthal listed St. Louis Rams safety Quintin Mikell as one of the NFC veterans on the roster bubble.

Three weeks later, a source informed of the impending move tells NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport that Mikell indeed will be released. The 32-year-old’s $6 million salary was due to count a prohibitive $9 million against the salary cap.

With the offseason under way, Around The League examines what’s next for all 32 teams. Chris Wesseling covers the Rams. More …

Mikell has plenty left in the tank, evidenced by his 101 tackles, three sacks and four forced fumbles last season. The problem is that NFL teams are reluctant to pay big money to in-the-box safeties, which is why so many are losing their jobs this offseason.

That trend has been exacerbated by a flooded market at the position. With so many quality safeties available, the San Francisco 49ers and Houston Texans were unwilling to pay the franchise-tag rate for Dashon Goldson and Glover Quin, respectively.

The Rams will be in the market for a pair of starting safeties in the next week or two. Combined, they likely will earn less than Mikell was scheduled to pull down in 2013.

Follow Chris Wesseling on Twitter @ChrisWesseling.

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Parise has two goals, assist to lead Wild past Canucks

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Zach Parise had two goals and an assist, Niklas Backstrom had 25 saves and the Minnesota Wild beat Vancouver 4-2 Sunday night to move into a first-place tie with the Canucks.

Jason Zucker and Jared Spurgeon also scored for the Wild, who won their fourth straight home game and beat their Northwest Division rivals for the first time this season.

Cory Schneider made 28 saves, and Henrik Sedin and Chris Higgins scored for the Canucks, who fell to 1-3-2 in their past six games.

The Wild have struggled with slow starts all season, but needed only 24 seconds to take the lead when Parise kicked off a contentious first period with his 10th goal. It was Minnesota’s first first-period goal in three games against Vancouver.

Things got testy with a slew of roughing, fighting and unsportsmanlike conduct calls midway through the period that saw eight total players in the penalty box at the same time.

Cal Clutterbuck had to be restrained in the box when he saw Alex Burrows took a few swings at Wild captain Mikko Koivu — over the head of the referee separating them.

A minute later, Mike Rupp flipped Tom Sestito‘s helmet to the ice before throwing him down as the two fought.

Minnesota ended up killing two consecutive power plays and went up 2-0 when Matt Cullen slipped a pretty pass to Zucker in front of the net at 18:31.

Spurgeon’s second-period goal made it 3-0 before Higgins’ one-timer from the right circle found its way through Backstrom’s pads to make it 3-1 at 7:51.

The Canucks pulled to 3-2 early in the third when the puck was deflected into the air and hit off Sedin’s leg into the net, but Parise added his second goal of the game when he put the puck between Schneider’s skate and the goal post at 6:29.

Notes: The Canucks haven’t scored in their past 20 power plays. … Minnesota has a power-play goal in a season-high four straight games, and six of the past seven. … Ryan Suter has a Wild season-best seven-game point streak. … D Tom Gilbert (illness) missed his first game with the Wild. … Minnesota is 9-2-1 at home, with points in five straight games.

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Smith eager to contribute to A’s crowded outfield

By Tyler Emerick / MLB.com | 3/10/2013 9:19 P.M. ET

PHOENIX — Last season in an outfield core of five players, Seth Smith was fourth on the depth chart, with Jonny Gomes bringing up the rear.

But with the designated hitter slot, the crowded outfield did not feel so congested. Smith appeared in 125 games in 2012, coming off the bench on just 24 of those occasions.

This season, however, with Gomes in Boston, Smith figures to drop a spot on the totem pole behind Chris Young, whom the A’s acquired in the offseason from Arizona.

Yet even with a measurably diminished role on the horizon, Smith still fits into his club’s plan for 2013, giving Oakland considerable depth in the outfield.

“I’m not 100 percent sure how it’ll play out, but we’ll find a way to get them all at-bats,” A’s manager Bob Melvin said. “We’ll probably have a better idea as we get along.”

So far this spring, Smith has found himself on base more than half the time he has come to the plate, batting 8-for-16 with three walks. He singled and drove in a run Sunday against the D-backs.

“I’m pleased with everything so far,” Smith said. “I’m moving in the right direction, and everything is building up to April 1.”

Smith is not sure what to credit for his hot start to A’s camp, but even if the hits were not coming, he would still feel confident with where he is at this point.

“There’s really nothing to read into it, results-wise,” he said. “You can look at someone’s swing and see where they are, but as for batting averages, they don’t mean anything. I hit just enough in the offseason where I felt like I wouldn’t get injured when I got to Spring Training. You just take it from there. The pitchers are trying to find their stuff, so you see a lot of fastballs early on.”

Despite Smith’s modesty, the early success has come as little surprise to Melvin, who throws batting practice to Smith every day and has been impressed with his work ethic.

“He’s got power to all fields, and he’s a perfectionist in his preparations on the hitting end,” Melvin said. “If he hits two balls in batting practice where he doesn’t want to hit them, he gets upset. Whether it’s using the whole field a little more or looking for certain pitches, I think the reason behind that is he is always trying to get better.”

Last season, Smith batted just .240 in 383 at-bats and fought with himself to fix it, so this year he is trying to take the pressure off and not worry about every detail as much.

“I have kind of taken a less-is-more approach to this spring,” he said. “It seems to be putting my swing in a better spot, taking fewer swings but doing them with more purpose. I’ve found it to be rewarding.”

Regardless of what kind of playing time the 30-year-old sees in 2013, Smith appears OK with his role on the A’s moving forward.

“We have a really good outfield, and we have a lot of guys, but I know I’m part of this team,” he said. “We’ll be good.”

Tyler Emerick is an associate reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

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Report: Jack Parker set to retire from BU

Legendary Boston University hockey coach Jack Parker will announce his retirement Monday, ESPN reported Sunday.

Parker, who has coached the Terriers for 40 seasons, will turn 68 on Monday.

Parker has won three national championships and led BU to 24 NCAA hockey tournament berths, the most by any coach. His 894 career victories are the most by a coach with one school, and third most all-time, trailing current Boston College coach Jerry York and former Michigan State coach Ron Mason. Parker has also guided BU to seven Hockey East titles and 21 Beanpot championships.

The Terriers finished the 2012-13 regular seasons with a record of 18-15-2. They will host Merrimack in the quarterfinals of the Hockey East tournament next weekend.

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Oilers visit Blackhawks team looking to start new streak

(Sports Network) – The Chicago Blackhawks made it halfway through the shortened season before finally suffering a regulation loss on Friday.

The Blackhawks will look to get back in the win column Sunday, when they host the Edmonton Oilers at United Center.

One of Chicago’s wins during its streak came at the expense of Edmonton as the Blackhawks notched a 3-2 overtime win against the visiting Oilers on Feb. 25. Marian Hossa scored the game-winner at 1:44 of the extra session to deliver the sixth of Chicago’s 11 straight victories.

Edmonton had won three straight in this series before losing that OT decision. It was the Oilers’ second setback in their past three trips to the Windy City.

The Oilers, who are last in the Western Conference with 20 points, enter Sunday on a five-game losing streak (0-4-1) but the club hasn’t lost six in a row since an 0-8-3 stretch from March 8-31, 2011.

Edmonton has been shut out in its last two trips to the ice, losing 3-0 in Detroit on Thursday before being slammed 6-0 the following night in Nashville. All told, the Oilers are 1-4-2 on a nine-game road trip that will end Tuesday in Colorado.

Devan Dubnyk was pulled after allowing two goals on 13 shots in the first period for the Oilers in Friday’s rout. Yann Danis finished up by surrendering four scores on 21 shots.

“It’s difficult to say anything positive about what happened,” Oilers head coach Ralph Krueger said. “There’s really no excuses at all.”

Edmonton is 4-7-3 as the road team this season.

Chicago went 21-0-3 to begin the 48-game regular season before finally losing in regulation Friday evening at Colorado. The Avalanche won the finale of a home-and-home series in 6-2 fashion, avenging Chicago’s 3-2 comeback win in Wednesday’s meeting at United Center.

The lopsided loss ended a pair of monumental Chicago streaks. The Blackhawks compiled the longest point streak to begin an NHL season and had also won a franchise-record 11 straight games before losing in Denver.

Jonathan Toews and Bryan Bickell scored for the Blackhawks, who hadn’t lost in regulation since a 6-1 setback at home to Nashville on Mar. 25, 2012 — an incredible stretch of 30 games.

Corey Crawford gave up five goals on 19 shots in 40 minutes to suffer the defeat. Ray Emery stopped 11-of-12 chances in the third.

“It’s a great accomplishment, having different ways of winning night in and night out and seeing contributions from all different players,” said Blackhawks head coach Joel Quenneville. “It was a lot of fun right up until today. Our opponents treated it like it was something different, and we welcomed the challenge.”

Perhaps, Chicago lost its first regulation game due to the absence of Patrick Sharp, who suffered a shoulder injury in Wednesday’s game against Colorado and will miss 3-to-4 weeks of action. The valuable two-way forward is fourth on the Blackhawks with 18 points (5 goals, 13 assists) in 2013.

Although they’ll be without Sharp for an extended period of time, defenseman Steve Montador is nearing a return to game action after a long battle with concussion symptoms. Montador hasn’t played since March 27 of last season, but he was activated from injured reserve earlier this week and is working his way into game shape.

The Blackhawks can still remain unbeaten in regulation at home on Sunday after beginning the 2013 campaign with a 11-0-1 mark at United Center. Following this game, however, Chicago will head out on a four-game road trip that is set to begin Thursday at Columbus.

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Leodis McKelvin, Buffalo Bills agree to four-year deal

The Buffalo Bills have used the early portion of this offseason to lock down their own home-grown talent. After slapping the franchise tag on safety Jairus Byrd earlier this month, the team has turned its attention to Leodis McKelvin.

Offseason Forecast: Bills
With the offseason under way, Around The League examines what’s next for all 32 teams. Patrick Crawley tackles the Bills. More …

NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport reported Saturday, citing a source close to McKelvin, that the Bills and the talented return man have signed a four-year, $20 million contract. The deal comes with $7.5 million in guarantees. FOXSports.com’s Alex Marvez first reported the pact.

McKelvin turned out a league-best 18.7 yards on 23 punt returns in 2012. Two of those went for touchdowns. He produced 28.3 yards on 18 kickoff returns and brought electricity to Buffalo’s special teams unit.

McKelvin has emerged as one of the NFL’s most dangerous return men, but it was believed he might bolt Buffalo for the chance to play more cornerback elsewhere. He started just four games in the Bills‘ defensive backfield last season, pulling down one interception.

After re-upping in Buffalo, we’re sure to see more of McKelvin in 2013.

Follow Marc Sessler on Twitter @MarcSesslerNFL.

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Report: Patriots ‘have some interest’ in Mike Wallace

Tom Brady winging passes to Mike Wallace: Impossible to imagine? Maybe not.

Armando Salguero of The Miami Herald cited an agent to report that the New England Patriots “have some interest” in the free-agent wide receiver.

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It’s not implausible that the Patriots would put feelers out on Wallace. Tom Brady‘s contract extension generated cap space, and Wes Welker’s future with the team is uncertain. On top of that, Brandon Lloyd might be facing his release after a disappointing season.

New England has two of the NFL’s most dynamic pass-catching tight ends in Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez, but the team lacks what Randy Moss once gave the offense. Nobody on the roster can take the top off a defense, something Brady made the most of when Moss was in town. Wallace is an incomplete wideout — he’s not going to work the entire field, he’s frustrating in that sense — but he would give New England a wild new dimension.

With that said, multiple teams will pursue Wallace, and the Patriots aren’t the bidding-war type. Even if Bill Belichick has an eye for Wallace, there’s a difference between “interest” and the steps that come next.

Follow Marc Sessler on Twitter @MarcSesslerNFL.

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Joe Haden: Darrelle Revis is No. 1 cornerback; I’m No. 2

As they say, three’s a crowd. But don’t tell that to Joe Haden.

The Cleveland Browns cornerback edged his way Friday into the largely tedious debate between Richard Sherman and Darrelle Revis over who wears the crown as the NFL’s top cornerback.

“I would say honestly, and this is just me being real 100 percent, I would say Darrelle Revis,” Haden said on NBC Sports Network’s “Pro Football Talk.” “I studied tape on guys and I try to look and see what I can do to get my game to be on their levels (and) I feel like I’m honestly the number two cornerback in the league, that’s just my opinion personally.”

Rank: Sherman vs. Revis

Who is the better CB?  Adam Rank goes to the grid to breakdown the Twitter feud between Richard Sherman and Darrelle Revis. More …

Haden added: “I studied all the good guys, all the great guys that are in the league now but Darrelle Revis he just stands out cause he’s just complete. He tackles, he can play off, he can play press, and he’s just very, very, very patient and he’s just hard to deal with off the line. His footwork on the line is amazing and that’s just the one thing I feel like I need to get to his level is just press so I feel that’s why he’s the No. 1 cornerback now.”

Revis will have no problem listening to Haden wax poetic on the wonders of the New York Jets cornerback, but knocking Sherman down a peg — even if Haden did this with a dose of humility — is ripping the lid off Pandora’s Box.

“Not to take anything away from him, I mean he’s a really good player on a talented team,” Haden said. “They get seen a lot, their defense is, their secondary is amazing with him, Earl (Thomas), you got (Kam) Chancellor, I mean their other corner too they have just their whole secondary, they get recognition, their team wins, they get seen a lot more but he’s a really, really good player but it would be Revis and then myself.”

I had the pleasure of watching all of Haden’s starts last season as part of my Sunday deskwork at NFL.com. He’s technically clean and incredibly athletic. He’s as fine a cornerback as the Browns have employed since the days of Hanford Dixon and Frank Minnifield.

Haden is a talent, but Revis is in another universe — and Sherman is heading there. That pecking order has backing, but every one of these guys feeds off confidence. You have to in order to play a position that demands you get back on your feet after being torched on national TV. Haden’s words aren’t so unusual.

Something tells me, however, Sherman is crafting his response.

Follow Marc Sessler on Twitter @MarcSesslerNFL.

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Wild get Clutterback back at Predators after 6-game absence with collision-caused leg injury

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Right wing Cal Clutterbuck has been taken off injured reserve by the Minnesota Wild.

Clutterbuck has missed six games with a leg injury from a collision in Edmonton that drew a two-game suspension for Oilers left wing Taylor Hall. Clutterbuck, who has two goals and two assists in 16 games, is expected to play on Saturday in Nashville.

The Wild also placed goalie Darcy Kuemper on injured reserve with a sore groin and recalled goalie Matt Hackett from their AHL affiliate in Houston. Hackett is 19-19-3 with a 2.56 goals against average and a .910 save percentage for the Aeros. He set an NHL record last season for the longest shutout streak to start a career, more than 102 minutes. Hackett will be Niklas Backstrom‘s backup against the Predators.

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Your! Call: Who deserves credit for the Leafs’ 2013 success?

It’s been an intriguing time of transition in Toronto.

In the span of just under two months, the Maple Leafs have gone from a team scrambling for an identity as the Dave Nonis era officially began to a solid playoff contender within reach of the top spot in the Eastern Conference.

The Leafs’ play thus far in 2013 has been consistent: The team has not lost back-to-back games in over a month and has not lost more than two in a row all season.

The Leafs have also avoided leaving points on the table as one of only two NHL teams without an overtime loss and one of only three to have not participated in a shootout this season.

So, who deserves the credit?

Brian Burke, speaking at the annual Conn Smythe dinner to support Easter Seals Thursday night, took a good chunk of the credit for himself.

“Sometimes you do the hard work and set the table and somebody else eats the meal,” Burke said in a candid speech.

It’s true that – aside from waiver addition Frazer McLaren – every member of the current Leafs squad was acquired by or is playing on a contract they signed with Brian Burke.

The team’s top five scorers include one draft pick (Nazem Kadri), three trade acquisitions (Phil Kessel, James van Riemsdyk and Cody Franson) and one free agent (Tyler Bozak) all acquired by Burke.

But how much credit does Burke deserve?

Dave Nonis was in charge when it came time to select the 2013 team and coach Randy Carlyle certainly had some say.

The decision to play the likes of Kadri and Matt Frattin (when healthy) over under-performing forwards like Tim Connolly and Matthew Lombardi – who were waived and traded, respectively – was Nonis’ call.

The team has enjoyed somewhat of a make-over this year with character additions from the American Hockey League.

Six players from Thursday night’s line-up have logged games for the Toronto Marlies this season, including defencemen Mike Kostka, Mark Fraser and Korbinian Holzer in addition to Kadri, Leo Komarov, and Ben Scrivens.

Trusting those three former AHL defencemen for 15-plus minutes per night over established vets like John-Michael Liles and Mike Komisarek was another decision not made by Burke.

Another man who should not be overlooked for the success the Leafs are currently enjoying is Burke’s predecessor, John Ferguson Jr.

Though much-maligned by fans during his tenure for player personnel decisions at the pro level, his fingerprints are still evident on the 2013 Leafs.

Seven members of the Leafs’ current roster were drafted by the club.

Of those seven players, six were drafted by Ferguson: Nikolai Kulemin, James Reimer, Holzer and Komarov in 2006, Frattin and Carl Gunnarsson in 2007.

Only one member of the current Leafs squad – Kadri – was drafted by Burke, despite having helmed the club’s last four drafts.

Again, many of the Ferguson picks were signed or re-signed by Burke but not every GM possesses the ability to draft multiple everyday players out of the same draft, especially when looking outside the first round.

Or is it Carlyle’s influence?

The team has burned through two head coaches since its last playoff appearance in 2004 and while there is still plenty of schedule left before the 2013 Stanley Cup playoffs begin, the season is more than halfway done and the Leafs are in good shape.

It is Carlyle that is putting the liens together and allotting ice time and he deserves plenty of credit for getting the most out of a cast of call-ups, as well as having players like van Riemsdyk and Franson on-pace for career years despite the shortened schedule.

So, is Burke right? Did he set the table for Nonis to succeed? Or, have the efforts of the men that preceded him and followed in his footsteps been overlooked?

Who really deserves the credit for the Leafs’ 2013 success thus far?

As always, it’s Your! Call.

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