Steelers confirm Mean Joe Greene is not dead, refuting online speculation

Hall of Fame defensive tackle Joe Greene has not died, the Pittsburgh Steelers told multiple outlets Friday, despite speculation to the contrary on social media.

Yahoo Sports

The Steelers toldTMZand other outlets that reports of Greene's death were "not accurate."

Additionally, longtime NFL reporterJohn McClainwrote on social media that he had spoken to Greene's family and confirmed that the four-time Super Bowl champion is alive and well.

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"Fortunately, Joe Greene has NOT died," McClain wrote. "That report was fake news. Joe is doing great!!!"

Greene, 79, nicknamed "Mean Joe," spent his entire 13-year NFL career with the Steelers, winning four Super Bowls with the team (1974, 1975, 1978, 1979 seasons). He earned 10 Pro Bowl nods throughout his career, was named first team All-Pro five times, and won the NFL Man of the Year award (now Walter Payton Man of the Year) in 1979.

Prior to that, Greene played for the North Texas Mean Green, which adopted the name while Greene was playing there in 1966. The program retired his No. 75 jersey in 1981. The Steelers retired Greene's No. 75 in 2014.

Greene was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1984, before being inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1987.

Steelers confirm Mean Joe Greene is not dead, refuting online speculation

Hall of Fame defensive tackle Joe Greene has not died, the Pittsburgh Steelers told multiple outlets Friday, despite spec...
Labaron Philon Jr. drives No. 4 Alabama over No. 13 Hofstra

Labaron Philon Jr. took over in the second half by scoring 21 of his game-best 29 points, and fourth-seeded Alabama rallied to win 90-70 over No. 13-seed Hofstra on Friday afternoon in the first round of the NCAA Tournament's Midwest Region in Tampa, Fla.

Field Level Media

Sporting a bandage on his cut chin in the second half, Philon made 10 of 18 shots overall and added eight rebounds, seven assists, and three steals in the standout performance.

"I missed a couple open shots, but I don't really bank myself on that," Philon said. "I try to get guys involved. I ended up with seven assists, and I was just mainly focused on getting the ball out of my hands when I needed to, getting it back if I needed to."

An 11½-point favorite playing without second-leading scorer Aden Holloway, who was suspended for first-degree felony marijuana possession, the Crimson Tide (24-9) trailed 28-18 early but finished strong in both halves.

Alabama advances to face No. 5-seed Texas Tech in Sunday's second round.

Aiden Sherrell posted 15 points and 15 rebounds, and Taylor Bol Bowen scored 15 points. Amari Allen and Latrell Wrightsell had 11 points apiece.

"All the guys were ready to play," Philon said. "It's a collective thing. Once we play like that, it's hard to contain it in the full and half court."

Finishing the Coastal Athletic Association with a tournament title and 11 wins over 12 games, the Pride (24-11) had their seven-game winning streak snapped as they shot 40.6% from the floor and lost the rebound battle 46-34.

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Preston Edmead totaled 24 points, four rebounds and four assists. Cruz Davis had 14 points and six assists.

German Plotnikov scored 12 points, while Biggie Patterson added 11 and six boards. Victory Onuetu grabbed nine rebounds before fouling out.

The Pride rallied in the first five minutes after the Southeastern Conference school went up 8-2. They cut it to 11-9 on Joshua DeCady's layup at 15:09 off a feed from Davis.

Hofstra grabbed its first lead with 11:45 left on Patterson's 24-footer before Davis made it 20-16. Then Joshua Aaron Reaves sank a 3-pointer from the wing to finish a 16-2 run and leave the Pride up 28-18 at 9:20.

However, behind Sherrell's 12 points and eight rebounds, Alabama went on a 16-5 run in the final 6:20 to lead 37-35 at halftime, despite shooting 38.9% (14 of 36) from the floor and just 5 of 19 (26.3%) from deep.

The Crimson Tide continued their momentum from the end of the first half and turned up the defensive intensity on a 13-4 run in less than five minutes to start the second frame.

Hofstra cut the deficit to five points multiple times inside the final 10 minutes, but Alabama made key stops and pulled away for the victory.

"We got it down to five a couple times. Then they hit a big shot. Hats off to them," Hofstra coach Speedy Claxton said. "I truly believe we would have got the stop, got the rebound and maybe got a score, it would have changed things. I wish we could have seen that."

--Field Level Media

Labaron Philon Jr. drives No. 4 Alabama over No. 13 Hofstra

Labaron Philon Jr. took over in the second half by scoring 21 of his game-best 29 points, and fourth-seeded Alabama ralli...
Miami (Ohio)'s NCAA tournament run ends in blowout loss to Tennessee in first round

An 11th-seeded SMU team that snuck into theNCAA tournamentin the First Four was one thing for Miami (Ohio).

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No. 6 Tennessee on Friday proved another altogether. No. 11 Miami failed to build off the success ofits First Four win over SMUin a78-56 loss to Tennesseein the first round.

The blowout did little to settle whether Miami belonged in the tournament field to begin with.

Tennessee takes control, doesn't let go

The runaway was on at halftime as the Volunteers raced out to a 51-32 lead behind 22 first-half points from senior guard Ja'Kobi Gillespie (29 points, 9 assists, 3 steals for the game). They built the lead and controlled the game despite star freshman Nate Ament failing to crack the scoreboard (0 points, 3 rebounds, 3 turnovers, 0 for 3 from the field).

There was no miracle rally for the Redhawks, whose worthiness for the NCAA tournament was a hot topic of debate after they failed to win a game in their conference tournament and didn't secure the MAC's automatic bid.

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Miami scored just one point and didn't hit its first field goal of the second half until 4:30 ran off the clock. Miami mounted a 7-0 run midway through the second half, but that just cut Tennessee's lead to 17 points.

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The hot 3-point shooting that powered Miami's First Four win was not present on Friday (7 of 29, 24%). The Volunteers never let the Redhawks back into the game.

And Miami's NCAA tournament concludes without a clear answer regarding its worthiness to make the field in the first place.

Tennessee, meanwhile, advances to the second round with confidence for a matchup against No. 3 seed Virginia.

Should Miami have made field as an at-large team?

Before its first-round loss in the MAC tournament, Miami went 31-0 as the last unbeaten team in college basketball. But its schedule was one of the weakest in the country and featured no games against power conference opponents.

This was in large part no fault of its own as power conference schools are hesitant to schedule games against mid-majors. Associate head coachJonathan Holmes previously told Yahoo Sports' Jeff Eisenbergthe program "was told no by probably 75 to 90 teams" that it tried to put on its schedule.

But Miami's schedule was its schedule, and its tournament résumé (No. 87 in KenPom,No. 64 NET,No. 37 WAB, 0 Quad 1 wins) didn't make the strongest case for at-large consideration. But ultimately, the selection committee leaned on the WAB rankings that favored Miami above other metrics and rewarded the Redhawks for their 31-1 season with a berth in the First Four.

The Redhawks leave the NCAA tournament with an exciting First Four win. But against the larger tournament field, they didn't compete.

Miami (Ohio)'s NCAA tournament run ends in blowout loss to Tennessee in first round

An 11th-seeded SMU team that snuck into theNCAA tournamentin the First Four was one thing for Miami (Ohio). No...
The US broke the all-time heat record for March. Yes, it's climate change

Anunprecedented heat wavein the West broke the record for the hottest March temperature anywhere in the United States: 108 degrees. It's an alarming signal of how hot the planet is getting and how fast it's happening.

CNN The orange dots show a few of the locations where all-time March record highs have been tied or broken from Monday through Thursday. - CNN Weather

Yuma, Arizona, hit109 degreeson Friday afternoon, which broke the national March record of 108 degrees set at Rio Grande City, Texas, in 1954 and 1902, according to adatabaseof weather records from the National Weather Service and other networks.

The new record could be even hotter. The temperature near Martinez Lake, Arizona, hit 110 degrees on Thursday and 112 degrees on Friday, but it's a temporary weather station that is not quality controlled, which calls into question its accuracy. The National Centers for Environment Information told CNN it does not validate or confirm monthly temperature records.

The scorching heat wave continues through the weekend, with temperatures expected to peak near the national record in Southern California or Arizona.

Anunusually strongand sprawlingheat domeis the catalyst for the heat, but the magnitude is undoubtedly being worsened by planet-warming pollution. Heat waves are becomingmore frequent, more severeand lasting longer as the world warms.

Climate scientists at World Weather Attributionpublished an analysisFriday that found this heat wave would be "virtually impossible for this time of year in a world without human-induced climate change."

Heat domes of this strength are rare this early in the year, and its arrival ahead of schedule could actually make it more dangerous. "The early, prolonged nature of this heat with limited seasonal acclimation will increase the risk of heat impacts especially among sensitive populations or those without effective cooling," the Weather Prediction Center said.

Extreme heat is thedeadliest formof extreme weather in the US, killing more than twice as many people each year on average as hurricanes and tornadoes combined.

Records are tumbling

More than 100 all-time March record highs were already broken or tied this week across several states in the West and High Plains, including California, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, South Dakota and Wyoming. And there's more to come: The summerlike temperatures are spiking 20 to 40 degrees above average, which has even broken all-time April records.

Phoenix soared to 102 degrees on Tuesday, easily besting its previous March record of 100 degrees. It shattered it again on Thursday with a high of 105 degrees, which even ties the April monthly record.

A high of 84 degrees in Flagstaff, Arizona, on Thursday shattered the previous March record by 11 degrees and bested its April record by 4 degrees.

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Denver, Las Vegas, Salt Lake City and Burbank, Fresno, and Palm Springs, California, are some of the other cities where temperatures have toppled March heat records this week.

Denver could even soar to near its April record of 90 degrees by Saturday.

The heat dome will flex its muscles eastward over the next few days.

Dozens of cities from Texas to South Dakota east to the Carolinas could at least break daily record highs.

Dallas-Fort Worth and Oklahoma City are among them, with highs expected to rise well into the 90s through this weekend. Those temperatures rival the average for late June or July.

Nebraska's capital city Lincoln could even approach its all-time March record of 91 degrees by Saturday. The heat could worsen conditions for fires in the state, including the Morrill County fire in western Nebraska, already the state's largest on record.

As for the West, the record heat will drone on and on for days well into next week. Temperatures could break record highs in parts of Arizona, California and Nevada every day through at least next Wednesday.

There's no relief in the longer-term outlook either, with above-average temperatures likely through the rest of the month.

CNN Meteorologist Mary Gilbert and Andrew Freedman contributed to this report.

This story has been updated with additional information.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

The US broke the all-time heat record for March. Yes, it’s climate change

Anunprecedented heat wavein the West broke the record for the hottest March temperature anywhere in the United States: 10...
Cuba refuses to let US Embassy in Havana import diesel for its generators

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Cuban government has refused a request by the U.S. Embassy in Havana to allow it to import diesel for its generators while the Trump administration continues to impose afuel blockade on the island,according to two U.S. officials familiar with the matter.

Associated Press

The Cuban government turned down the request as the U.S. State Department has been weighing a reduction in staffing at the embassy in Havana because of the lack of diesel. Such a move would likely lead to a U.S. demand for a similar reduction in staffing at the Cuban Embassy in Washington, say the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.

The Cuban government rejection was first reported by The Washington Post.

Cuba has struggled with dwindling oil since the U.S. removed Venezuela's leader, halting critical petroleum shipments from the nation. President Donald Trump thenthreatened tariffson any country selling or supplying Cuba with oil.

The island is relying on its own natural gas, solar power and its own oil to run thermoelectric plants, but that hasn't been enough to meet demand.

The standoff on diesel comes as Trump has been pressing for dramatic change in government led byCuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel.

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Trump has suggested that top Cuban leaders would be smart to avoid the fate of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who was ousted and arrested in a U.S. military operation in January. Venezuela had been Cuba's closest ally and provided it with heavily subsidized oil.

Any potential staffing reduction at the embassy is not expected to come immediately because the U.S. believes it has enough diesel in reserve to last for another month, according to one official.

Díaz-Canelsaid last week thatCuba has held talkswith the U.S. government. It marked the first time theCaribbean countryhad confirmed widespread speculation about discussions with the Trump administration in the midst of the Republican administration's pressure campaign.

Humanitarian organizationsbegan delivering aidto Cuba by air Friday, including solar panels, food and medicine.

Cuba has been preparing to receive a shipment of Russian oil later this month, which would be its first shipment in the past three months.

Trump and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio have said they see the island nation as the next country where the U.S. can expand its influence.

The Trump administration is looking forDíaz-Canelto leave as the U.S. continues negotiating with the Cuban government, The Associated Press previously reported. No detail has been offered about who the administration might like to see come to power.

Cuba refuses to let US Embassy in Havana import diesel for its generators

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Cuban government has refused a request by the U.S. Embassy in Havana to allow it to import diesel f...

 

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