Baghdad’s Green Zone opens its gates to public after 15 years

For fifteen years most Iraqis have been unable to access the heart of Baghdad b ut the tall concrete walls and barbed wire that have closed off the Green Zone for years, are finally coming down.

The Green Zone, a 10 square kilometer area in central Baghdad, has been partially open to the public since December 10 for a two-week trial period that is likely to become permanent.

Cars are now allowed to traverse the area from 5pm to 1am along the 14th of July Road, a key thoroughfare that extends from the 14th July Bridge – also known as the hanging bridge – and connects the city’s east and west.

Side roads where Iraqi officials are based remain closed however, and government buildings and foreign missions continue to be under heavy security and surveillance.

Following the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, the neighborhood was cordoned off by the US military, which set up its headquarters there, at Saddam Hussein’s former palace. As the area later hosted the US embassy and Iraqi parliament, the Green Zone became a symbol of the US occupation and the estrangement felt by many Iraqis towards their government.

This led Baghdad residents to receive the move with celebrations. Iraqi flags were seen hanging from car windows, as families cheer on the government while entering the once heavily fortified area. And yet, Iraqis hope more will be done to bring Bagdad back to its former self.

The mayoralty of Baghdad has worked with the Iraqi security forces to lift kilometres of blast walls across the Green Zone for several weeks [Reuters]

Festive atmosphere

The reopening, ordered by Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi, coincided with the first anniversary of Baghdad’s victory over the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant [ISIL], the armed group that had overtaken large swathes of the country since 2014.

“This is a reason for real celebration,” said Adnan Qureishi, a journalist and Baghdad resident. “The area has an important place in our memory. It had been under occupation by the Americans and the government for too long.”

Hassan Jaber, a professor at Baghdad University, who has been driving along the previously closed off thoroughfare for several days, feels equally elated by the move.

“It’s a double celebration of a big achievement [victory over ISIL] and brave move [reopening of the Green Zone],” Jaber told Al Jazeera.

“For 15 years this area has been off limits. A whole generation has never seen it,” he added, explaining that the last time he traversed the area was in 2003.

“We just hope the reopening will extend to all roads, old palaces and former government buildings too.”

Following the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, the neighborhood was cordoned off by the US military, which set up its headquarters there [Anadolu]

Relieving Baghdad’s traffic problem

Long-neglected road networks in the city of almost nine million residents make movement across Baghdad difficult, and traffic jams ubiquitous.

But with two of the capital’s key thoroughfares – Haifa Street and 14th of July Boulevard – traversing the Green Zone, the reopening has reduced some of Baghdad’s heavy road congestion.

“The reopening, even if partial, has brought our city a sense of relief,” Ammar Waleed, spokesperson for the Iraqi traffic police told Al Jazeera.

“Most residents in Baghdad are finding transit across the city easier now,” he added.

Salah Mahdi, a taxi driver and Baghdad resident, agrees but says a real impact will only be felt once all gates to the zone are reopened around the clock.

“This is definitely a positive change. But these roads need to be opened during rush hour. That would make a real difference,” said Mahdi.

Government promises

Several Iraqi leaders had pledged to reopen the central zone since the US military withdrew from Iraq in 2011, but their promises were never realised.

After the government reopened the Green Zone in 2015 for a few days, it closed it again following opposition from officials over security concerns.

The presence of government buildings, residences of several high-level officials, various international organisation, such as the UN, and foreign embassies – most notably the US embassy’s expansive complex – have established security concerns as a longstanding issue.

Despite the barriers and checkpoints, the area has remained a target. In 2004, a suicide bombing killed dozens of Americans, while a year later, an Iraqi legislator was killed in another attack on the parliament. Followers of Iraqi Shia religious leader Muqtada al-Sadr targeted the area with rockets several times in 2008. And in 2016, anti-corruption protesters stormed the Green Zone, bringing the government to a standstill.

The area has an important place in our memory. It’s been under occupation by the Americans and the government for too long.

Adnan Qureshi, journalist and Baghdad resident

Although there are no guarantees the reopening will be permanent, there are promising signs the government will keep its word on the matter this time.

“It’s definitely different this time. The government has made a real promise and the threat of ISIL is no longer present,” said Hakeem Abdul Zahraa, spokesperson for the Baghdad mayoralty.

For several weeks ahead of the move, the mayoralty has worked with the Iraqi security forces to lift kilometres of blast walls across the Green Zone. They have also dismantled several checkpoints which previously only allowed people with biometric badges and vehicle passes to enter.

“For weeks now we’ve been working. We’ve removed a lot of the blast walls, but lots more are yet to be taken down,” said Abdul Zahraa.

According to Abdul Zahraa, the government will definitely complete the process, but a gradual approach is necessary.

“Road works need to be completed, traffic lights fixed, and tunnels that had been deserted for years, made safe to use again,” Abul Zahraa told Jazeera. “All that will take time and must be done over stages.”

The US embassy in Baghdad had not responded to an invitation to comment on the Green Zone reopening by the time of publishing this article.

It did not make any official statements on the move except to warn, in a security alert, residents in Baghdad to remain indoors on the night of the reopening.

Two of the capital’s key thoroughfares, Haifa Street and 14th of July Boulevard, traverse the Green Zone  [Anadolu]

According to Mamoon Alabbasi, a political analyst focusing on the Middle East and North Africa, despite the presence of security concerns, the government is unlikely to go back on its word.

“Abdul Mahdi will go through the reopening, or as much as he can of it. Security concerns and possible pressure from officials remain. But that’s why the reopening has been partial,” he explained.

Cosmetic change?

In addition to opening up the area, Abdul Mahdi relocated his offices out of the fortified enclave on the first day of his term in late October, saying that he wanted to bring his government closer to the people and for Iraqis to consider “all of Iraq a Green Zone”.

But with frustrations over chronic power cuts and water pollution prompting large protests across Iraq’s southern provinces in recent months, analysts believe this move may not be enough to calm the public.

“The reopening of Green Zone has made Abdul Mahdi more popular, but it is a cosmetic change of sorts. The real problems are still there and people in Basra are fuming over the lack of policy change,” said Alabbasi.

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LeBron James Triple-Doubles, Leads Lakers to Win over Anthony Davis, Pelicans

Los Angeles Lakers' LeBron James, right, smiles as he walks past New Orleans Pelicans' Anthony Davis during the first half of an NBA basketball game Friday, Dec. 21, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

With both teams plagued by sickness, the Los Angeles Lakers ended their recent losing skid thanks to a 112-104 victory over the New Orleans Pelicans on Friday. 

LeBron James was a game-time decision and Anthony Davis was questionable due to separate illnesses.

The Lakers didn’t need more things to worry about after losing three of their last four games, but they got back on track against a struggling New Orleans team that’s dropped three straight games. 

Both superstars wound up playing, seemingly trying to show each other up. James posted his third triple-double of the season with 22 points, 14 assists and 12 rebounds. Davis finished with 30 points and tied his season high with 20 rebounds.

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Kyle Kuzma continued his recent hot streak, leading the Lakers with 23 points. This marks his third straight game scoring at least 20 points. 

Anthony Davis Needs the Lakers More than the Lakers Need Anthony Davis

Despite the continued insistence from Pelicans head coach Alvin Gentry that Davis won’t be traded, this summer is going to tell New Orleans’ front office what it needs to know about the five-time All-Star. 

Per The Athletic’s Sam Amick, the Pelicans’ ability to offer Davis more money than any other team may not be a big factor in his next contract. 

According to a source with knowledge of Davis’ thinking, he does not see the extra $87.3 million that New Orleans is expected to offer in a five-year, $239.5 million supermax extension this summer as a factor in his eventual decision,” Amick wrote. 

Even in a league in which players carry an exorbitant amount of power, the Lakers are in a unique position where they can pursue Davis on their terms. 

On ESPN’s Woj & Lowe show (h/t RealGM.com), Adrian Wojnarowski reported Los Angeles is saving all of its assets—future draft picks and young players—to pursue Davis in a trade next summer. 

For as much talent as Davis has, he needs the Lakers more than they need him at this point. James has given this franchise the spark that’s been missing since the end of Kobe Bryant‘s prime.

Los Angeles is currently the No. 4 seed in the Western Conference with James and a roster of comprised largely of players with fewer than three years of experience and veteran castoffs.

Meanwhile, Davis is stuck with the Pelicans, who have been unable to figure out how best to maximize his talents. General manager Dell Demps has tried being bold, acquiring DeMarcus Cousins from the Sacramento Kings and giving Jrue Holiday a max extension in July 2017. 

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Yet the Pelicans have one playoff series win in two postseason appearances since Davis’ rookie season in 2012-13. That limited success hasn’t done anything to stop him from going hard every single time he steps on the court:

Russillo @ryenarussillo

Davis is a big with perimeter skills that can still play like a traditional center. So many things to love about his game, but my favorite thing about him is that he busts his ass every possession. He’s the best.

The Lakers don’t know how far their current collection of talent will go in the playoffs, but barring some sort of collapse, they look like they will make it that far. The Pelicans are one of four Western Conference teams under .500. 

Los Angeles also has the benefit of carrying a max contract spot heading into this summer. Potential free agents include Kevin Durant, Klay Thompson, Kawhi Leonard, Jimmy Butler and Kemba Walker. 

New Orleans’ starting lineup against the Lakers included Solomon Hill and Tim Frazier. This situation doesn’t help Davis at this stage of his career. 

The Lakers would look much more formidable with Davis, but they are already among the best teams in the West without him. He needs the spotlight they can offer more than they need him to succeed. 

What’s Next?

The Pelicans will remain in California for a game against the Sacramento Kings on Sunday at 6 p.m. ET. The Lakers will stay home to host the Memphis Grizzlies on Sunday at 9:30 p.m. ET. 

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Somalia: Deadly blasts rock Mogadishu near presidential palace

Two explosions have hit Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, killing at least six people, local media reported.

The first car bomb detonated at a checkpoint near the national theatre, sending thick white smoke billowing into the sky.

The second explosion took place just minutes after, reportedly in the same area.

Mohamed Bulbul, a journalist based in Mogadishu, told Al Jazeera that Mohamed Tulah, the Deputy Governor for security in Somalia’s Benadir region, was wounded in the first blast.

“Government officials are stationed near the area and it is a very guarded place. From what we know the security bomber hit the security checkpoint”.

Images circulating on social media showed destroyed vehicles and debris littering the streets.

BREAKING: Heavy explosion heard in #Mogadishu #Somalia pic.twitter.com/Ddt5TfKCiJ

— DalsanTV (@DalsanTv) December 22, 2018

The explosions have shattered nearly a month of calm in Mogadishu, which is often the target of attacks by al-Shabab.

The al-Qaeda linked armed group, which has carried out several attacks in Somalia and neighbouring countries, is fighting to topple the Somali government and wants to impose a strict version of Islamic law in the Horn of Africa country.

The group used to control most parts of the country, but since 2010, the fighters have been removed from most major towns and cities.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera News

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Kyrie Irving Says Celtics ‘Obviously’ Playing ‘Selfish’ After Loss to Bucks

BOSTON, MA - DECEMBER 21: Kyrie Irving #11 of the Boston Celtics drives to the basket against the Milwaukee Bucks on December 21, 2018 at the TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE  (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)

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The Boston Celtics trailed by 13 points after one quarter, gave up 65 points by halftime and were never seriously in a 120-107 home loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on Friday.

After the game, Celtics point guard Kyrie Irving said, “There’s obviously some selfish play going on out there.”

Per Jay King of The Athletic, Irving also referenced the abundance of isolations and fadeaways in the Celtics offense.

“I get caught up in that as well,” he said. “I literally can do anything I want out there at any time I want. But at the same time it’s what can I do for my teammates to be more successful?”

The Celtics held a closed-door meeting immediately after the game, and the locker room was shut for at least 30 minutes before media was let in, per A. Sherrod Blakely of NBC Sports Boston.

Irving didn’t reveal details of the talk, but he said it was “well-needed,” per King.

The Celtics’ season has been eventful. On some days, they look great, like when they beat the Oklahoma City Thunder on the road and the Bucks, Toronto Raptors and Philadelphia 76ers (the top three Eastern Conference teams) at home.

However, Boston has also inexplicably lost to some of the league’s worst teams at home, including the 9-25 New York Knicks and 8-24 Phoenix Suns. The C’s started just 10-10 before rattling off eight straight wins, but they’ve now lost three in a row by an average of 10 points.

There’s more to the Celtics’ struggles than selfish play and a scuffling offense that ranks middle of the pack in efficiency. 

During a Christmas shopping spree at the Natick Mall with Sam Alipour of ESPN the Magazine, Celtics forward Jayson Tatum revealed some reasons why the C’s have been struggling, noting that the team “let the attention get to (their) heads” and that they have been inconsistent.

There could be some merit to the first reason, as the Celtics had much preseason hype after coming one game from making the NBA Finals last season despite being without Gordon Hayward for the entire year and Kyrie Irving for the playoffs.

With those two back in the mix, the C’s had 19-2 preseason odds (third-best in the league) to win the NBA Finals, per OddsShark.

Still, as Tatum also noted, it’s a long season. The page hasn’t even turned to 2019 yet, and Boston is still a top-five Eastern Conference team. If the C’s can figure things out and make a run down the stretch, they’ll be as dangerous as any team in the East.

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Inside the frantic negotiations that failed to avert a shutdown


John Cornyn

Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) talks to reporters as he backs into his office at the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 21. He like Vice President Mike Pence believed President Donald Trump would sign a bill without money only for the president to reverse his position. | Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Congress

With GOP leadership feeling burned, a group of rank-and-file senators stepped up — and still fell short.

Cory Gardner didn’t like what he was hearing as Senate Republicans met on Friday afternoon.

A group of GOP senators that sat with President Donald Trump earlier that day were offering increasingly dour assessments of the odds of avoiding yet another government shutdown this year, this time over Trump’s border wall. But the first-term Colorado senator still thought a deal was possible.

Story Continued Below

Then Gardner’s phone rang, and it was Trump on the line.

“What I heard from the president was, ‘We’re going to get this done, we’re going to get this fixed,’” Gardner said. “He’s ready to find a deal. So, we talked about it.”

A few minutes later, Gardner and Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) stepped into the Republican cloakroom off the Senate floor and desperately tried to dial Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s acting chief of staff and a former congressional colleague. Eventually, Mulvaney answered with Vice President Mike Pence on the line, and the four Republicans talked. Soon, Mulvaney, Pence and White House adviser Jared Kushner were on their way to the Hill to meet with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) in a last-ditch attempt to find a deal.

Gardner and Perdue’s efforts didn’t head off a shutdown. Yet the episode highlights an essential component of Trump’s style of being president, especially when it comes to dealing with Congress: his use of back-channels and personal relationships — often circumventing party leaders — to try to get deals done. Trump employs the tactic far more than any recent president. Sometimes it works, more often it doesn’t. And Friday was a case where it didn’t work.

It happened, to real success, during the bipartisan negotiations over the criminal justice reform package. It happened again on Thursday, when conservative House GOP hard-liners Mark Meadows and Jim Jordan went around Republican leaders and urged Trump to back a bill providing $5 billion for the border wall, although that led directly to Friday’s shutdown.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) had been ready to postpone the border wall fight until early February and avoid a partial government shutdown. Meadows and Jordan urged Trump to pick the fight with Democrats now, and Trump went along with them — ambushing McConnell and Ryan in the process.

Schumer and the trio of Trump administration officials made some progress in a private meeting on a deal to fund the government and modestly boost border security funding. But it came too late. The Senate and House both adjourned relatively early in the evening, and congressional leaders are still hashing things out with the president and his top officials.

Lawmakers and aides in both parties are cautiously optimistic that the shutdown will be short, believing there’s an emerging consensus around a package of seven annual spending bills, including $1.6 billion in money for fencing. Everyone seems to realize that Trump’s dream of $5 billion for concrete wall funding is dead, including Trump himself. But nobody seems quite sure of what, exactly, Trump will sign after this week’s frenzied back and forth.

On Friday morning, Schumer and McConnell were barely talking. After all, they’d already struck a deal to continue government funding until Feb. 8, only to see Trump pull his support for the plan following the revolt by the House Freedom Caucus.

“Mitch is not going to negotiate with Schumer because he doesn’t know if he can depend on what the president’s bottom line will be. So, that’s understandable,” said Perdue, who met with Trump and other senators on Friday morning. “But because of that, nobody’s talking.”

In fact, things were so bad and GOP senators so disgusted with the state of play that two of them, Sens. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) and Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), couldn’t be convinced to even open debate on a doomed House-passed bill that delivered $5 billion for the border wall. The vote stayed open for more than five hours as Perdue and Gardner backchanneled with the administration, and as Schumer spoke to Trump officials and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).

Eventually, Flake, Corker and Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) voted to move forward on the bill and allow leaders to keep talking. Seemingly minor, the procedural move makes it possible for the Senate to act as quickly as a deal can be struck.

“Mitch certainly doesn’t want to put us out voting on something that the president has not agreed to. The key is that the president has to agree that he will [sign] this,” Flake said.

Flake met with Corker, then with Schumer, McConnell, and finally the two leaders together to move the Senate’s funding effort forward. Yet while that procedural fracas was playing out, Republicans were frantically trying to come up with something they could put on the floor.

The shuttle diplomacy continued throughout the day. Pence, Kushner and Mulvaney went from Schumer’s office to Pence’s own hideaway in the Capitol, where Corker came to visit. Then they want to the House side of the Capitol to negotiate with conservatives and GOP leaders, trying to figure out what could pass that the president would sign.

McConnell, meanwhile, was somewhat hands-off after Trump’s about-face on the stopgap bill. As emphatically as he could, Pence had told senators that Trump would sign the legislation, only to see that backfire. So Pence couldn’t sign off any deal with Schumer or House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) — who was even more skeptical — unless Trump publicly backed it first.

“That was my belief at the time. That was my belief at the time based on all the representations made. But as you know, things change,” said Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) of Pence’s comments to the GOP insisting Trump would sign the Senate’s short-term spending bill without wall money.

When Trump instead did the opposite, McConnell was quietly steaming, according to multiple GOP senators. And by the time he announced on the Senate floor on Friday that the chamber would advance the House’s bill only to stall for several hours as leaders worked to strike a deal, he was wearing a button declaring that he was part of the Senate’s “Cranky Coalition.”

Shortly after 6 p.m. Gardner and Perdue thought that a breakthrough was imminent and both chambers would move quickly. But the shutdown deadline came and went, underscoring the difficulty of scrambling together an agreement after two weeks of chaos.

And rather than force Democrats to block the House bill and allow the traditional shutdown blame game to begin, McConnell instead left the Capitol before 8 p.m. having never held a vote on Trump’s preferred legislation.

“Constructive talks are underway,” McConnell said as he walked out. Asked if he was participating, he responded: “As I said repeatedly, we need Democratic votes and a presidential signature.”

House Republicans were happy that the Senate didn’t reject their bill too, “because it took a hot potato off our laps,” in the words of one. The most recent state of play could be framed as the Senate having stalled on legislation to stop the shutdown.

Of course, House Republicans passed its $5 billion in border wall funding knowing full well it couldn’t pass the Senate. Democrats and even some Republicans seethed that Ryan — who is retiring in two weeks — didn’t simply put the Senate’s clean short-term funding bill on the House floor. It would likely have passed with support from some Republicans and a lot of Democrats, effectively daring Trump to veto it.

“Obviously the $5 billion is not going to pass,” Corker said. “Obviously everybody understands that. So what do we do in the interim, that the Democrats will take and that the president will take?”

By day’s end that wasn’t entirely clear. The House and Senate left much earlier than they usually do during a shutdown, not even pretending to play the normal political games as the clock ticked toward midnight. By 9 p.m., Pence, Kushner and Mulvaney had left too.

The day had not resulted in a breakthrough, but the needle had moved. At least a bit.

“We independently and together have heard the president say very specific things about what he would or wouldn’t do. There’s a very reasonable chance that Schumer can find common ground with that,” Perdue said.

“We woke up this morning thinking nothing is happening,” Gardner added. “Now I think we’ve opened up this door to a deal to be had.”

James Arkin contributed to this report.

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LeBron James: NFL Owners ‘Old White Men’ with ‘Slave Mentality’ Toward Players

BROOKLYN, NY - DECEMBER 18:  (NEW YORK DAILIES OUT)   LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers in action against the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center on December 18, 2018 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.  The Nets defeated the Lakers 115-110. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

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Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James said Friday on his HBO Sports series The Shop that the NFL has “a bunch of old white men owning teams” who have a “slave mentality” toward players.

Ben Golliver of the Washington Post provided the full transcript:

Ben Golliver @BenGolliver

Story: Lakers’ LeBron James takes aim at NFL owners, calling them ‘old white men’ with ‘slave mentality’ towards players @postsports https://t.co/AIWoHGLB4V https://t.co/1UePdZUZ4S

Ahiza Garcia of CNN Money reported May 18 that only two people of color owned or co-owned professional NFL teams: Shahid Khan of the Jacksonville Jaguars and Kim Pegula of the Buffalo Bills. The lack of diversity spreads through all major American sports leagues, with the NBA having the most people of color own or co-own teams (only three). The same goes for management and coaching positions as well.

James is one of a few people to call out the league and/or its owners over a “slave mentality” or something similar.

Of note, Solomon Jones of Philly.com wrote that “team owners sometimes think and behave like slave owners” in reference to the league’s policy on NFL players protesting racial injustice and social inequality during the national anthem.

Per Glen Martin of California Magazine, Cal sociology professor emeritus and civil rights activist Harry Edwards said the policy, which stated that players must stand for the anthem or stay in the locker room, is representative of a “plantation mentality.” Edwards noted NFL owners “are wealthy, entitled and arrogant, and they essentially view their players as property, not human beings with rights guaranteed by the Constitution. … [NFL team] owners are acting like plantation owners, insisting that any act of ‘rebellion’ must be squelched.”

James has never been afraid to use his platform to express his feelings on the world’s most important issues, as Cord Jefferson of Bleacher Report noted in a July 23 piece. Chances are this won’t be the last time we see James shun the “shut-up-and-dribble” request.

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Dodgers’ Stunning Yasiel Puig Blockbuster Could All but Seal Bryce Harper Splash

Los Angeles Dodgers' Yasiel Puig flips his bat as he watches his solo home run during the sixth inning of the team's baseball game against the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday, May 22, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press

The possibility that Bryce Harper becomes a member of the Los Angeles Dodgers took a step closer to reality Friday.

The big story for the time being is what the Dodgers subtracted in a blockbuster trade with the Cincinnati Reds. Going out are outfielders Yasiel Puig and Matt Kemp, left-hander Alex Wood and infielder Kyle Farmer, plus a bundle of cash. Coming in are a washed-up starting pitcher and a couple of prospects:

MLBRosterMoves @MLBRosterMoves

.@Reds acquire OFs Yasiel Puig, Matt Kemp, LHP Alex Wood, INF Kyle Farmer and cash from @Dodgers for RHPs Homer Bailey, Josiah Gray and INF Jeter Downs. https://t.co/EtayFYHf5s

The Reds are taking on money and sending out their No. 7 (Jeter Downs) and No. 20 (Josiah Gray) prospects, according to MLB.com. But in Puig, they’re getting a star-caliber right fielder. Kemp is a viable platoon option against left-handed pitching. Wood was an All-Star in 2017, and he only regressed as far as a 3.68 ERA over 151.2 innings in 2018.

The Dodgers, meanwhile, aren’t gaining anything at the major league level. Homer Bailey was the only major leaguer coming back, and he’s already been released.

On the bright side, the Dodgers cleared up an outfield logjam and gained a significant degree of financial flexibility. These things are conducive to a subsequent splash.

Such as, of course, signing Harper to a free-agent megadeal.

Nick Wass/Associated Press

According to ESPN.com’s Alden Gonzalez, Harper “badly wants to be a Dodger.” It’s harder to gauge how badly the Dodgers want the 26-year-old superstar, but enough rumors and speculation link them to see smoke that could become fire.

Trouble is, the Dodgers aren’t alone in the sweepstakes for Harper’s services. And while Friday’s trade is certainly significant, it doesn’t erase the alleged barriers standing between the two-time defending National League champs and the 2015 NL MVP.

As Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times reported in November, the Dodgers may be planning on staying under the luxury-tax threshold every year through 2022. That would mean finishing 2019 with a payroll under $206 million.

It’s unclear where the Dodgers stand now in relation to next year’s luxury-tax threshold, but they’re definitely under it. Roster Resource projects their 2019 luxury-tax payroll (which is based on average annual value) at $197.5 million. Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports put it much lower at $184.4 million.

Either way, however, the Dodgers can’t sign Harper to a contract of $30 million-plus per year and still avoid the luxury tax. If they really want him, they’ll either have to further trim down their payroll or disregard their best-laid plans for avoiding the luxury tax.

It’s possible the Dodgers will go through Door No. 1, but not likely. If so, they might fill their newfound wiggle room with less expensive stars. Here’s Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic with a few possibilities:

Ken Rosenthal @Ken_Rosenthal

In the wake of this trade, #Dodgers can do many other things besides take a run at Harper. They can sign free-agent A.J. Pollock and/or trade for #Marlins’ Realmuto or one of #Indians’ starting pitchers. Many ways they can go.

On the other hand, going through Door No. 2 and into luxury-tax territory wouldn’t be that revolutionary.

As we covered more extensively earlier this week, the Dodgers don’t have any excuses to play it cheap this winter. The franchise is valued at $3 billion by Forbes, and it took in over $500 million in revenue last season. Luxury tax or no luxury tax, money ought to be no object.

The Dodgers are in a position to downplay the luxury tax anyway. Though they paid out nearly $150 million in penalties from 2013 to 2017, according to the Associated Press, they’re fresh off getting under the threshold and resetting their baseline tax rate on overages.

The Dodgers will be subject to a surtax if they exceed the threshold by more than $20 million, as well as more taxes and a draft penalty—their top pick in the following year’s draft would be moved down 10 spots—if they go more than $40 million over. If they consider the latter to be the ultimate red line, well, that’s fair.

As of now, however, that $246 million red line isn’t even in play.

The Dodgers could sign Harper for $40 million per year and still be under it. They’d only have to cut a check for breaking luxury-tax barriers in 2019. And with roughly $40 million due off their books after 2019 (per MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand), they could go right back under in 2020.

If the question is why the Dodgers shouldn’t go all-in on Harper following Friday’s salary dump, the only reasonable answer is that it would best for them not to risk a long-term albatross. He’s young enough to demand at least a 10-year contract. According to Rosenthal, the Dodgers prefer a “short-term deal with a high average salary and opt-outs.”

Considering what they stand to gain, both sides may be amenable to a compromise.

Beyond some kind of record-setting deal, Harper is surely looking to join a team with which he can achieve the postseason success that eluded him in his seven years with the Washington Nationals. The Dodgers, of course, have won six straight NL West titles and two straight pennants. Even without Harper, they’re equipped to be the team to beat in the NL once again in 2019.

For their part, the Dodgers are questing to win their first World Series championship since Kirk Gibson and company turned the improbable into the impossible in 1988. Harper could help. It’s fair to say he’s had a frustrating career, yet he’s a six-time All-Star with 184 career home runs and a .900 OPS. At his peak, he was the best player in Major League Baseball in 2015.

In short, the fit between Harper and the Dodgers is all sorts of right. And after what happened Friday, there’s no reason the money shouldn’t be good enough.

Stats courtesy of Baseball Reference.  

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John Harbaugh to Return as Ravens HC in 2019, Work on Contract Extension

BALTIMORE, MD - NOVEMBER 10: Head coach John Harbaugh of the Baltimore Ravens looks on in the fourth quarter against the Cleveland Browns at M&T Bank Stadium on November 10, 2016 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

John Harbaugh will return to the Baltimore Ravens for a 12th season as head coach.

The Ravens announced the decision Friday and noted the team is planning to discuss a contract extension with Harbaugh with an eye toward keeping him beyond 2019:

Baltimore Ravens @Ravens

Statement from the Baltimore Ravens: https://t.co/NSog0QWx1P

It’s been an up-and-down season for Baltimore, but it currently holds the final playoff spot in the AFC at 8-6 with two weeks left in the 2018 regular season.

The main reason for the successes: a top-ranked defense that has clamped down on opponents as one of the league’s most physically imposing front sevens sets the tone for slugfests.

That said, offensive limitations have continued to cap Baltimore’s ceiling—a story that’s become all too familiar for Harbaugh’s team over the past five years.

In offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg’s third year with the club, the Ravens wield one of the NFL‘s least threatening attacks.

Although they have done well to churn out a 13th-ranked 24.4 points per game, they lack explosive dimensions with an anemic passing game that manages just 227.8 yards.

The Ravens have also failed to consistently hit on big plays and have only 38 completed passes of greater than 20 yards. The Kansas City Chiefs lead the league with 68.

Another offseason of tinkering likely lies ahead, and the Ravens will have to mull over ways to bolster their perimeter playmaking corps to help ascendant signal-caller Lamar Jackson as he settles into a full-time role under center.

Now it will be up to Harbaugh to help shape the team’s future as the franchise moves forward with its stalwart holding steady on the sideline.

Stats courtesy of Pro Football Reference unless noted otherwise.

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Rockets Believe Chris Paul Will Miss at Least 2 Weeks with Hamstring Injury

MIAMI, FL - DECEMBER 20:  Chris Paul #3 of the Houston Rockets looks on against the Miami Heat at American Airlines Arena on December 20, 2018 in Miami, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The Houston Rockets can plan to be without Chris Paul for at least the next couple of weeks, the team announced (per Clutch Fans):

ClutchFans @clutchfans

Rockets announce Chris Paul has a Grade-2 left hamstring strain and he will be re-evaluated in two weeks. https://t.co/SnY7GBl328

ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski first reported that Paul would only miss two to three weeks after injuring his left hamstring during Thursday’s 101-99 loss to the Miami Heat

Rockets head coach Mike D’Antoni told reporters after the game Paul would undergo an MRI and would miss “some time.”

Paul, who signed a four-year contract worth $160 million in July, was injured midway through the second quarter against Miami when Derrick Jones Jr. knocked the ball out of his hands, at which point he grabbed the back of his left leg. 

Hamstring issues have plagued Paul throughout his career. The nine-time All-Star missed the final two games of last year’s Western Conference Finals against the Golden State Warriors with a strained hamstring in his right leg. 

Per ESPN Stats & Info (h/t ESPN.com), Paul has missed 19 games in his career with five hamstring injuries. 

The Rockets are 0-5 this season in games Paul hasn’t played. He’s averaging a career-low 15.6 points and 8.7 assists per game in 26 appearances.

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Shea Patterson to Forego 2019 NFL Draft, Return to Michigan

EAST LANSING, MI - OCTOBER 20:  Shea Patterson #2 of the Michigan Wolverines runs the ball in the second half while playing the Michigan State Spartans at Spartan Stadium on October 20, 2018 in East Lansing, Michigan. Michigan won the game 21-7. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Quarterback Shea Patterson will return to Michigan in 2019 for his senior season.

He explained the decision to return to school in an interview with Angelique S. Chengelis of the Detroit News.

“I think my original plan was to come here and help the team out as much as I could,” Patterson said. “The thoughts were maybe come out after one year, so I think there might have been some speculation there. At this point, I feel like everybody thinks I’m coming back. Excited to get that out there so they know.”

Shea Patterson @SheaPatterson_1

〽 https://t.co/SnE1oCgAjJ

Patterson helped return the Wolverines to national prominence in 2018 by throwing for 2,364 yards and 21 touchdowns in 12 games. 

He also led Michigan to a 10-2 record and an appearance in the Peach Bowl against Florida on New Year’s Day. 

Patterson shook up the college football landscape by transferring from Ole Miss to Michigan for the 2018 campaign.

The 6’2″, 205-pound signal-caller committed to Ole Miss in 2015 as the No. 4 overall prospect and No. 1 quarterback in 247Sports‘ composite rankings. After seeing limited action as a freshman in 2016, Patterson appeared in seven games for the Rebels during his sophomore season.

He showed immense potential, completing 63.8 percent of his passes for 2,259 yards, 17 touchdowns and nine interceptions.

A torn knee ligament cut Patterson’s 2017 season short, but he bounced back well for the Wolverines in 2018.

On the heels of his impressive debut campaign at Michigan, Bleacher Report’s Matt Miller ranked Patterson as the No. 5 quarterback in the 2019 draft class as part of his most recent big board.

While Patterson has impressive tools, he never put up huge numbers at the collegiate level, which could have adversely impacted his draft stock.

At the same time, he is now experienced in a pro-style offense, which may have been attractive to NFL talent evaluators.

Regardless, Patterson decided to build on his 2018 performance by returning next season, and that should be huge for the Wolverines in terms of once again helping them vie for a national championship.

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