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Top 10 reasons LeBron James will sign extension with Cavs

Kenny Roda will be writing a weekly blog on Cleveland Scores covering the entire Cleveland sports universe. Check back often for his updates!

10) No other team can offer more years and more money than the Cavaliers. Five years and around $80 million depending on what the new salary cap is.

9) The mother of his son, his mother and now grandmother to his son, family, friends and inner circle are all from this area and have homes here. Does he really want to move them all?

8) Owner Daniel Gilbert is sinking a ton of money, not only into the team’s roster to surround LeBron with better players, but he’s also putting a lot of money into the arena and is building a new state of the art practice facility in Independence for LeBron and the team.

7) The Dwayne Wade rivalry that is developing in the Eastern Conference. D-Wade is one up on “The King” as far as championships go and being the competitor that LeBron is, you know that doesn’t sit well with #23.

6) The New Jersey Nets and LeBron’s good buddy and favorite musical artist, Jay-Z, are capped out and don’t have room to sign LeBron right now.

5) The New York Knicks currently suck and Kobe wants to prove he can do it alone in Los Angeles with the Lakers.

4) LeBron can go down in Cleveland sports history as the greatest athlete this city has ever seen and will be lauded as the savior of a city tortured by sports and he did all this by staying at home in Ohio right out of high school.

3) LeBron realizes that at the end of this new contract he’ll either be 26 or 27 and will still be in the prime of his career and will be eligible to sign another huge contract, either with Cleveland, or if they’re not winning, with any team that he wants to.

2) Even if he signs on July 12 for that reported 5 year deal around $80 million, he can always force a trade if the Dannys, Gilbert and Ferry, don’t put a winner together.

1) Did I mention the Cavaliers can give him the most money out of any team in the NBA? I want to believe that LeBron wants to stay here and bring a winner to his home state, but if I’ve learned anything from guys like Jim Thome, Albert Belle and Manny Ramirez, it’s a business and in this case Cleveland can offer the best monetary deal. So if LeBron is like all the other athletes today, and lets hope he’s not, but just in case he is, then advantage Cleveland is the money department.

Indians put on fireworks display

The Tribe sure has a knack for destroying the New York Yankees. Back in 2004, the Indians made history when they shut out the Bronx Bombers 22-0 in New York. They put on quite a holiday spectacle Tuesday, obliterating the Yanks 19-1 to win their fourth in a row. The Tribe blasted six home runs in the game, two each by Jhonny Peralta and Travis Hafner, and put up nine runs in the fifth. The offense was having a field day against Yankee starter Shawn Chacon as well as the rest of bullpen. Twenty-one hits in all for the Tribe. Grady Sizemore was perfect on the day, going 3 for 3, Victor Martinez was 5 for 6, and Todd Hollandsworth went 3 for 4 with 2 RBIs and continues to rope the ball. Jake Westbrook, having finished his most effective month of the season (3.12 ERA in June), threw a shutout in his first July start. Westbrook went seven innings and allowed only five hits. Edward Mujica threw two scoreless innings to finish off the game. Jason Michaels finally made his return from the DL and went 0 for 4 with one run scored.

What a fourth of July celebration. With his two homers and four RBIs, Pronk sure is making a strong case for himself to be an American Leauge All-Star. He wants that invite to Pittsburgh and is letting voters everywhere know what kind of player he is.

What’s the holdup?

‘Melo and Wade have both signed, so why hasn’t LeBron? Sitting on a max extension offer from the Cavaliers, LeBron James has yet to let the team or its antsy fans know if he plans on accepting the deal. Heading into the offseason, everyone assumed the extension was a mere formality and that LeBron meant it when he said he had absolutely no intention of leaving.

So why hasn’t he signed?

I’m not jumping the gun and saying LeBron won’t sign, though I also won’t lie and say that the thought doesn’t scare the daylights out of me. Still, LeBron seems like a genuine guy, and when he says he wants to stay, I believe him. (Then again, I also believed Jim Thome.)

Since the Cavs aren’t going to do anything less than offer LeBron the max allowable money, this delay would seem to be about more than dollars and cents. A blogger on our sister site, The Scores Report, wonders if LeBron wants more say in front-office decisions, and that certainly wouldn’t surprise me, but I think there’s something else going on.

LeBron’s agent, Leon Rose, wants the Cavaliers to know exactly who’s in charge here, and while LBJ is saying all the right things about building a championship team in Cleveland, that doesn’t mean he won’t bolt if he’s not happy. So Rose took care of his newest client, #1 pick Andrea Bargnani, first and he’s also dealing with the Allen Iverson trade drama. You can take your time when you’re sitting in the power position, which is exactly where LeBron and Rose are because the Cavs need LeBron but LeBron doesn’t need the Cavs. Rose wants to make sure everyone involved understands that.

Still, I doubt LeBron will wait too much longer before announcing his intentions. A week or two? Fine. Maybe he’ll hold off until Chris Bosh, the last remaining big name from the ’03 draft class, is locked up, showing up fashionably late to the extension party. Fine, I can handle that. Just don’t drag it out, don’t make us sweat. If you really want to stay, stall to make your point but then show your commitment by inking the deal. Then we can all sleep easy.

Sowers’ victory extends win streak to three

Jeremy Sowers will remember this one for a long time. The youngster faced a potent and start-studded Yankee lineup featuring some of baseball’s most recognizable hitters but was hardly fazed. Sowers gave up an early two-run first inning home run to Jason Giambi but settled down to earn his first major league victory. That’s all the Yankees would get as Sowers went seven innings while giving up only six hits in the Tribe’s 5-2 victory Monday night at a sold out Jacobs Field. After Yankee starter Chien Ming Wang dominated Indian hitters when they last met in mid June, they were able to figure him out this time around. Victor Martinez came through with a two-run double in the third and Todd Hollandsworth hit his fifth homer of the season in the sixth inning. Fausto Carmona pitched a scoreless eighth before handing it over to Wicky who saved it in the ninth. Wickman was impressed by Sowers’ outing.

“His composure was great,” Indians closer Bob Wickman said. “That’s one thing you can’t teach. He’s got it.”

After the home run in the first, Sowers was on his game tonight. One of his biggest pitches came in the third when he struck out Bernie Williams with the bases loaded. The Indians have somehow found a spark and are playing much better baseball.

Vote for Pronk

Grady Sizemore, not Travis Hafner, was the lone Indian selected to the 2006 American League All Star team. Hafner, batting .312 with 22 home runs and 66 RBIs, was snubbed again in favor of Boston’s David Ortiz. However, there is still a chance Pronk could be added to the roster with the internet voting. Hafner joins Twins pitcher Francisco Liriano, White Sox cather A.J Pierzynski, Orioles cather Ramon Hernandez, and Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander on the American League internet ballot. Fans can vote for the final addition to the American League All-Star team until 6:30 p.m Thursday. This is the second time in three years that Hafner has been included in the internet voting.

If you had to pick one Indian to make the All-Star team, Pronk would be the first that comes to mind but several factors led to him getting left out in the initial selections this season. For one, as long as David Ortiz is in the American League, Hafner will never get the respect he deserves. Secondly, this year’s All-Star game is in a national league park, which eliminates the DH from the equation. That means Hafner would have to be selected as a first baseman and the American League is a little jammed at that position. After Ortiz, Paul Konerko and Jim Thome took the remaining two first base spots on the roster. Thome is having an unbelievable first half and Konerko, although he has solid numbers, was helped by the fact that Ozzie Guillen is the manager of the American League. Both managers get seven selections of their own and Konerko was one of Guillen’s picks. Therefore, Hafner was left out and has to depend on the internet voting to get him in. He has a better chance than he did in 2004 when he lost to Hideki Matsui, who had an entire country voting for him.

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