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Venturi, U.S. Open champion and analyst, dies

Ken Venturi, who overcame dehydration to win the 1964 U.S. Open and spent 35 years in the booth for CBS Sports, died Friday afternoon. He was 82.

His son, Matt Venturi, said he died in a hospital in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Venturi had been hospitalized the past two months for a spinal infection, pneumonia and then an intestinal infection that he could no longer fight.

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Venturi died 11 days after he was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame.

He couldn’t make it to the induction. His sons, Matt and Tim, accepted on his behalf after an emotional tribute by Jim Nantz, who worked alongside Venturi at CBS.

“When Dad did receive the election into the Hall of Fame, he had a twinkle in his eye, and that twinkle is there every day,” Tim Venturi said that night.

Venturi was all about overcoming the odds.

A prominent amateur who grew up in San Francisco, he captured his only major in the 1964 U.S. Open at Congressional, the last year the final round was 36 holes. In oppressive heat, Venturi showed signs of dehydration and a doctor recommended he stop playing because it could be fatal. Venturi pressed on to the finish, closed with a 70 and was heard to say, “My god, I’ve won the U.S. Open.”

He had a severe stuttering problem as a child, yet went on to become one of the familiar voices in golf broadcasting. He began working for CBS in 1968 and lasted 35 years.

“We all knew what a wonderful player Ken Venturi was, and how he fashioned a second successful career as an announcer,” Jack Nicklaus said. “But far more important than how good he was at playing the game or covering it, Ken was my friend. Ken was fortunate in that the game of golf gave him so much, but without question Ken gave back far more to the game he loved than he ever gained from it. Over the years, Ken developed a circle of friends that is enormous and whose collective heart is heavy today.”

Venturi played on one Ryder Cup team and was U.S. captain in the 2000 Presidents Cup.

[+] EnlargeKen Venturi

“His tremendous accomplishments on the golf course were certainly Hall of Fame-worthy on their own, but in Ken one finds a rare example of a golfer whose second career, in television, rivaled the legendary status of his competitive achievements,” PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem said. “His unique perspective and poetic delivery as an announcer enhanced countless memorable moments in golf, making his voice and presence as indelible as the historic tournaments he covered. Ken will forever be remembered as a consummate gentleman, and he will be truly missed.”

Venturi was born May 15, 1931, in San Francisco, and he developed his game at Harding Park Golf Course. He won the California State Amateur at Pebble Beach in 1951 and 1956, while serving in the Army in Korea between those two amateur titles.

His stammering problem is what led him to golf.

“When I was 13 years old, the teacher told my mother, ‘I’m sorry, Mrs. Venturi, but your son will never be able to speak. He’s an incurable stammerer,’” Venturi said in 2011. “My mother asked me what I planned to do. I said, ‘I’m taking up the loneliest sport I know,’ and picked up a set of hickory shaft across the street from a man and went to Harding Park and played my first round of golf.”

As an amateur, he was the 54-hole leader in the 1956 Masters until closing with an 80, and he was runner-up at Augusta National in 1960 to Arnold Palmer, who birdied the last two holes.

He turned pro and won his first PGA Tour at the St. Paul Open Invitational. Venturi won eight times over the next three years, including the Los Angeles Open and the Bing Crosby National Pro-Am at Pebble Beach, before injuries started to affect his game after nearly winning the 1960 Masters.

He hurt his back in 1961 and badly injured his wrist in a car accident the next year. He missed the U.S. Open three straight years until he narrowly qualified for Congressional. It turned out to be an epic final day for the Californian coping with broiling heat.

Venturi shot 66 in the third round but was feeling weak during the break before the final round that afternoon. John Everett, a doctor and member at Congressional, checked on him and found a normal pulse but symptoms of dehydration.

“Dr. Everett told me … I was lying next to my locker and he says, ‘I suggest that you don’t go out. It could be fatal,’” Venturi said in 2011 when he returned to Congressional for the U.S. Open. “I looked up at him and I said, ‘Well, it’s better than the way I’ve been living.’ And I got off the floor, and I do not remember walking to the first tee. I don’t remember the front nine until I started coming into it.”

Venturi was so shaken, so weak, when it was over that his final act was to sign the scorecard. He couldn’t even read the numbers. Joe Dey, the executive director of the USGA, looked over his shoulder, checked the scores and told him to sign it.

Sports Illustrated honored him as its “Sportsman of the Year” in 1964.

Venturi won three more times, his last win coming in 1966 at the Lucky International at Harding Park, where it all started.

He eventually developed Carpel Tunnel Syndrome in his hands and was forced to retire. That’s when he moved into the booth as the lead analyst for CBS Sports, and his voice filled living rooms for the next 35 years until he retired in 2002.

“He was a deeply principled man with a dynamic presence. He just exuded class,” Nantz said. “Through his competitive days and unequaled broadcasting career, Kenny became a human bridge connecting everyone from Sarazen, Nelson and Hogan to the greatest players of today’s generation. Kenny faced many adversities in his life and always found a way to win.”

Venturi was elected to the Hall of Fame through the Lifetime Achievement category. Nantz gave an emotional tribute that night, and then called Venturi’s two sons to the stage to hold the trophy because “we need to put the crystal in the hands of the Venturi family.”

“If there is some sense of fairness, it is that Ken was inducted into a Hall of Fame that he very much deserved to be in and, in fact, should have been in for many years,” Nicklaus said. “While I know he was not able to be there in person for his induction, I am certain there was an overwhelming sense of pride and peace that embraced Ken. It was a dream of Ken Venturi’s that became a reality before he sadly left us.”

Venturi is survived his wife of 10 years, Kathleen, and his two sons. Matt Venturi said services were pending.

Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press

Bob Burnquist wins sixth career Skate Big Air gold

BARCELONA, Spain — Bob Burnquist has now won a total of 24 X Games medals after beating out Mitchie Brusco and Elliot Sloan in the Skateboard Big Air finals on Friday at X Games Barcelona. The win puts Burnquist even with BMX legend Dave Mirra and ahead of snowboarder and skateboarder Shaun White for the medal-total record.

Burnquist has competed in every X Games since they began in 1995, and has competed in all 11 Skateboard Big Air competitions since the event made its X Games debut, winning Big Air gold six times.

Brusco, 16, is having a very big week. He won bronze in Skateboard Vert on Thursday, thanks in part to landing his first 900 on a traditional vert ramp, then upped the stakes with his first 1080 on the MegaRamp quarterpipe to win silver on Friday.

Burnquist, 36, was the oldest athlete in the event and has mentored many of the younger competitors at his own backyard MegaRamp and on the contest circuit. “These kids are just amazing every year,” he said. “I mean not just every year: Every month there’s progression going on.”

Burnquist led after the first section of the two-part competition with a Lien 720 rodeo over the gap, ahead of Elliot Sloan and 12-year-old sensation Tom Schaar, but he had his work cut out for him in the full-run portion of the event. Schaar landed a 900 on the quarterpipe, briefly bumping into the lead before Sloan overtook him, but Burnquist’s switch backside 180 ollie over the gap and 720 Indy grab on the quarterpipe was enough to put him back in gold-medal position.

“Everyone’s going for it, so I might as well go for it myself,” Burnquist said, noting that he was inspired by seeing Schaar’s 900 and watching Brusco land his 1080. “I just can’t believe this kid did a 1080 like first try.”

Added Brusco, “I figured there was no better place to do it than here. All the big stuff goes down at X Games.”

Crosby has hat trick as Pens up lead on Sens


Sidney Crosby’s hat trick helps Penguins take 2-0 lead on Senators

Crosby’s Hat Trick Ignites Penguins

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PITTSBURGH — Sidney Crosby had his second career playoff hat trick and the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Ottawa Senators 4-3 on Friday night to take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Brenden Morrow added his first playoff goal in more than five years, Tomas Vokoun made 19 saves and the Penguins rode their superstar captain to their fourth straight victory.

Crosby beat Craig Anderson three times in the game’s first 22 minutes, sending the goalie to the bench after stopping 18 of 21 shots.

Kyle Turris, Colin Greening and Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored for the Senators, but couldn’t stop Ottawa from falling into a deep hole against the Eastern Conference’s top seed. The Senators have never won a playoff series after dropping the first two games.

Game 3 is Sunday in Ottawa.

The Senators insisted they didn’t have to play a perfect game to hang with the Penguins, pointing to the way they controlled play at even strength for long stretches in a 4-1 loss in the series opener Tuesday night. Ottawa insisted if it could stay out of the penalty box and convert when it had the man advantage, it would be right there.

Despite doing both in the first period — killing two penalties and converting on Turris’ bank shot on the power play — the Senators still trailed 2-1.

More to the point, they trailed Crosby 2-1.

The Pittsburgh captain became the fifth player in franchise history to record 100 playoff points in spectacular fashion. He collected an innocent-looking pass at the Pittsburgh blue line then darted up the left side. He split two Senators — including Norris Trophy-winning defenseman Erik Karlsson — then ripped a shot under Anderson’s pad to give the Penguins the lead 3:16 into the game.

Turris tied it with the first soft goal Vokoun has allowed since taking over for Marc-Andre Fleury in Game 5 of the first-round series against the Islanders. Turris collected the puck near the left post and shot it off Vokoun and into the net.

Crosby one-upped Turris a few minutes later, zipping down the left side once again. This time, Crosby appeared to be looking to pass, eyeing linemate Pascal Dupuis as they raced in on Anderson. Only Crosby didn’t pass. At the last second and without even peeking directly at Anderson, he flipped a wrist shot near the goal line that smacked off the goalie’s pad and into the net.

Karlsson, who is still working his way back from an Achilles injury sustained when Pittsburgh’s Matt Cooke inadvertently slashed Karlsson with his skate, drew a hooking penalty on Cooke early in the second.

Crosby didn’t need any fancy stickwork to record his first postseason hat trick since 2009. Instead he powered a slap shot over Anderson’s glove from the left circle to push Pittsburgh’s lead to 3-1. Anderson skated to the bench in favor of backup Robin Lehner.

Greening responded almost immediately after the switch, beating Vokoun with a sizzling wrist shot 40 seconds later to get the Senators within one. Morrow restored the two-goal lead by redirecting Paul Martin‘s blast from just outside the crease. It was Morrow’s first postseason score since May 14, 2008, while playing for the Dallas Stars.

The score was one of the few mistakes made by Lehner in his playoff debut. The 21-year-old was stellar otherwise in relief of Anderson. He made 20 saves in all, including series of point-blank stops. He robbed Jarome Iginla on a 2-on-1 shortly after entering and used perfectly a timed slide to stone Evgeni Malkin on the doorstep in the third period.

Lehner’s play steadied the Senators, and Ottawa kept coming, pulling within a goal 2:01 into the third period when Pageau tapped the puck across the line following a mad scramble in front.

The Senators, however, couldn’t tie it as Pittsburgh remained unbeaten since Vokoun replaced Fleury and moved within two wins of making it to the conference finals for the first time since 2009 when the Penguins went on to win the Stanley Cup.

Game notes

Crosby reached the 100-point plateau in his 75th playoff game, the fifth-fastest player to reach the mark in NHL history … Pittsburgh went 1 for 6 on the power play and is 10 of 30 (33 percent) in the postseason. The Senators went 1 for 2 after going 0 for 6 in the opener … Ottawa D Eric Gryba didn’t play. He was injured in a collision with Penguins D Brooks Orpik in the second period of Game 1

Jamie Bestwick wins record eighth gold in a row in BMX Vert

BARCELONA, Spain — Jamie Bestwick is now officially in a class of his own after topping his record-setting seventh consecutive BMX Vert win last month in Brazil with an eighth gold medal Friday at X Games Barcelona.

“I had a Barcelona shirt made with my name and number 8 on the back, but I couldn’t wear it,” Bestwick said, noting that he felt a bit superstitious about the eight-peat possibility coming into the event. “I’m at a loss for words, and it was an honor to ride in such a historic event.”

The British rider made his X Games debut in 1996 with a bronze medal in BMX Vert and won his first gold in 2000. He won again in 2003 and doubled up in 2005 with BMX Vert and BMX Vert Best Trick victories. He took BMX Vert silver in 2006 and has dominated the event ever since, winning every X Games main event since 2007.

Snowboarder Shaun White, SnoCross racer Tucker Hibbert and the Skateboard Vert Doubles team of Tony Hawk and Andy Macdonald are in the X Games six-peat club, but Bestwick’s eight-peat is a first.

In Barcelona, he barely edged out fellow British rider Simon Tabron for the win in a tiebreaker finish (the five judges’ scores from the top-scoring runs are averaged to break the tie). Australian rider Vince Byron came in close behind in the bronze-medal position, and Chad Kagy landed just off the podium despite bringing some of the day’s biggest tricks, including a new front flip flair landed twice and a flair double tailwhip on the first wall of the vert ramp after dropping in.

Brett Wilhelm/ESPNJamie Bestwick wins his eighth straight X Games gold medal in BMX Vert at X Games Barcelona.

Bestwick’s runs included his trademark airs at height, opposite turndown flairs, fastplant flairs, downside tailwhips at height and a new move in his lexicon: a seatgrab nac nac 540.

He has grown accustomed to more clear-cut finishes than he got in Barcelona. He won X Games Foz do Iguaçu by an astounding 19 points and X Games Los Angeles 2012 by 14 points. In Barcelona, less than one point separated the top four finishers.

“I came here so well prepared. I was really riding well at home, but when I got here, with the wind, it just played with me and I didn’t believe in myself,” Bestwick said, despite leading after the first run in the new best-of-three runs format. He pulled it together under pressure, improving his score in his second run enough to take a victory lap in the final run.

His competitors will have to wait until 2014 to unseat Bestwick. BMX Vert won’t be contested at X Games Munich or X Games Los Angeles this year.

“You’re going to miss a really good show,” Bestwick said, lamenting the decision, which was announced earlier this month. “I think this was an awesome contest, and these Spanish fans would definitely agree.”

Caps coach says he can beat up Tortorella

Ovechkin Blasts Referees Following Loss

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Now it’s getting personal.

Washington Capitals coach Adam Oates is not happy about New York Rangers coach John Tortorella characterizing the Caps’ complaints about officiating as whining.

“Well, I think he’s out of line,” Oates said on Washington’s 106.7 The Fan. “[Tortorella] should be worried about his own series. We didn’t whine once during the series. I never complained. I don’t know, did you guys ever hear me complain about officiating?”

Oates seemed so frustrated that he was asked whether he could beat up Tortorella.

“Yes,” Oates said, “easily.”

Caps star Alex Ovechkin had already criticized the officiating in the series, which the Rangers won in seven games. The Rangers received 28 power-play chances in the series; the Capitals finished with 16.

Tortorella responded Wednesday.

“We’ve got everybody and their brother whining out there in Washington about what happened in that series,” Tortorella said. “And I think that’s a big reason they lose that series.”

Mayor says deal to sell Kings has been signed

Kings To Be Sold To Sacramento Group

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Sacramento mayor Kevin Johnson announced to screaming throngs of Kings fans Friday that the deal to sell the NBA franchise to a group led by software tycoon Vivek Ranadive has been signed.

The announcement at a City Hall rally brings to an end nearly five months of maneuvering by Johnson to secure a new ownership group, convince the council to commit to building a new downtown arena, and to show the NBA that the capitol city of the most populous state in the nation has the fan base to make the venture successful.

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“This was one heck of a comeback,” Johnson, a former NBA All-Star, said on a stage shared with two dozen investors, fans and politicians who had worked to keep the franchise in the city.

Earlier this week, NBA owners rejected a bid to move the franchise to Seattle. Investor Chris Hansen, whose agreement to buy the team from the Maloof family and move them to the Pacific Northwest shocked the city in January, fought to acquire the team to the bitter end. He even negotiated to buy a minority share when it became clear the league opposed relocation.

Johnson said that the deal reached between the Maloofs and the Ranadive group did not include an investment from Hansen.

NBA Commissioner David Stern praised Hansen’s proposal and said the NBA might consider expansion once a new TV deal is in place.

The mayor was conciliatory toward Seattle, but said he focused throughout the negotiations on promoting Sacramento as thriving city with 19 sellout seasons, one of the longest streaks in the NBA.

“Seattle is a great city and we want them to get a team. For us, it was never a competition. It was about our community telling our story,” Johnson said, adding: “It’s about not letting someone take something that’s not theirs.”

The NBA is expected to officially approve the sale next week.

A source had previously told ESPN.com’s Brian Windhorst that the Maloof family had reached an agreement with Ranadive to sell 65 percent of the Kings for approximately $348 million. The Kings’ total valuation in the sale is $535 million, an NBA record.

The plan for the Kings’ future includes a $447 million downtown arena that will be built on at the western gateway to the city near the Sacramento River.

The Sacramento ownership group also includes 24 Hour Fitness founder Mark Mastrov, former Facebook senior executive Chris Kelly and the Jacobs family that owns communications giant Qualcomm.

Information from ESPN.com’s Brian Windhorst and The Associated Press was used in this report.

Brother: Severe pain cause of Trickle’s suicide

Retired Driver Dick Trickle Dead At 71

CONCORD, N.C. — Short track legend Dick Trickle wouldn’t have committed suicide were he not in such severe pain, his brother told ESPN.com on Friday.

Trickle, 71, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on Thursday in the same cemetery where his granddaughter is buried in Boger City, N.C.

A day earlier, according to Chuck Trickle, the man known as the sport’s greatest local short track racer went to Duke University for more tests to help determine what was causing pain under his left breast.

Trickle
Trickle

“Last week he told me, ‘I don’t know how much longer I can put up with this,’” Chuck Trickle, 68, said by phone from Las Vegas. “They were going to put something in him to help with the pain. It was a five-step process. I don’t know how far along he was.

“He must have just decided the pain was too high, because he would have never done it for any other reason.”

The Lincoln County, N.C., sheriff’s department said the incident occurred at 12:02 p.m. at Forest Lawn Cemetery off Highway 150.

The Lincoln County Communications Center received a call, apparently from Trickle, that “there would be a dead body and it would be his.” Center workers tried to place a return call to the number but did not get an answer.

Emergency units found Trickle’s body near his pickup truck when they arrived.

Chuck said a private ceremony for family members is being planned for Monday. Trickle is survived by his wife Darlene and three children — Vicky, Tod and Chad.

Chuck said he hasn’t heard what was in the note found at the cemetery with his brother.

“I’m at a loss for words,” he said. “I wish I knew the answer. This is not a thing he would do. I believe the pain was the problem.”

Chuck said he didn’t realize how bad the pain was until last week when his brother cursed during a phone conversation.

“He never cussed in his life,” Chuck said. “The type of person he is, he never was sad. There were some words that came out last week that were not very good.”

He said his brother was talking to or meeting with doctors twice a day.

“With all the technology in the world there is no way in the world they shouldn’t find this [cause for the pain],” Chuck said. “He had so many MRIs and CT scans that he said ‘my skin is hurting.”’

The entire NASCAR community was mourning Friday at Charlotte Motor Speedway as drivers and crew members began preparation for Saturday night’s All-Star race.

Those who knew Trickle best were looking for answers.

“I thought about it pretty hard last night,” said ESPN analyst and former Sprint Cup crew chief Ray Evernham. “The only thing you can say is Trickle lived on his terms and died on his terms, and that’s the only sense I can make of it.”

Trickle tried to qualify one of then-Evernham Motorsports speedway development cars at Talladega in the mid-2000s. He was also scheduled to do an interview on one of his old cars being restored for Evernham’s new television series, “AmericaCarna,” set to debut in January 2014.

“He raced the way he wanted to race,” Evernham said. “He came up with that one hour sleep for every hundred miles. He partied hard. He raced hard. He did nothing his whole life but race and help people that raced. He lived for it.

“His life was racing. He didn’t conform. He didn’t worry about all the other things. He lived on his terms.”

He raced the way he wanted to race. He came up with that one hour sleep for every hundred miles. He partied hard. He raced hard. He did nothing his whole life but race and help people that raced. He lived for it. His life was racing. He didn’t conform. He didn’t worry about all the other things. He lived on his terms.

– ESPN analyst and former Sprint Cup crew chief Ray Evernham

Many remember Trickle for having a working cigarette lighter in his car so he could smoke during a race. Others remember him for being a part of almost every ESPN race report just because of his colorful last name.

They all remember him for being an amazing talent on short tracks, where he won more than 1,000 feature events, many in his home state of Wisconsin.

“Man, Dick was a legend, you know especially up in Wisconsin short track racing where I grew up,” said 2003 Sprint Cup champion Matt Kenseth of Cambridge, Wis. “That era of stock car racing up in that area really died with him.

“It’s just crazy, surprising news.”

Kenseth last talked to Trickle in July at the Slinger (Wis.) Nationals. They spent most of the two-hour conversation discussing Kenseth’s move from Roush Fenway Racing to Joe Gibbs Racing this season.

“He kind of peeked in the trailer afterwards and of course he asked if we had any beer in there,” Kenseth recalled. “He had a unique way of looking at things. He had a ton of common sense and he was really smart and always had a really funny way of putting things.

“Man, he went on for about an hour just about my move and what he thought was great about it and just a lot of other interesting things that made me feel good. Ninety percent of the stuff he told me through all the years I raced with him … stuff always proved to be right. That’s the last time I saw him. I’m still in shock. I don’t really get it.”

Neither does Mark Martin, who was mentored by Trickle early in his career.

“I’m confused and broken-hearted about what happened,” the 54-year-old Michael Waltrip Racing driver said.

Martin remembers Trickle as much for how he helped him off the track as for how he helped on it.

“For the influence that he had on us and the etiquette and the way he raced,” he said. “He raced us real hard on the race track, but off the race track, he was very free with parts or advice — he gave freely. Really, really good dude.”

Trickle didn’t move to NASCAR’s top series until 1989, winning the rookie of the year award at 48, an age many are retired or close to it.

“He was in his element — short track racing where he didn’t have to look over his shoulder or worry about anything,” Martin said. “That’s why he didn’t come NASCAR racing when he might have and was young enough that he really could have gotten his feet planted firmly here.

“He was doing it his way.”

Trickle’s only victory in NASCAR’s premier series was a non-points victory in the 1990 Winston Open, the preliminary to the All-Star race.

Martin said Trickle wasn’t a person to let others see him down. Chuck agreed, saying that is what tipped him off the pain was becoming unbearable.

“You can talk to any of the NASCAR guys and everyone of them would tell you this is not Dick Trickle,” he said.

The Trickle family is not a stranger to tragedy. Chuck’s son, Chris, was shot in 1997 and died the next year. Police never solved the case.

Trickle’s granddaughter, Nicole Ann Bowman, was killed in an accident in front of East Lincoln High School in 2001.

“Whether that was part of the toll, I don’t know,” Chuck said. “I don’t believe so. I believe the pain was the problem.”


David Newton | email

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Jets’ Goodson arrested for drugs, weapons

Jets RB Mike Goodson Arrested

New York Jets running back Mike Goodson was arrested Friday morning on drug possession and weapon charges, according to the New Jersey state police.

Goodson was found with another man stopped in the center-left lane on Interstate 80 in Denville, N.J., just after 3 a.m., police said. A tow truck driver found them and called 911 due to concerns about the physical condition of Goodson, who was in the passenger seat of a GMC Yukon SUV. He was transported to St. Clare’s Hospital, then brought to police offices when he was deemed healthy enough to discharge.

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Before heading to the hospital, Goodson was found carrying a small amount of marijuana, while there was additional marijuana and a loaded .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun in the car. The 25-year-old Goodson was charged with possession of marijuana under 50 grams, possession of paraphernalia, unlawful possession of a loaded handgun and possession of hollow-point bullets.

Goodson was set to be taken to the Morris County Correctional Facility in default of $50,000 bail.

The driver of the vehicle, 31-year-old Garant Evans of New Jersey, had a prior felony conviction. He faces the same charges as Goodson, in addition to DWI, traffic summonses and possession of a weapon with a prior felony conviction. He is being held on $150,000 bail.

A Jets team spokesperson said: “We are aware of the report and are gathering information.”

According to the NFL, if a player violates the league’s guns and weapons policy, they could be subject to suspension. League spokesperson Greg Aiello told ESPN in an email that each team has an annual mandatory preseason meeting for players, coaches and staff that goes over the policy, and encourages NFL employees not to own a gun. It also reviews registration protocol for weapons.

The Jets signed Goodson this offseason to a three-year, $6.9 million deal. In 40 career games with Carolina and Oakland, Goodson has rushed for 722 yards and three touchdowns. He’s projected to be part of the team’s rotation at running back.

In April, the Jets cut defensive end Claude Davis and cornerback Cliff Harris after they were arrested and charged with possession of marijuana. Both players had signed reserve/future contracts with the team before being waived.


Matt Ehalt

ESPN New York contributor