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Earnhardt defends crew chief Ives in shaky final season

DOVER, Del. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. has long reigned as NASCAR’s most popular driver. But he thinks too many of his fans have started airing in 140-character bursts a most unpopular opinion — that crew chief Greg Ives should take the blame for the No. 88’s struggles this season.
Not so fast.
“We’ve had a difficult year and there’s just been a little rumbling in the background from fans,” Earnhardt said Tuesday. “They just love to target the crew chief. Our struggles are no one individual’s responsibility. I think me and my crew chief, we have such a very passionate fan base, very large fan base, it’s a challenging position for anybody. I’ve seen that, with all the guys that I’ve worked with. They’ve all had to deal with criticism.”
Ives, in his third season with Earnhardt, was criticized during the Brickyard 400 for his decision to send the No. 88 to the pits even though it was good on fuel before the end of the second stage. Had Earnhardt stayed out, he would have come off a restart inside the top five. Instead, he was 24th and soon wrecked out of the race when he connected with Trevor Bayne. Earnhardt’s crew also struggled with lug nuts on one pit stop that cost him several spots in the field.
Earnhardt, who is retiring after the season, shut down criticism of the team on Twitter, where he has 2.1 million followers, writing, “He never gave up on me. We’re a tight group and will finish together.”
“Maybe Twitter ain’t the place to be drawing attention to things like that,” Earnhardt said. “You just hear enough chatter over the course of a long period of time. It wasn’t something that just happened that particular weekend. Sometimes you feel like you’ve got to stand up for your guys. At least let Greg know, it’s not OK I guess, to be a fan, then dog the crew.”
Earnhardt’s final season at Hendrick Motorsports has been more dud than dominant, and Indy was the fifth time this season he has crashed out of a race. Earnhardt has just four top-10 finishes and is 22nd in the standings — his worst full-season performance since 2009. He’ll need to win one of the next six races to end his Cup career with any shot at racing in NASCAR’s postseason and winning his first championship.
Earnhardt says he’s healthy and isn’t focused on his shift into the NBC Sports broadcast booth next season. Earnhardt said negotiations began after he decided to leave racing and continued for several months before the two sides agreed to the deal in the past few days.
“I think that’s what they hired me for, was to be myself and give my point of view,” he said.
And his point of view this week? Fans — and the media — need to pump the breaks on pointing fingers in Earnhardt’s woeful season.
“We’ve had some pretty difficult results and had a lot of opportunity to be frustrated and miserable,” he said. “But I don’t want this season to be remembered by my crew chief, myself and my guys as a miserable, miserable time. The fans have an influence on that. They can definitely ease up a bit on Greg and realize that he’s extremely talented. He’s in that position for a reason.”
Earnhardt, who spoke at a Goodyear tire test at Dover International Speedway, is off this weekend to Pocono Raceway, where he swept two races in 2014. There’s little time to worry about the Brickyard.
“I’ve had a lot of bad finishes in my career,” he said. “But I can’t remember anything about those and I probably won’t remember much about this season, a couple years down the road. What happened in Indy will be long forgotten. I try not to dwell on it too much like I used to. I used to let it eat me alive until we got back to the track.”
Earnhardt, 42, is excited about his future at NBC. The agreement with NBCUniversal announced Monday will allow Earnhardt to pursue “a wide range of opportunities in the company’s media businesses, including movies, television, podcasts, and other areas” including football and perhaps even the Olympics.
Earnhardt said he might pattern part of his new job after broadcasters he admired, including greats Barney Hall, Ken Squier and Benny Parsons.
“I’m green as heck,” Earnhardt said.
He will watch next season with a headset as Ives tries to steer replacement Alex Bowman to better days in the 88. Asked if he had any second thoughts about retirement, Earnhardt was quick to say no.
“It’s easy to focus on the race. It’s hard to focus on the distractions,” he said. “There are responsibilities outside the car. There’s a lot more this year. It seems like they’ve always kind of escalated each year. It’s harder to focus on that stuff. That stuff does deserve some time and energy. It’s a little harder to do that and do it right because you want to make sure the racing is getting everything it needs.”

Auditor: City must continue to control expenses

Increased efforts by municipalities to minimize expenses have been vital for those entities to stay afloat during the economic downturn and will likely continue to be important for at least another two years, an auditor said. Gerald Thibodeaux of Kolder, Champagne, Slaven & Co. presented Morgan City’s annual audit report for the year ended Dec. 31, 2016, during Tuesday’s City Council meeting. Auditors issued unmodified opinions, the most favorable possible, on the city’s financial statements of the city’s governmental activities and each major fund. As a whole, Thibodeaux called the audit “really, really clean.” “It’s no surprise to anybody. Revenues ...

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Many honorees at CCHS baseball awards ceremony

Central Catholic High School held its baseball awards ceremony Thursday at the school.
Lettermen awards, all-district and all-state recognition and the annual Jack Caldwell Award were presented.
Award winners are:
All-District: Gregory Leger (first-team), Tyler Longman (second-team), Drake Angeron (first-team), Bryce Grizzaffi (second-team), Samarick Paul (first-team), Brooks Thomas (honorable mention), Mitchel Lemoine (first-team), Adam Dupuis (first-team), Nathan Hebb (honorable mention), Blake Hidalgo (first-team), Thomas Garber (first-team), Thomas Mire (second-team) and Luke Barbier (honorable mention).
All-State: Leger (first-team), Angeron (honorable mention), Lemoine (honorable mention), Hidalgo (first-team) and Garber (honorable mention).
Academic All-District: Longman, Angeron, Paul, Thomas, Ryan Miller, Sammy Spitale, Grant Stansbury, Dupuis, Hebb, Hidalgo, Mire, Michael Scott Wise, Barbier, Kade Pichoff, Andrew Duval, John Charles Hebert, Taylor Blanchard and Ethan Boagni.
Jack Caldwell Award: Dupuis.

Henry Giroir wins St. Mary Golf & Country Club tournament

Every year during the PGA's The Masters week, St. Mary Golf & Country Club in Berwick holds its Masters Tournament. This year’s winner was Henry Giroir. Giroir was presented his green jacket by the 2016 winner Bruce Broussard. Henry started playing at St. Mary when he was 13 years old (he is now 78). In his teens, he also worked as a caddy and helped plant most of the trees on the course. Asked why he has played so long at St Mary he said, “I just love being out here. It is a great game, and you meet and get to enjoy the company of some great people.” Henry’s only hole-in-one came on the par 3 No. 3 hole when he was 28. Tournament Chairman Thomas Strader provides a Masters-style green jacket for the winner.

Saints put 4 on PUP list; Snead inks 1-year tender

METAIRIE (AP) — The Saints have placed top linebacker Dannell Ellerbe and three offensive linemen on the club’s physically unable to perform list in advance of this week’s opening of training camp.
The linemen placed on the PUP list are starting left tackle Terron Armstead, starting center Max Unger and guard Senio Kelemete. Armstead had shoulder surgery and is expected to miss half the season. Unger had offseason foot surgery and projects his return by the regular-season opener. Saints coach Sean Payton hasn’t discussed the nature of Kelemete’s or Ellerbe’s injuries.
Players on the PUP list do not count against roster limits, but if not activated by Week 1, they must sit out an additional six weeks.
Meanwhile, receiver Willie Snead has signed his one-year restricted free agent tender, meaning he can participate fully in camp even as he seeks an extension.

Sun Belt chief hails benefits of 10-team structure

NEW ORLEANS — Sun Belt Conference commissioner Karl Benson struck a celebratory tone Monday while discussing the impending departure of two of the league’s 12 teams.
Smaller will be better was the message from Benson, who left little doubt during the league’s annual media day that his preference is for the Sun Belt to maintain the 10-team, two-division structure it will have in 2018.
“We are not actively looking or have any signals out there that we would entertain any new members,” Benson said. “We got to 10 in a very methodical, thoughtful way. ... We have no interest in looking elsewhere.”
This season will be the Sun Belt’s last with New Mexico State and Idaho. Next season, the remaining 10 teams will be split along geographical lines into five-team divisions. In the West will be Arkansas State, Louisiana-Lafayette, Louisiana-Monroe, South Alabama and Texas State. The East Division will contain Appalachian State, Coastal Carolina, Georgia Southern, Georgia State and Troy. The conference will host its inaugural title game in 2018 as well, with the division winners meeting at the home of the higher-ranked team.
That is when Benson envisions the Sun Belt being at its best. Its geographic alignment will be more practical, reducing travel burdens on teams and fans alike while also promoting regional rivalries, he said.
“We believe the structure we’ve created (for 2018) is the right structure,” Benson said. “It’s sustainable.”
There are some cases in which Benson may not be able to prevent growth. The Sun Belt has two non-football members, Arkansas-Little Rock and Texas-Arlington. If either of those schools adds football — something UALR is exploring — the Sun Belt would have to accept it.
If that happens, Benson doesn’t plan to search for a 12th football member to even out the divisions.
“The Big Ten was an 11-team football league for over 15 years,” Benson said. “They did just fine.”
Some other topics discussed during Sun Belt media day:
HEADING OUT
While Idaho has opted to return its football program to the second-tier Football Championship Subdivision, necessitating its departure from the Sun Belt, New Mexico State would have preferred to remain. However, its agreement with the Sun Belt as a football-only member in 2014 gave the conference the option to end the relationship. Now the Aggies are preparing for life as an FBS independent.
“We certainly would like to make some noise going out and set ourselves up for our future. We need to attract the attention of other conferences,” Aggies coach Doug Martin said. “We’d certainly like to be in a conference and we would like for all of our sports to be in the same conference.”
Martin said he understood why many Sun Belt members might not want to accept New Mexico State in all sports because of the travel time and costs.
The Aggies were predicted to finish 10th in the league’s preseason poll. Appalachian State is the favorite, followed by Troy and Arkansas State.
RESULTS-ORIENTED SCHEDULING
In recent years, Benson has urged Sun Belt teams to play no more than one game per season against a power conference team, at least two games against peer conferences and one game against an FCS program. In essence, he’s asking Sun Belt teams to limit the big individual paydays they get from playing Power 5 teams for the sake of building up win totals across the league.
The results have already begun to show, Benson said. Last season, six Sun Belt teams played in bowl games and four were victorious. Placing more teams in bowls means more money from agreements with the College Football Playoff, which last year accounted for nearly half of the Sun Belt’s $31 million in gross revenue.
“Our financial models are built on success in the College Football Playoff,” Benson said.
For that reason, he’s also urging Sun Belt teams to be cautious about scheduling Tuesday night games. He’s not convinced the benefits of national TV exposure always outweigh the challenges mid-week games create for teams and fans.
IMMEDIATE GOALS
Benson likes the Sun Belt’s 2017 prospects for collectively outperforming the four other non-power conferences — the American Athletic, Conference USA, Mid-American and Mountain West.
He said the Sun Belt’s goal this season is to place a team in a New Year’s Day bowl game — and win it.
“That is a realistic goal — not in the future, but today,” he said.

Mississippi’s Luke earns dream job, but in tough spot

OXFORD, Miss. — One of new Mississippi coach Matt Luke’s vivid childhood memories is seeing his dad’s Ole Miss helmet — No. 35 — hanging in the family’s den.
Then there were the years his family drove five hours each way between Gulfport, Mississippi, and Oxford to watch his older brother Tom play for the Rebels. A short time later, it was Matt’s turn, and he was a mainstay on the Ole Miss offensive line from 1995-98.
Now, at 40 years old, he’s head coach of the Rebels.
“I can truly tell you all today that this is my dream job,” Luke said, occasionally getting emotional as he talked. “It’s a job I’ve been preparing my whole life for. I feel more strongly than ever that I’m the right man to run this program.”
It might be Luke’s dream job. He has not, however, inherited a dream situation.
The past 12 months have essentially been a nightmare for the Ole Miss football program.
There was a disappointing 5-7 season in 2016 and a self-imposed bowl ban for the upcoming season because of an ongoing NCAA investigation. And then — most stunningly — coach Hugh Freeze resigned in disgrace last week after a school investigation into his phone records found a “pattern of personal misconduct” starting with a one-minute call to an escort service.
Now Luke is left to pick up the pieces. It’s a daunting task — preseason camp is just over a week away and the first game is on Sept. 2 against South Alabama.
“They just want to play football,” Luke said of his team. “They just want to go out and play the game they love. They want to go out, represent Ole Miss and win football games. It’s my job to make sure the focus stays on the players.”
Ole Miss athletic director Ross Bjork said Luke will be paid $500,000 over the next five months to be head coach. That’s in addition to his yearly $660,000 salary as the co-offensive coordinator.
While Luke could keep the job in 2018 and beyond, Bjork offered no promises other than to say Luke is “going to be a great candidate for our job. We’re going to watch him up close and personal. He and I will interact on a daily basis.”
Luke was a safe choice to lead Ole Miss in the short term for many reasons.
Even though he was with Freeze in all five of his seasons, he almost has completely avoided involvement in the school’s long-running NCAA investigation. Luke is mentioned in just one of the NCAA’s 21 allegations, but he is not the focus of the allegation.
His offensive pedigree should provide continuity for a young, promising core that includes sophomore quarterback Shea Patterson, sophomore left tackle Greg Little and sophomore receivers like A.J. Brown and D.K. Metcalf.
Patterson’s development might be the most important to the Rebels’ success this season. The 6-foot-1, 200-pounder started three games last season, throwing for 880 yards, six touchdowns and three interceptions after senior Chad Kelly was lost for the season because of a knee injury.
Patterson — who was the nation’s top-rated quarterback recruit in the 2016 class — was one of Freeze’s prized recruits during his five-year tenure.
Patterson said he was “praying for coach Freeze” and that his focus was on his teammates and the coming season, even if circumstances aren’t ideal.
“We’re all just ready to play,” Patterson said.
Offensive lineman Javon Patterson said players are trying to take the anger from the past year and channel it to a better 2017.
“Somebody’s going to have to feel this frustration,” he said. “We’re going to go out there, play 12 games and get after it.”

Russia enters 19 for athletics worlds despite ban

MOSCOW — Russia plans to send 19 athletes to the track and field world championships in London next week despite its suspension from international competition for widespread doping.
The 19, including three former world champions, have been given exemptions from Russia’s suspension after the IAAF reviewed their history of drug testing.
Maria Lasitskene is the overwhelming favorite to retain her high jump title, following an unbeaten season in the Diamond League. No other woman has leapt over two meters this year, but Lasitskene has done it at 11 different competitions.
Sergei Shubenkov leads the charge for Russia’s men as he tries to win a second world title in the 110-meter hurdles.
Russian Athletics Federation sporting director Elena Orlova told Tass news agency on Monday that, besides the 19, it also filed paperwork for doping whistleblower and 800-meter runner Yulia Stepanova, though she was rejected by the IAAF. Stepanova has barely raced this year and does not appear to have met the qualifying standard for the championships.
Since they’re officially “neutral athletes” under IAAF rules, the Russians won’t be allowed to wear national colors and the Russian anthem won’t be played if they win gold.
A total of 38 Russians had exemptions that could have allowed them to compete at the championships, but many didn’t make the qualifying standards. Eleven more were approved only for youth events, and 106 applications were declined.
Russia has been suspended since November 2015, when the first in a series of World Anti-Doping Agency investigations alleged drug use and cover-ups were common on its track team.
The IAAF said it couldn’t confirm the definitive number of Russian entries for the world championships until closer to the competition.

Quilt show runs through Aug. 14

The Bayou Belle Quilters Guild and Rumpled Quilts Guild is hosting a quilt show at the Artists Guild Unlimited Everett Street Gallery in Morgan Cit. Show hours are 1-4 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays through Aug. 14. During the event, Bayou Belle Quilters Guild is selling tickets for the Opportunity Quilt, above, with funds being used to support local charities. Submitted Photo

The astonishingly high risk of a 401(k) loan

If anyone tells you a 401(k) loan is a cheap way to borrow, they are both right and very, very wrong.
401(k) loan interest rates are low. But the way many Americans repay them spells disaster.
If you stop your 401(k) contributions to repay the loan, borrowing $10,000 today could cost you $190,000, or $1,000 a month in lost future retirement income, if you’re in your 30s. If you’re in your 20s, the loss could double to $380,000, or $2,000 less a month for retirement.
That’s assuming you repay the loan. If you quit or lose your job, chances are high that you won’t, triggering taxes and penalties plus the loss of future retirement income.
Many borrowers like the idea that they’re “paying themselves back” because the interest they pay goes into their 401(k) rather than to a lender. Interest rates on 401(k) loans are typically the prime rate, currently 4.75 percent, or the prime rate plus one percentage point. But that return is likely lower than what the money would earn if it remained invested, and that difference is magnified over the years thanks to compounding.
You can minimize the damage if you don’t reduce your 401(k) contributions during repayment. Let’s say Ashley and Jessica, both 25, take out 5-year, $10,000 loans with a 5.75 percent rate. Before the loans, both contributed 6 percent of their $60,000 salaries and got a 50 percent employer match.
Ashley continues contributing $300 each month in addition to her loan payments; Jessica stops her contributions and resumes them after she pays off her loan. About 15 percent of borrowers stop paving after taking out a 401(k) loan, according to Fidelity Investments.
After 40 years:
—Ashley’s nest egg is about $5,700 smaller than it would have been without the loan, according to the National Center for Policy Analysis’ 401(k) loan cost calculator, assuming 7 percent average annual returns. That reduces her monthly income in retirement by about $31 if she buys a 30-year fixed annuity with a 5 percent rate of return.
—Jessica has $381,572 less than if she hadn’t borrowed, or $2,048 less each month in retirement income, if she buys a similar annuity.
In real life, the damage is likely to be somewhere between these extremes.
Most borrowers continue to contribute while repaying loans, although often at a lower rate, according to a study by human resources consultant Aon Hewitt. The average contribution rate of people with loans is 6.2 percent, compared with 8.1 percent for those without.
Also, 401(k) borrowers tend to be older. Loan activity peaks among borrowers in their 40s, according to a study for the National Bureau of Economic Research. The toll for pausing or reducing contributions 20 years before retirement is about one-quarter of what it would be if you cut back when you have 40 years to go.
Regardless of age, borrowers are vulnerable to default. Another study for the National Bureau of Economic Research found that 86 percent of people who left their jobs didn’t pay back their balances within the 60 to 90 days usually required to avoid default. The loan then becomes an early withdrawal, with taxes and penalties typically equaling 25 percent or more of the loan balance.
The bigger cost is the lost future tax-deferred returns. Assuming 7 percent annual returns, each $1,000 withdrawal means $16,000 less after 40 years.
Those are huge tolls. Before you borrow from your 401(k), consider:
—Are you using this loan to live beyond your means? The answer is probably “yes” if this isn’t your first loan, if you’re consolidating credit card debt or if you’re buying something you otherwise couldn’t afford. Fix the spending problem before you create a retirement problem.
—Do you have a plan to avoid default? Ideally, you would have resources such as savings or home equity you could use to repay the loan quickly if you left your job. If you have such resources, the next question is: Why aren’t you using those instead?
—Can you keep up retirement contributions? If you cut back while repaying the loan, be prepared to step up your contributions once you’ve paid off the loan. A good rule of thumb is to add the loan repayment amount to the amount you contributed before the loan and continue contributing that much until you retire.
A reckless 401(k) loan could turn out to be the most expensive money you’ll ever borrow.
—This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Liz Weston is a certified financial planner and columnist at NerdWallet, a personal finance website, and author of “Your Credit Score.”
—Online: National Center for Policy Analysis 401(k) loan cost calculator
www.ncpa.org/401/d401kwa1_1.php

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