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Greg Johnson, a former NHL center and Nashville Predators captain who died by suicide in 2019, was diagnosed with CTE, his family announced through the Concussion Legacy Foundation on Wednesday.CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, is a progressive neurodegenerative disease caused in part by repeated traumatic brain injuries, such as those experienced in contact sports or military combat, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). CTE can only be definitively diagnosed by an autopsy of the brain after death.Dr. Ann McKee, director of the Boston University CTE Center, who has led NIH-funded research on the disease, diagnosed Johnson with CTE, a news release from the Concussion Legacy Foundation said. McKee was not able to definitively determine the severity of Johnson’s CTE due to the manner of his death, per the release.A post-mortem CTE diagnosis should not be considered as the cause of suicide, which is “complex and multifactorial,” the release noted, but traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with suicide independent of CTE. The relationship between TBI, CTE and suicide has not been formally studied, the release said.Johnson died at age 48 on July 7, 2019, in Rochester, Mich. No suicide note was left, according to the Detroit News, which cited a Rochester Police report. The Oakland County (Mich.) Medical Examiner declined to discuss findings from an autopsy completed around the time of Johnson’s death, the Detroit News previously reported.Johnson’s wife of 22 years, Kristin Johnson, said that his CTE diagnosis “took (her) breath away.”“Greg’s death shattered our world, and we never once thought this disease was something he struggled with,” Kristin said in a news release. “He experienced very few symptoms that we knew of, but he spoke of his concussions often. I remember the exact moment he told me his heart condition (that forced) him to retire was a blessing because he couldn’t take another hit. He knew his hockey career had a profound impact on his brain.”Johnson’s eldest daughter, Carson Johnson, said she had “no idea what CTE even stood for when (her) dad took his life.”“Now understanding that the hits he endured throughout his hockey career damaged his brain, I want all athletes to understand the risks and I want the NHL to startacknowledging it exists and do more to protect its players so other daughters don’t have to lose their fathers,” Carson said in the release.Piper Johnson, Johnson’s youngest daughter, added: “He truly was the best dad ever, and to lose him to suicide was beyond anything we could imagine. It was awful, but we want to talk about it to help others struggling know they are not alone, and there is help available.”The Philadelphia Flyers drafted Johnson in the second round of the 1989 NHL Entry Draft, but he was traded to the Detroit Red Wings in 1993 before ever appearing for Philadelphia. He spent the next 12 seasons in the NHL playing for the Red Wings, Pittsburgh Penguins, Chicago Blackhawks and Predators, finishing his career with 145 goals and 224 assists in 785 games.Johnson, a native of Thunder Bay, Ontario, was also a member of Canada’s national team, winning a silver medal at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Norway. He won gold with Canada in the 1991 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.Johnson played college ice hockey for the University of North Dakota from 1989 through 1993.He retired in 2006 after an irregular heartbeat was discovered during a physical examination.If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, call or text 988 for the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting HOME to 741741.GO DEEPERChris Simon’s death puts spotlight on hockey and CTE: ‘The NHL is going the Big Tobacco route'(Photo: Noah Graham / Getty Images)

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It was quiet for a few weeks, but the Lakers have been busy recently adding assistant coaches to JJ Redick’s staff.
Vice president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka and Redick have been “completely aligned” on adding former head coaches to the staff.
They accomplished that goal by hiring Nate McMillan and Scott Brooks as top assistant coaches. Now, they are adding another assistant with connections to the Lakers.
As Michael Scotto of Hoops Hype first reported, the Lakers are adding Greg St. Jean as an assistant coach.

The Los Angeles Lakers are adding Greg St. Jean as an assistant coach to JJ Redick’s staff, league sources told @hoopshype. He won a championship as part of Frank Vogel’s Lakers staff in 2020 and has since been an assistant coach with Jason Kidd in Dallas and Vogel in Phoenix. pic.twitter.com/HKJvABm3Zy— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) July 7, 2024

The name might not sound familiar to most fans, but St. Jean has a long NBA coaching resume.
He was an assistant coach for Frank Vogel in Phoenix since 2023, worked underneath Jason Kidd in Dallas from 2021-23 and was part of Vogel’s staff from 2019-21, helping the Lakers win the 2020 championship.
Few understand this organization’s intricacies better than St. Jean does.
With that information in hand, he is still willing to return to Los Angeles and take on the challenge of bringing the Lakers back to glory working underneath a first-year head coach.
The Lakers may not have executed a blockbuster deal this summer, but they are delivering in the coaching department.
The franchise has invested financially into the staff as promised and suddenly, they have decades of NBA coaching experience on the bench and people in the building with experience working under this ownership group.
The Lakers are not finished yet, as more coaches will likely be announced in the coming weeks.
Redick mentioned the Lakers are planning to hire a Director of Player Development, so that’s another addition people should be looking for.
The Lakers might be a win-now team, but with a quarter of their roster 23 and under, the growth and development of their young assets will be critical to the team’s success.
That’s why Redick will be helping Lakers Summer League coach Dane Johnson develop young players like Bronny James, Dalton Knecht and Maxwell Lewis at the California Classic and the Las Vegas Summer League this July.
It will take an all-hand-on-deck approach to get the Lakers from the seventh seed in the Western Conference back to the NBA Finals. While we haven’t seen a transaction that catapults them there, they are moving in the right direction.
You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88.



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By:

Kevin Cunningham

July 5, 2024

Greg Norman is still angry about the treatment of pro golfers who joined LIV Golf.

Bryan Lynn/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

We still have no word on the progress (or lack thereof) in negotiations between the PGA Tour and the Saudi Arabia PIF, which finances LIV Golf. And while LIV CEO Greg Norman isn’t waiting to plan for the future, he still has one foot stuck in the warring past, as he revealed in a new interview.

Sitting down with Bloomberg News, Norman talked in detail about the current state of LIV and his vision for the years to come, but he also dipped back into the controversial origins of the upstart league, and the hurdles they faced from the rest of the golf world.

Here’s why Greg Norman ‘feels sorry’ for LIV Golf’s critics
By:

Josh Sens

“There was a lot of headwinds in the beginning because the monopolists really controlled the game on a global basis,” Norman told Bloomberg. “And we came along with a platform or a business model that could work side-by-side within the ecosystem.”

Despite the criticism he and his Tour faced in the media, Norman conversely claimed that he faced no such resistance to LIV in person.

“Nowhere in my entire journey in the last three years since I’ve been CEO and commissioner [of LIV Golf] has someone come up to me and said, ‘What you are doing is wrong.’ And I think that’s a powerful enough testament of saying that our product is our product and our product is received with open arms by many.”

But he also threw a thinly-veiled shot across the bow of the PGA Tour, saying, “By a few who want to stop us for all the wrong reasons, they haven’t been able to sustain their position in the game of golf. What we have done brilliantly is injected more capital into the game of golf. Golf is finally looked on as an asset class.”

Norman saved his strongest words for the early critics of LIV Golf, especially those criticizing the first wave of pros who joined up, calling the treatment of those players “disgusting.”

“And I compliment the boys who came on, the first movers. They came on with a massive amount of headwinds,” Norman said. “The vitriol and the hatred was just disgusting, to be honest with you, considering what these guys have done in the game of golf and how they’ve carried the game of golf and the institutions they represented, was disgusting.”

As for the future, Norman sees LIV taking control of the game of golf outside of the U.S. and pointed to LIV’s venue lineup as evidence of their success in that pursuit.

“We started out a couple years ago doing about nine and five [venues] — nine in the U.S. and five international. And now that’s flipped. So the international scene, the global scene has opened their arms to us in a significant way. The USA is getting there, but the globe has opened up their arms.

“So ultimately, what we’ll end up doing is taking the game on a global basis.”

Despite Norman’s confidence, the future of LIV Golf is very much up in the air. Until negotiations on an official agreement between the PGA Tour and the PIF is finalized, we won’t know how LIV will fit into that picture.

Kevin Cunningham
Golf.com Editor
As managing producer for GOLF.com, Cunningham edits, writes and publishes stories on GOLF.com, and manages the brand’s e-newsletters, which reach more than 1.4 million subscribers each month. A former two-time intern, he also helps keep GOLF.com humming outside the news-breaking stories and service content provided by our reporters and writers, and works with the tech team in the development of new products and innovative ways to deliver an engaging site to our audience.

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(Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)

The Los Angeles Lakers’ coaching staff is undergoing an overhaul after deciding to part ways with Darvin Ham and replace him with JJ Redick, but it appears one familiar face will be returning.
It has already been reported that former NBA head coaches Nate McMillan and Scott Brooks will be Redick’s top assistants, but there still are some other spaces to fill.
Redick accomplished his goal of getting two former head coaches to join him in L.A., and his next addition is someone familiar with the organization in Greg St. Jean, per Michael Scotto of HoopsHype:
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The Los Angeles Lakers are adding Greg St. Jean as an assistant coach to JJ Redick’s staff, league sources told @hoopshype. He won a championship as part of Frank Vogel’s Lakers staff in 2020 and has since been an assistant coach with Jason Kidd in Dallas and Vogel in Phoenix. pic.twitter.com/HKJvABm3Zy
— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) July 7, 2024

St. Jean served as an assistant under Franck Vogel with the Lakers for two seasons starting in 2019-20 before leaving to join Jason Kidd’s staff when he was hired as head coach of the Dallas Mavericks. St. Jean would then return to the side of Vogel when he was hired by the Phoenix Suns this past season, but with the former being fired after just one year, St. Jean and the rest of that staff was available.
He also comes from a basketball family, with his father, Garry St. Jean, serving as the head coach of the Sacramento Kings back in the early 1990s.
As someone who is familiar with the games of LeBron James and Anthony Davis having been there during the 2020 championship run, St. Jean will be a valuable asset to Redick in his first season at the helm.
JJ Redick happy Lakers added Dalton Knecht
In addition to filling out his coaching staff, JJ Redick was also involved in the Lakers’ draft where they landed Dalton Knecht with the 17th overall pick.
Redick is putting an emphasis on adding 3-point shooting to the team and was pleased to see them add Knecht.
“First of all, I was thrilled to be in the draft room,” Redick said. “It was a very amazing experience for me. We didn’t think Dalton would be available at 17, but he provides something that we just don’t have. He’s a movement shooter. He can obviously play off the bounce. We viewed him very highly on our draft board, and he can score at all three levels. He’s got size. There was a lot of things to be excited about with Dalton, and I’m excited to coach him.”
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