Jamaica Tallawahs captain Chris Gayle has thrown his support behind making a USA leg an annual part of the Caribbean Premier Leagues schedule, and has said he hopes the league will come back next year for the good of cricket in the US.Speaking at the Tallawahs training session on Monday at the Central Broward Regional Park in Lauderhill, Florida, Gayle said that in order for the effort to get into the US market to succeed, it had to be on a consistent basis rather than the one-and-done events of the past. Gayle has toured the USA with West Indies teams to New York in 2006 and Florida in 2012, and believes the fan base is present to support cricket but that the lack of regular events has stifled momentum.I think the US is cricket-orientated, Gayle said. When you look at the mixed culture here over in the US, I think you have a huge cricket base and cricket fans over here as well. I think the cricket from a West Indies point of view has been trying to break into the US market for years now. We havent been successful so its just always a bit of here and there.Hopefully the CPL will actually be consistent with having games here in the US. If its just a one-off thing, then itll be a problem for the game of cricket in the United States as well. If it can actually progress, I know this leg will be a good one for CPL and if it can continue next year and keep letting the people here in the US get a chance to see it live, then it should be a fantastic thing for the game of cricket here in the US as well.The most recent tour in 2012 provided good memories for Gayle. Opening the batting for West Indies in the first of two T20 internationals against New Zealand, Gayle struck an unbeaten 85 off 52 balls and combined with Kieron Pollard for a 108-run stand in the final 6.5 overs to post a total of 209 for 2, a record for the side which stood until January 2015. A series sweep over New Zealand in Florida set the tone for their World T20 triumph over Sri Lanka a few months later and Gayle said he was happy to be back in Lauderhill.It was a great memory to be honest with you, Gayle said. When you look back at it, you are always thinking what sort of wicket youre going to get to play on because a lot of cricket up here is played on the matting. We played on a wicket that was very good to bat on. I dont see any difference since Ive just been out there from what happened in the past. So it should be a good wicket and hopefully a lot of runs can be scored on the wicket as well which will actually make the game more interesting.Its like here in the Caribbean. The sun is out, the beach is just down the road as well. I know everybodys looking forward to it. South Beach is a bit further away and everybodys having a good time as well. But its just good to be back and Im looking forward to the opportunity to play here again. Hopefully this will be a new beginning for CPL and will hope it progress over the next few years as well.Gayle also recalled the first-day sellout crowd of 15,000 people in 2012 for the West Indies matches. Though attendance has been capped for the CPL at 10,000, Gayle expects the atmosphere to be just as lively and is hoping the sizeable Jamaican expat population will give Tallawahs a boost for their games against St Lucia Zouks on Saturday and Sunday to help maintain their hold on the first place heading into the playoffs.When West Indies actually played New Zealand here, the turnout was tremendous, Gayle said. I think the CPL will bring out the crowd once more. The atmosphere that theyve seen on TV, Im sure they want to experience it for themselves as well so hopefully we get a good [crowd to] start on Thursday and then itll progress over the weekend as well. So it should be a good one and Im looking forward to it.Im happy on a personal point of view as well and as a team point of view to actually be at the top of the table. So hopefully we can actually maintain the momentum which we left in Jamaica and come in here and play against the Zouks on Saturday and Sunday, win at least one of those games and then move on to the final.Im sure youll see some Jamaican flags flying around. The support is actually good for us. Itll be noisy, its going to be a great atmosphere and hopefully everybody at the end of the day can walk away happy and then well move on to the finals in St Kitts. Nike SB Homme Soldes . "I wrote 36 on my sheet at the beginning of the game," the Cincinnati coach said, referring the yard line the ball would need to be snapped from. Nike SB Soldes . "I was fortunate to play many years at this level with a great organization and unbelievable teammates," said Hejduk in a statement. http://www.chaussurenikesbpascher.fr/ . -- Gus Malzahn finally had his day in Fayetteville. Nike SB Homme Pas Cher . The Lightning are 2-0 so far on a four-game road trip, giving the club five straight wins as the guest and improving Tampas away record this season to 11-8-2. Nike SB Pas Cher . Traditional contenders Brazil, Greece and Turkey drew the other three spots to complete the 24-team field for this summers tournament in Spain, basketball governing body FIBA announced Saturday at its meeting in Barcelona. Shooting and age. They make this monstrous new superteam, this juggernaut that just decapitated its biggest long-term threat in the West, unlike any that came before.Shooting makes every fit easier, because great shooters do damage even when they dont have the ball.This isnt the 2011?Miami Heat, with two ball-dominant wings who couldnt spread the floor when the other guy took his turn.This isnt the 2004?Los Angeles Lakers?--?or the later Steve Nash and?Dwight Howard?version, either.The?Golden State Warriors?now have four All-NBA players ages 26 to 28. The?LeBron James-era Heat had three stars,?not four, and one of them --?Dwyane Wade?-- was older in their first year together than any of Golden States current stars.The collective shooting on this team is outrageous -- including perhaps the two greatest shooters ever, with a seven-foot gunslinger about to enjoy the cleanest catch-and-shoot looks he has ever had. Only three guys had a larger gap than Kevin Durant between their actual field-goal percentage and the mark we would have expected based on the difficulty of those shots, per SportVU data provided to ESPN.com. One of the three was reigning two-time MVP Stephen Curry. Things are about to get much easier for Durant and Curry.Defenders have to be inside the jerseys of Curry, Durant and?Klay Thompson?at all times. Do you know how powerful that basic reality is? Even if the Warriors changed literally nothing about their offense -- if Durant just played the role of?Harrison Barnes?-- they could be the greatest scoring team in history. The lane will be wide open for cutters. They can generate open 3s at will, just by running everyone off picks until some defender falls behind.But the offense will be different. Thats the point. As great as they are, the Warriors over the past two seasons found the going much tougher in the playoffs. The whole league watched the?Oklahoma City Thunder?and?Cleveland Cavaliers?ugly up their offense by switching everything on Curry. A healthier Curry would have exploited that more often this past postseason, but it still felt at times like the Warriors were dancing around the 3-point arc, waiting for some event -- a defender messing up a switch or Curry launching step-back fire.It was hard work, and it happened far from the basket. The Warriors now have more ways to enter the teeth of the defense. Durant can drive. He can run a nice pick-and-roll. He shot 61 percent on post-ups last season, per Synergy Sports, and honestly, that number kind of makes you want to cry. He has a ton of experience screening in the pick-and-roll, and his old dance partner,?Russell Westbrook, is a so-so jump-shooter that teams are generally?fine with leaving open; theyd try to go under and stick with Durant. Currys main pick-and-roll partner,?Draymond Green, is a so-so jump-shooter that teams are generally fine with leaving open.What are you supposed to do with a Curry-Durant pick-and-roll? You cant leave either party open, even for a millisecond. You cant switch -- unless you hide your point guard on Thompson so that a bigger wing has Curry, and probably not even then. The Warriors offense was beautiful and intricate. It will still be beautiful, but now it can also be simple: Dump the ball to Durant and get the hell out of the way. Simple is really useful during the playoffs, when defenses focus hard enough to track the intricate.There will be fit issues; Durant will not get to hold the ball and jab step for five seconds as often as he did in Oklahoma City. The Heats Big Three and those great Lakers teams were not nearly as good in real life as they looked on paper, at least not right away.But again: shooting. Curry is fine playing away from the ball; he might be the most dangerous off-ball player in the league. Thompson might never have to dribble again.The Warriors have limited resources to fill out a bench and acquire large humans, especially since they apparently chose?Shaun Livingston?over?Festus Ezeli?as the mid-sized salary to keep while squeezing in Durants max money.?Six?months ago, the Golden State brass preferred Ezeli, but they have no confidence left in his knees or his game. The Warriors have only the minimum salary and room exception, worth about $2.9 million, left to fill the roster. That buys you nothing in a world of infinite cap room.?Jon Leuer?is making eight figures.They need some competent size to cinch up their rebounding;?Chris Kaman?and?JJ Hickson?arent getting it done. That is a real problem. Then again, there are a ton of leftover big men and very few cap-room teams with a need?up?front. But Durant fits their switchy defensive scheme. And he showed a new frenzy on that end in the postseason -- better effort, smarter reads and scary rim protection. He can guard every position in a pinch and provide more length and rebounding than Barnes in the revamped Death Lineup.Every contender builds with one eye on James, and Durant is a much better one-on-one option against him than Barnes. That is crucial in preserving?Andre Iguodalas body.This team will be top-heavy -- and thin. They will need to find a couple of?Richard Jefferson-like?ring chasers. That is the price you pay for loading up on stars. They would have eventually faced the same general money crunch anyway, with Barnes?and then Curry on max contracts. This price is a little steeper, since they lose rotation players and access to the full mid-level exception, but you get Durant and figure the rest out.Most championship teams are top-heavy and thin. No matter how deep you are, if a star gets hurt in May and June, you are probably sunk.In the end, that is the best reason for choosing Durant over Barnes, Ezeli and?Andrew Bogut: He is a hedge against an ill-timed injury to Curry, Thompson or Green in a way no seventh or eighth guy ever could be. The cruel irony is that?the post-James Harden?Thunder know better than anyone the importance of a hedge against superstar injuries. The Warriors can engineer depth when things really count by keeping two of their four stars on the floor at all times.This star hoarding is only possible because of an unprecedented spike in the salary cap, and both the league and players union must reckon over what they have wrought here. We have spilled a ton of internet?ink over Currys absurd below-market extension, but the cap leaped so high that the Warriors could have fit Durants salary even had Curry signed a max-level deal back in 2012. The only extra cost would have been Livingston.In the end, the Warriors were the only team that really drew Durants interest. His reps at Nike love the idea of him stationed in the San Francisco Bay Area, even playing with Under Armours signature star, league sources said. Executives from another team that met with Durant said he spent most of the meeting silent and didnt ask any questions. Without the cap spike, the Warriors would have had to make more painful sacrifices to get in the conversation.And the cap will jump so high again in a year that Golden State will have plenty of room to re-sign Durant for his full super-max -- though it may cost themm Iguodala, depending on the precise cap figure.dddddddddddd The league proposed smoothing the cap increase to prevent this exact scenario, but the idea emerged too late, and the union rejected it out of hand. It all felt perfunctory, almost for show.?With collective bargaining talks ongoing, enraged owners might push for a deeper discussion about scrapping the ceiling on individual player salaries.So now, we have another superteam. Durant will get ripped for this, and it will mostly be stupid. It was stupid how the media lionized him way back in 2010 for tweeting about his extension with Oklahoma City, while James rushed into a ridiculous television show. Durant was a restricted free agent then, and few things are as predictable as a superstar restricted free agent re-signing for the maximum salary at the first moment possible. LeBron was unrestricted in 2010, and Durant, in his first shot at the free market, changed teams after a whirlwind courtship.Staying didnt make Durant a humble hero then, and leaving doesnt make him a villain now. He left a job he held for nine years in favor of another job. His route to the championship is easier, and if he stays long term in Golden State, he might never be indisputably the greatest player on a championship team. That could be interesting in sussing out his place in history. He also might win three NBA Finals MVPs. Who knows? Everyone hated James for joining his friends in Miami -- until he won a ring. No one ever hated Larry Bird for playing next to Hall of Famers all over the damn court.The Warriors will enter next season as massive favorites in the Western Conference. They didnt just sign Durant, they gutted the only Western Conference team they feared. They do not fear the?Spurs.?After losing in San?Antonio in March, Golden States players talked in the locker room about how the Spurs had no chance against them in a seven game-series, per several team sources -- about how San Antonio could only manage 87 points even with Iguodala and Bogut in street clothes that night.They were right to fear the Thunder. Golden States road win in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals, after being down 3-1, will live forever as a comeback that changed the foundation of the league. That game made Thompson an NBA immortal. He saved the Warriors season -- and ultimately nudged Durant away from Oklahoma City.It was a performance so remarkable that Warriors general manager Bob Myers went back and re-watched the final five minutes right away -- the first time has done so for any Golden State game.I never do that, Myers told me during the Finals. I just wanted to see what happened. I didnt understand it. I still dont.Warriors coach Steve Kerr was in such disbelief after a Thompson 30-footer with about five minutes to go in that Game 6 that he scanned the crowd, locked eyes with a Thunder fan seated courtside and exclaimed to her, How the heck does he do that?I just had to say something to someone, and she was the first person I saw, Kerr said during the Finals.Those shots are the margin between the Thunder making the Finals and this complete franchise devastation.Thunder GM Sam Presti prepared Oklahoma City for Durants departure as best he could.?Steven Adams?and?Victor Oladipo?are real building blocks; perhaps the Thunder will invest a little more time in?Dion Waiters. Scouts love?Domantas Sabonis, the other core piece Presti wrangled from the?Orlando Magic?in the?Serge Ibaka?deal.If Westbrook re-signs next summer, the Thunder will be feisty enough to soften the blow of Durants departure -- and of Hardens presence elsewhere on a below-market extension that runs through 2018. But these Thunder without Durant arent title contenders, and Westbrooks eyes will wander. Other teams will start calling.The Lakers, Westbrooks hometown team, have a gleaming city, several interesting young players and a timeline for recovery hanging over the neck of team executive Jim Buss like a guillotine. In theory, the Lakers should simply wait for Westbrook to hit free agency, stink badly enough to keep their pick yet again and sign him without dealing away any assets -- the road not taken with the?New York Knicks?and?Carmelo Anthony.In practice, that is a risk, especially given the Lakers can no longer get star free agents to pick up their calls. Everyone will have cap space again next summer, including the crosstown?Clippers. Unless you know for sure -- wink,?wink -- Westbrook is in, there is value in picking him up ahead of time and securing the right to offer him more years and more cash.The Lakers still have enough cap room to extend Westbrooks contract on the spot if they nab him. Any team (including the Thunder) with the requisite space can bump his 2016-17 salary up from $17.8 million to his new max, about $26.5 million, and tack on three more years from there with 4.5 percent annual raises. By signing an extension, Westbrook would forfeit free agency under next years mega-cap, but the huge raise this season makes it closer to a wash than expected over the next four years.Presti doesnt want to trade Westbrook, but if he feels backed into a corner, he will chase young players and draft picks. The?Phoenix Suns?reportedly talked with the?Atlanta Hawks?about?Paul Millsap, and they come armed with prospects galore,?extra point guards and two future Miami picks. The?Denver Nuggets?had the Hawks biting on a package of picks and players, including?Kenneth Faried, for Millsap, per several league sources, but its unclear if Denver would?chase Westbrook. Both teams have enough cap space left to renegotiate and extend Westbrook, though he might not have any interest in sticking around either place.The Magic, a trade partner just 10 days ago, have a bunch of interesting young guys and a win-now mandate. The?Boston Celtics?can throw all?their unused trade assets at Oklahoma City.Presti would call everyone with a young stud, just as he did in dealing Harden: the?Milwaukee Bucks?with?Jabari Parker, the?Minnesota Timberwolves?with?Andrew Wiggins?and a few other possibilities. The Lakers threat will depress the trade market, barring?some?hush-hush advance agreement from Westbrooks camp.Either way, the Durant-Westbrook Thunder take their place as the NBAs great dynasty that wasnt. They made one precocious Finals run and never returned, undone by injuries, bad luck, the rise of Golden State and one trade that reduced their margin for error. If Westbrook stays, they will rebuild from the middle, and we will see if Presti can appeal to free agents who might take them from 40-plus wins back into the 50s. If Westbrook leaves, the climb will be long and painful.Golden State has reached the top, and the Warriors are primed to seize the throne back from Cleveland. Its too soon to pencil in a dynasty. They have no bench right now. And crazy things can happen -- just ask the Thunder. But the Warriors will enter next season as favorites, with the chance again to be an all-time team. ' ' '