Mike WiLL Made-It - 23 (Explicit) ft. Miley Cyrus, Wiz Khalifa, Juicy J
Is Miley Cyrus engaged?
The pop star posted a selfie on Instagram, showing off a large rock on her ring finger.
Adding to the intrigue? The ring looks very much like the ring that ex-fiance Liam Hemsworth gave to her when the two were engaged.
Cyrus and Hemsworth have been spotted together recently, sparking rumors that they are a couple again.
Earlier in January, a source told ET that the two were spotted kissing and huggingat the Falls Music & Arts Festival at Byron Bay on Saturday in Liam"s home country of Australia.
Cyrus and Hemsworth met on the set of "The Last Song" in 2010; the two were engaged in May 2012, but the couple broke up in September 2013.
Take a look at a photo of Cyrus" ring in 2012 in the below photo, then look at her ring from Monday"s Instagram post. Do you think it"s the same? She claimed in 2013 that she lost the ring.
SD@LAD: Upton gets ejected following his strikeout BaseballDetroit signs left fielder Upton to six-year, $132.75 million deal
The Detroit Tigers no longer have a weakness in left field.
Instead, they have a three-time All-Star, a 28-year-old in the midst of his prime and another big bat in the middle of the lineup.
According to a person with knowledge of the situation, the Tigers signed right-handed-hitting left fielder Justin Upton to a six-year, $132.75 million contract, pending a physical. The deal includes an opt-out clause after the second year. He will have an average annual salary of $22.125 million.
The Tigers will lose their second- and third-round draft picks this year because of the Jordan Zimmermann and Upton signings. They still have their first-round pick No. 9 overall.
Upton is a career .251 hitter with 190 home runs and 616 runs batted in in nine seasons. He was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2005 draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks. This past season, he hit .251 with 26 home runs and 81 RBI with the San Diego Padres.
The expensive agreement with Upton could put Detroit in a position to challenge World Series champion Kansas City, which dominated the AL Central last year after the Tigers had won the division the previous four seasons.
Detroit traded Yoenis Cespedes and David Price at the deadline, and then let general manager Dave Dombrowski go. Al Avila was promoted to Dombrowskis spot, and he has been aggressive in his first offseason in charge.
Family celebrates with Gordon
Dee Gordon put his signature on a $50 million, five-year contract with the Miami Marlins as more than a dozen relatives watched from the front row at a news conference Monday.
My family stuck with me through the hard times, Gordon said. Im glad theyre here for the good times.
The 5-foot-11 Gordon is a frustrated basketball player who switched to baseball and became a late bloomer. Last season, he led the National League in batting (.333), hits (205) and stolen bases (58), won a Gold Glove at second base and made the All-Star team.
It was his first year in Miami after he was traded by the Los Angeles Dodgers in a seven-player deal.
I instantly loved the way they treated me here, Gordon, 27, said. Signing an extension was pretty much a no-brainer.
The World Series champion Kansas City Royals finalized their $17.5 million, two-year deal with Lorenzo Cain, buying out the All-Star outfielders final two years of arbitration.
Cain, 29, will receive $6.5 million this season and $11 million next season.
College footballPortland State linebacker dies
Portland State linebacker AJ Schlatter, 20, died Sunday of a complication from what school officials termed minor throat surgery.
Schlatter, who was from Canby, Ore., started 10 games last year as a redshirt freshman and made 62 tackles. He came to Portland State as a walk-on and earned a full scholarship.
Portland State coach Bruce Barnum a former Eastern Washington linebacker said, We lost a diamond that will never be replaced. He was the definition of what we are about at PSU.
Arizona has agreed in principle to hire Boise State defensive coordinator Marcel Yates as its defensive coordinator.
Yates will replace Jeff Casteel, who was fired this month by coach Rich Rodriguez.
Yates was a defensive back at Boise State from 1996 to 99.
Indiana offensive lineman Dan Feeney said he will return to school for the 2016 season rather than entering the NFL draft.
The 6-foot-4, 310-pound guard has allowed one sack in 37 starts for the Hoosiers.
Auburn tailback Peyton Barber, a third-year sophomore, is leaving to enter the NFL draft.
Barber led the Tigers with 1,017 yards rushing.
GolfDonaldson injured by chain saw
Jamie Donaldson of Wales apparently will miss this weeks Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship because of a finger injury he said was caused by a chain saw.
Donaldson posted a graphic photo on Twitter of what seemed to be a laceration to the little finger on his left hand.
Above the image, the 40-year-old wrote: So folks in my time off decided to have a fight with a chainsaw and lost! Oops!! C u in Dubai.
The tournament reference appeared to be the Dubai Desert Classic, which starts Feb. 4.
SoccerBordeaux fans are banned
Bordeaux fans have been banned from attending this weekends French-league match at Nantes because of the risk of violence between hooligans.
Supporters of the teams have fought in the past.
Swansea moved out of the relegation zone after a 1-0 victory over visiting Watford in the English Premier League. Captain Ashley Williams scored in the first half.
ELSEWHERE
Vancouver Canucks center Henrik Sedin, 35, is not expected to return to the teams lineup until February.
Sedin suffered an upper-body injury in Sundays 2-1 shootout victory over the Islanders in New York.
Hopefully h**l be ready after the All-Star break (the All-Star Game is Jan. 31). I think its probably a 10-day injury or so, Canucks coach Willie Desjardins said.
Gulch, who won the 1988 Breeders Cup Sprint and was voted North Americas top sprinter for that year, died of complications from cancer Sunday at a farm in Georgetown, Ky. He was 32.
Gulch was the sire of Thunder Gulch, winner of the 1995 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes.
Steve Prohm has learned that what worked for Fred Hoiberg isn"t going to be what works for him.
For the Hoiberg, a laissez faire locker room where players were allowed to color outside the lines at times was the best way for him to manage a locker room and a program. It was a system that Prohm, the Iowa State men"s basketball coach who inherited a successful upperclassmen roster accustomed to that type of environment, tried to maintain when taking over for Hoiberg in June.
MARCH MADNESS ON SOCIAL MEDIA
JOIN THE TEAM.
Seven months into his tenure and amid a two-game losing streak and rising scrutiny, Prohm decided no longer.
"I finally kind of got to be me," Prohm said after his team"s win over Kansas State on Saturday, "so I just met with the team and I just told them, "Hey I"ve got to be" me. This is who I am, this is what I"m about and I want to fit in but I want to do things the way I want to do them.""
So what, exactly, does that mean going forward?
On the floor, it likely means pulling back the reins on the freedom-and-confidence-over-everything philosophy of Hoiberg. ISU won"t ditch its up-tempo and free-flowing attack, but it very well may be tempered to a degree.
"We"re on defense so much," Prohm said. "If you breakdown in football, we"d be like 20 minutes offense, 40 minutes defense, and we"re so good offensively, we"re still in games but we have to do a better job of managing games, whether it"s me (with) timeouts (or slowing pace)."
Off the court, it probably means tighter guidelines for the players to adhere to. Prohm carries himself much like Hoiberg in an understated manner, but prefers to adhere to a stricter set of expectations for his players.
"We"ve got great kids," Prohm said, "they"re not doing anything (bad). When I say things, it"s going to be done.
"Just do the right thing. That"s the only rule I have. I don"t have a sheet of 50 things. Do the right thing."
MORE: Evansville Aves pushing for NCAA tournament berth
The new Prohm, same as the old Prohm, did have an early casualty, Hallice Cooke, who was suspended for Saturday"s game.
"He didn"t do the things I wanted done," Prohm said, "and then he didn"t do what he was supposed to so left him back (in Ames).
"It was a one-game deal."
The players, though, seem to recognize Prohm"s stance as genuine and sincere, not simply a play for control.
"He got his swag," point guard Monte Morris said. "He stands on ten toes on everything."
Short-term adjustment period aside, Prohm said the change was just a matter of being the coach he wants and knows how to be. With likely top-ranked Oklahoma looming on Monday (8 p.m., ESPN) and a Big 12 season that seemed on the brink of slipping away, the move comes at a critical juncture for ISU.
"You kind of find your way for a little bit," he said, "and you see what the team needs and then you know, this is where this team needs help, this is where I need to help them and this is how I"ve done it in the past and this is how I"m going to do it."
MORE: Tom Crean deserves ample credit for Indiana"s turnaround
In the end, it"s about being true to yourself and the players you have. A tighter grip wouldn"t have fit Hoiberg"s professional sensibilities nor would it have likely meshed with some of the personalities he coached. It"s hard to imagine Royce White flourishing how he did under an iron fist. Hoiberg"s way also led to a school-record four-straight NCAA tournaments and the most successful five-year run in school history.
But it"s not his program anymore.
"It"s not drastic," Prohm said, "but I"ve been in a situation like this before where last year I had to get uncomfortable and I"ve got to get uncomfortable here to do the best job with this team.
"That doesn"t mean we"re going to win 15 in a row, but it means this team is going to max out and that"s my biggest goal, to max this team out."
This article was written by Travis Hines from Ames Tribune, Iowa and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.
Tornado damage Sarasota homes 1_17_16, copyright OurTown Sarasota.
Shirley Callaway and her friends, Marci Richter, Marleen Eagan and Debbie Ellett make caps for cancer patients.(Photo: WTSP)
The first thing Shirley Callaway ever crocheted was a baby blanket for her youngest son. For 46 years, she"s been weaving together yarn for the perfect gifts.
"My family was here last weekend and I have an order list because they saw me making these," she said with a smile on her face.
Callaway and three of her friends from the Tampa Bay Newcomers social group spent the morning crocheting warm, cozy hats the kind that you rarely see in Florida.
"The whole purpose is to not only warm their heads with the hats but to warm their hearts so that they know there are people who care about them and what they"re going through," she said.
Callaway and her friends, Marci Richter, Marleen Eagan and Debbie Ellett, walked side by side into the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa with a basket full of handmade cancer caps. This is the second time that they made the trip there to hand out their creations for free to anyone fighting the dreaded disease.
These are some of the cancer caps made by the Newcomers.(Photo: WTSP)
"It makes a huge difference that they can donate a massive amount of hats for our patients," said Landee Fielland, who is the guest relations specialist for the Moffitt infusion center, where patients are treated. "It is a lot more than a hat."
Especially for the patients who receive them. On this day, the Newcomers have hats of all of the area football teams. Kelly Jarvis grabbed a blue-and-orange one with a flower on top, the colors of her beloved Florida Gators.
"Right now I"m also losing my eyebrows and eye lashes and I feel, you know," she said with tears tumbling down her face. "It"s not great to go through all this and feel unattractive at the same time.
"It"s more than a hat. It"s a hug."
Shirley Callaway, Marci Richter, Marleen Eagan and Debbie Ellett make cancer caps for patients at Moffitt.(Photo: WTSP)
Amy Presseo agrees. She took one of the hats that the Newcomers left behind on a previous trip to Moffitt. Now, she got to meet the ladies wgo made that hat face to face.
"I"ll be happy when I get my hair back," she said. "I feel comfortable with wearing a hat."
As exciting as it is to see the happy faces on the patients when the get a hat in their hands, it is a tough mission for Callaway. Her son, Chip, died of testicular cancer 25 years ago in the very same buildings that the Newcomers visiteach month.
As tough as it is, she powers through to hand out hats that bring smiles.
"That"s what it"s all about," she said.
Her personal doctor and his wife help make the hats possible. The couple purchased all of the yarn that the group uses. The Newcomers have made hundreds of hats and plan to always give them away for free.
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CINDY: HERE IS THE PROBLEM -- THE SNOW IS SO FLUFFY, IT WILL BLOW OFF THE TREES. WE ARE MAKING UP FOR SOME LOST TIME AROUND HERE. WITH OUR 3.1 INCHES OFFICIALLY OVERNIGHT, WE ONLY HAD ABOUT FIVE AND A HALF. ON THE AVERAGE WINTER, WE HAVE 17 INCHES OF SNOW, SO, WE ARE MAKING UP FOR LOST TIME. PICKING UP FIVE, EVEN A FEW REPORTS OF SIX, BUT IN GENERAL, TO TO FOUR INCHES. WE HAVE HAD AN ARCTIC FRONT COME THROUGH THIS MORNING AND THAT IS WHY THE WINDS ARE KICKING UP, COMING AT US FROM THE WEST NORTHWEST, AND WE ARE STILL IN THE 20"S OUTSIDE. SUBZERO HERE AT NOON TIME. THIS IS SOME SERIOUS COLD WORKING IN AND WE ARE JUST GETTING STARTED. TEMPERATURES HAVE BEEN HOLDING STEADY. AT 8:00 THIS MORNING, IT WAS A COUPLE OF DEGREES LESS COAL THAN IT IS RIGHT NOW. WE"VE GOT BLUE SKIES AND TEMPERATURES GOING THE WRONG WAY AS THE ARCTIC AIR IS WORKING ITS WAY IN. IT IS GUSTING HIGHER AND MORE THAN 30 MILES AN HOUR OUT THROUGH WORCESTER COUNTY. THESE WINDS WILL BE WITH US FOR THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. THIS IS WHAT IT FEELS LIKE WITH WIND CHILLS RUNNING IN THE SINGLE DIGITS. ELSEWHERE, WHEN CHILLS IN THE TEENS. IF YOU ARE OUT AND ABOUT THIS AFTERNOON, DON"T LET THE SUN FOOL YOU. IT IS WINDY AND COLD. THE WINDCHILL WILL BE DROPPING DOWN INTO THE SINGLE DIGIT IN BOSTON. OUT THE DOOR TOMORROW MORNING, THIS IS 5:00 A.M. -- WIND CHILL RUNNING BELOW ZERO. ACTUAL TEMPERATURES OVERNIGHT WILL GO DOWN INTO THE SINGLE DIGIT AND TEENS. OVERNIGHT THROUGHOUT THE DAY TOMORROW, THERE"S A WIND ADVISORY AND THE POTENTIAL IS THERE FOR SOME WIND GUSTS. WE WILL KEEP THE WIND IN PLACE THROUGHOUT THE GAME ON TUESDAY BUT WE WILL HAVE SUBZERO WIND CHILLS TOMORROW MORNING AND WIND CHILLS NO HIGHER THAN THE SINGLE DIGITS THROUGHOUT THE DAY. STILL CONTENDING WITH SOME GUSTY WINDS. ONLY GRADUALLY STEPPING DOWN. TEMPERATURES START TO MODERATE BUT WE WILL BE WATCHING THAT CLOSELY WITH HIGH PRESSURE TO THE NORTH. NOTICE BY 6 A.M., THERE"S THE STORM WITH HIGH PRESSURE TO THE NORTH AND AN INCREASED EASTERLY WIND. THIS WILL BE A STRONG COASTAL STORM, BUT THE TRACK IS KEY. WE WILL BE WATCHING THAT VERY CLOSELY, BUT A SIGNIFICANTLY CLOSE STORM HERE, TIMING FRIDAY NIGHT AND THROUGH THE DAY, IT LOOKS LIKE IT WILL BE HEADING
Chris Mortensen Deletes False Deflategate Report From Twitter
Larry Fitzgerald saved his most impressive pivot for after the game.
The Cardinals star wide receiver nearly single-handedly lifted Arizona to a divisional-round win over the Packers, side-stepping tacklers and an unreal Aaron Rodgers Hail Mary to clinch the game, 26-20 in overtime.
With a 75-yard catch and run on a broken play, Fitzgerald propelledArizona into perfect position in the extra period. With a shovel pass from Carson Palmer from the Green Bay 5-yard line, Fitzgerald won the game, which he immediately put into proper perspective with a message for ESPN reporter Chris Mortensen, who is battling throat cancer.
Mort, I want to tell you, man, Fitzgerald said just minutes after the game-winning score, still trying to catch his breath. Were thinking about you, and fight, baby. Love you, Mort.
Mortensen, who had been silent since his statement Friday, took notice of Fitzgeralds salute and offered his thanks to the wide receiver, along with everyone whos offered their best wishes.
Thank you everybody and thank you @LarryFitzgerald, he wrote. I am humbled. 1 Timothy 2:1.
(The Bible verse? First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people.)
In his statement, the 64-year-old Mortensen said he had been diagnosed with Stage IVthroat cancer and would be taking a break from covering football.
A slew of well wishes and tributes have come forMortensen, who has been with ESPN since 1991, as colleagues such as Adam Schefter have made it known he will not be forgotten in his absence from ESPN broadcasting.
Fitzgeralds nod, during one of the more euphoric moments of his life after amassing 176 yards on eight catches, shows the players will be cheering him on, as well.
Forbidden Questions with Kiefer Ravena - THE GOAT on FOX Sports
UPDATE: FOX Sports confirmed on Monday that Greg Norman will not return as a golf analystfor the network in 2016.
"After careful consideration, we have decided to make this change to our USGA Championships coverage," said John Entz, President of Production & Executive Producer, FOX Sports. "We want to thank Greg for his contributions last year, and wish him success in all his current and future endeavors."
Norman also commented in the press release saying, "I put a lot into my role this past year and really enjoyed the time I spent with the commentary team,I have a long history with FOX and wish them well on their journey showcasing USGA Championships. I also want to thank David Hill (former Head of FOX Sports) and the USGA for believing in me and instilling their vote of confidence in me from the outset."
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After just one season in the chair as the lead golf analyst for FOX Sports, Greg Norman is reportedly out of the job.
Links Magazine tweeted on Sunday night that it had learned that Norman "is out at @FOXGOLF," the official handle of FOX Sports Golf.
The publication provided no other information.
When reached by GOLF.com on Sunday evening, representatives from both FOX Sports and Norman"s public relations team declined to comment on the report. One FOX announcer confirmed to GOLF.com that Norman is out. "It wasn"t (Norman"s) choice,"the sourcesaid.
On Foxsports.com, the two-time major winner is still listed as an on-air golf analyst for the network.
In 2013, FOX signed a 12-year deal with the USGA worth more than $1 billion to acquire rights to the U.S. Open. Norman and Joe Buck led the coverage for the FOX golf team at the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay. The inaugural broadcast was heavily scrutinized and drew less-than-glowing reviews.
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