
Paris Hilton was just ordered back to jail by the judge. She will have to serve out the reminder of her time at the jail but will get credit for time served. Head over to TMZ.com for all the latest on the saga.

Paris Hilton was just ordered back to jail by the judge. She will have to serve out the reminder of her time at the jail but will get credit for time served. Head over to TMZ.com for all the latest on the saga.
In another heated Rookie Card Playoffs race, Manny Ramirez’s New Edition 1992 card pulled through in the Slugger Round with 44% of the votes.

He edged out Ken Griffey, Jr. with 37% and Cool Hand Konerko, who accumulated 13% of the votes. Frank Thomas’ reach-around managed just 5% while Magglio Ordonez’s lack of locks accumulated only 3% of the tallies.
This brings us to the sixth set of Round One, the Pitcher’s Duel. The winning card will move onto the final Round, where only one will emerge the glorious victor: the Rookie Card Champion of the World.
Check out these hurlers’ first years in the big leagues and choose your favorite. Once again, you may base your favoritism on absolutely anything.
Maybe the bewildered look on Tom Glavine’s face has you chuckling and we know you love the smug mug on Curt Schilling (some things never change!) How about the relaxed lean of Mariano Rivera or those legs on The Hoff?! And some of us may feel nostalgic when looking at the last future Hall Of Famer, John Smoltz.
Vote for your favorite current player’s rookie card.
You can vote here or head over to see my beautiful and talented co-host, Sooze, at Babes Love Baseball to vote.

Big Stein is very happy his skipper got his 2000th win as a manager with the Yankees. He is the longest tenured manager under Big Stein’s watch. But Big Stein wants to know why Newsday ran the Mets on the cover when Joe Torre got his 2000th win. It makes Big Stein so mad he might go get a calzone. He also wants to know why his pitcher’s don’t throw a game like Schilling did yesterday since his team is still stuck in 4th place.
If you hadn’t heard by now, Curt Schilling was masterful yesterday on the mound in throwing a one-hitter. He helped end a 4 game skid for the Sox. The Sox now head into Arizona to face a red-hot Diamondbacks team, who has gone 8-2 in it’s last 10 games.
But before that happens, let’s take a gander at what the Boston and Oakland area media had to say about the game and other things in today’s papers. No reaction from Schill yet on 38 Pitches.
It was a 38 special in Oakland yesterday writes Gordon Edes. [Boston Globe]
Susan Slusser says Shannon Stewart ignored a take sign in breaking up the no-hitter. [San Francisco Chronicle]
Schilling’s gem stopped a 4 game skid writes Jeff Horrigan. [Boston Herald]
Steve Corkran writes the A’s said no no-no. [Oakland Tribune]
Big Papi had no idea Schilling had a no hitter until the 9th inning says Jeff Goldberg. [Hartford Courant]
Susan Slusser writes that Joe Blanton’s excellent start was overshadowed by Schilling. [San Francisco Chronicle]
Steven Krasner has reactions from the Red Sox about the almost no-no. [ProJo SoxBlog]
Shannon Stewart came out swinging writes Amalie Benjamin. [Boston Globe]
Rob Bradford says Schilling’s makeover worked well yesterday. [Boston Herald]
Gordon Edes talks about the Red Sox draft, Brad Mills and Coco Crisp in his Red Sox notebook. [Boston Globe]
David Ortiz wanted to know if Youk turned into Coco on that bizarre play in the 8th inning writes Steven Krasner. [Pro Jo]
The Red Sox-Diamondbacks series thumbnails. [Boston Globe]
For more headlines and stories, head over to the Boston Globe, Boston Herald, Hartford Courant, Providence Journal, Oakland Tribune, and San Francisco Chronicle websites.
at 
Friday June 8th
Josh Beckett (R) (8-0, 2.95) vs Doug Davis (L) (4-6, 3.05)
Saturday June 9th
Julian Tavarez (R) (3-4, 5.33) vs Micah Owings (R) (4-1 3.86)
Sunday June 10th
Daisuke Matsuzaka (R) (7-4, 4.63) vs Randy Johnson (L) (3-2, 3.78)

Juan Pierre is in the midst of a 4 for 32 slump for the Dodgers right now.
Bartolo Colon returns to the Angels on Friday after missing time with biceps tendonitis.
Giants slugger Barry Bonds got yelled at by his mom. Seriously he did.
Colby Lewis is adjusting to pitching out of the bullpen for the A’s.
Chad Tracy may return to the Diamondbacks lineup as early as Saturday.
Mariners SS Yuniesky Betancourt has a 18 game hitting streak.
Geoff Blum is starting to heat up for the Padres.
Vincente Padilla is questionable for his start on Sunday for the Rangers.
Get Kaz Matsui some butter because he’s on a roll for the Rockies.

Written by Steve Hofstetter, Adam Hofstetter, Cody Marley, Ryan Murphy, Rich Ragains, Elliot Steingart, and Chris Strait
Airtran Airways dropped Michael Vick as their spokesman. They also fired Marcus Vick from their baggage department.
A study of retired NFL players found that those who had at least three concussions had triple the risk of clinical depression. And becoming sideline reporters.
Bengals WR Chad Johnson’s horse racing publicity stunt is the first time a Bengal has tried to outrun anything not in a police car. Though there might be a cop on the horse just in case.
Elsewhere in horse racing, the breeding rights to Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense were auctioned to the highest bidder. Congratulations Madonna!
Roger Clemens will finally play for the Yankees this week, as they need a DH.
In basketball news, 74-year-old Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss was arrested for DWI. If you had to pay Kwame Brown $8.2 million per season, you’d have a few drinks, too. The 1AM traffic stop also found a 23-year-old female passenger. Which makes us wonder why she wasn’t the one who was wasted.
Cavaliers fans are excited about LeBron James’ new baby, who should be able to come off the bench for 5-10 minutes a game.
And Michael Jordan complimented Lebron James for taking a “big step forward” by leading the Cavs to the NBA Finals. Though Jordan’s money is still on the Spurs.
For more of the Sports Minute (Or So), visit minuteorso.com
I may not be a Yankees fan but I am a fan of baseball and it’s history. With that being said, a big congratulations goes out to Joe Torre on his 2000th win as a manager. He is only the 10th manager to win 2000 games in their careers. He joins Connie Mack, John McGraw, Tony LaRussa, Sparky Anderson, Bucky Harris, Joe McCarthy, Bobby Cox, Walt Alston, and Leo Durocher in the exclusive club.
The Boston Red Sox select, Nick Hagadone, a left handed pitcher out of the University of Washington.
Hagadone has a fastball that ranges from 90-93, a nasty slider and evolving changeup. He’s a big boy too. 6’5″ 230 lbs.
Hagadone was a starter and a reliever in college. He even combined with another famous Husky alum on a no hitter in 2006. You might know him as Tim Lincecum, rookie phenom pitcher with the San Francisco Giants, who was a 1st-round draft choice last season.
If you want to make comparisions as far as where he went in the draft, look back to the 2002 draft. The Red Sox took this kid named Jon Lester. We all know how he’s turned out.
Beau Mills, son of Boston bench coach Brad Mills, was selected by the Cleveland Indians 13th overall in the first round. Mills, a power hitting corner infielder, hit 38 HR’s this year for Lewis and Clark and was the NAIA player of the year. In 2004 the Red Sox drafted him in the 44th round. (Taken from Steve’s notes)
In what looked like it may have been a big hitting day, actually turned into a day where the pitching took center stage as Curt Schilling and Joe Blanton battled head to head. But even then it was one man who commanded the spotlight.
The old man, the weathered ace working on the last year of a four year deal in which he brought Red Sox Nation a World Series championship, nearly got something for himself today as he got within one out of no-hitting the Athletics.
Schilling dominant all afternoon, walked no one and struck out four as he shut out Oakland 1-0, retiring 27 of 29 hitters, allowing only the 9th inning single and another runner on an error in getting his third career one-hitter.
The Sox after not hitting much in the last two games got off to a quick 1-0 lead in the first inning off of A’s starter Joe Blanton. With two quick groundouts to start the game, David Ortiz took Blanton deep into the right field seats for his 11th HR to get the Sox on the board. Manny Ramirez followed with a line drive single to center, then J.D. Drew hit a blistering line drive right but it was right at shortstop Marco Scutaro to end the inning. Little did we know but that was all the scoring there would be in this nail bitter.
Meanwhile, Schilling got off to a good start getting three fly outs in the first inning. Though it wasn’t without adventure as Coco Crisp and Drew bumped into each other going for Nick Swisher’s fly ball that was eventually caught by Drew for the final out.
After a first inning where the Sox hit him hard, Blanton worked quick and set down the next 6 hitters before giving up a two out walk in the third inning to Kevin Youkilis. He then got Ortiz to ground out to end the frame. As Blanton left the mound he started to get into it a bit with home plate umpire Ron Kulpa. Nothing came of it but Kulpa sent a message to Blanton through catcher Jason Kendall.
On the other side, Schilling was looking like the dominant ace retiring the first nine A’s in order including Jack Cust and Dan Johnson on strikeouts.
At this point we looked locked into a pitcher’s duel as Blanton had set down another four in a row through four innings after the Youkilis walk. Schilling also continued his mastery of the A’s today setting down the first 12 with three K’s, 6 fly outs and 3 ground outs. He was clearly on his game at this point with most hitters getting first pitch strikes and working with pinpoint control and making short work of hitters. At this point he only had one 3-ball count.
Blanton continued to deal, retiring 7 in a row with a one, two, three fifth getting Jason Varitek to ground out to the mound, Cora to fly out to Swisher and he notched his first strike out getting Crisp to whiff on a foul tip.
Schilling started the Oakland half of the fifth with a fly out to Ramirez by Eric Chavez on a ball that Manny almost over ran with the very high sky during the early afternoon game. Big Schill then grabbed his fourth K on splitter getting Cust for the second time on the afternoon. His streak of 14 in a row was snapped when Julio Lugo booted a ground ball by Johnson for his 7th error of the year. But as he often does, Schilling bore down and got Scutaro to fly out to Drew in right to work around the error. The perfect game was gone but Schilling looked dominant retiring 15 of 16 through the first five.
Blanton was almost as good having allowed only two first inning hits as he worked into the 6th inning. The Kentucky native struck out Lugo to start the 6th, Chavez looking like the human vacuum at the hot corner threw out Youkilis on a ground out. Blanton saw his streak end at 9 in a row when he walked Ortiz; it was the second walk Blanton allowed on the afternoon. Manny ended any idea of some more runs when he flew out to Mark Kotsay in center.
Kotsay led off the 6th with a hard hit ball to deep center but Crisp made a nice running catch tracking the ball down just before the wall to keep the no-hitter in tact. Crisp is now working on 103 straight games without an error. Jason Kendall then flew out to Drew for the second out and Schilling got Shannon Stewart to ground out to Youkilis unassisted at first to end the 6th. Schilling had retired 18 of 19 four on strike outs, 10 fly outs and 4 groundouts.
Drew singled to center to start the top of the 7th, Lowell flew out to Swisher but Blanton started to struggle and fell behind Varitek with Drew running, Varitek singled to center putting runners at the corners with one out. Blanton now up over 100 pitches on the day got Alex Cora to foul out to Chavez who made a nice running catch and Crisp hit a come backer to end the inning and the threat.
Schilling started the 7th inning having thrown only 75 pitches got Mark Ellis to ground to Mike Lowell who booted it but was still able to throw him out. Swisher was retired when Schilling sawed off his bat as he grounded out to Youkilis with Schilling covering the bag.
Schilling twice in his career has gone 7.1 no-hit innings once as a Phillie and once as a Diamondback. He is now at seven batters retired in a row after getting Chavez to ground out to Cora and has retired 21 of 22 hitters.
Lugo starts the 8th by grounding out to Chavez. The Sox will be very happy not to see Chavez for awhile after this week. Youkilis walked for the second time today this brought A’s manager Bon Geren out to remove Blanton. Blanton pitched great but ended up being overshadowed by Schilling. Lefty Ron Flores came in to face Ortiz who with the shift on decided to bunt, the ball was fielded by Kendall who threw to Chavez covering second but Youkilis was safe. When Youk looked up he saw third uncovered and tried to advance but Chavez flipped the ball to Scutaro who out ran Youkilis to tag him out. Colby Lewis was then brought in face Ramirez with two out who grounded out to Ellis.
Schilling began the 8th at an economical 82 pitches got Cust to ground out to Youkilis unassisted. This was the third time Schill has gone 7.1 no-hit innings the last time in 2001 with Arizona. Johnson hits a comebacker to Schilling for the second out of the frame, Scutaro then flies out to Crisp to end the inning. Schilling has now retired 24 of 25 including 10 in a row.
Drew struck out to start the ninth looking on a Lewis fast ball, Lowell flew out to Kotsay bringing up Varitek who grounded out to Ellis to end the ninth.
Schilling at 90 pitches, headed into the ninth and was brilliant.
Kotsay grounds out to Lugo for the first out, Kendall then grounds out on a fastball to Lugo and Schilling stood out one away facing Stewart who grounded the ball past a diving Cora for a base hit to break up the no-hitter. Cora then made a great catch on a foul ball by Ellis to end the game.