Baseball fans have their bases covered this year with TSNs extensive Major League Baseball broadcast coverage featuring Sunday, Monday and Wednesday night baseball and ESPNs Baseball Tonight all season, along with MLBs Opening Night and Opening Day games. MLBs marquee Sunday, Monday, and Wednesday night games feature the leagues top teams and the most-anticipated games of the season. Overall, TSN platforms deliver more than 75 games this season. TSN subscribers can live stream TSN and TSN2s MLB coverage on their smartphones, tablets, and computers at no additional charge through TSN GO. TSNs baseball coverage will feature ESPNs acclaimed MLB production, which includes Sunday Night Baseball, helmed by veteran Toronto broadcaster Dan Shulman along with analyst John Kruk and reporter Buster Olney. Opening Night and Opening Day TSN is the exclusive Canadian broadcaster of MLBs Opening Night and Opening Day. A special edition of Baseball Tonight tees up the season on Sunday, March 30 at 6:30 p.m. ET on TSN2, followed by the Los Angeles Dodgers vs. San Diego Padres at 8 p.m. ET on TSN2 and Baseball Tonight at 12 midnight ET. Coverage continues on Opening Day (Monday, March 31) as TSN platforms deliver live coverage of five games from the first full day of competition in the 2014 MLB season (see below for broadcast schedule). SportsCentre Canadas most-watched sports news and information show covers all angles of the MLB season with breaking news, daily highlights, and more, all-season long. SportsCentre delivers weekly updates from ESPN play-by-play announcer Dan Shulman, Insider segments with analyst Steve Phillips, and reports from baseball reporter Scott MacArthur. SportsCentre premieres two features this week on the past and future of baseball in Montréal. Fronted by TSNs Michael Farber, both features will debut during the 6 p.m. ET edition of SportsCentre. On Thursday, March 27, The Last Pitch revisits the final years of the Expos franchise with a spotlight on Omar Minaya, baseballs first Latin-American general manager. On Friday, March 28, ENCORE? focuses on the possibility of Major League Baseball returning to Montreal, featuring a sit-down interview with MLB Commissioner Bud Selig. TSN Digital Fans can visit TSN.ca for highlights, interviews, news, and analysis, including blog posts by baseball analyst Steve Phillips, Blue Jays and MLB reporter Scott MacArthur, and TSN Radio 1050 Torontos Scott Ferguson. TSN.ca also delivers weekly MLB Power Rankings and Player Rankings from fantasy expert Scott Cullen. TSN Radio TSN Radio has baseball fans covered throughout the season with beat reporters Scott MacArthur and Scott Ferguson delivering daily reports on the Toronto Blue Jays as well as breaking news from around Major League Baseball. Dan Shulman also appears three times weekly, talking Blue Jays and MLB on TSN Radio 1050 in Toronto. Winnipeg-area baseball fans can set their dial to TSN Radio 1290 in Winnipeg for live Blue Jays game broadcasts in 2014 as part of a recently announced agreement. Fans can also tune in to TSN Radio 690 in Montreal and TEAM Radio 1040 and 1410 in Vancouver for marquee MLB games as part of ESPNs Sunday Night Baseball. TEAM Radio also delivers Blue Jays, Seattle Mariners, MLB playoff games, and the World Series. Broadcast Schedule Sunday, Monday and Wednesday Night Baseball matchups are selected to feature the best teams in baseball (visit TSN.ca for confirmed broadcast schedules). TSN and TSN2s broadcast schedule for Opening Night and Opening Day is as follows: Sunday, March 30Baseball Tonight: Sunday Night Countdown at 6:30 p.m. ET on TSN2ESPN Sunday Night Baseball: LA Dodgers @ San Diego at 8 p.m. ET on TSN2 Monday, March 31Baseball Tonight at 12 noon ET on TSN2ESPN Monday Night Baseball: Chicago Cubs @ Pittsburgh at 1 p.m. ET on TSN2ESPN Monday Night Baseball: Boston @ Baltimore at 3 p.m. ET on TSNESPN Monday Night Baseball: St. Louis @ Cincinnati at 4 p.m. ET on TSN2ESPN Monday Night Baseball: Colorado @ Miami at 7 p.m. ET on TSN2ESPN Monday Night Baseball: Seattle @ LA Angels at 10 p.m. ET on TSN2 Tuesday, April 1Baseball Tonight at 1 a.m. ET on TSN2 MLB on TSN TSNs coverage is in the first year of a recently announced deal that includes rights to ESPNs Sunday Night Baseball and, for the first time, Monday Night Baseball and Wednesday Night Baseball. In addition to the live games, TSN is the Canadian home of ESPNs flagship baseball show Baseball Tonight, along with a comprehensive package of MLB digital content. Sunday Night Baseball remains the only nationally televised MLB game of the week in Canada. Jason Kidd Jersey . Weise will have his hearing with the NHL head office over the phone, while the league has requested an in-person hearing with Kassian. Oilers centre Sam Gagner suffered a broken jaw after getting hit with a high stick from Kassian in Edmontons 5-2 win. Custom Dallas Mavericks Jerseys . The Arena das Dunas in the northeastern city of Natal sustained minor damage during the protests, but demonstrators stayed away on Sunday and officials said the stadium passed its first test, with only minor adjustments needed going forward. http://www.mavericksteamofficial.info/dw...vericks-jersey/. "Thank you for the warm welcome," Beckham said on an 80-degree February morning. In this case, it was soccer weather. The sport moved a step closer to returning to South Florida on Wednesday, when Beckham confirmed he has exercised his option to purchase a Major League Soccer expansion franchise in Miami. DeAndre Jordan Jersey . The 28-year-old from Rochester, Alta., was selected by the Redblacks from the Saskatchewan Roughriders roster in the 2013 CFL Expansion Draft. Luka Doncic Jersey . On Sunday, head coach Patrick Roy said the teams leading scorer will skate at Mondays morning practice and the club will make a decision on his status for Game 6 at that point.WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- South Africas Sharks and defending champions the Chiefs remained the only unbeaten teams in Super Rugby after a fifth round which featured a storm of yellow cards and cliff-hanger endings. The Durban-based Sharks withstood a furious second-half fightback to beat the Queensland Reds 35-20 for a fourth straight win which gave them a five-point lead atop the championship table. The Hamilton-based Chiefs scored two late tries to beat the Cape Town-based Stormers 36-20 for their third win, after the Stormers rallied from 24-6 down to 24-20 with six minutes remaining. The ACT Brumbies, reduced to 14 men for almost 20 minutes, held on to beat the New South Wales Waratahs 28-23 in a gripping Australian derby, inflicting the Waratahs first loss in three games. In Dunedin, the Western Force were reduced to 13 men for the last eight minutes but clung on to beat the Highlanders 31-29 for their second straight bonus-point victory. Replacement flyhalf Hayden Parker scored a last-minute try for the Highlanders but missed the conversion, allowing the Force to claim back-to-back wins for the first time since April 2011. The Auckland-based Blues scored 36 second-half points in the most remarkable comeback of the round but still went down 39-36 to the Lions in Johannesburg, to be left with only one win from four matches. The Blues had two players sin-binned during the second half. In Wellington, the Hurricanes overran the Cheetahs 60-27, by nine tries to three, to capture their first win of the season in a match in which defences were either inept or non-existent. The match featured the most bizarre sin-binning of the round -- Cheetahs fullback Willie Le Roux was shown a yellow card in the 43rd minute for a deliberate knock-on, though it seemed perfectly apparent he had attempted an intercept. The flurry of yellow cards and a number of other contentious decisions again focused attention on the poor or inconsistent standard of refereeing, which continues to frustrate coaches and players. Scrums remain a particular area of frustration but there have been wider concerns about the failure of referees to spot glaring infringements -- notably in a critical try for the Lions against the Blues which came ffrom a knock-on.dddddddddddd Players and coaches must also answer for a lack of structure and the poor quality of fundamental skills in many matches -- the rates of turnovers and handling errors are higher than even early season glitches can excuse. The match between the Hurricanes and Cheetahs was a free-for-all that lacked any structure and in which tackles were not only regularly missed but often not even attempted. The Brumbies showed the value of a well-organized defence in their win over the Waratahs. Though they conceded 14 late points, they were still able to hold on while a man short to post their third win from four games and to move to the top of the Australian conference. Flanker Scott Fardy and flyhalf Matt Toomua were leaders of an outstanding Brumbies defensive effort. Brumbies captain Ben Mowen said he was disappointed his team lost two players to yellow cards, requiring it to play most of the last 20 minutes with 14. "Discipline goes hand in hand with how we want to play," he said. "Thats not something you can do regularly and expect to get a result." The Sharks benefitted from a yellow card in beating the Reds after leading 25-6 at halftime. Queensland dominated a half during which it remained parked in Sharks territory but the sin-binning of Beau Robinson allowed the Sharks to score a converted try three minutes from fulltime to clinch the match. "We gave the Sharks some ball position and some ill-discipline really cost us - theyve got some great goalkickers and that showed on the scoreboard," Reds captain James Horwill said. The Chiefs again showed they are the best-coached team in New Zealand with their win over the Stormers. They scored five tries, including one to Tanerau Latimer in his 100th match, as coach Dave Rennie and his assistants devised a method to break down the Stormers formidable defence. "Its pretty exciting when you do a lot of analysis during the week and you see certain pictures that the defence gives you and you are able to exploit it right up the field," Chiefs co-captain Aaron Cruden said. "We made most of our best gains deep in our half as opposed to closer to their line. It was nice to step up." 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