A former Canadian Football League player is suing his former American university, alleging the school for years pressured football players to take “bogus” exercise, communications or African-American studies courses that were meant to inflate their marks and maintain their eligibility. Steven Matz Jersey . Michael McAdoo, a defensive end who played in 2013 with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, is suing the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In court papers obtained by TSN, McAdoo has asked a U.S. federal court in North Carolina to grant his case class action status so that all players who received football scholarships at the school between 1993 and 2011 might receive a court-awarded judgment. The school has not responded to the case and McAdoo’s claims have not been proven. The University of North Carolina, once referred to as a New Ivy by Newsweek magazine, has been investigating claims of academic corruption for at least several years. In 2011, the school fired football coach Butch Davis days before preseason practice and an investigation found that the chairman of the African and Afro-American Studies Department had been allowing student athletes for years to take so-called no-show classes. The school also sacked its athletic director and received a wave of penalties from the NCAA, including scholarship losses and probation for three years. McAdoo says the school should pay damages to student athletes who were caught up in the scandal. An education at UNC, he wrote in legal papers, is “widely regarded as one of the best public university educations available in the United States. UNC, however, did not provide the promised legitimate education. Instead, UNC systematically funnelled its football student-athletes into a ‘shadow curriculum’ of bogus courses which never met and which were designed for the sole purpose of providing enrolees high grades.” “UNC maximized the number of football student-athletes who remained eligible to engage in intercollegiate athletics, thus improving the chances of athletic success and falsely increasing the university’s revenue and reputation.” McAdoo played at UNC in 2008, 2009, and 2010 after he was recruited by Davis, who met with his mother and grandparents. McAdoo says he remembers the coach telling his family: “I can’t guarantee that Michael will play in the NFL, but one thing I can guarantee is that he will get a good education at the University of North Carolina.” Although he expressed interest in criminal justice when being recruited, once on campus he was told that football student-athletes were urged to consider only three options for a major: exercise sport science, communications, or African-American studies. McAdoo’s statement of claim details how the scandal worked. “At the beginning of the semester, students were given a topic on which to write a paper,” he wrote. “The football student-athletes in any given course were generally given the same topic. “Throughout the semester, there were no class meetings, there was no supervision, no drafts of papers were reviewed, and no faculty feedback was given. “On some occasions, academic counsellors told their African American Studies Department contacts the particular grades the football student-athletes would have to receive in order to remain athletically eligible. Even the weakest papers and papers featuring long passages of unoriginal text received passing, and often outstanding, grades.” McAdoo was signed by Winnipeg on Oct. 18, 2013, and was released on May 12 this year. Noah Syndergaard Mets Jersey . The Cavs announced the move Saturday, one day after LeBron James said hes returning to Cleveland. A 12-year veteran, Haywood has played in 794 NBA games, averaging 6. Yoenis Cespedes Mets Jersey . -- Wide receiver Sidney Rice should be fully recovered from a torn knee ligament by the time the Seattle Seahawks start defence of their Super Bowl title, general manager John Schneider said Wednesday. http://www.metsbaseballauthentic.com/steven-matz-mets-jersey/ . Ramirez is still hitting behind Puig, only now they are in the third and fourth spots, and the change is starting to generate positive results for manager Don Mattingly.TORONTO - If you had been up early to watch the Canadian mens hockey team win gold Sunday morning, the Raptors first-half lullaby likely put you back to sleep. "I think we set basketball back probably 15 years in the first half," Dwane Casey admitted, speaking of his teams lackadaisical effort at the outset of a 105-90 win over the lowly Orlando Magic. Slow starts have become a troublesome trend for the Raptors, who scored 44 points on 42 per cent shooting in the opening 24 minutes Sunday, but theyve also developed a fondness for the second-half explosion, which seems to bail them out more often than not. Whatever Casey is saying or doing in the locker room at intermission, its been working. Once considered to be one of the worst third-quarter teams in the association, the Raptors looked like an inspired team coming out of the halftime break. "Like I told our guys, were going to have a lot of games where were going to have to grind it out," Casey said. "For whatever reason we struggle in the first half [and] come through, turn it on [in the second half], but I think thats also a little bit of growth on our part. Ive seen times when it had been a struggle for close to 40 minutes." The Raptors have indeed turned a corner in that regard, establishing themselves as a lethal second-half club. Toronto has outscored, or tied, its opponent in the second half in 13 straight contests, holding teams to 39 per cent shooting and besting them by 91 total points during that stretch. Since the season-altering trade of Rudy Gay, the Raptors lead the NBA in second-half point differential, outscoring foes by 216 points, 47 more than the second-ranked Indiana Pacers. Led by its dynamic backcourt, Toronto missed just two of its 14 field goal attempts in the third, besting the Magic 36-24 and turning a three-point halftime lead into a 15-point advantage going into the fourth. Neither guard, Kyle Lowry or DeMar DeRozan, missed a shot in the frame. The two combined for 26 of Torontos 36 points. Lowry, who shot just 1-of-7 in the first half, was in the zone. As the clock ticked down to end the period, the Raptorrs point guard pulled up from 25-feet and drained his fourth three-pointer, putting the finishing touch on a perfect (5-for-5 from the field, 4-for-4 from three, 3-for-3 from the line) 17-point quarter. Michael Conforto Jersey. Although the Raptors have outscored the Magic and Cavaliers 73-45, shooting 76 per cent from the floor in their last two third quarters - en route to a pair of home victories - Lowry and his teammates are wisely concerned about their customary slow starts. "Were not that good of a team to just ease our way into the game," said Lowry, who finished with 28 points on Sunday. "Weve got to come out and play with [that] intensity from the start." Whats behind the teams late wake-up calls? "I cant really put a finger on it," DeRozan said after scoring 17 of his 24 in the second half. "Maybe we just like a challenge sometimes. [We] put ourselves in a tough situation so we can fight ourselves out, but weve got to stop that and understand weve got to come out of the gate so we dont make the game that hard on us." Fortunately, the Raptors were playing host to the leagues worst road team. The Magic, riding a 15-game losing streak away from home, were missing leading scorer Arron Afflalo, absent as a result of an ankle injury. They scored just 14 points in the opening quarter and didnt put up much resistance when the Raptors guards seized control of the game. Toronto managed to seal a double-digit victory despite committing a season-high 24 turnovers, 18 of them coming from Lowry, DeRozan and Jonas Valanciunas. While six of Torontos next seven games come against losing teams, this is not a habit that will be kind to the playoff-bound Raptors as they approach the stretch run. "We cant rely on that," DeRozan said of his teams second-half success, "because when we run into the top teams its going to be tough to try to make a comeback against those teams." "So weve got to start a habit of that now," he continued, "even when were playing teams like Orlando so well be ready and we know what to expect when we play the good teams." ' ' '