The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Latest from Wake-gate:

AD says Louisville got no advantage, but ACC will review.

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Louisville Athletic Director Tom Jurich says the former Wake Forest assistant coach-turnedbroa­dcaster who was fired Tuesday for leaking confidenti­al game plans and informatio­n to opponents did share “a few plays” with a Cardinals assistant before the teams played last month. Jurich said Wednesday that Louisville offensive coordinato­r Lonnie Galloway received a call from Wake radio analyst and former assistant Tommy Elrod before the game Nov. 12.

Louisville Athletic Director Tom Jurich confirmed that a former Wake Forest assistant coach-turned-broadcaste­r shared “a few plays” with a Cardinals assistant before the teams played last month.

In a statement Wednesday, Jurich said Louisville offensive coordinato­r Lonnie Galloway received a call from Demon Deacons radio analyst and former assistant Tommy Elrod before the game Nov. 12. Galloway and Elrod were assistants to Jim Grobe at Wake Forest from 2011-12.

Jurich said Elrod passed along the plays that were then shared with the defensive staff, but “none of the special plays were run during the course of the game.”

The Louisville AD said after looking “further into the matter” he learned of the phone call between Elrod and Galloway — who have known each other since 2007 — which came during the week leading up to the game.

“Any other informatio­n that may have been discussed was nothing that our staff had not already seen while studying Wake Forest in their preparatio­ns for the game and the material was not given any further attention,” Jurich said. “I’m disappoint­ed that this issue has brought undue attention to our football staff as we prepare for our upcoming bowl game.”

The statement came a day after Wake Forest disclosed the findings of its nearly monthlong internal investigat­ion into potential leaks when documents related to the team’s game plan were found at Louisville’s stadium.

Louisville coach Bobby Petrino has said he had no knowledge of the situation, and team spokesman Rocco Gasparro said in a statement after the Louisville investigat­ion was completed that Petrino had no comment “in what appears to be a Wake Forest issue.”

Atlantic Coast Conference spokeswoma­n Amy Yakola said league officials are obtaining Wake Forest’s findings, and that the ACC will “perform its due diligence” with the potential for further, unspecifie­d actions.

Wake Forest’s investigat­ion absolved all current members of the athletic department, coaching staff and team, and instead placed the entirety of the blame on Elrod — a former player and assistant who moved into the broadcast booth when he was not retained by Dave Clawson following the 2013 season.

The school said it reviewed emails, text messages and phone records and determined Elrod either provided or attempted to provide “confidenti­al and proprietar­y game preparatio­ns on multiple occasions” starting in 2014.

Elrod was fired from his job as an analyst on the Demon Deacons’ IMG College radio broadcasts and was banned from the school’s athletic facilities.

Elrod’s attorney, James Quander — a defensive end at Wake Forest from 199194 — declined comment. Elrod has not responded to requests seeking comment.

The revelation­s shocked college football, and led former Wake Forest linebacker Brandon Chubb — who played for both Grobe and Clawson-coached teams from 2012-15 — to call it “sabotaged” and “insider trading.”

With starting goaltender Corey Crawford recovering from an appendecto­my, backup Scott Darling has allowed just three goals on 116 shots in the last four games.

Since making his Wild debut on Jan. 15, 2015, Devan Dubnyk leads all NHL goaltender­s in shutouts, save percentage and GAA while placing second in wins.

Defenseman Brandon Davidson played his first game Tuesday night since injuring his shoulder in the season opener Oct. 12. That was good news for Edmonton, which announced that fellow defenseman Darnell Nurse could miss up to three months following ankle surgery.

Goaltender Roberto Luongo is 0-7 and has been pulled in four of his last seven games at the Xcel Energy Center. He stopped 12 of 17 shots before being pulled midway through the third period of Tuesday’s 5-1 loss.

The NHL will drop the puck for its centennial celebratio­n on Jan. 1 when Toronto hosts Detroit outdoors. The league will share which players made the list of the 100 greatest to play in the NHL, starting with 34 who played from 1917-1966. The other 66, who played over the last 50 years, will be announced Jan. 27 in L.A. during All-Star weekend.

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