COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Fans of the Cleveland Cavaliers now have a new way to savor the teams NBA title.The Cavs are being honored with butter sculptures at this years Ohio State Fair, which opened Wednesday in Columbus.The butter sculpture display includes life-sized Cavaliers mascots Moondog and Sir C.C., along with the Larry OBrien Trophy. The trophy sculpture is about 4 feet tall, much larger than the actual award.The display took about 2,150 pounds of butter and 500 hours to complete. The sculptors began by building wooden and steel frames to support the sculptures weight. They then formed each sculpture from 55-pound blocks.The American Dairy Association Mideast has sponsored butter sculptures since the early 1900s. The displays are inspired by a theme representing something optimistic and non-controversial about Ohio. Cheap Yeezy 700 Hospital Blue .Y. - New Orleans forward Anthony Davis was chosen Friday to replace the injured Kobe Bryant in the NBA All-Star game that will be played in his home city. Cheap Yeezy 700 Static . PAUL, Minn. http://www.yeezy700outlet.com/discount-yeezy-700-utility-black-online.html . Francis told several hundred members of the European Olympic Committees that when sport "is considered only in economic terms and consequently for victory at every cost . Fake Yeezy 700 Utility Black . As he recorded his 23rd and 24th points of the evening, a segment of the sellout Air Canada Centre crowd expressed their appreciation for the Raptors point guard with a smattering of MVP chants. Fake Yeezy 700 Static . Reigning world champion Eve Muirhead of Scotland opened with a 12-2 rout of Winnipegs Jennifer Jones in a battle of teams bound for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Several prominent retired and current Olympic athletes have thrown their support behind an international crowdfunding campaign to benefit Russian doping whistleblowers Vitaly and Yuliya Stepanov, who had to flee their home country and settle in an undisclosed location in the United States last year.The public effort, designed to help the Russian couple with educational and living expenses, comes at a time when athletes around the world are urging anti-doping and Olympic officials to ensure whistleblowers personal safety and ability to provide authorities with information.Lauryn Williams of the United States, one of only five athletes in history to have won medals in both the Summer (track and field) and Winter (bobsled) Games, is among those who recorded statements of support on a Swiss-based website.I think that globally, we should make an effort to support them so that other whistleblowers know were serious about stamping out doping, said the 32-year-old Williams, who sits on the World Anti-Doping Agency Athlete Committee.Others publicly endorsing the campaign include Olympic discus gold medalist Robert Harting of Germany, who will defend his title in Rio de Janeiro next month; Olympic cross-country skiing champion Beckie Scott of Canada, who also chairs the WADA Athlete Committee; and three-time Olympic skeleton racer Ben Sandford of New Zealand.Joseph de Pencier, CEO of the Institute of National Anti-Doping Organizations -- a trade and advocacy association for 59 such agencies -- praised the effort.ddddddddddddEqually important are continuing efforts to make use of the Stepanovs experience and insight to improve anti-doping, he told ESPN. We all need to learn from those who report wrongdoing how better to encourage others to come forward.Vitaly Stepanov, a former employee of the now-discredited Russian Anti-Doping Agency, began providing inside information to WADA in 2010. His wife, an 800-meter runner who doped as part of the national system, joined him after being sanctioned in 2013. Her covert recordings later became part of a German television documentary that forced WADA to investigate their allegations.WADAs findings, combined with further, detailed revelations by ex-Moscow lab director Grigory Rodchenkov, have led the International Olympic Committee to consider excluding Russian athletes from the Rio Games next month. Yuliya Stepanova has been granted a special exemption by world track and field officials to compete in Rio, but it is still unclear whether she would be able to do so under a neutral flag if other Russian athletes are excluded. She entered the 800-meter event at the European Championships earlier this month but was injured in her first race. ' ' '