News sport : Gregg Popovich jokes about Phil Jackson's latest Spurs dig: 'Oooh, that makes me so mad!'

It’s fair to say that San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich is taking a victory leap of sorts around the NBA, and it’s more than earned.


It’s not just that Popovich’s Spurs routed the Miami Heat in last year’s NBA Finals; it’s the way coach Pop went about movements that led to the glow. His system encouraged top line players to take pay cuts. He fought the NBA and wisely sat players, mindful of the 100-some game slog that a championship season demands. His championship teams have ranged from low post killers to defensive-minded stunners to the absolutely gorgeous, international-style basketball that was last season’s winner. Even in a San Antonio defeat on Wednesday night, Brooklyn Nets forward Mirza Teletovic praised San Antonio’s European-styled system after the game for allowing him to see the floor more clearly on his way toward a season-high 26 points in a Brooklyn win.


He allowed the first internationally-raised basketball coach to serve as head coach of the Spurs earlier this season. He hired the more than qualified Becky Hammon to serve as the first full time female assistant coach in NBA history. He’ll make champions out of players as disparate as Stephen Jackson, and Boris Diaw.


Most importantly, to many of his coaching colleagues? He still gets under Phil Jackson’s skin.


Jackson referred to Popovich’s strengths last spring when discussing his hopes for the New York Knicks, as he attempts to resurrect the long-moribund franchise. Because Phil Jackson is Phil Jackson, though, he had to offer a Phil Jackson-styled qualifier. From Newsday:



"Tim Duncan making the salary he's making after being part of a dynasty -- not a dynasty, I wouldn't call San Antonio a dynasty -- a force, a great force," Jackson said in April. "They haven't been able to win consecutive championships, but they've always been there."



With the Spurs in Brooklyn on Wednesday, local press had to ask Popovich if he had any reaction to Jackson’s months-old comments. From Newsday:



"Oooh, that makes me so mad!" he said before the Spurs played the Nets Wednesday night.




But, Pop said it very sarcastically.




[…]




"Just write whatever you want and I'll say I said it," Popovich joked. "Make it good though so you can get a promotion. Juicy. Ugly. Really good."



The “dynasty”/”not a dynasty” argument is really daft – honestly, who cares? It’s true that the Spurs have yet to win two titles in a row, injuries and other very good basketball teams have gotten in the way of such, but five titles spread out over 15 years with one mainstay big man and a backcourt that was around for four of the five is about as amazing as pro basketball gets. For the Spurs to roar back from what should have been an enervating loss in the 2013 Finals to play at their absolute peak some 12 months later might be the most impressive thing I’ve ever seen in lo, these many years of covering this league.


Phil Jackson certainly competes, on that level. Winning 54 games with Pete Myers as your shooting guard and Michael Jordan shagging flies ranks up there. As does sustaining three different three-peat winners in spite of fatigue, in-fighting, or championship-level competition on the opposing side of the floor. Call it a coin flip, if you want to be right about things.


To Popovich’s credit, however, he’s not the one who is engaging these pissing matches. Phil Jackson might not be technically engaging here either, he just can’t help speaking candidly, he just can’t help being Phil Jackson. He’s just kind of like that, thankfully, and thankfully Gregg Popovich similarly remains true to his thoughts as to what counts, and what doesn’t.


Phil Jackson’s Knicks, and by extension Phil Jackson’s preferred triangle offense, has been rightfully called out on the carpet for their overreliance on long two-point shots. This is more the fault of the players than the offense – again, the ideal result from a triangle’s unfolding is a shot near the rim – but Jackson has added to the intrigue by criticizing three-point shots as an NBA staple over the summer.


One of the shot’s most vocal opponents, through the years, is former Knick and former Jackson teammate Bill Bradley. Bradley has long called for the abolition of the shot, purporting that it reduces ball movement and slows the game to a standstill.


That may have been true around the time of the release of Bradley’s last basketball book, but in the modern era the same can’t be said. Bradley signed off on as much when he got in touch with the coach of the three-point heavy San Antonio Spurs over the summer to credit him with making the NBA fun again.


From the New York Times:



But stuff happens. The Spurs’ revolution overthrowing King James was televised. Within days, Joe Torre had weighed in with a congratulatory note. Then Bill Bradley called to tell Popovich that Tim Duncan and friends had reminded him of his old Knicks teams and that they had renewed his love of the N.B.A. game.




“You say to yourself, something special must have really happened,” Popovich said before heading to Brooklyn for Wednesday night’s game against the Nets at Barclays Center, where the Spurs’ eight-game winning streak was broken. “I should know this. I was there; I should have noticed.”




[…]




Of the call from Bradley, who is six years older than the 65-year-old Popovich, he said: “I was speechless. He was a hero.”



If Gregg Popovich can convince Bill Bradley that a shot from 23 feet away is optimal, then he’s done his job here.


Now all Bradley needs to do is convince his ex-teammate that these Spurs are pretty damn dynastic.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Roger Staubauch and the birth of the term 'Hail Mary'


Of course Roger Staubach coined the term "Hail Mary." He has done just about everything else during his eventful life.


Staubach was a Heisman Trophy winner at the Naval Academy, the last Heisman winner from a service academy (he'll probably keep that title for a long time, too). He served in Vietnam. He came to the Dallas Cowboys and became one of the most dynamic quarterbacks in NFL history. In his post-NFL days, he became a wildly successful businessman.


And he came up with the term "Hail Mary," which is now just a part of football's language. It was inspired from his most famous play, when he hit Drew Pearson to win a 1975 NFC divisional playoff game. He talks about that and the rest of his experiences in the NFL Network's "A Football Life" on Friday, and a trailer for the show is in the video above.


Staubach has had quite the interesting ride.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Though he intelligently won't sign an extension, Kevin Love wants to be a Cavalier 'long term'

There is a chance, however slight, that Kevin Love leaves the Cleveland Cavaliers as a free agent this summer. LeBron James could decide to walk away from his own contract with the team in order to pursue a baseball career. Kyrie Irving could elbow Love out of that lucrative soda pop endorsement. Dion Waiters could continue to be Dion Waiters. Between now and July, lots of things could happen.


What won’t happen between now and then is a contract extension for Love. The new Cavs power forward could make far, far more money as a free agent that re-signs with Cleveland this summer than he could merely extending the contract that includes a player option for next season at over $16.7 million. If he rides this season out, wherever it leads, and opts out, then Love can eke even more money out of the league’s maximum contract guidelines.


Until then, of course, he’ll have to hear the questions from those who aren’t really on the up and up when it comes to all things NBA. Scott Sargent is not one of those people, but sadly for him his job demands he had to sit through an episode of “Mike and Mike in the Morning” on ESPN radio on Tuesday to document Love’s interview. Here’s the killer quote from Love:



“Since I was traded to Cleveland this summer, I’ve said since Day 1 that I’m a Cleveland Cavalier long term and I plan for it to be that way. I want to grow with this team. There’s a lot of guys with a lot of unique talent, one-through-fifteen, on our roster who are going to be here for a long time. If I could end all the speculation now, I would. But people are going to continue to talk no matter what. I just want to continue getting better with this team long term. I’m a Cleveland Cavalier.”



The “if I could end all the speculation now” tagline is a bit off, because Love could end all the speculation now by signing an extension that would make the Cavaliers more than happy. Or he could even sign off on opting into the final year of his contract for next season. Either move would be incredibly daft on Love’s part, there is no chance that either would happen even if he did suffer some sort of calamitous injury, and absolutely nobody within Cleveland or out of it should criticize Love for sustaining this current, cogent, plan.


There is no real guarantee that Love will sign a long-term extension with the Cavaliers this summer, even if he does want to stay a Cavalier for life. With the influx of television money hitting NBA coffers in the coming years, necessitating a salary cap raise, Love could ink a one-year deal this summer and sign for far more the following summer. LeBron James, who “only” signed a two-year deal with Cleveland last summer, is clearly following that path.


The Cavaliers have won four straight after a tough start, a streak they’ll likely continue as they head into New York on Thursday night. The Knicks are one of several teams that has for years looked forward to Love’s 2015 opt-out as a chance for a rebirth, but even if the Cavaliers fail to win a title or even make it to the Finals this season, Love is going to stay in Cleveland unless something goes terribly wrong. Kyrie Irving would be the best teammate Kevin Love ever had even if LeBron James had never existed. And LeBron James does exist. He exists and he just lost out on the Eastern Conference Player of the Month Award to something named “Jimmy Butler,” and he has six months to figure this all out.


Anyone charging Kevin Love for being duplicitous for saying that he would like to end any speculation while declining to sign a contract extension doesn’t understand how these things work. Luckily for Kevin Love’s bank account, Kevin Love understands how these things work.


Lucky for Cleveland, too. About damn time.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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It’s horses for courses - Baxter

"Horses for courses" was how Chiefs coach Stuart Baxter explained his team's 3-0 Premiership thrashing of Wits.


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Johannesburg – “Horses for courses” was how Kaizer Chiefs coach Stuart Baxter explained his team's comprehensive 3-0 Premiership win over Bidvest Wits University at Johannesburg's Milpark Stadium on Wednesday night.


“Chiefs' style is best suited to an expansive pitch so that we have the space to employ our attacking style,” Baxter said.


“But we took into account the compact nature of the playing surface at Milpark and adapted our tactics accordingly.


“It worked well and we were not only able to contain our opponents but also remain on the look-out for the chance to counter-attack at all times, resulting in us securing three goals and coming close to scoring on a number of other occasions.”


But in keeping with the “horses for courses” approach, Baxter said they would require a totally different approach for the Soweto derby against Orlando Pirates.


“In the first instance, the high-profiled derby with Pirates is always an extremely emotional affair for all those concerned and quite often the unexpected occurs and makes a mockery about any pre-conceived notions.


“We will obviously take note of this in our planning and prepare accordingly as best we can.


“Also the playing surface for the Pirates game will be different to that against Wits and this is another factor to take into consideration.”


Baxter said he was particularly pleased by the scoring efforts of Bernard Parker and Eric Mathoho against Wits, particularly as Parker was running into his best form after a frustrating period of injuries.


“Parker's second goal was a gem and it's clear he is now not far off his best form.


“As for Mathoho scoring with a superb header, it's always nice when a defender shows he can provide goals as well as preventing them.”


And when it comes to formulating the line-up for the eagerly-awaited Pirates game, Baxter will surely sticky to his “horses for courses” dictum.


In contrast to Baxter, Wits coach Gavin Hunt was uncharacteristically silent after his team's defeat, replying to questions from after-match interviewers with “no, I've got nothing to say”.


Wits has suffered three defeats in their last five matches. – Sapa






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News sport : Dirk Nowitzki regrets calling Kirk Hinrich's dumb foul 'dumb'

Well, it clearly was a dumb foul. But you don’t really have to say it was a dumb foul, right?


Leave that to us jerks in the press, Dirk Nowitzki. Kirk Hinrich made what by his own admission was a “boneheaded” play when he fouled Monta Ellis intentionally behind the three-point line with Kirk’s Chicago Bulls up three points late in regulation on Tuesday night, and Dirk Nowitzki pulled no punches following the contest. A reminder:



"In my 17 years, it was one of the dumber fouls I've ever seen," Nowitzki said in a matter-of-fact tone. "You wait all the way until he dribbles to the 3-point line to grab him, so that's obviously a tough one, tough play. I saw coach [Tom] Thibodeau was just shaking his head."



Dirk is absolutely correct on all counts, but NBA fans rarely get to read quotes from NBA players going on record as speaking truth to power about other players. Even players with obvious and lingering beefs will toss out the pablum and avoid confrontation when it comes to stuff like this when talking to media postgame, save for some recent exceptions to the unwritten rule.


In retrospect, and after a good night’s sleep on the plane up to Milwaukee, Dirk Nowitzki feels a bit of regret for being candid and open in his comments. From Eddie Sefko at the Dallas Morning News:



“Yeah, it got overblown a little bit,” he said. “You know, Kirk is actually my guy. We went to dinners before. I didn’t really mean to put him on the spot like that. It was an unfortunate play. We’ve all been part of unfortunate situations. I don’t know if Thibs wanted them to foul, but it was just way too late.




“They had a chance to foul Monta when he dribbled two or three times up the floor. The situation was just a bad one, but it was fortunate for us. But I didn’t mean to put my man Kirk on the spot like that, because he’s a good dude. He’s a hard-nosed player. He made two 3s right before that actually to put them in position to win, so I have nothing but respect for Kirk Hinrich. I didn’t mean to really get it out like that.”



Hinrich would likely wave off any apology, as the NBA veteran and coach’s kid probably wholeheartedly agrees with Nowitzki’s initial assertion. The longtime Bulls guard has struggled this year, drawing the ire of Bulls fans well before his Tuesday night boner, but he rebounded nicely on Wednesday – nailing two needed three-pointers down the stretch of Chicago’s 102-95 win over the reeling Charlotte Hornets.


Kirk Hinrich is a good dude, and a hard-nosed player, as Nowitzki points out. He’s not immune from criticism, however, because while his late-game misstep made all the headlines, it was his ineffective work off the bench in the loss to the Mavericks that caused far greater damage to Chicago’s chances. If you’ll allow myself to, um, quote myself:



If Dirk Nowitzki and Kirk Hinrich truly are friends, this is an insight into their friendship. Nowitzki wasn’t really ribbing Hinrich, he was telling the truth, but these are how friends sometimes talk about each other. When there is egg on the face, you’re allowed to point it out. Sometimes you’re even allowed to laugh.


Dirk Nowitzki’s initial comments would be a major problem if the whole of the Western world, including Kirk Hinrich, didn’t completely agree with him.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Ravens' Haloti Ngata suspended for rest of regular season

(AP) The Baltimore Ravens suffered a huge blow to their playoff hopes, losing arguably their best defensive player for the rest of the regular season.


Defensive tackle Haloti Ngata, a five-time Pro Bowler and two-time first-team All-Pro, has been suspended for four games for violating the league's policy on performance-enhancing drugs. The Ravens have just four games left, so he's done for the rest of the regular season.


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Ngata, a 6-4, 340-pound force of nature who moves so well he has two interceptions this season, said he failed the test for using Adderall, a drug used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The NFL does not announce specific reasons for failed drug tests.




Whatever the reason, the Ravens are now without one of their best players for a big stretch of games. Baltimore is 7-5, one of six AFC teams tied at 7-5 for the final wild-card spot. Every other team's chances look a little bit better after this news.


More NFL coverage from Yahoo Sports:



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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Aguero playing like one of the gods

Manchester City's Argentine striker Sergio Aguero was named Player of the Year in a vote by 250 000 English fans.


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London - Manchester City's Argentine striker Sergio Aguero was named Player of the Year in a vote by 250 000 English fans this week - and it probably won't be the last honour he picks up this season.


The 26-year-old, who won the Premier League title with City in May and reached the World Cup final with Argentina in July, topped the Football Supporters Federation poll, ahead of City team mate Yaya Toure, Liverpool's Raheem Sterling, Morgan Schneiderlin of Southampton and the Chelsea duo of Eden Hazard and Branislav Ivanovic.


He has scored 19 goals in all competitions already this season and 30 in his last 33 Premier League games and his unstoppable rocket from 20 meters which pulled City level at Sunderland on Wednesday left Sunderland substitute Jozy Altidore exclaiming “Oh My God!”.


Aguero has been playing like one of the gods all year and after being honoured by the FSF at its annual gala dinner in London on Monday, he said that the title race was far from over even though City trailed leader Chelsea by six points.


“We are two games behind them, six points, but there is still a long way to go.


“What is in our favour is that City know how to catch teams - we've done it in the past and can do it again.”


Aguero himself is hitting top form with a phenomenal run in recent weeks starting at the end of October when he scored all four in City's 4-1 win over Tottenham Hotspur.


He followed that with two against Queens Park Rangers in a 2-2 draw and a match-winning hat-trick in City's 3-2 win over Bayern Munich in the Champions League last week.


His two goals in City's 4-1 win at Sunderland on Wednesday rook his tally to 11 goals in his last nine league games.


City coach Manuel Pellegrini said after the Sunderland victory: “At this moment, it is difficult for defences to stop him. He is playing a very high performance but there are so many years left for him to strengthen.


“Even before he started scoring in these games in a row, I thought he was in the top five players in the world. I am very happy for him.”


A candidate for the Fifa World XI and the FIFpro World XI, Aguero is also the front-runner for the English Footballer of the Year award at the end of this season. – Reuters






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Mashaba does not fear ‘group of death’

Bafana Bafana were drawn with three tough teams for the African Cup of Nations 2015: Ghana, Senegal and Algeria.


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This is what Bafana Bafana did not want – the proverbial group of death. Last night, in the draw for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) held in Malabo, the capital of host country Equatorial Guinea, South Africa were drawn with three tough teams in Ghana, Senegal and Algeria.


Algeria are the top-ranked African country, Senegal are fourth, Ghana are fifth, with South Africa at 11th.


Bafana are certainly in for a real challenge when the competition kicks off in the west African country next year.


The tournament was initially slated to be held in Morocco, but the north African nation insisted it wanted a postponement because of fears around Ebola.


The Confederation of African Football (CAF), the governing body of the sport on the continent, was adamant that Afcon 2015 would take place from January 17 to February 8 next year.


It asked for other countries to step in and Equatorial Guinea put its hand up.


In attendance last night was Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba, who also assisted with the draw process. And, as South Africa’s name was drawn in Group C, Mashaba must have cringed at the thought of the quality and talent his emerging team would have to face.


Nevertheless, Bafana will, no doubt, still feel confident going into the tournament, especially after a superb qualifying campaign. Mashaba’s side went through the qualifiers unbeaten and were largely responsible for dumping current African champions Nigeria out of the 2015 event.


The team is nicely settled now, with new captain Dean Furman and Andile Jali growing in stature with every game. The defence, too, has impressed, with Bafana conceding just three goals during qualifying.


Players like Kaizer Chiefs centre-back pair Erick Mathoho and Tefu Mashamaite, Ajax Cape Town teenager Rivaldo Coetzee, Thulani Hlatshwayo, Sibusiso Khumalo and Thabo Matlaba ensure that things are kept tight. As such, goalkeeper Darren Keet, from Bothasig in the Mother City, is able to take up his position on the goal-line with a sense of security.


There’s no denying the difficulty of the task ahead for Bafana. The opposition awaiting them in Equatorial Guinea are giants of the continent. But if Mashaba – and South Africa – want to be mentioned among the best on the continent once more, this draw gives them a chance to make a point.


The coach said after the draw that he preferred to be in a tough group, so that there would be no complacency.


“Algeria are very tough, very tactical, and quick going forward. They will be a problem team to beat. Senegal are physical, very strong, and have a couple of players playing abroad.


“We are more or less on the same level as Ghana,” he added.– Cape Argus






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Players ‘relieved’ to see VV go

Matshelane Mamabolo says that Vladimir Vermezovic was never the right man for the Orlando Pirates coaching job.


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Granted he won them the Nedbank Cup last season, but Vladimir Vermezovic was never the right man for the Orlando Pirates coaching job.


And his resignation yesterday would not have come as a surprise for the discerning soccer follower.


The Serbian handed in his resignation following Tuesday night’s 2-1 home defeat by Steve Komphela’s Maritzburg United after which disgruntled Buccaneers fans pelted him with an assortment of missiles while chanting “VV must go”.


And with good reason too, the former Kaizer Chiefs coach having failed to take Pirates to the next level after Roger de Sa had turned them into a slick machine that contested cup finals locally and on the continent.


When Pirates won the country’s own version of the FA Cup at the end of last season, it was generally agreed that the victory was more down to the players’ desire to collect some silverware after three failed attempts rather than the coach’s inspirational leadership.


Club chairman Irvin Khoza said in a statement that assistant coach Eric Tinkler will be in charge for the remainder of the season. Tinkler, who had also fulfilled the same role when De Sa left, gets the hardest start to his reign with Saturday’s Soweto derby against league pace-setters Kaizer Chiefs at the FNB Stadium.


A Pirates insider said yesterday that VV was just not managing to get through to the players.


“The players will probably be the most relieved that he is gone,” the insider said. “It just wasn’t working hey. The players didn’t want him because he had a very strange mentality that they didn’t get.”


One of those that apparently didn’t get along with the coach was fullback Thabo Matlaba who VV incredibly dropped for his first derby.


It was a shocking decision at the time, the Serb instead preferring to use Ayanda Gcaba and his decision back-firing badly as the defender had a nightmare of a match in the 1-0 defeat to Amakhosi.


What was more shocking though was the initial decision by Khoza to bring back Vermezovic to the country following his spell with Chiefs.


Though he brought trophies (the Telkom Knockout and the Nedbank Cup) to the Amakhosi cabinet, VV never really endeared himself to the club’s fans who generally questioned his selection policy.


And when he left Chiefs to return home to Serbia where he joined his former club Partizan, there was more rejoicing than disappointment at Naturena.


But Khoza brought him back and despite suffering a defeat in his first match which happened to be the derby, Vermezovic presided over the Nedbank triumph that saw the Buccaneers end the season on a high note.


The pre-season Carling Black Label triumph, a competition he had mocked as a joke when he was at Chiefs, saw him add another silverware to the cabinet.


But it was then downhill from there on, Pirates failing to win any of their first three matches and losing to Chiefs in the MTN8 final. What got to most Pirates fans was his continued tinkering with the team, VV looking like a coach who didn’t know how to set up his team.


He changed the team again on Tuesday night with Komphela saying after his team’s win that he felt for the Serb: “If he had won it would have been ‘well done coach for making the changes ahead of the Derby’. It’s different now with the loss.” - The Star






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Igesund looking towards next season

Gordon Igesund says it may already be time for SuperSport United to give up on this season’s Premiership race and look ahead to next season.


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Pretoria – Gordon Igesund says it may already be time for SuperSport United to give up on this season’s Premiership race and look ahead to next season.


SuperSport fell 18 points behind log-leading Kaizer Chiefs after a 3-1 defeat to city rivals Mamelodi Sundowns in Atteridgeville on Wednesday.


“We’re never out of the running but I’m a realistic person,” Igesund said afterwards.


“I’ve been in the game a long time and when a team like Kaizer Chiefs gets 13 or 14 points in front of you, it’s not going to be easy for anybody to catch them.”


With 18 games left to salvage a positive season for the Pretoria outfit, catching Amakhosi looks unlikely.


The defeat left SuperSport struggling in 11th spot after SuperSport surged into the lead through Dové Womé, on-loan from Sundowns, in the 17th minute.


But Khama Billiat cancelled out the opener 15 minutes later with his first of the season, before Themba Zwane added a second on the stroke of half-time.


Things went from bad to worse for Igesund’s outfit when Thuso Phala, Matsatsantsa’s hero in Saturday’s Telkom Knockout final win over Platinum Stars, was sent off for a trailing elbow on Billiat.


Sundowns capitalised and soon found the back of the net for a third time as Teko Modise wrapped up the points with his stunning shot outside the area, which handed Sundowns their first win in five league outings.


“I was disappointed with the red card that Thuso got. He ran nearly 25 metres with a guy on his back. When he tried to shake him off and try to get away from it, the referee sends him off,” Igesund said.


“I’m never one to complain about those situations but I’m just hoping the referee can look at this and maybe he can say that he made a mistake.”


The former national coach was dealt a further blow when Wome picked up his fourth yellow card of the season, ruling him and Phala out of the next game, against Ajax Cape Town, over the weekend.


Igesund, however, chose to look on the bright side.


“Both of those players have been in fantastic form. Wome pulled a hamstring but he picked up his fourth yellow card so he’ll be suspended anyway. Maybe that’s a blessing for us, it will give him a bit of a rest.


“The rest will do Thuso good as well because, after the cup final, he looked a bit flat. He’s the type of player that works hard in a game.”


Igesund said he would use the remainder of the 2014/15 season to groom the youngsters in the club.


“We’ve won the cup and we will obviously try and finish in the top eight and as high as we can, but I want to use this period between now and the end of the season just to start grooming some players in the right areas, see what we need and take it from there.” – Sapa






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Iniesta boost for Barca

Barcelona have been boosted by the successful return from injury of talismanic playmaker Andres Iniesta as they prepare to host city rivals Espanyol.


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Madrid - Barcelona have been boosted by the successful return from injury of talismanic playmaker Andres Iniesta as they prepare to host city rivals Espanyol in La Liga.


Iniesta played for the first time since damaging a calf muscle at the end of October in Wednesday's 4-0 King's Cup last-32, first leg victory at third-tier Huesca.


The Spain international, captaining the side in the absence of most of Barca's rested regulars, bossed the game and scored a splendid goal reminiscent of his dramatic effort at Chelsea in 2009 that sent Barca through to the Champions League final.


The ball was played to him from the left across the top of the penalty area and his first-time shot arrowed into the top corner to make it 2-0 in the 16th minute.


“When you try a shot from outside the area sometimes it goes in,” the self-effacing Iniesta, a hero to Spain fans for his extra-time winner in the 2010 World Cup final, told reporters.


“I managed a good strike, although for me the most important thing was the overall feeling which makes me positive,” added the 30-year-old.


Iniesta can provide extra creativity in attack for second-placed Barca as they seek to keep pace with leaders Real Madrid, who are two points clear at the top after 13 matches and host Celta Vigo on Saturday.


A win for Carlo Ancelotti's men at the Bernabeu will extend their club-record winning streak to 18 matches.


La Liga returns to action on Saturday less than a week after a Deportivo La Coruna supporter was killed in fighting between fan groups known as “ultras” near the stadium before the club's match at champions Atletico Madrid last weekend.


Police will be on high alert for Atletico's match at Elche and Deportivo's game at home to Malaga on Saturday.


The Spanish government, soccer authorities and clubs have vowed to banish “ultras” from stadiums and their surroundings and Atletico have cut ties with their main group, the “Frente Atletico”.


David Moyes, the new coach of Real Sociedad, will be looking to maintain the Basque club's improved form since he took over last month when they play at Villarreal on Sunday. – Reuters






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Drogba still has something to offer

Jose Mourinho believes Didier Drogba's dynamic display in Chelsea's 3-0 win over Tottenham proved the Premier League leaders have the strength in depth to last the pace in the title race.


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London – Jose Mourinho believes Didier Drogba's dynamic display in Chelsea's 3-0 win over Tottenham proved the Premier League leaders have the strength in depth to last the pace in the title race.


Mourinho's side maintained their six-point lead at the top of the table thanks to a throwback performance from Ivory Coast striker Drogba, who scored his fifth goal of the season at Stamford Bridge on Wednesday to make the absence of suspended leading scorer Diego Costa a mere footnote.


Drogba, 36, showed there is still plenty of life in his ageing legs by laying on Eden Hazard's 19th minute opener, then netting with a clinical finish in the 23rd minute before substitute Loic Remy's fine finish in the 73rd minute sealed Chelsea's seventh successive home win.


Even Mourinho, who brought Drogba to west London from Marseille for his first spell with the club in 2004, was moved to single out the Blues legend for special praise after a performance which showed Chelsea should have enough firepower in reserve if the injury-prone Costa falters.


“Yes, it is remarkable. Didier is a team player, one of these with an old school mentality. Not selfish, not vain, a humble guy who plays for the team, fights for the team. Fantastic,” Mourinho said.


“When he is on the bench and comes on for the last few minutes to help the team defend, he does that with the same enthusiasm as when he starts a game against Tottenham.


“We played against him when he was at Galatasaray last season so I could feel the kind of potential he still has and I was expecting exactly this, with not even a doubt about a player who is not playing every game. I knew he would adapt very well mentally to his role.”


Thanks to Drogba's inspirational efforts, Chelsea have equalled a club record, set previously in 2007 and again in 2009, by extending their unbeaten run to 23 matches in all competitions Ä


21 this term and two games at the end of last season.


They have also matched the club's record unbeaten start to a league season of 14 games without defeat set in the second tier in 1925-26.


Mourinho puts his team's scintillating form down to their refusal to look for excuses when they are hit by bad luck or injuries and suspensions.


“We need him (Costa) but we have the right mentality. If we don't have a player we don't cry about it,” Mourinho said.


“(Nemanja) Matic is suspended for the Newcastle game on Saturday? No problem. Did you remember Diego Costa today? I didn't.


“We give confidence to the players and they respond in the best way.


“We were able to face a difficult moment against Tottenham, be stable, score the goals and then manage the game.”


After winning their previous three matches, this was a reality check for Tottenham and their boss Mauricio Pochettino acknowledged his side had paid the price for failing to turn their early pressure into goals.


Harry Kane twice went close, firing narrowly wide and then hitting the bar with a header, but Tottenham crumbled at the back to leave them without a win at Stamford Bridge in 28 matches since 1990.


“We started very well and made some chances, but they scored with their first chance and the game changed. That is the difference,” Pochettino said.


“I'm very disappointed with the result because 3-0 is harsh but we can take some positives. We were very brave at the start.


“If we scored when Kane hit the bar then the game changes, but we were playing a very good team.


“Our history here is difficult but we came here with the idea to take three points.


“That was our intention in the beginning, but in football it's hard to manage the luck.” – Sapa-AFP






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Wenger lauds ‘fast-adapting’ Sanchez

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger hailed the speed of Alexis Sanchez's adaptation to the Premier League after the Chilean forward's last-gasp winning goal sank top-four rivals Southampton.


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London – Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger hailed the speed of Alexis Sanchez's adaptation to the Premier League after the Chilean forward's last-gasp winning goal sank top-four rivals Southampton.


Sanchez, a £30 million ($47.1 million, 38.2 million euros) signing from Barcelona, netted his 14th goal of the season in the 89th minute of Wednesday's game to earn Arsenal a 1-0 win that sent them to within two points of the Champions League spots.


Southampton's England international goalkeeper Fraser Forster produced a string of fine saves at the Emirates Stadium, but he could not stop Sanchez's close-range finish from Aaron Ramsey's cross.


Sanchez, who has been the talisman for Arsenal in the opening four months of the campaign, received the accolades of his manager after his strike lifted the north London club into sixth place.


“He was one of the players who had to dig deep today (Wednesday), but he has such a desire to fight that he always finds something special to get the goal,” Wenger said.


“It's difficult to find examples of people who have settled in so quickly. My memory is not perfect, but I can't think of a quicker one.


“We're in December and he arrived in July. When you look at the number of goals and the impact he has had in the team, it is fabulous.”


Wenger was on the receiving end of boos from Arsenal fans when he replaced Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain with Olivier Giroud in the 65th minute.


But the relief at Sanchez's last-gasp strike was palpable as Arsenal maintained the momentum sparked by victory over Borussia Dortmund in Europe and nurtured by a gritty away success at West Bromwich Albion.


Wenger added: “For us it was important to win because we lost our last home game (to Manchester United). We had the right attitude, a good solidarity and focus, and it's a good basis.


“But you could see that the confidence within the crowd was a bit nervous. At times, it transmitted to the players.


“We did not have our usual fluency in the game, but it's important that you can win a game when that is not perfect.”


Southampton remain in third place despite back-to-back losses, having gone down 3-0 at home to Manchester City on Sunday.


But Wenger tipped the south-coast club to recover from their blip and be in the hunt for a top-four finish come the end of the season.


“There is a long way to go, but I think they are top-four contenders,” said the Frenchman.


Southampton finished with 10 players as defender Toby Alderweireld limped off with a hamstring injury after visiting coach Ronald Koeman had already made all three of his substitutions.


The St Mary's outfit have a growing injury list ahead of the visit of Manchester United next Monday.


“Maybe if he had a kick on his ankle then he could play on for the last five minutes, but it's a hamstring problem. You can't continue as a player,” said Koeman of Alderweireld's abrupt exit.


“We have to wait on Morgan (Schneiderlin). It is the same injury as when he came back from international duty. I don't think he will be fit for next Monday. Maybe the weekend after.


“Jack (Cork) has told me it is the same ankle as last season. We have to wait on Toby, but a hamstring is always a minimum of two weeks. If it's a real hamstring injury then it is longer.


“(Dusan) Tadic was a little bit injured, a little bit tired because we play a lot. But I can't change that. It's football.” – Sapa-AFP






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News sport : Monta Ellis hits absurd buzzer-beater to lift Mavs over Bucks

Dec 3, 2014; Milwaukee, WI, USA; Dallas Mavericks guard Monta Ellis (11) drives for a layup during the second quarter against the Milwaukee Bucks at BMO Harris Bradley Center. (Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports) Monta Ellis has rehabilitated his reputation since joining the Dallas Mavericks in the summer of 2013. A player previously known as a volume shooter with few contributions in other areas has benefited greatly from being surrounded by other quality scorers and now looks like a dangerous, acceptably efficient guard for the best offense in the NBA. Ellis is a lot more valuable now that no one considers him a first option.


For the most part, though, Monta is the same player who frustrated many observers, particularly when it comes to taking and making bizarre shots made possible only by elite body control. One of his best and most successful examples of such a play came in the final seconds of Wednesday night's game between the Mavs and host Milwaukee Bucks.


With 8.9 seconds on the clock and the score tied at 105-105, Ellis took the inbounds pass and prepared to take the defending O.J. Mayo one-on-one. Mayo did very well and forced Ellis into two help defenders, which presumably would have caused the ballhandler to force a shot or pass to another player who would have very little time to beat the clock. Instead, Ellis spun to his left, took two steps in the same direction, and faded away for a 10.0-degree-of-difficulty shot over Mayo:





The stunning finish was upheld after video review and the Mavs left town with a 107-105 win. It initially looked like Ellis might have traveled, but his movement was legal — it was just a very odd interpretation of the rules. A running fadeaway out of a spin move just isn't a shot many players will consider, let alone choose to take. It's an incredible play regardless of its impact on the game.


It also marked the second night in a row in which Monta had helped Dallas to a win with some late-game ingenuity. Ellis forced a very foolish foul from Kirk Hinrich in the final seconds of regulation on Tuesday night vs. the Bulls and then hit three free throws to send the game to overtime, where the Mavericks eventually won.


On the other hand, Ellis wasn't especially efficient in either game outside of those two huge moments. With 21 points on 11-of-26 shooting vs. the Bucks, Monta has now scored 61 points on 61 field goal attempts in his last two games. I imagine Dallas will take it.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Sixers finally win, avoid record for season-opening losses at Wolves

Dec 3, 2014; Minneapolis, MN, USA; Philadelphia 76ers guard Michael Carter-Williams (1) passes during the first quarter against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Target Center. (Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports) The 2013-14 Philadelphia 76ers were never built to win many games, but the reality of the situation has been much worse than anyone anticipated. Heading into Wednesday night's game at the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Sixers had lost their first 17 contests of the season by an average margin of 14.4 points. They also boasted the league's least efficient offense and one of its worst defenses. A loss vs. Minnesota would put Philadelphia into a tie with the 2009-10 New Jersey Nets for the most consecutive losses to start a season, with Friday's game against the Oklahoma City Thunder looming as a likely record-breaker.


The franchise can now rest easy, because the Sixers topped the Wolves 85-77 in a close, largely unwatchable game at Target Center. At 1-17, Philadelphia is still the worst team in the NBA by 1 1/2 games (behind the Detroit Pistons), but they can at least imagine a brighter future.


Then again, this welcomed result does not indicate that the Sixers played especially well. Both teams struggled to score throughout the game, in keeping with their performances for much of the season so far. The Wolves, playing without the injured Ricky Rubio and Nikola Pekovic, trotted out an active roster not considerably better than that of the Sixers, albeit one with slightly more established NBA rotation players.


Both teams shot below 40 percent from the field (39 percent for Philly, 35.7 percent for Minnesota) and 25 percent from three-point range (5-of-24 for Philly, 3-of-17 for Minnesota). The score at the half was just 34-32 in favor of the Wolves, with the Sixers following up a 23-point first quarter with just nine points in the second.


The best proof of the general quality of the game might have come on its first attempt at an opening possession. After the Sixers won the tip-off, Henry Sims drew a foul and got set to head to the line. Except referees then realized that the teams had started going towards the wrong baskets, and the whole game had to be restarted again. Take a look:



Yes, the first 16 seconds of the game were simply stricken from the record. If only the Sixers could have done the same to their first 17 games.


However, if we're going to put this win into any mitigating context, then we must also admit that the Sixers made enough plays in crunch time to come away with the win. After Mo Williams gave the Wolves a 75-73 lead with 2:16 remaining, it looked as if Philadelphia was headed for another disappointment. But point guard Michael Carter-Williams ran the offense well and took advantage of the Wolves' sieve-like defense to close on a 12-2 run.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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