News sport : Barry Alvarez will reportedly coach Wisconsin in Outback Bowl

Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez speaks during a press conference in the UW Field House media room near Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2014. Head football coach Gary Andersen announced Wednesday he was leaving to become the coach at Oregon State. (AP Photo/Wisconsin State Journal, M.P. King) A day after Gary Andersen’s surprising departure from Wisconsin to Oregon State, Badgers athletic director Barry Alvarez was left to wonder who would coach the team in the Outback Bowl.


On Thursday he found the answer: himself.


Sound familiar?


Alvarez, the Badgers’ coach from 1990-2005, manned the sideline for the 2012 Rose Bowl (which UW lost 20-14 to Stanford) after Bret Bielema accepted Arkansas’ head coaching position. Under similar circumstances, the 67-year-old Alvarez will do it again when UW takes on Auburn on New Year’s Day in Tampa, Fla., according to ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit.



Alvarez, who also is a member of the College Football Playoff selection committee, took over as University athletic director while still assuming the head coaching position in 2004. He stepped aside after the 2005 season (culminating with a win over Auburn in the Capital One Bowl) and promoted Bielema, his defensive coordinator.


When Bielema left, Alvarez hired Andersen away from Utah State prior to the 2013 season. In two seasons at the helm, Andersen led the Badgers to a 19-7 record, but dropped the Big Ten title game 59-0 to Ohio State on Saturday.


Alvarez said Tuesday that he was “very surprised” by Andersen’s sudden departure. He also revealed that the team’s seniors asked him to coach the game against Auburn. Now, it appears that he will honor their wishes.


For more Wisconsin news, visit BadgerBlitz.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Nick Young to the tank-happy Magic Johnson: 'Chill out for a minute'

By now, it’s been proven that Magic Johnson is just about as duplicitous as it gets when it comes to his on-record opinion about the Los Angeles Lakers. Johnson rode former Lakers coach Mike D’Antoni for years without showing a scintilla of class, chiming on TV and on Twitter any time the lottery-bound Lakers took another step backward in the won/loss column.


This year’s Laker model, with Magic’s friend and former teammate Byron Scott at the helm, is far worse than D’Antoni’s lacking teams. Johnson, however, seems to have no problem with as much. You’ll recall:



''I hope the Lakers lose every game,'' the former Lakers point guard said. ''Because if you're going to lose, lose. And I'm serious. If you're going to lose, you've got to lose, because you can't be in the middle of the pack. You either have to be great, or you've got to be bad to get a good pick.''



At Laker practice on Wednesday, however, and in the wake of the team’s sixth win in 22 tries against the Sacramento Kings, the Lakers wanted nothing to do with Magic’s take on tanking. Here’s Nick Young, from the Los Angeles Times:



"It's too early to do that right now. I'm going to have to tell Magic to stay at Dodger Stadium for a while," Young said. "He's going to bring that smile around here. I'll do all the smiling right now.




"I'm [probably] telling Magic, 'You've got to stick with us.' Magic always has some bold comments. I remember last year he said some crazy things. I'd just tell him, 'Chill out for a minute' or I'd have to knock him out once or twice."




Robert Sacre exclaimed in the locker room "Less lottery balls!" and added that "no one wants to hear" talk about tanking.



OK, then.


Kobe Bryant took a more measured approach in his response, pointing out that Johnson’s history as an owner and executive would encourage him to take more of a long term-leaning take on things. That would be a sensible response had Johnson not whined and moaned about Mike D’Antoni and Laker losses at every given opportunity last season – with the Lakers owning an eventual lottery pick and Kobe Bryant out for the season with a broken leg, and nothing to gain by winning.


Players, of course, want to win. They sure wouldn’t mind eventually playing with the NBA’s Next Great Star, and sometimes the way to get that star is to blow an entire season off and grab a high draft pick, but competitors still have to wade their way through nearly six months of games before they can have a chance in the lottery. Michael Carter-Williams recently pointed out as much in the hours before his notorious Philadelphia 76ers lost by 53 points, and it makes complete and total that the Laker players would dismiss even a Laker legend like Magic Johnson.


It also makes complete and total sense as to why Magic Johnson is acting like a complete and total hypocrite, here.


Even with Kobe Bryant healthy and leading the NBA in scoring, the Lakers are far worse this season under Byron Scott’s guidance. For all the hand-wringing about Mike D’Antoni’s supposed indifference to team defense, Scott’s Lakers are defending at a historically-poor rate, a clear carryover from Scott’s time in Cleveland, when he also ran a historically-low defensive squad (three bottom-four defensive ratings in consecutive years).


The Lakers do have further incentive to lose this season, because unlike last year the team’s draft pick goes to Phoenix if it falls out of the top five, and losing more often ensures better lottery chances. Still, the idea that terrible defense and heaps of losses are just fine with Magic because his buddy Byron Scott is in charge is sickening. D’Antoni did not do a good job in Los Angeles, but at least he can say that his team’s defended better and won more often.


This is where Magic is at now, sadly. Even Nick Young is making more sense than 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 : Man who climbed fence at Richmond race sentenced to jail time

The man who caused a caution flag during the September race at Richmond by climbing onto the catchfence in turn four was sentenced to a year in jail on Thursday.


From NBC 12:



A judge found James Dennis guilty on Thursday of being drunk in public and disorderly conduct and sentenced him to a year in jail with all but one month suspended. He was also ordered to pay a $100 fine on each of the counts.



Dennis, 53, was shirtless and climbed up on the fence, apparently avoiding all track security in the process. NASCAR was forced to put out the yellow flag and Dennis was apprehended when he climbed down from the fence.



"It was one of those crazy spur of the moment things I should have never did and more or less ashamed of myself for doing," Dennis had said in September.


According to NBC 12, Dennis said after he was arrested that he was trying to get a picture of Kevin Harvick, his favorite driver. Maybe it's of small consolation to him that Harvick won the 2014 championship, though we imagine there aren't too many people who would trade a year of jail time for a title for their favorite driver.


And while his move was one of the most memorable events of the 2014 season, it's because it was incredibly insane and unsafe. Hopefully the sentence serves as a nice deterrent for anyone crazy (and liquid-couraged) enough to repeat what Dennis did.


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Nick Bromberg is the editor of From The Marbles on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Reports: Tulsa hires Baylor offensive coordinator Philip Montgomery

Oct 31, 2014; Memphis, TN, USA; Tulsa Golden Hurricane player on the sideline during the game against the Memphis Tigers at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. Memphis Tigers beat Tulsa Golden Hurricane 40 - 20. (Justin Ford-USA TODAY Sports) It appears that Tulsa has its man.


According to InsideTulsaSports.com, Football Scoop and Fox Sports, Baylor offensive coordinator Philip Montgomery is expected to be named the new Tulsa head coach.


Montgomery comes to Tulsa after calling the plays for Baylor’s high-powered offense that has led the country in scoring for the last season seasons, including putting up an average of 48.8 points for the 11-1 Bears this season. His offense also led the nation in yards per game at 581.3.


Montgomery has been on Art Briles’ staff at Baylor for the past seven seasons and also coached with Briles at Houston.


Prior to joining Briles’ staff at Houston, Montgomery was an offensive coach at Stephenville High School and Denton High School in Texas.


The move comes 10 days after Bill Blankenship was fired after four seasons leading the program and finishing the 2014 season at 2-10. Blankenship went 24-27 overall as Tulsa’s head coach.


Arizona State offensive coordinator Mike Norvell was also heavily considered for the position but ultimately removed himself from consideration for the role.



Tulsa has not yet confirmed the hire.


For more Tulsa news, visit InsideTulsaSports.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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Sundowns struggling to keep up

Mamelodi Sundowns coach Pitso Mosimane conceded that keeping up with the pace in the title race was proving a difficult task.


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Johannesburg – With defending Premiership champions Mamelodi Sundowns failing to gain traction this season, coach Pitso Mosimane conceded that keeping up with the pace in the title race was proving a difficult task.


“At the top it is not easy, you need a string of wins and once you don’t get a run of wins then you are not that convincing. Four or five games in a row helps a lot because you get into the habit,” Mosimane said.


Sundowns shared the spoils with Orlando Pirates in a 1-1 draw at the Orlando Stadium on Wednesday evening.


Log leaders Kaizer Chiefs enjoy a substantial lead at the top of the league with 37 points – some distance away from Wits in second with 26 points and the Brazilians on 24 points in third.


Sundowns were unable to get revenge on the side that embarrassed them in a 3-0 demolition in their first match earlier in the season.


The Chloorkop outfit made a positive start away from home with an early goal from Khama Billiat in the fifth minute. But they allowed the Buccaneers to get back into the game and equalise in the 31st minute through a Lennox Bacela strike.


Mosimane said his team's false-starts was a result of better prepared opposition in a tough league.


“Everybody starts to draw, I don't know if you are aware of that. The league is getting tougher and tougher with so many teams playing to draws.”


Sundowns entered the encounter with an attacking mind-set but failed to execute, he said.


“We came here and we went for the win. We scored first but then we conceded and allowed them to get back into the game. I knew that whoever scores first would have the advantage.”


The former Bafana Bafana coach said the title challenge would finish with far less points than he had anticipated.


“Initially I thought this league will go to 70 or 75 points but I've changed my mind now. It looks like it will be going back to 65 points.


“We are playing six games in a row with only a day-and-a-half rest and we're only training once. That is not easy.”


The match was Pirates caretaker coach Eric Tinkler's second match in charge since Vladimir Vermezovic resigned last week.


The Bafana legend said they tried to pin Sundowns back in their own half in order to put pressure on their defence.


“After looking at Sundowns and how they play, they are a team that likes to build up from the back.


“They are a team that always tries to commit players forward. We felt if we play high pressure on them, we could actually make it difficult for them hence we opted to go with two strikers.”


Pirates were out to bounce back to winning ways after they were convincingly beaten 2-0 by arch-rivals Chiefs in the Soweto derby last weekend.


Tinkler said they were likely to deploy a tactic of two strikers after utilising a lone-man upfront for most of the season.


“It's something that we were thinking about for quite a while now. There have been games where we have, in the past, played with two strikers particularly Lennox and Kermit Erasmus.


“Lennox worked particularly hard after not getting much game time in the past, hopefully his legs will recover quickly in time for our next game on Saturday.”


Pirates face Ajax while Sundowns take on the University of Pretoria at the Tuks Stadium, also on Saturday. – Sapa






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News sport : Thursday Fantasy Fliers, Week 15: Kerwynn Williams and Jared Cook

Please remember, friends, that the players we discuss in this feature are FLIERS. Hail Marys. Emergency options for desperate owners. No one is claiming these guys are must-add, must-start fantasy assets. They don't get the green light in 8 and 10-team leagues. Here, we try to assist deep league managers with dire needs.


For fantasy purposes, Thursday's game between the Cardinals and Rams could be a deep well of sadness. It certainly doesn't have a shootout vibe.


[Join FanDuel.com's $2M Week 15 fantasy league: $25 to enter; top 17,475 teams paid]


Arizona has allowed just 18.3 points per game on the season, the third lowest number in the league. St. Louis stopped giving up points two weeks ago, pitching back-to-back shutouts against Oakland and Washington (winning by a combined score of 76-0). These defenses have each forced 23 takeaways on the year, tied for seventh-most in the NFL. The Cards rank sixth at defending the run, the Rams tenth. Both Ds have had success hunting quarterbacks, combining for 66 sacks on the season (31 for Arizona, 35 for the Rams).


Basically, the fantasy community can expect a long, ugly night. It seems unwise to bet big on the first game of Week 15. Tre Mason remains on the approved list — he's near the bottom, but he makes the list — and so are both of tonight's D/STs. But that's pretty much it.


For those of you who play in XXL-sized leagues, these two characters are in the discussion as well...


RB Kerwynn Williams, Ari (18 percent owned, 3 percent started)


So the past week has treated Williams fairly well, at least professionally. He was elevated from the Cards' practice squad on Friday, then surprisingly handled the bulk of the backfield touches against the Chiefs on Sunday. Williams finished with 19 carries for an even 100 yards versus KC, which of course landed him squarely in the fantasy pickup conversation. He's a small, quick-cutting runner (5-foot-8) who delivered huge stats back in 2012 at Utah State (2209 scrimmage yards, 20 TDs, 6.9 YPC, 45 REC), then held his own at the combine (4.48 speed, good shuttle). You can check the collegiate highlights right here .


Williams made stops with Indy and San Diego before finding his way to Arizona's roster; when Andre Ellington checked out, Kerwynn stepped up. He'd apparently been a terror on the scout team for Arizona...


“He had been making our defense look like fools,” linebacker Sam Acho said.

...which led to last week's opportunity. Officially, Stepfan Taylor remains the starter in the Cards backfield, but, as you've surely learned by now, starting status isn't necessarily a huge deal. Williams shouldn't lack for touches on Thursday. Again, the problem is the opponent. The Rams defense has only allowed 256 total rushing yards to running backs over the team's last five games (3.4 YPC); Ellington ran for just 23 yards on 18 carries against St. Louis back in Week 10.


Bottom line: For me, Williams ranks as only a fringe flex option in Week 15, a desperation play for fantasy owners. Ideally, in the playoff semis you have more reliable options with friendlier matchups. But if you're playing in the sort of league in which every team's lead back is owned, then someone needs to scoop up Kerwynn. I've added him in two leagues (of many), but can't say I'm starting him myself.


[Week 15 rankings: Quarterback | Running Back | Receiver | Tight End | Kicker | DST]


TE Jared Cook, STL (30 percent owned, 13 percent started)


Look, I'm probably the wrong guru to give you a hard-sell on Jared Cook. He's never been one of my pet players. He's a sketchy play in the best of matchups, always a threat to give you two catches for 19 yards. But we also have to acknowledge that Cook, for whatever reason, always seems to do his best work in December (splits here). He delivered a pair of scores against Washington on Sunday, and he's about to face a defense that's been remarkably generous to opposing tight ends.


The Cards have allowed the most receiving yards to the tight end position this season (875), and the same was true last year (1156 yards, 16 TDs). Cook himself delivered 84 yards and a touchdown against Arizona a few weeks back, and he had 190 yards and two scores against the Cards last season. If you've been playing the wire at TE all season, he's clearly worth a look this week. I'm actually starting him somewhere, which almost never happens.






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News sport : N.C. State QB Jacoby Brissett writes letters to each of his offensive teammates

Nov 29, 2014; Chapel Hill, NC, USA; North Carolina State Wolfpack quarterback Jacoby Brissett (12) throws a pass during the first half against the North Carolina Tar Heels at Kenan Memorial Stadium Mandatory Credit: Rob Kinnan-USA Today Before his first season as starting quarterback began, N.C. State’s Jacoby Brissett found a fun and unique way to strengthen his connection with his teammates.


He doesn’t remember where the idea stemmed from, but he took it upon himself as a team leader to write and hand-deliver letters of encouragement to each of his offensive teammates.


“It just stuck with me,” Brissett told ESPN.com. “A lot of them keep the letters. I know one week I didn’t write letters because I talked to the whole offense together and everybody was curious why they didn’t get a letter. It’s funny to see they actually pay attention to it.”


Since then, Brissett hasn’t missed a week with his letters as he led the Wolfpack to a 7-5 record and a berth in the Bitcoin St. Petersburg Bowl against UCF.


The gesture sticks out to his teammates.


“For me and my roommate, it touched us both and showed us how serious he was about the games and it showed he had faith in us,” said senior wide receiver Bryan Underwood. “It was good to see he was taking another step in leadership toward the team.”


Brissett says the letters are all about showing appreciation for the work his teammates put in and being a shoulder to lean on, but it’s not always so serious.


“It’s a matter of saying I appreciate what you’ve done so far,” Brissett said. “Or if someone is going through a rough time, it’s a chance to say I’m here for you if you need me. Sometimes, you’ve got to joke with some of them. With the offensive linemen, you have to joke with them because they’re never serious, anyway.”


Brissett, a junior who transferred from Florida, threw for 2,344 yards, 22 touchdowns and five interceptions while running for 498 yards and three more touchdowns in his second season with the program. The Wolfpack won three of four games to end the regular season and Brissett – a 6-foot-4, 231-pound dual-threat – capped off the season with a four-touchdown effort in a 35-7 win over rival North Carolina.


Brissett knows there is more work to be done moving forward to get better.


“I hold myself to a higher standard and every game, I want to make the right read, the right throw and as much as everybody says you can’t be perfect, why not? That’s always my thought process going into a game.”


For more North Carolina State news, visit TheWolfPacker.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : What's his deal? Check out Pete Carroll's impassioned defense of Jim Harbaugh


The perception of Pete Carroll and Jim Harbaugh is that they don't like each other much, as rival NFC West coaches, and that might be true.


But after the Seattle Seahawks coach went out of his way to praise Harbaugh, who appears to be on the way out with the San Francisco 49ers, you get the sense that they like having each other as competitive foils. Or at least Carroll likes having Harbaugh around to compete with. With Harbaugh possibly entering his final few games as 49ers coach, as new rumors about his future sprout up every day, Carroll defended his coaching rival to the hilt.


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Heck, he even called Harbaugh a "stud," according to CSN Bay Area.



“The fact that he’s going through all those conversations and stuff, he’s a stud,” Carroll said, referring to Harbaugh having to discuss his future. “He’s not going to waver. He’s going to keep battling and do what he does. He’s a great competitor. He always has been. That’s why they’re so dangerous coming in right now because of his leadership and his toughness about the way he runs his program.




“And the fact that all these conversations are going on, that’s just something I have nothing to do with. It has nothing to do with the kind of football coach he is and the style of play they generate and the way they bring it. I have tremendous respect for him.”



Carroll and Harbaugh battled when the former was at USC and the latter was at Stanford, and Carroll famously confronted Harbaugh after Stanford went for a needless 2-point conversion late in a win and asked, "What's your deal?"



The two continued that to the NFL, where each ended up the head coach in a heated 49ers-Seahawks rivalry. The 49ers and Seahawks play again this Sunday, and perhaps for the last time with Carroll and Harbaugh on opposite sidelines, because just about everyone expects the 49ers and Harbaugh to end their sometimes tumultuous relationship after this season.


While the public perception is that the coaches don't like each other any more than the Seahawks and 49ers don't like each other (and to be fair, the coaches haven't exactly discouraged that story line), you won't see a coach talk this highly about a rival coach, especially one he supposedly dislikes.



“I’ve never seen him not be a really good coach," Carroll said. "He’s a fantastic football coach. I’ve watched him do all the stuff he did at Stanford to turn that program around (and) what he did with the Niners. I know he’s a great football coach."



And if Harbaugh's personality will eventually be the reason he gets traded to another team or just released from his contract or whatever will happen this offseason, Carroll thinks that's wrong.



“Not everybody likes everybody or gets along with everybody," Carroll said, according to CSN Bay Area. "Sometimes they don’t see the magic that guys have. I think he’s a fantastic football coach. He’s proven that. There’s no question about that.”



Perception isn't always reality, and even if these two aren't the best of friends, there seems to be a lot of respect between them. Too bad that personal rivalry seems to be close to an end.


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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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‘Big Sam’ not getting carried away

West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce is not dreaming of qualifying for the Champions League just yet.


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London - West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce is not dreaming of qualifying for the Champions League just yet but that could change in January if his side continue their flying start to the Premier League season.


Fourth-placed West Ham, who have 27 points from 15 games, have surpassed expectations with a string of fine attacking displays and they will be hoping to record their fourth straight win when they travel to Sunderland on Saturday.


“If we're still here towards the end of January then we'll reassess our aims,” Allardyce told a news conference on Thursday.


“By that point we'll have played 20 games, we'll have played everybody once so we should have a good indicator of where we are.


“We'll see what everybody has got in their locker, everybody would've seen what we have in ours so it'll be a question of whether we can carry it on.”


England striker Andy Carroll, who missed the start of the season with an ankle injury, struck twice against Swansea City as West Ham cruised to a 3-1 victory.


With fellow forwards Diafra Sakho and Enner Valencia making a seamless transition to the Premier League, Allardyce is delighted with his strike force.


“He's (Carroll) had a long layoff and only played a handful of games. His confidence will get better the more he plays, his goals will help that too,” Allardyce said.


“We're the third highest scorers in the League, with nine different scorers before the Swansea game. So we're getting goals from all over the team.


“With our options up front with Valencia and Sakho back as well as Carlton Cole and Mauro Zarate it is a very strong frontline that we can change if and when we need to.”


Midfielder Mark Noble is out of West Ham's trip to 14th-placed Sunderland with an Achilles injury and Allardyce expects a tough test from Gus Poyet's side despite the fact they have scored just 13 Premier League goals this season.


“They're hugely difficult at home, playing them away has been tough for us,” he said. “They've been struggling for goals recently.


“I think Connor Wickham and Steven Fletcher would've wanted a few more goals than they've got and if they had they would have converted their draws to wins.


“Hopefully, we can keep those guys quiet on Saturday and deliver another good away performance.” – Reuters






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Baxter slams ‘spineless’ Chiefs

Kaizer Chiefs coach Stuart Baxter called his side ‘spineless’ following their draw against Platinum Stars.


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‘Spineless! Embarrassing! Lacking in courage and conviction! Iffy and butty! The worst I’ve ever seen!”


Stuart Baxter is a hard man to please. On an evening when many felt his team did well to hold on to their unbeaten run with a come-from-behind 2-2 draw against Platinum Stars, the Kaizer Chiefs coach was berating his team’s showing as unworthy of being added to this collection of games.


“The first 45 minutes was probably the worst I’ve ever seen,” said the man who has presided over 75 league matches for Amakhosi. “The first half was as spineless as I’ve seen. We made a couple of mistakes in the beginning and presented them with the goal (scored by Robert Ng’ambi on eight minutes). In terms of passing and movement it was an embarrassment at times.”


So embarrassing was Amakhosi’s performance in the initial stanza that they conceded two goals for the first time in the league this season, Eleazor Rodgers putting Stars back in the lead in the 44th after Siphiwe Tshabalala had equalised.


Baxter so did not like what he saw that he considered making three changes at half-time.


“We came in at half-time and I needed to change things,” he explained after the match. “I was contemplating three changes but I thought let me give the lads who started 10 minutes and it didn’t get any better in terms of quality.”


Baxter was particularly irked by the casual manner in which Chiefs gave away possession to their opponents. “Lots of teams, when they play us, think about our attacking fullbacks and counter-attacking in behind them. But that’s not usually a tactic that works very well because we are so good with the ball. We don’t give up that many transitions. And if they do that we have a strategy.


“Now what we did tonight, we gave the ball away in so many bad positions that it put the fear of death into people. But our structure and our strategies to deal with that we were all over the place. So I had to make a change in the structure.” The structural change meant a switch to three centrebacks and a position on the outside for substitute Erick Mathoho as essentially a man-marker with Mandla Masango adding extra pace on the winger and Bernard Parker upfront.


“Tower (Mathoho) being quick I slid him across to the side to take care of the lad (Mahlatse Makudubele) that was countering us on the right. I pushed Mandla on at wingback as an extra winger and him and Shabba played there and tried to get us through.


“And we tried to get Bernard as an extra striker to deal with crosses. And I thought it worked well for 20 minutes; we raised the level of quality and we raised the intensity.”


In that time Chiefs found the equaliser via Tefu Mash-amaite’s header from a Tshabalala cross.


But then it all went pear-shaped again, leaving the Chiefs coach livid. “In the last 15 minutes it could have gone either way, it could have been 4-3 either way. But then we fell back into this. I don’t know how to say it – lack of courage, lack of conviction. It was sort of iffy and butty all the time.


“Yeah, probably a good game for the crowd but not for me. I am going to put this into the category of bad day in the office. Yes, the fact we got the point is great … we still keep trundling along. But they’re gonna have to raise their level, almost everybody.” - The Star






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United set sights on Liverpool

Manchester United would dearly love to heap more misery on Brendan Rodgers and his beleaguered Liverpool side when the bitter rivals meet at Old Trafford.


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London - Manchester United will bid for a sixth straight Premier League victory to heap more misery on Brendan Rodgers and his beleaguered Liverpool side when the bitter rivals meet at Old Trafford.


United, who finished seventh last season, continued to recover from their poor start to the campaign with a fortunate 2-1 win at high-flying Southampton on Monday that lifted them into third place for the first time since August 2013.


By contrast, last term's runners-up Liverpool are ninth and suffered an early Champions League exit with a 1-1 home draw in their final group game against FC Basel on Tuesday.


The Anfield club have struggled to recapture the form that took them to the brink of the title and, after two wins in their last six league matches - including a 0-0 home draw with Sunderland on Saturday - they have 21 points.


United striker Robin van Persie scored both goals in the victory at Southampton and three strikes in as many games have helped silence the critics following his poor early form.


The Netherlands captain said he and his team mates, who are eight points adrift of leaders Chelsea with 28 after 15 games, are finding their top form.


“The next game is Liverpool, so we're looking forward to that,” Van Persie said. “We are really happy that we are on the way up now. We have to keep the momentum going.”


Table-topping Chelsea will look to bounce back when third-bottom Hull City visit Stamford Bridge on Saturday after Jose Mourinho's side suffered their first defeat of the season in a 2-1 loss at Newcastle United last weekend.


Chelsea had already qualified for the Champions League last-16 with a game to spare before easing past Sporting Lisbon 3-1 in their final group game on Wednesday.


Second-placed Manchester City took full advantage of Chelsea's slip by moving within three points of the leaders with a battling 1-0 home win against Everton.


However, they will have to do without their top scorer Sergio Aguero, who could miss up to six weeks with a knee injury, for Saturday's trip to bottom club Leicester City.


City reached the Champions League knockout stage with a gritty 2-0 victory at AS Roma on Wednesday.


West Ham United, exceeding all expectations in fourth, visit Sunderland while Southampton, who have slipped to fifth, will look to halt a run of three straight defeats when they travel to second-bottom Burnley on Saturday. – Reuters






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Vilakazi thanks Wits for keeping faith

Wits midfielder Sibusiso Vilakazi thanked the rest of his team for sticking with him and keeping the faith after he ended his barren goal run against Ajax.


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Johannesburg – After getting his first taste of goal this season, Wits midfielder Sibusiso Vilakazi thanked the rest of his team for sticking with him and keeping the faith.


Last season’s Player of the Season scored his first goals of the campaign with a well-taken hat-trick to help Wits climb up to second in the Premiership standings thanks to a 4-2 win at home against Ajax Cape Town on Wednesday evening.


“Credit must be given to my teammates and my coach as well. He’s been pushing me when I was injured and out,” Vilakazi said afterwards.


“It was a good win for the team and I hope I can continue from this.


“I have my teammates to help me as we try to keep up with the team on top.”


Vilakazi scored his first league goal since April in the opening 45 before adding two more to seal a comfortable win for the Clever Boys, to remain in touch with runaway league-leaders Kaizer Chiefs.


Eleven points separate Chiefs and Wits, while Mamelodi Sundowns are a further two points adrift but have a game in hand, meaning the Brazilians could reclaim second spot.


For now, however, Gavin Hunt is happy to be back in the top two.


“We scored some good goals, played some good stuff,” a reserved Hunt said after the game at Bidvest Stadium.


Hunt admitted a change in tactics allowed the visitors more space, but added that he was pleased his ploy to allow Ajax more of the ball paid off.


“We tried to do what teams do to us at home. Everybody sits off us, so we thought, well we’ll sit off and we’ll try and place in the space a bit more,” he said.


“We tried to create a bit more space because we haven’t created enough when we play at home.


“I went the other way tonight, we dropped off and gave them 10 or 15 metres and played differently. I thought it was much better.


“We let them have the ball. At home we’ve been struggling because we’ve been going in and playing on the front foot. Even Chiefs last week. They hurt us three times from three counters, so we dropped off a couple of metres tonight and try and play a different way.”


Former Wits boss, Roger De Sa, meanwhile, praised his young Ajax outfit for fighting to the end, but conceded that the team made far too many basic errors.


“We shouldn't have conceded the goals we did,” De Sa said.


“We gave some of the youngsters a chance tonight and they tried their best. We had to play catch-up football but the effort was great from my kids.” – Sapa






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City’s great escape

Manchester City concluded one of the great Champions League Houdini acts as they qualified for the knockout stages after beating Roma.


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Rome - Manchester City concluded one of the great Champions League Houdini acts as they qualified for the knockout stages with goals from Samir Nasri and Pablo Zabaleta sinking Roma 2-0 to eliminate the Italians at the Stadio Olimpico.


The Frenchman's 60th-minute thunderbolt, before he laid on a second for the Argentine in the 86th minute, ensured the English champions did not suffer another frustrating early exit in Group E.


City's great escape into the last 16 seemed unthinkable when they trailed in their penultimate game at home to Bayern Munich with just five minutes remaining before Sergio Aguero completed his famous hat-trick.


Victory or a score draw offered City's most realistic chance of progressing from the group behind Bayern Munich in a fevered atmosphere in Rome and even without their injured totem Aguero, Manuel Pellegrini's men produced a performance full of resolve.


Nasri, given too much space on the edge of the box, hammered a glorious 20-metre shot which cannoned off the post and into the net, and City defended manfully before Nasri freed the rampaging Zabaleta to score his first Champions League goal.


“People wrote us off without our key players (like Aguero and Vincent Kompany) but we're a strong unit, we believed in what we could do,” City keeper Joe Hart told Sky Sports.


“You don't win two Premier League titles in three years easily. We have resolve, character and fantastic players. Add that together and you've got a chance.”


With various permutations at the start of the night leaving it possible for Roma, City or CSKA Moscow to join Bayern in the last 16, the game effectively became an Anglo-Italian shootout once news of Bayern's early lead over the Russians filtered through.


The English champions had their moments in the first half, especially when James Milner twice forced sharp saves from Morgan De Sanctis.


Hart then stepped up with some crucial stops from the moment he spread himself to block Jose Holebas's fifth minute shot from point-blank range.


As the hour mark approached, Roma seemed to be running out of ideas when the in-form Nasri celebrated his 50th appearance in the competition with a marvellous goal.


Roma, by now needing to score twice, came closest when Hart made another crucial intervention to push Kostas Manolas's header on to the post and Martin Demichelis blocked a shot on the line before Zabaleta calmed City nerves.


Roma had the minor consolation of qualifying for the Europa League, ahead of CSKA Moscow who lost 3-0 at Bayern in their final group match. – Reuters






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Vilakazi hat-trick sinks Ajax

Sibusiso Vilakazi scored a hat-trick as Wits moved up to second on the Premiership log after defeating Ajax Cape Town.


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Johannesburg – Sibusiso Vilakazi scored his first goals of the season with a well-taken hat-trick to help Wits climb to second place in the Premiership standings with a 4-2 win at home against Ajax Cape Town.


Vilakazi sent Wits into the lead with his first of the 2014/15 campaign after 11 minutes.


Thulani Hlatshwayo doubled the Clever Boys' tally minutes from the half-time whistle for a comfortable lead against an Ajax side unbeaten in their last four matches.


The Urban Warriors pulled one back courtesy of Nazeer Allie's stunner from outside the area, but Vilakazi again found himself in front of goal and duly restored Wits' two-goal cushion 20 minutes from the end.


Noah Sadaoui, in his first ever appearance for Ajax, then scored a late penalty to ensure late drama.


However, Vilakazi had the last say with his third of the evening, ending a worrying drought for the exciting attacking midfielder as the hosts walked away with three valuable points.


The win took Wits to 26 points at the halfway stage of the season, two clear of Mamelodi Sundowns, who were held to a 1-1 draw by Orlando Pirates a few kilometres down the road in Soweto.


With a fourth win in their last five Premiership fixtures, Gavin Hunt's side appear to be back in contention for a top-two finish.


They will have Sundowns, with a game in hand, breathing down their necks as the rest of the league aim to chase down runaway log-leaders Kaizer Chiefs.


Vilakazi had not scored a league goal since April and was made to wait until his 12th appearance of the season to open his account.


Vincent Pule delivered a tricky ball into the area, resulting in a mistake from Musa Lebusa, who tangled with his goalkeeper Anssi Jaakkola, allowing last season's Player of the Season to prod home the opener.


Hlatshwayo then got in on the action with a powerful header from Ben Motshwari's corner, sending Hunt's team into the half-time break in front.


Ajax came out looking for a way back into the tie and had Allie to thank as the defender waltzed his way through some ordinary defence before unleashing a thunderous effort from outside the area.


The ball nicked the underside of the bar on the way to beating Moeneeb Josephs, who was largely anonymous up to that point.


In the 71st minute he had the easiest of tap-ins to secure his second of the night after Jabu Shongwe's shot took a deflection and fell kindly for Vilikazi, who found an empty net with Jaakkola completely beaten and out of position.


Siyabonga Nhlapo's handball inside the area again brought hope to Ajax's cause as Sadaoui scored the resulting penalty, sneaking the ball under Josephs and bringing the visitors to within a goal of the leaders.


Vilakazi's class, however, proved to good for the Cape side, scoring his third in the third minute of additional time to round-off a hugely successful night. – Sapa






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Downs, Pirates share the spoils

Neither Orlando Pirates nor Mamelodi Sundowns were able to make up ground with the Premiership pace-setters after a 1-1 draw at the Orlando Stadium.


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Johannesburg – Neither Orlando Pirates nor Mamelodi Sundowns were able to make up ground with the Premiership pace-setters after a 1-1 draw at the Orlando Stadium.


With the result Sundowns have accumulated 24 points after six wins, six draws and two losses, while Pirates have 19 points with five wins, four draws and five losses.


Unbeaten Kaizer Chiefs sit comfortably atop the table with 37points from 15 matches.


Pirates got off to a flying start after an easy tap-in from tricky winger Khama Billiat in the fifth minute, while the Soweto giants replied with a Lennox Bacela strike in the 31st minute.


Sweet revenge was on the mind of Sundowns after the Buccaneers embarrassed them with a 3-0 demolition in their first clash earlier in the season.


The opening goal came after some great work from Themba Zwane on the flank to beat three challenges to squeeze in a pass to Billiat who tapped in for the goal.


The Buccaneers answered with a set-piece goal after a corner-kick from Kermit Erasmus, whose ball landed kindly for the striker.


Pirates had the upper-hand in the first-half with their midfield having the better ball retention over the Sundowns formation after they conceded.


The home side was allowed to get back into the game with the equaliser that spurred them and brought the team back to life.


Pirates captain Oupa Manyisa was the spark in the attack with the versatile midfielder combining well with his wingers, Sifiso Myeni and Daine Klate.


However. Bongani Zungu was up for the challenge in the heart of midfield as he battled hard with his industrious box-to-box style of play.


Sundowns got their goal after applied pressure on the wing-backs of Pirates.


Having been hammered 2-0 by arch-rivals Kaizer Chiefs in their previous encounter, Pirates aimed to bounce back with aplomb.


Scores were level at a goal each at the half-time break after end-to-end stuff in the opening period.


In the second half Sundowns did not mind playing the high ball into the opposition territory with Cuthbert Malajila proving a dangerous threat in the air with his headers.


In the 49th minute Malajila knocked a ball down to Rheece Evans, who delivered a ball into the penalty box that evaded both sets of players.


The Sea Robbers though replied with a corner-kick that fell kindly for Siyabonga Sangweni whose shot blasted the side of the net away from target in the 51st minute.


After a quiet first-half, midfield maestro Teko Modise was more influential in the second period after he laid-off an exceptional ball to Billiat, who got the ball tangled at his feet.


Bacela saw his header bounce off the upright in the 56th minute after a superb cross from Manyisa as the chance went begging for Pirates.


Goalkeeper Kennedy Mwenee bailed Sundowns out with a brilliant diving save in the 72nd minute after a strike from Erasmus.


Neither team was able to grab the second goal after exchanged blows in the final quarter. – Sapa






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