All change as United, Reds set for battle

What a difference a year makes for Manchester United and Liverpool.


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London - What a difference a year makes for Manchester United and Liverpool.


As the bitter rivals prepare to resume hostilities at Old Trafford on Sunday, a reversal in fortunes has taken place that barely seemed possible at this time last season.


Just 12 months ago, United's title defence was in tatters and manager David Moyes was having to explain how he had managed to turn Alex Ferguson's ferocious tiger of a team into an over-cautious kitten.


Liverpool, meanwhile, could do no wrong. The goals were flowing freely as manager Brendan Rodgers adopted a system that allowed Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge to fill their boots and Anfield rejoiced as some long-lost swagger returned.


In early December last year, United lost 1-0 at home to Everton and Newcastle United as the same players who had been runaway league champions the season before looked utterly shorn of belief.


Their pain was heightened as their arch-rivals steamed ahead.


A 3-1 win over Cardiff City courtesy of two goals from Suarez on December 21 helped Liverpool go top of the table playing a brand of entertaining football more commonly seen at Old Trafford in recent seasons.


Twelve months, however, is a long time in football and two transfer windows is sufficient to bring about a revolution in an era when the stock of managers can rise meteorically and plummet like a stone after back-to-back wins or consecutive defeats.


Now it is United who are starting to strut. With Moyes a distant memory and the imposing figure of Dutchman Louis van Gaal at the helm, United have returned to form.


Five straight Premier League wins have lifted them to third in the table, just as Liverpool suffered a stupefying 0-0 draw at home to Sunderland last weekend that left them ninth.


Another lifeless draw at home to Basel in the Champions League on Tuesday dumped them out of the competition and left pundits to pick over the bones of a team who look the palest of shadows of last season's outfit.


Former Liverpool defender Mark Lawrenson called them “rudderless” after their European failure, while another former stalwart Steve Nicol said the manager's job was on the line.


Contrasting transfer-market strategies in which Liverpool looked to unearth hidden gems as United paid big for established talents are being touted as a simple explanation for their differing situations.


Liverpool sold Luis Suarez to Barcelona and replaced him with nine players of potential for 130 million pounds ($204 million), whereas United recruited high-profile names such as Angel Di Maria and Radamel Falcao from the top drawer.


As well as buying big, Van Gaal has restored a winning mentality at United that has not been sighted at Old Trafford since Alex Ferguson left the dug-out.


Rodgers, by contrast, seems uncertain of his best team, formation, or even tactical approach.


The gung-ho outlook that propelled them to within an inch of last season's title proved largely unsuccessful at the start of the current campaign, while recently achieved defensive solidity has blunted attacking intent.


Part of the problem for Rodgers seems to be the attacking players he signed bare little resemblance in the way they play to the high-energy, high pressure game of the departed Suarez and the injured Daniel Sturridge.


Van Gaal, however, seems to have developed a system that mitigates for a lack of defensive steel and makes the most of the startling array of forwards United have at their disposal.


A series of injuries have also failed to mask the team's obvious progress from last season, while the manager's stature ensured the panic button was not pressed even when results were mixed at the start of the season.


Last March's 3-0 victory for Liverpool at Old Trafford showcased all that was good about the Merseysiders and laid bare United's shortcomings.


A repeat result on Sunday looks highly unlikely. Reuters






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News sport : 2014 Driver Reviews: No. 25 Tony Stewart

After doing exit interviews for Sprint Cup Series drivers in 2013, we're turning the tables. We want the drivers to sell themselves. So here are the resumés for all full-time Sprint Cup Series drivers in 2014. Then, at the end, we'll provide a summation of the driver's season in 150 words or less.


Name: Tony Stewart


NASCAR Experience: Three Sprint Cup Series titles, most recently in 2011. The only driver to win a championship in both the full-season and Chase format. 48 Sprint Cup Series wins.


Most recent team: Stewart-Haas Racing


Most recent season finish: 25th


2014 accomplishments: Finished fourth in the Bristol spring race, fourth at Martinsville in the fall and fifth at Auto Club Speedway. Yeah, this really doesn't jive with the stats listed above. Can we call this an outlier season for a myriad of reasons?


Most memorable moment: Smiling at Martinsville after that fourth-place finish. A late gamble to not pit meant a chance for the win, but as Dale Earnhardt Jr. took fresh tires and sliced through the field, he couldn't be stopped.


Strengths: A lot of things. You remember the 48 wins, right?


2015 goals: Win races Nos. 49 and 50. Qualify for the Chase. You know, return back to normal, or establish a new normal.


FTM's Take: A Stewart resumé about 2014 is brief for obvious reasons. When you add in the recovery from the broken leg he suffered in 2013 and then what happened at Canandaigua Motorsports Park in August 2014 when he struck and killed Kevin Ward, there aren't many fitting adjectives to use to describe Stewart's season. It's fair to question whether or not Stewart, 44 in May, will ever return to the form he's shown throughout his career, especially after a less-than-stellar 2013 before his sprint car accident. And those questions are likely why Stewart was forthright about his 2014 and adamant about his future at the end of the season. 2015 may be Stewart's most vital season yet. But we've learned to never bet against him.


Previous reviews: No. 26 Casey Mears, No. 27 Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 28, Danica Patrick, No. 29, Justin Allgaier, No. 30, David Gilliland, No. 31 Cole Whitt, No. 32 David Ragan, No. 33 Michael Annett, No. 34 Reed Sorenson, No. 35 Alex Bowman


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News sport : Sixers coach Brett Brown laments the trading away of yet another contributor

Philadelphia 76ers coach Brett Brown knew what he was in for when he took this terrible, terrible gig.


Brown knew that this terrible gig could turn into a fantastic gig after a spell, but that he’d have to endure several terrible rebuilding years in order for the Sixers to accrue the assets needed to make a proper championship run. In the meantime, the losses were going to mount as Brown led an extended training camp of sorts while the youngsters figured it out.


One of those youngsters, forward Brandon Davies, was traded away from the Sixers this week in exchange for the soon-to-be waived Andrei Kirilenko, the rights to Brooklyn’s second round pick five seasons from now, and the right to swap second round picks with Brooklyn in 2018. Not exactly a haul. Meanwhile, even if the Sixers do eventually turn it around in Brett’s lifetime and start peeling off 60-win seasons, it’s going to take years for his individual coaching winning percentage just to climb back to the ranks of the ordinary.


Brown is not exactly pleased. From CSN Philly’s Dei Lynam:



"When you start losing people that you are very fond of and have tremendous respect for ... there is a human side of it that bothers me because you are trying to grow chemistry, you are trying to grow a culture," Brown said after Thursday's practice.




"That takes a hit when teammates lose teammates. There is a respect, effort-wise, of how they go about their business. There is a reality to our job that is just business in the NBA, but it doesn't mean it has to feel right."



It’s important to note that this isn’t a rant. It is the team’s sad reality, though.


Davies is not a great player. When news of the deal became official, some members of Philadelphia’s blogging community made jokes at his expense, noting that his presence or absence wouldn’t really shift the needle for either the Nets or the 76ers. His new coach in Brooklyn, in fact, seemed less than knowledgeable about Davies’ work as a pro:



(Davies, if you’ll recall, was suspended from BYU for some rather nebulous violations against the university’s ethics code.)


Brett went on to credit Davies for acting as the sort of hard-working, “high-character” sort of guy that you’d want as the “15, 14, 13” spot in the rotation, which isn’t exactly saying much for Davies’ game. Any player selected in the second round, however, is rather lucky to make it in the NBA at that spot in the rotation, and while the Sixers have had good fortune working in that realm (second round rookie K.J. McDaniels is having a solid year), there’s absolutely no guarantee that whomever they select (in 2018 and 2020, mind you) will approximate the modest output Davies gave Philadelphia this season.


Brown isn’t really talking about “output” in the same sort of cold, clinical terms we are, however. He’s talking the challenge of keeping a locker room afloat in spite of all the losses, and the team front office’s obsession with hoarding even lower rung draft picks. From Thursday:



"It is a tremendous challenge to keep the locker room together if they lose a teammate or friend. It is a tremendous challenge to have a semblance of order or purpose on offense or with rules on defense. It is just such a volatile situation at times."



“Despite” the ridiculous “ethics violation” at BYU, Davies was considered a fantastic teammate there, and this has carried over to the NBA. He’s a great passer for a power forward and he’s in much better NBA shape this season. By all accounts, he was a great guy to have around.


And now he’s gone. Clear some locker room space for a draft pick that won’t make his NBA debut (if he’s lucky) for another 70 months.


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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 : Former Miami QB Kevin Olsen reportedly headed to Towson

Miami Hurricanes quarterback Kevin Olsen runs plays during the first day of preseason football camp in Coral Gables, Fla., Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2014. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter) Three months after an unceremonious departure from Miami, Kevin Olsen has reportedly found a new home.


Olsen, a redshirt freshman quarterback, announced on his Instagram account Thursday that he will transfer to Towson. Per the Sun Sentinel, he posted a photo of the school’s helmet with the caption, “A second chance.”


Olsen was arrested in September on charges of DUI and possession of a fake or stolen driver’s license. The incident was his third different suspension from the program and Miami announced a day after his arrest that he was no longer enrolled at the university.


Previously, prior to the Hurricanes’ bowl game against Louisville last year, Olsen was suspended by head coach Al Golden for violating team rules. He was also suspended for the team’s season-opener for reportedly failing a drug test.


Since Towson is an FCS program, Olsen will be eligible to play immediately in 2015. The Tigers went 4-8 this season, but advanced to the FCS national championship last year, where they lost 35-7 to North Dakota State.


The 6-foot-3, 195-pound Olsen was a four-star recruit out of Wayne Hills, N.J. in the class of 2013. He briefly ascended to the top of the depth chart during spring practice, but was passed over by freshman Brad Kaaya. Olsen never saw the field for the Hurricanes.


Miami (6-6) will play South Carolina (6-6) in the Duck Commander Independence Bowl in Shreveport, La., on Dec. 27.


For more Miami news, visit CaneSport.com.


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News sport : Vegas showgirls made an appearance at Utah's Las Vegas Bowl announcement (Video)


What better way to be welcomed to the Las Vegas Bowl than by Las Vegas showgirls?


When Utah found out it was playing Colorado State in the Las Vegas Bowl, the bowl brought two showgirls to Utah's facility to help share the news.


But you know what stands out most to us in that video? The bowl swag the players had to choose from. It's a wide range of products and players could be practical with a kitchen mixer or chair or go the electronics route with a game console or headphones. Those were some pretty good choices.


The Utes play Colorado State on Dec. 20. Utah last went to the Las Vegas Bowl in 2010.


For more Utah news, visit UteZone.com.


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







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News sport : Jim Boeheim on why he doesn't own a computer, his new book and more

To promote his newly released autobiography "Bleeding Orange," Jim Boeheim has done a series of book signings and radio and TV interviews in recent weeks.


The Syracuse coach chatted about the book with Yahoo Sports earlier this week. He also fielded questions about everything from why he still has faith in his cold-shooting team, to his favorite restaurant in an ACC city, to his steadfast refusal to purchase a computer.


JE: Who is the best player and the best team you've seen this season?


JB: Obviously everyone talks about Kentucky and they're for real, but I really think Duke, Arizona and Louisville are in that mix of teams. I'm not sure Virginia is out of that mix either. They're very, very good and underrated. I think Montrezl Harrell at Louisville is one of the best in the country, but I think it's more about teams than players this year. There aren't as many individual stars but there are a lot of really, really good teams that have a lot of options. I watched Wichita State the other night and they're really, really good again. I wouldn't be shocked if they don't lose more than another game or two the whole year. So I think there are some really good teams out there. There are more good teams this year than last year.


JE: Can any of those teams beat Kentucky?


JB: Kentucky will be hard to beat. If it were a best-of-7 series, I don't think anyone would beat them. But single-elimination? I think there are a lot of teams that can get them in one game.


JE: Who's the most underrated coach in the country?


JB: You can point your finger at a lot of different places. Gregg Marshall at Wichita State has gotten some recognition for what he has done. So has John Beilein. But what Sean Miller has done, Mark Few has done, Billy Donovan has done, Tony Bennett ... there's just so many good coaches out there. I don't think people realize how many there are. I don't think that's appreciated enough. There's a whole lot of really good coaches out there, and it comes down to which players play the best on a given day.


JE: You could have written a book at a number of points throughout your career or waited until after retirement. Why was now the right time for 'Bleeding Orange?'


JB: I wanted to still be active, and the reason it was the right time now was Jack McCallum was available and we were leaving the Big East and going to the ACC. It was a perfect time to start the book as we were going through the start of the ACC yet we were still able to reflect back on the moments in the Big East. Then we start out 25-0, so that became a big part of the story. It was good to have that kind of a season when you're writing a book.


JE: I know you hand-picked Jack McCallum to write the book — and why not since he's such a fantastic writer — but describe the history between you guys and why you trusted him to do it?


JB: We met a long time ago when he worked for Sports Illustrated and did a story on me in '96 when we went to the Final Four. It was really a positive story. It was the first time I met Jack, and I took a chance and took him inside everything. I'd gone through a divorce. He handled it in a good way. We've known each other ever since then and we've talked a lot. So it was just natural that I was just waiting for him to become available so I could do the book.


JE: One of my favorite anecdotes in the book is the story about Derrick Coleman's reaction after you guys beat North Carolina in 1987 to advance to your first Final Four. Can you share that story?


JB: I'm the happiest I've ever been in my life. I had been coaching 10 years and we had good teams, but we'd never had a team reach the Final Four. I've never seen a locker room happier than we were. We just beat North Carolina — they were the No. 1 seed — and there's Derrick throwing his jersey on the floor and looking upset. I didn't know what to make of it, but he was upset because he had a trip planned during spring break to see his grandma. That had to be put on hold for the Final Four. He had a great Final Four too. Nineteen rebounds or something in the championship game.


JE: You've said before that you don't own a computer. Is that still true? And have you ever been tempted to buy one?


JB: Nope, I never have. Obviously we have them at home. My kids and my wife have one. I went on it one day, and I couldn't even get through the starting screen. I just said I can't do this. I haven't gone back. I know it's a good tool, but I just haven't gotten there.


JE: You think that ever changes? Maybe in retirement?


JB: Maybe someday. The only reason I could see possibly is I like to read newspapers. If I can learn how to do that, maybe I'd do that, but I don't know.


JE: You've done a half dozen book signings so far. What's the most memorable question you've gotten at one of them from a fan?


JB: What stands out is that in the little town of Auburn, it was snowing and people stood outside for an hour, an hour and a half to get a book signed. We signed 600 books there and this is a little town. In Syracuse, we signed 1,200 at Wegeman's one day. That's a pretty big number. It was just nice to see our fans come out like that. 5,000 books in six nights. It was pretty good.


JE: Let's talk about your team this season and specifically your 20.8 percent 3-point shooting. Are players taking bad shots? Are they missing shots they make in practice? Do you just not have enough shooters on the roster? How do you explain it?


JB: We weren't a really good shooting team last year, we lost Tyler Ennis who was a pretty good shooter and now we have one guy who's a proven shooter and everyone on the other team knows that. So they're not going to give Trevor Cooney anything if they can help it and they're giving us shots at other positions. We think those guys are pretty good shooters, but right now the three guys we need to make shots are shooting 18 percent from three. We need them to start making a few shots. We're 350th or something in the country in 3-point field goal percentage and we lose two games to good teams that were tie games late in the game. So we don't have to make a lot of shots but we do have to make some.


JE: Since Kaleb Joseph is really the only true point guard you have, I thought he was a big key to your team this season. Evaluate his play so far a month into the season.


JB: He has been alright. He has been as good as most freshmen, maybe better than a lot of freshmen, but he's still a freshman and he's making some mistakes. He is probably hurting us on defense more than on offense. His defense is something we're really trying to work on. He is playing about as well as you expect, but I don't think our other perimeter players are playing as well as they have to. Trevor Cooney and Michael Gbinije in particular they have to play better. If they play better, it will be easier on the point guard.


JE: You probably ruffled some feathers below the Mason-Dixon line a few years ago with your joke about having to eat at Denny's or Wafflehouse on the road once Syracuse joined the ACC. What's the best restaurant you have discovered in ACC country so far?


JB: That shouldn't have ruffled any feathers. That was a joke. There's as good restaurants in the ACC cities as there are in New York. I had an Italian dinner at Wake Forest that was as good as New York City. I've had great meals at Clemson too. That was just one of those times where you're trying to be funny and people take it literally. Some people can't take a joke, I guess.


JE: You would think people would be familiar with your dry wit after a few decades of it, right?


JB: Maybe it's new to them, I don't know. I never was accused of being funny for 20-30 years, so I'm trying to be a little funnier now.


JE: You've been at Syracuse your entire coaching career. What's the closest you ever came to leaving?


JB: I took one interview at my house for a school many years ago, and I knew right away as the interview was starting that I wasn't going to leave Syracuse. That was just a courtesy interview. They wanted to come in and talk to me. I knew within 10 or 15 minutes, I wasn't going to go. I'm from here. I've always been here. I've never really thought about leaving Syracuse.


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News sport : Oklahoma State's Tyreek Hill arrested on domestic abuse charges

Oklahoma defensive tackle Chuka Ndulue (98) chases as Oklahoma State wide receiver Tyreek Hill, left, runs a punt return 91 yards for a touchdown in the fourth quarter of an NCAA college football game, tying the score and setting up an overtime, in Norman, Okla., Saturday, Dec. 6, 2014. Oklahoma State won 38-35 in overtime. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki) Oklahoma State running back Tyreek Hill was arrested following an incident on Thursday night.


According to the Oklahoman, Hill, a junior, is facing domestic abuse charges after his girlfriend told police that Hill “hit her in the face and stomach and choked her.”


Hill’s girlfriend, whose name was not released, was admitted to the emergency room at the Stillwater Medical Center. She told police that she and Hill got into a fight that escalated into violence.


Hill was arrested at his home around 11 p.m. Thursday night “based on probable cause for Domestic Abuse by Strangulation.” Hill’s girlfriend was treated and released from the hospital.


Hill, a junior college transfer in his first season with the Cowboys program, ran for 534 yards, caught 31 passes for 281 yards and returned three kicks (two kickoffs, one punt) for touchdowns this season. In the Cowboys’ season finale against in-state rival Oklahoma, Hill returned a punt 92 yards for a touchdown in the game’s final minute to force overtime. The Cowboys then won 38-35 in overtime, giving the team six wins and clinching bowl eligibility.


The Cowboys are scheduled to face Washington in the Cactus Bowl on Jan. 2. Hill’s status for the game is unknown.


For more Oklahoma State news, visit OStateIllustrated.com.


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News sport : Colts offensive lineman on Jadeveon Clowney's surgery: 'He's screwed'


Microfracture knee surgery has become a dirty term for football players, a procedure that isn't exactly easy to come back from.


When the news hit that Houston Texans rookie outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, the top pick of the 2014 draft, had microfracture surgery to repair his balky knee earlier this week, it should have set off some alarms. It did for Indianapolis Colts offensive lineman Gosder Cherilus, who had that procedure after suffering a knee injury in 2010.


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Cherilus' diagnosis for Clowney wasn't pretty.



“He’s screwed,” Cherilus told the Indianapolis Star. "His game is all about explosion. That’s a problem. I’m out there dancing. I’m an offensive lineman. That’s a different ballgame. He’s screwed. I’m just being honest.”



Every surgery is different and so is everyone's recovery. And microfracture, in which tiny holes are made in the bone near damaged cartilage in the knee, allowing the cells in the bones to generate new cartilage, has worked well before.


Tight end Kellen Winslow had microfracture surgery early in 2007 and had 1,106 yards that season. Running back Reggie Bush had microfracture surgery after the 2008 season and maintained his explosion, when he hasn't been dealing with other injuries. Saints receiver Marques Colston and Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce came back from the procedure and were productive. In basketball, Knicks forward Amar'e Stoudemire had the surgery in 2005, had more than 20 points per game in each of the five seasons that followed, and is still playing at age 32 and averaging 13.3 points and 7.5 rebounds per game.


So let's not totally freak out about Cherilus' prediction. Clowney could end up just fine. But it won't be easy. Cherilus talked with the Star about how it was supposed to take him 12 months to return but did it in nine with three-to-five hour rehab in the morning and more in the afternoon. And he said he did that every day for nine months.


This is what Clowney faces.



“You see my leg right here?” Cherilus said. “Imagine putting this on crutches for 10 weeks. You loseeverything. The whole leg was numb. I couldn’t even walk. We had to teach the leg to do everything all over again: taking off, cutting, everything.”



So while players have come back from microfracture surgery before, it's not an easy road. Instead of enjoying the career of one of the best defensive prospects to come out of college in years, now we're left to wonder if he'll ever be the player everyone thought he would be.


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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 : Report: Carmelo Anthony is open to a trade. Other reports: No he isn't.

It was only a matter of time. Big budget NBA teams featuring maximum salaried superstars in major markets with several competing news papers tend to have varying agendas to work through. When the team and player in question lose 20 of 24 games to start a season, people are going to start talking. Off the record, of course.


On Friday, Marc Berman of the New York Post reported that Knicks scoring forward Carmelo Anthony would be amenable to waiving his no-trade clause if it meant greasing the wheels for a potential trade to a better team.


The sources who spoke didn’t say that Carmelo has waived it, that he’s demanded a trade, or that any deal was imminent. The sources just said, in a potential situation, Carmelo might be OK with it.


OK.


From the Post:



Five months after swearing his allegiance to New York and signing a five-year, $124 million contract, sources told The Post the All-Star forward would be open to dropping his no-trade clause if team president Phil Jackson strikes a deal with a team Anthony would like to play for.




Part of Anthony’s deal included the rarely used no-trade provision.




For now, Anthony has no desire to be traded, but his willingness to consider giving up the no-trade clause shows how frustrated he has become with the Knicks’ historically bad start to the season.




[…]




“He thought things would be better than this, but he still wants to stick it out for now, ’’ a source said. “He trusts Phil, but I think he’s afraid of Phil.’’



Right.


All of this comes in anticipation of the Dec. 15 trade deadline, of sorts, one that allows teams to deal players signed during the previous summer’s offseason.


You forgot? That’s right, it’s only been five months since Carmelo Anthony signed a five-year and over $124 million deal with the New York Knicks, committing to the team’s rebuilding process and his adopted hometown over suitors with greater championship prospects, sunnier climates, or combinations of the two.


The Post’s competitors were quick to go after the report:









So there’s that.


The Knicks have been ruddy awful this season, and Anthony has played (and sometimes sat!) through injury for most of the 2014-15 quarter-season run. It hasn’t been a fun time in New York, which is why all these narratives appear plausible on the surface. Whether these sources are from some sort of Knick ally looking to paint Carmelo as duplicitous and/or unfaithful or an Anthony camper looking keep the Knick front office on edge is unclear. What is clear is that a trade involving Carmelo Anthony, this season at least, is incredibly unlikely.


Not only does Anthony boast a no-trade clause and an agent that on record flatly denied the Post’s report, but Carmelo also has a taste for New York. He wants to build some sort of moneymaking legacy in the town, even if it means he’s painted as the scoring martyr on several failed teams as he nears retirement.


(Talk of Anthony’s trade kicker is a little daffy, at least for this year. A trade kicker can’t add to a max contract, and Anthony has a max contract this season. When the salary cap bumps up over the next several years, and Anthony technically isn’t making max money, then the kicker would be established; but it’s only at a 15 percent rate, and have nothing to do with 2014-15.)


It’s hard to imagine many other teams lining up to deal for Anthony, who is now in his 30s and may need knee surgery. Teams wanted to sign him last summer, to be sure, but those same teams aren’t going to round up a litany of players to match the nearly $22.5 million Anthony is making this season in order to deal for him.


And Knick president Phil Jackson? He knew this was going to be a holdover year, even if he’d like to see more wins and better play. It’s going to take him a long time to give up on Carmelo Anthony.


Why?


Because Phil Jackson, for all his slick stylings and power broking moves behind the scenes, remains a damned hippie at heart. He’s a baby boomer, baby boomers are convinced that they’re all special snowflakes, and he thinks that he’s the Chosen One that can turn Carmelo Anthony’s career into a championship one. Along those same lines, Phil Jackson is a dogged competitor, something he learned from his ridiculously competitive mother. It’s that instinct that is also driving him to believe that he can act as Carmelo’s championship savior.


Then there is the triangle offense aspect of things. Phil Jackson thinks that it is a cure-all, and when run properly it can be. The Knicks and Carmelo Anthony are not running it properly, currently, which is where the early morning (seriously, we’re a quarter of the way into the first season of a five-year plan) criticism comes in. If run properly, the triangle offense can be the best thing to ever happen to Carmelo Anthony.


Phil Jackson knows this, which is why he threw as much money as he could at an inherited superstar that had just turned 30. Phil Jackson was not wrong in his estimation, even if this all does eventually go down in flames. He’s putting the onus on Carmelo and the players he eventually surrounds him with to play the right way.


It’s New York. It’s the Knicks. These stories are never going to go away.


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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 : Wisconsin reportedly focused on hiring Pitt's Paul Chryst

Wisconsin didn't take much time to find who it wanted as its next head coach. And it looks like Pitt will now be on the coaching search if Wisconsin gets its man.


According to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, Paul Chryst is "poised" to return to Wisconsin, where he went to school and served as the team's offensive coordinator before moving to Pitt before the 2012 season.


“I thought this would be the scenario from Day 1,” a source told the Journal Sentinel. “He will put together a good staff.”


Per BadgerBlitz.com, the hiring could be made official on Friday.


Unlike the departures of Mike Riley to Nebraska and former Wisconsin coach Gary Andersen to replace Riley at Oregon State on Tuesday, the Chryst-to-Wisconsin scenario has always seemed logical because of his Wisconsin ties. His Pitt teams are 19-19 in a year in the Big East and two years in the ACC and many of his current assistants also have Wisconsin ties.


A move to Wisconsin for Chryst would also help the Badgers stay true to their run-game success. At Pitt this season, RB James Conner has rushed for 1,675 yards.


If Chryst leaves Pitt, the school will be undertaking its third coaching search in five years. In 2011, Pitt hired Todd Graham and he left the school after a season to go to Arizona State.


For more Wisconsin news, visit BadgerBlitz.com.


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Pardew silences his critics

Newcastle United's Alan Pardew was named Premier League manager of the month for November following a remarkable turnaround in the club's fortunes.


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London - Newcastle United's Alan Pardew was named Premier League manager of the month for November following a remarkable turnaround in the club's fortunes just weeks after fans were calling for his head.


The north east club were languishing in the bottom three in October as “Sack Pardew” banners appeared at St James' Park, but a run of five straight wins starting at home to Leicester City on October18 saw them surge up the table.


They won three out of four games in November, seeing off Liverpool, West Bromwich Albion and Queens Park Rangers, while their superb turnaround was typified by a gutsy 2-1 win at home to previously unbeaten leaders Chelsea last weekend.


“It is nice to be recognised for our results but we will not get carried away by this and will do everything we can to make sure December is just as good a month for us,” Pardew said on the club website (www.nufc.co.uk).


Manchester City's prolific striker Sergio Aguero was named player of the month after scoring six times in November. – Reuters






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United out to add to Liverpool’s woes

Manchester United will relish the opportunity to inflict more pain on wounded foes Liverpool when the teams renew their rivalry at Old Trafford.


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London – Manchester United will relish the opportunity to inflict more pain on wounded foes Liverpool when the teams renew their heated rivalry at Old Trafford in the Premier League this weekend.


Liverpool won both league fixtures against United last season, triumphing 3-0 on their last visit to Sir Matt Busby Way in March, en route to finishing 20 points clear of their cross-county rivals in the final standings.


But the tables have since turned and while United go into the weekend in pursuit of a sixth consecutive victory – a run that has lifted Louis van Gaal's side to third place – Liverpool's confidence is at a low.


Having made a dismal start to their league campaign, Liverpool's season nose-dived further when they were eliminated from the Champions League in the group phase following a 1-1 draw at home to Basel.


Memories of last season's thrilling title bid are fading fast at Anfield, but midfielder Joe Allen says his side will draw encouragement from their last performance at Old Trafford when they make their return on Sunday.


“We had a fantastic result there last season, so we'll be looking to draw some confidence and inspiration from that performance and we'll go there and try to get the win,” the Wales international told the Liverpool website.


“They are great games to play in between two clubs who are massive globally and there's a great rivalry between the clubs. These matches are great to be a part of.


“Last season it was a great feeling to go to Old Trafford and get the three points and all of the players want that feeling again.”


Liverpool remain without injured striker Daniel Sturridge, while Mario Balotelli has not played for over a month, but United have injury problems as well.


Chris Smalling sustained a groin injury during United's 2-1 win at Southampton on Monday, joining Phil Jones, Luke Shaw, Angel di Maria and Daley Blind on the sidelines.


While Liverpool crashed out of the Champions League in mid-week, Manchester City secured their place in the last 16 with a superb 2-0 victory away to Serie A title contenders Roma.


It followed a run of four straight league wins that has seen the champions whittle leaders Chelsea's advantage down to just three points ahead of Saturday's trip to bottom club Leicester City.


City will learn the identity of their next Champions League opponents on Monday, but goalkeeper Joe Hart has urged his team-mates not to lose focus in their quest to topple Jose Mourinho's Chelsea.


“We are confident we can do well against anyone, but it is Leicester now and we have to turn our eyes to that,” said the England international. “That's our next big game.”


Chelsea saw their unbeaten run come to an end at Newcastle United last weekend, but goalkeeper Petr Cech believes Wednesday's 3-1 win over Sporting Lisbon in the Champions League has restored momentum.


“It's always important to win, especially when you lose a game in the league,” said the Czech, who will give way for Thibaut Courtois for Saturday's home game with third-bottom Hull City.


Arsenal failed to claim top spot in their Champions League group despite winning 4-1 at Galatasaray, but the victory allowed them to draw a line beneath last weekend's dispiriting 3-2 loss at Stoke City.


Arsene Wenger's side have lost three of their last five league matches and midfielder Aaron Ramsey, whose side host in-form Newcastle on Saturday, says they must raise their game ahead of the hectic festive period.


“That is the thing we need to do now,” said the Wales international, who scored two goals in Istanbul, including a stunning 30-yard strike with his weaker left foot.


“We have a busy couple of weeks coming up now and hopefully we can take full advantage of them, and hopefully take maximum points throughout December.”


Southampton, who have slipped to fifth after three consecutive defeats, visit second-bottom Burnley, while high-flying West Ham United will look to tighten their grip on fourth place when they travel to Sunderland.


Fixtures


Saturday (1500 GMT unless otherwise stated):


Arsenal v Newcastle United (1730 GMT), Burnley v Southampton, Chelsea v Hull City, Crystal Palace v Stoke City, Leicester City v Manchester City, Sunderland v West Ham United, West Bromwich Albion v Aston Villa


Sunday:


Manchester United v Liverpool (1330 GMT), Swansea City v Tottenham Hotspur (1600 GMT)


Monday:


Everton v Queens Park Rangers (2000 GMT) – Sapa-AFP






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Pirates take aim at Ajax

Ajax Cape Town could be on a hiding to nothing when they visit Orlando Pirates for an Absa Premiership clash.


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Ajax Cape Town could be on a hiding to nothing when they visit Orlando Pirates for an Absa Premiership clash.


Thrashed 4-2 at Wits on Wednesday night, the Urban Warriors take on a Pirates side that seems to have finally rediscovered their mojo after about two months of hardship.


“The team spirit of old is back,” said Lennox Bacela on Wednesday night “We’re a team now. The singing in the dressing room is back and at the end of the game a lot of people agreed that they saw a better Pirates this time.”


While they needed to come from behind to hold Mamelodi Sundowns 1-1 thanks to Bacela’s strike, Eric Tinkler’s team were generally the better side on the night.


Unlike in recent matches when they appeared to lack in drive and confidence, the Buccaneers were an inspired lot at Orlando Stadium as they ran at Sundowns.


In midfield Issa Sarr was a workhorse and at the back Siyabonga Sangweni performed like a man keen to prove he is far from being past his sell-by-date as had been suggested by some in recent weeks. Up front, Bacela and Kermit Erasmus proved the club’s assertion that their lone-striker strategy was the best way to go as a myth by combining to cancel out Khama Billiat’s goal.


Tinkler is likely to persist with the two against Ajax, and Bacela in particular could prove dangerous for Roger de Sa’s team.


Given a rare start this season, the 31-year-old striker duly grabbed the opportunity as he not only scored but even hit the upright in an inspired performance that will make it hard for the technical team to drop him.


“Obviously as a striker, the first goal you score gives you confidence going forward,” he explained at the post-match conference “So for me it was great to get the goal.”


But being the team player he is, Bacela was more pleased with the team’s overall performance.


“We generally played well and I felt we deserved to get all the three points.”


They only got one though and tomorrow’s clash with a wounded Ajax provides them an opportunity to make up for Wednesday night’s failure.


It will be interesting to see if Tinkler sticks to the two-strikers route or returns to the all too familiar yet ineffective lone marksman ploy, the caretaker coach saying after the match that the Sundowns match had called for the twin attack.


Bacela doesn’t concern himself with the team’s approach much and refuses to see his scoring on Wednesday as his way of silencing those fans who had been calling for Pirates to start matches with Erasmus and Lehlohonolo Majoro.


“Who of us (strikers) gets to play is up to the coach. But obviously people will say what they think and they are entitled to their opinions. All three of us are here to represent Pirates. For us all that matters is that we support each other all the time no matter who plays.”


Such was his partnership with Erasmus and the way they complemented each other against Sundowns that it will be folly of Tinkler not to start with them against Ajax.


Today


Maritzburg United v AmaZulu, Harry Gwala Stadium, Pietermaritzburg, 8pm


Tomorrow


University of Pretoria v Mamelodi Sundowns, Tuks, Pretoria, 3.30pm


Mpumalanga Black Aces v Free State Stars, Mbombela Stadium, Nelspruit 3.30pm


Kaizer Chiefs v Chippa United, Peter Mokaba, Polokwane, 6pm


Orlando Pirates v Ajax Cape Town, Orlando Stadium, Soweto, 8.15pm


SuperSport United v Polokwane City, Lucas Moripe Stadium, 8.15pm


Sunday


Platinum Stars v Wits, Royal Bafokeng, Rustenburg; Bloemfontein Celtic v Moroka Swallows, Free State Stadium


Both at 3.30pm


Tuesday


Polokwane City v University of Pretoria (Peter Mokaba, 3pm)


Kaizer Chiefs v Free State Stars (Peter Mokaba, 6pm)


Ajax Cape Town v AmaZulu (Cape Town, 7.30pm)


Maritzburg Utd v Mamelodi Sundowns (Harry Gwala, 8pm)


Wednesday


Moroka Swallows v Orlando Pirates (Dobsonville); Platinum Stars v Chippa United (Royal Bafokeng); Bidvest Wits v SuperSport United (Bidvest); Black Aces v Bloem Celtic (Mbombela). All at 7.30pm - The Star






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No need for January signings - Wenger

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has risked angering frustrated fans by saying the club doesn’t need any January signings.


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London - Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has risked angering frustrated fans by saying the under-performing London club do not need any January signings if everyone in the current squad stays fit.


The Frenchman has come under mounting criticism in recent weeks as Arsenal's title challenge has faltered at an early stage again with a 3-2 Premier League defeat to Stoke City last weekend provoking an angry reaction from some supporters.


The Arsenal boss was subjected to a torrent of verbal abuse from fans at a railway station after Saturday's reverse.


Club officials also blocked unhappy supporters from displaying banners calling for Wenger to be sacked ahead of Arsenal's 4-1 victory at Galatasaray on Tuesday.


Yet with Arsenal trailing league leaders Chelsea by 13 points, Wenger, who has reputation for keeping his powder dry in the transfer market, said there was no immediate need for January reinforcements unless injuries forced his hand.


“There will be very little activity,” he told reporters on Friday. “Quiet in first three weeks, frenetic in last few days. Usually the market is not busy in January.


“If everybody is fit and available, we don't need to go into transfer market.”


Wenger said he may have to rethink his plans if defender Laurent Koscielny fails to recover from a calf injury he suffered in their victory over Southampton on December 3.


The French centre back joins Aaron Ramsey (hamstring) and Nacho Monreal (foot) on the sidelines for Saturday's game against Newcastle United, along with the suspended Calum Chambers.


Wenger has found an unlikely ally in Newcastle manager Alan Pardew, who the Frenchman once shoved in a touchline skirmish.


Pardew described the incident at the train station as 'totally disrespectful' and told Arsenal fans they should be grateful to Wenger for all he has achieved at the club.


“We had a problem once but we sorted it out,” Wenger responded.


“I am very thankful for compliments but all I want is to do well for my club.” – Reuters






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Schurrle happy at Chelsea

Andre Schurrle has dismissed any suggestion he might leave Chelsea during the January transfer window after overcoming a long-standing illness.


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London – Andre Schurrle has dismissed any suggestion he might leave Chelsea during the January transfer window after overcoming a long-standing illness.


Schurrle first felt the effects of a virus in Brazil during Germany's successful World Cup campaign but the winger believes he is now nearing a return to full fitness ahead of Hull's visit to Stamford Bridge on Saturday.


And after being used largely as a fringe player by Blues boss Jose Mourinho, the former Bayer Leverkusen star is keen to re-establish himself as a central figure after scoring in Wednesday's 3-1 Champions League victory over Sporting Lisbon.


Schurrle's pace and clinical finishing should add another dimension to Chelsea's attack as the Premier League leaders attempt to consolidate their position at the top of the table after suffering a first defeat of the season at Newcastle last week.


“The illness has lasted weeks and weeks. Even during the World Cup my body didn't feel that good,” Schurrle told Standard Sport.


“I don't want to say what the medical name for the illness was but the symptoms are hard to get over.


“While they may have gone away, it took a toll on my body and it takes lot of time to get back to match fitness.


“The first weeks of the season with Chelsea were actually very good, very positive. I scored against Burnley and the following games were good, too.


“But then my body just shut down a little bit, because I was tired and maybe a little bit in my head and mind as well.


“I did not feel really well. On the pitch I tried to work harder but I needed more time.


“I'm not where I want to be but I feel better and you could see I was very motivated against Sporting.”


Restating his intention to remain at Stamford Bridge despite reports linking him with a move, Schurrle added: “Of course I can just laugh all the talk of leaving off. I am not going to change the club in the transfer window.


“I am happy where I am, I am happy in London. I love the city, I love the fans.


“We have a great team and want to win something this season. This is where I belong and where I want to help. I know what the manager wants for me and that he likes me.”


Hull travel to the Bridge without a win in their past eight matches and Steve Bruce is enduring the most challenging spell of his two-and-a-half-year tenure as manager.


Despite their poor start to the season, in which the Tigers have won just twice in the league, Bruce remains confident his team are capable of securing their highest league finish.


After winning promotion in 2013, Hull finished 16th in the Premier League last season Ä the highest in the club's history.


After spending close to £40 million ($62.8 million) on new players in the close-season, Bruce believes that position will be bettered.


“I'm still convinced we'll finish higher than we did last year,” Bruce said.


“When we got up, my aim was to establish us over four or five years. You're going to come against difficult runs. The bottom eight are separated by two or three points.


“We're all in the same boat. You've got to get yourself out of it and I still think we're better equipped than we were last year in terms of the squad.”


Hull will be without Mohamed Diame, who is recovering from a knee injury, and long-term absentee Robert Snodgrass.


Bruce is expected to pair first-choice strikers Nikica Jelavic and Abel Hernandez for the first time since October 4, when Hull beat Crystal Palace 2-0 in their most recent victory. – Sapa-AFP






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