News sport : Oregon State honors Marcus Mariota in newspaper ad (Photo)

Oregon and Oregon State may be huge rivals, but the two programs certainly respect one another.


To show that respect for Oregon and Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Marcus Mariota, Oregon State took out a full page ad in The Oregonian to congratulate Mariota on winning college football’s most prestigious hardware.



The ad reads:


Our own Terry Baker brought that treasured hardware home to Oregon 52 years ago. So we know that feeling. And what it takes to get there.


It takes doing the work. Showing up, then stepping up. Becoming a leader on the field.


It takes thousands of yards, gained one pass and one run at a time. Keeping your head in today’s game, not on yesterday’s hype.


It takes dedication. Standing with your team until the job’s done. Representing your school and state with character to the last.


And you’ve done that.


Congratulations, Marcus Mariota, on winning the Heisman Trophy. From the Oregon State Beavers.


That’s a pretty awesome gesture from the Beavers. Mariota became the first Ducks player to win the Heisman and the first from an Oregon school since OSU’s Terry Baker in 1962.


With the Heisman media frenzy coming to a close, Mariota will turn his attention to the Ducks’ New Year’s Day College Football Playoff semifinal matchup against Florida State in the Rose Bowl.


For more Oregon news, visit DuckSportsAuthority.com. For more Oregon State news, visit BeaverBlitz.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1yUnj1x

News sport : Kobe Bryant seems unimpressed with the little party the Lakers threw him

Kobe Bryant and his teammates have an odd relationship. That makes sense: Kobe Bryant is an odd guy, and the Los Angeles Lakers are an odd team.


They’re also, for the first time this season, the proud owners of a three-game winning streak. On top of that, you may have heard, Kobe Bryant passed Michael Jordan on Sunday evening to move into third place on the NBA’s all-time scoring list. The Kobester struggled from the field in that contest against the Minnesota Timberwolves, missing 13 of 20 shots, but he routinely earned trips to the free throw line and finished with a stellar 26 points.


In celebration, the Lakers decided to outfit the team plane with accessories one might buy for, say, Sheila the bank teller’s 47th birthday. Watch:




Kobe’s reaction is … um, Kobe-ish.


In terms of celebrations, only Kirk Cameron’s seems sadder.


We josh, of course. The Lakers have a game in Indiana on Monday evening, the team loses an hour as it crosses over into the Eastern Time zone, and 36-year old Kobe Bryant is likely aching – he’ll admit as much. On top of that, it’s going to take a whole hell of a lot to impress Kobe Bryant at this stage of his career. The man has lifted five championship trophies and just passed the greatest basketball player of all time on the NBA’s scoring list. He can’t be bothered by your little cake.


What might impress the Kobester is this:



We’re impressed. Bryant might be shooting 38 percent and he’s probably hurting his team, but it takes a special level of cat to be able to launch this many shots at this age. We’re enjoying your weird party, even if you aren’t, Kobe Bryant.


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/12VsUHb

News sport : H.S. senior creates comical football highlight reel

Some players let their parents call the coach if they think they're not getting enough playing time. Others have a sense of humor about it, like Barrington (Illinios) senior Jack Lenihan.


The second-string wide receiver created an entire highlight reel of his action on... the sidelines. He gets in for one play, contributing the "Lenihan Factor."



No word yet on how many Division 1 coaches are calling for the distracted sideline star. But hey, at least he's having fun with it.


H/T: Total Frat Move






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/12VtJQ7

United, Liverpool are worlds apart

Twenty five seconds. That was the time that elapsed between Raheem Sterling’s miss for Liverpool at one end and Wayne Rooney’s opening goal for Manchester United at the other.


|||

Twenty five seconds. That was the time that elapsed between Raheem Sterling’s miss for Liverpool at one end and Wayne Rooney’s opening goal for Manchester United at the other. It seemed to confirm the old line about the tiny margins between success and failure in sport, but don’t let that fool you. If the game turned on that slim passage of play, by the end there was a chasm between these clubs.


At the end, Sterling lay flat in the centre circle and pulled the neck of his shirt over his head. He no doubt blamed himself for what went horribly wrong here yesterday, but there were several other factors, not least the excellence of Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea.


United’s superior finishing was an element, too, and a linesman’s mistake that aided their second goal. Bottom line, though, United were the better team. Liverpool may have got into scoring positions more frequently, and knocked it about well at times, but such classy flourishes are redundant without the cutting edge. United have that, Liverpool do not. It is the difference between title contention and mid-table torpor; the difference between three and nil.


Both teams are still works in progress, but on this evidence United are now significantly ahead. Neither have particularly outstanding defences but United’s is growing the more time spent with coach Louis van Gaal and, despite injuries, six wins on the trot have been achieved at a cost of just three goals. Equally, Van Gaal has front-loaded his team in trademark Dutch style and is gaining momentum.


There is little defensive quality in the Premier League right now, meaning a team with a strong attack will flourish — as United’s recent record indicates.


And while Liverpool are floundering, having been shorn of Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge this season, United have an almost endless supply of stellar talent: Wayne Rooney, Robin van Persie and Juan Mata in the starting line-up, Radamel Falcao and Adnan Januzaj on the bench, Angel di Maria on the treatment table. Liverpool had more chances, but United were two goals clear by half-time and coasted home, thanks to De Gea’s brilliance. It said it all.


There can barely have been a more brutal example of the need to make scoring opportunities count. In real time just 25 seconds separated the moment when Liverpool should have taken the lead, and the moment when Manchester United did.


Penalty shootouts aside, it is hard to imagine a miss that has ever been placed in sharper relief.


Liverpool had started impressively, had already come close through Martin Skrtel and seen Marouane Fellaini go into the book when Sterling’s opportunity came. Adam Lallana slipped the ball in and his fellow England man was left with only De Gea to beat. A year ago, he would have been hotly fancied to score.


Yet Sterling has endured an indifferent season, despite the haggling over a much-improved new contract, and his finish was tame and directed straight at the goalkeeper. The player nearest to him when he shot was Rooney. Keep that in mind.


Danger over, United swept upfield through Antonio Valencia. He nutmegged Joe Allen on the way and no Liverpool player seemed greatly compelled to stop his progress. Rooney, meanwhile, was making ground box to box like a lunatic as the great players do. Valencia cut the ball back and Rooney, playing in the Paul Scholes role, ran on to it like, well, Paul Scholes. There is no finer compliment around these parts.


He finished like him, too. Low, powerful, precise, somehow wrong-footing Brad Jones — replacing the off-form Simon Mignolet in goal — from distance. Old Trafford was ecstatic, Sterling stood near the halfway line, awkward and embarrassed. He shuffled on the spot, feeling the responsibility, knowing eyes were on him. He was right, too. Liverpool never recovered from that reversal of fortune.


It may be raised as mitigation that Sterling is a forward, not a striker, an attacking midfield player, not a straight-out match-winner. It is not much of an excuse. Recent speculation suggests there are people around Sterling with grand ambitions for their man — Real Madrid ambitions, Gareth Bale ambitions. But Real Madrid players score those. Indeed, a Real Madrid player given the chances that fell to Sterling yesterday might expect to be going home with the match ball as well as three points. It was far from his only aberration.


In the 23rd minute, Alberto Moreno put Sterling in and he turned Phil Jones perfectly, only to be met with the obstacle of De Gea again. Arguably the most improved player in the Premier League — there is a strong case for De Gea being the competition’s best goalkeeper this season — he stood tall and saved again. It was a more powerful shot this time, but not smartly aimed. Worse was to come.


In the 52nd minute, with Liverpool now trailing by two, Jonny Evans played a back pass that seemed designed to afford the visitors a chance to get back in it. This fell to Sterling in the sort of space city developers drool over, and he first took it to De Gea’s right. It looked as if he might have succeeded in rounding him, but the duel ended predictably: a poor shot, at De Gea, the opportunity lost. The ball went up the other end and Rooney almost scored again. It was a rare miss by the home side. As at Southampton on Monday, Manchester United were clinical — even if crucially supported by the officials.


Their second came in the 40th minute — a classic poacher’s goal, but requiring a helping of good fortune. Ashley Young crossed from the left, Van Persie flicked the ball on and Mata stole in at the far post to stoop and head the ball into an unguarded net. One can only presume the linesman did not think Van Persie got a touch — because Mata was a yard offside. Liverpool’s defenders looked aghast but protest was useless. Having failed to make their own luck, they certainly weren’t going to catch a break here.


This was, in no small part, due to De Gea. Mario Balotelli was introduced at half-time but, like Sterling, he could find no way through. After 67 minutes, Sterling turned provider — he seemed happier in that role — cutting the ball back for the Italian in the penalty area. He hit a mighty shot but De Gea was mightier, diverting it with both hands on to the bar. Jordan Henderson fed Balotelli after 83 minutes, but De Gea saved it.


He went through one-on-one a minute later and De Gea was there again. Rio Ferdinand said he sees the goalkeeper fast approaching the status of Peter Schmeichel and Edwin van der Sar. It is too soon for that just yet, perhaps, but maybe one day. Certainly, if looking for value in the English market this summer, Real Madrid might be better off pursuing him ahead of Sterling.


It only remained for United to end the game as a contest. There were 71 minutes gone when Rooney broke and crossed, only for Dejan Lovren to make a horrible mess of the clearance under little pressure. He played it straight to Mata, who put in Van Persie on the right overlap. Liverpool were so torn that Jones did not even dive as the ball flew past him.


Liverpool and Sterling will think hard about those 25 seconds; but by the end identifying the difference between the teams did not require the precision of a stopwatch. – Daily Mail






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1yShqgk

News sport : Oklahoma QB Trevor Knight cleared to play in bowl game

Oklahoma quarterback Trevor Knight (9) passes in the third quarter of an NCAA college football game against Baylor in Norman, Okla., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014. Baylor won 48-14. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki) More than a month after being injured against Baylor, Oklahoma quarterback Trevor Knight has been cleared to play.


The sophomore went down with a neck injury on Nov. 8 and missed the Sooners’ final three games of the season, but returned to practice on Saturday, the program announced.


“It’s a big plus, definitely,” OU head coach Bob Stoops said of Knight’s return. “We’ve missed him the last several weeks. Obviously he’s got experience and the bowl experience from a year ago, so hopefully this will give us a big boost.”


According to the Oklahoman, doctors had been hesitant to clear Knight to play after being diagnosed with transient quadriplegia, a condition that can range from “mild weakness that goes away in minutes to complete paralysis that lasts for hours.” Knight, who is 11-3 as Oklahoma’s starter, was able to walk around after the Baylor game, but he was held out of action as pain from the injury lingered.


Now, Knight is set to make his return to the field when the Sooners take on Clemson in the Russell Athletic Bowl on Dec. 29.


“It felt so good to get back and run around with the guys a little bit and throw the ball around,” Knight said. “It’s been tough not being able to practice for so long. I got back in there and got a little rhythm throughout practice and knocked a little rust off. It definitely felt good to be back out there.”


Before the injury, Knight had thrown for 2,197 yards, 14 touchdowns and nine interceptions while completing 58.1 percent of his passes.


With Knight out, freshman Cody Thomas filled in for the 8-4 Sooners’ final three games, beating Texas Tech and Kansas while losing to Oklahoma State.


For more Oklahoma news, visit SoonerScoop.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1wxcTCV

News sport : Report: 99.9 percent chance Giants' Tom Coughlin returns in 2015




The New York Giants have guaranteed they'll suffer a losing season for the second straight year, but one report states that head coach Tom Coughlin is almost certain to return for the 2015 NFL season.

How certain?



“[It's] 99.9 percent he’s back,” a source familiar with the club’s thinking told The New York Post Sunday night.



That's pretty certain. Still, the Post could not receive official immediate confirmation from either of the Giants' two owners.



“I have no comment,” co-owner John Mara said.


“No comment,” co-owner Steve Tisch said.



There had been waxing whispers that Coughlin, 68, might be headed towards Splitsville with the team he has coached to two Super Bowl titles and a 95-79 record over the past 11 seasons. But following Sunday's victory over the Washington Redskins, their second straight win, the Giants — at 5-9 — apparently have done enough to convince the team's brass to give Coughlin at least another year.


The NFL's oldest head coach has coaxed his injury-plagued team to play hard in recent weeks despite a seven-game midseason losing streak, during which Coughlin's status appeared far more murky. Eli Manning has improved in recent weeks, and star rookie receiver Odell Beckham Jr. has given the entire offense a shot in the arm and an identity.


The belief is that there is a young nucelus to build around offensively, and Manning remains in his peak years, too, showing he can adapt to the new offensive system of coordinator Ben McAdoo. A full season together with Beckham and Victor Cruz, assuming he rehabs well from Achilles, could provide a huge lift next season.


Coughlin is 13th on the all-time coaching wins list, one ahead of Jeff Fisher, and he's closing in on a few milestones — 100 regular-season victories with the Giants, and the mark of his former mentor, Bill Parcells, who won 172 NFL games. Coughlin sits nine games back, with 163 victories, and could surpass the former Giants head coach with a winning season next year.


Three straight seasons out of the playoffs hasn't sat well with the Giants, but Coughlin appears to have done enough to convince his bosses to try to end that streak next season.





- - - - - - -


Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1wzU0hx

News sport : Report: NFL initially promised Adrian Peterson a two-game suspension


Adrian Peterson remains suspended over child abuse charges, having lost an appeal for reinstatement. However, new evidence has surfaced that seems to bolster Peterson's claim that he was promised one degree of punishment and served another.


ABC News has obtained audio of a call between Peterson and NFL executive vice-president of operations Troy Vincent, recorded Nov. 12, in which Vincent seemed to promise a two-game suspension. Instead, Peterson was suspended indefinitely.


"Two additional games, not time served?" Peterson asks on the recording.


"No, no, no," Vincent replies. "It's just the one this weekend. So really, it's just next week and you ... you're rolling. You're back."


Six days after this recording, made in the offices of Peterson's attorneys while Vincent was on a speakerphone, the NFL handed down its suspension. At issue: a meeting on Nov. 14 which Peterson skipped since his attorneys claimed it was not a mandatory one. But Vincent seems to imply that Peterson needed to toe the line in every way in order to get the two-game suspension.


"So, two games?" Peterson asks at another point.


"Yeah," Vincent replies, "but you cannot ... you've got to go through the process."


According to the AP, Peterson also appealed directly to Vincent, saying that he had already lost more than half the season and $4 million in endorsements. Vincent replied by encouraging Peterson to meet with Goodell to keep him apprised of his progress.


At another point in the tape, Vincent appears to side with Peterson, offering him both support and hope: "I gave you my word the other day. I think we looked at each other, and in my heart i'm praying that we can just get your family restored and get you back on this field so you can continue to be the ballplauyer the citizen the husband the father that God has called you to be ... You've paid the price. And I think everybody understands that."


However, at Peterson's appeal hearing, Vincent denied making any promises, insisting that Peterson needed to "show up." Harold Henderson, the arbitrator appointed by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, agreed with the NFL's assessment, and according to ABC, indicated that Vincent was trying to help Peterson without making explicit promises.


Peterson's lawyers entered the audio in question into evidence at the appeal, apparently seeking to demonstrate that the NFL's words to Peterson were far removed from its actions afterward ... and from its words at the hearing. However, Henderson's office told ABC that there was insufficient information to conclude that the NFL's indefinite suspension was in response to Peterson skipping the Nov. 14 meeting. In announcing Peterson's indefinite suspension, Goodell made sure to indicate that Peterson had shown "no meaningful remorse" in the wake of the child abuse allegations and initial suspension.


The NFL Players' Association is expected to file a claim in federal court on Peterson's behalf very soon, possibly as early as Monday. As ABC noted, the claim needs to prove misconduct on the part of the arbitrator, which is a high bar to clear in order for Peterson to return to the league.


____

Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



And keep up with Jay over on Facebook, too.







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/12US9t8

Rodgers struggling to find answers

Brendan Rodgers admitted he is managing a fractured dressing room after Liverpool’s 3-0 defeat at a resurgent Manchester United.


|||

Brendan Rodgers admitted he is managing a fractured dressing room after Liverpool’s 3-0 defeat at a resurgent Manchester United.


Wayne Rooney, Juan Mata and Robin van Persie inflicted Liverpool’s seventh defeat of the Barclays Premier League season to move within five points of Manchester City in second.


Rodgers, who faces a tricky Capital One Cup quarter-final away to Bournemouth on Wednesday, is struggling to find solutions after this latest defeat.


The Liverpool manager said: ‘We have to recapture the team ethos. With the emphasis of the team, it is clear to me that we are searching to find solutions. The players are working hard and giving everything. In every dressing room there have always been issues


but it is not something I discuss outside the dressing room. The players are honest but we are not getting results. I can’t fault their commitment because they gave everything.’


Rodgers axed Belgian keeper Simon Mignolet and replaced him with Brad Jones for the trip to Old Trafford and also changed to a 3-4-3 system.


It played straight into United’s hands and Louis van Gaal’s team, who have now won six games in a row, were 2-0 up at the break.


Rodgers added: ‘Simon has been fine, I spoke to him after the Basle game in the Champions League and he understood it.


‘Brad Jones didn’t have much to do and he’s ended up picking the ball out of the net three times.


‘This will be for an indefinite period. In my first year Brad did well and sometimes coming out of the firing line can help.


‘I just felt after Basle that there was a chance to make the decision.’


Rooney picked up United’s first goal but their next, scored by Mata, should have been disallowed for offside. Van Persie wrapped it up for United after the break with a clinical strike.


Despite the emphatic scoreline, United keeper David de Gea was man of the match for a string of excellent saves from Mario Balotelli and Raheem Sterling.


Rodgers added: ‘We didn’t deserve to lose, but we need to be more clinical.


‘Their keeper got man of the match and that tells you everything. We created more chances against United than in the last five or six games but we are disappointed with the first and the third goal.


‘The second one was clearly offside. With the players we had we did the best we could.’


Van Gaal’s side are eight points behind Chelsea and are third in the Barclays Premier League after this convincing win.


Despite their good form the Dutch coach refuses to accept that his team can challenge for the title in his first season in England. He added: ‘The most important match is always the next one. We are winning now, six matches in a row but we have to improve our style.


‘We can kill the game easily, but we must improve. Everyone is happy now — my cook is happy and my wife is happy because we beat Liverpool.


‘We have a way of playing that takes into account the qualities of the opponent and my staff are always looking for the way we can inflict pain on the opponent.


‘You need luck, but you can force the luck. That was not the case at the start of the season.’


Van Persie added: ‘The fans were absolutely brilliant from the start to the finish. They were our 12th man again. David was outstanding again. He was absolutely brilliant like always.’


Defender Marcos Rojo pulled out on Saturday, though Van Gaal refused to discuss the extent of the defender’s injury. – Daily Mail






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1yTKqcs

Jose defends Costa over diving claims

Jose Mourinho claimed Diego Costa is unfairly treated by referees having watched him collect a booking for diving.


|||

Whatever else gets said about Jose Mourinho, he certainly has an acute sense of timing.


Not only because he claimed Diego Costa is unfairly treated by referees having just watched him collect a booking for diving but also that he did so while Chris Foy, the latest official in question, was nearby.


It led to a rather amusing scene in a Stamford Bridge corridor following Chelsea’s win.


Mourinho had just been asked if he was frustrated about Costa’s treatment by officials, a follow-up question to his earlier assertion that only two of the Spaniard’s seven yellow cards this season — two for simulation — were warranted. That’s when Mourinho spotted Foy.


‘You have to ask Mr Foy,’ Mourinho said. ‘Mr Foy, tell the guys please. Diego Costa is crying because you gave him a yellow card! And these guys are asking me why.’


Foy reached into his pocket and offered Mourinho a tissue. It was intended and accepted as a light-hearted gesture.


But that should not disguise what was a worrying pattern on Saturday where two Chelsea players — Willian and Costa — were booked for simulation and a third, Gary Cahill, escaped what should have been his second yellow card after an embarrassing tumble in the area. Hull manager Steve Bruce was furious about that reprieve, though Mourinho feels he is also entitled to be bemused, such is his belief that Costa is the victim of unfair perceptions from his time at Atletico Madrid.


Mourinho said: ‘I remember two (of Costa’s yellows) that are understandable and fair. Against Newcastle and Liverpool. Other times he touches one guy and it is a yellow card. Everything he does is a yellow card.


‘Why? I don’t know. I think when he was at Atletico he created a certain image and people don’t believe that he can change. People don’t understand that he is intelligent enough to understand and to change — because he (has) changed.’


He added: ‘In England, normally referees are very good. And more than the referees, the fans — they are very fair in that analysis. They don’t like the elbows, the spitting. And he learned. He had lessons on it. Not just me or my staff, also people like (Cesc) Fabregas, (Cesar) Azpilicueta — the ones that speak Spanish well with him and they have his ear. The guy is clean.’


Mourinho had given Costa a four-day holiday and the striker rewarded his manager.


‘He went with his family to a weather where he can take his shirt off and get some sun. Then, in return, he said he’d come back fresh. He came back with that happiness in his legs.’


Shortly after, Foy came over with his tissue. Mourinho might have had greater cause to use it over the loss of Frank Lampard to Manchester City, though he insists it was the right decision to let him go.


He said: ‘The project is to prepare for the next 10 years, not for the next year. We made the right decision. You can argue, “You have John Terry and Didier Drogba”. Different. Drogba is a striker that is coming to help and support and JT is the best central defender in English football and it doesn’t matter how old he is. The nucleus of the team has to be developed. If you have a big player like Frank we would stop the development of the other guys.’


The victory was some way short of Chelsea’s highest standards this season and Mourinho admitted: ‘I have to agree — we have had many special performances this season and in this (game) we just had moments.’


Bruce, meanwhile, has accepted he made a mistake in taking Hatem Ben Arfa on loan from Newcastle. The Frenchman has made only eight appearances and is believed to be training alone in France.


Bruce said: ‘Sometimes transfers work out and sometimes they don’t. I can’t see there being a future. There has been no fall-out — he’s been omitted from the squad because when you are up against it, I believe you need to show a bit of resilience and unfortunately Hatem sees it differently.’


CHELSEA (4-2-3-1): Cech 6; Ivanovic 7.5, Cahill 4, Terry 6, Luis 6.5; Mikel 5.5 (Ramires 82min), Matic 6.5; Willian 6.5 (Schurrle 80), Oscar 6.5 (Drogba 78), Hazard 8; Costa 7. Subs not used: Schwarzer, Zouma, Remy, Azpilicueta. Booked: Cahill, Willian, Costa. Scorers: Hazard 7, Costa 68.


Hull City (3-5-2): McGregor 6.5; Chester 6, Dawson 6 (Bruce 10, 6.5), Davies 6; Elmohamady 5, Livermore 6, Huddlestone 4, Meyler 5.5, Robertson 6; Jelavic 5.5 (Ramirez 74, 6), Aluko 5.5 (Brady 64, 6). Subs not used: Jakupovic, Rosenior, Hernandez, Quinn. Booked: Meyler, Chester, Bruce. Sent off: Huddlestone.


Man of the match: Eden Hazard.


Referee: Chris Foy 4.5. – Daily Mail






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1suIhm6

City to face Barcelona

Manchester City will tackle Barcelona and Jose Mourinho's Chelsea were drawn against Paris Saint-Germain in two blockbuster Champions League last 16 ties.


|||

Manchester City will tackle Barcelona and Jose Mourinho's Chelsea were drawn against Paris Saint-Germain in two blockbuster Champions League last 16 ties.


Holders Real Madrid were given a palatable pairing against German side Schalke 04, and last year's beaten finalists Atletico Madrid come up against Bayer Leverkusen.


Arsenal, finalists in 2006, face Monaco, Italian champions Juventus will have to overcome Borussia Dortmund, and German giants Bayern Munich, who beat Borussia in the 2013 final, play Shakhtar Donetsk.


Swiss outfit Basel's reward for knocking out Liverpool at the group stage was a match-up with two-time winners Porto.


The last 16 first leg games are scheduled for 17/18 and 24/25 February, with the second legs on 10/11 and 17/18 March.


The final for Europe's elite club competition will take place in Berlin's Olympic stadium next June. – AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1wznH1W

What now for second-rate Ajax?

Ajax Cape Town coach Roger de Sa was left with more questions than answers following his team’s drubbing at the hands of Pirates.


|||

More questions than answers.


This was Ajax Cape Town coach Roger de Sa’s blunt assessment of the current state of his team following Saturday night’s 4-0 drubbing at Orlando Pirates. The result brought to an end one of the worst weeks in the club’s history after they were also put away 4-2 by Wits last Wednesday.


Ajax looked like a second-rate team in both those matches, with only a screamer from Nazeer Allie and a Noah Sadaoui penalty saving some of the team’s blushes against the Clever Boys.


Ajax don’t have a lot of time to turn things around before facing AmaZulu at Cape Town Stadium tomorrow night (kickoff 7.30pm). Another defeat could see them drop outside the top eight after occupying second place in the standings for quite a few weeks this season.


On Saturday night, Ajax never really looked like scoring, due to a lack of creatively and a shortage of thrust from midfield. The intensity they had at the start of the campaign has gone missing.


And, when your defensive effort, especially from set pieces, has gone pear-shaped, then it is really a miserable state of affairs.


The Urban Warriors have only scored four goals in their last seven matches, while they have conceded three-times as many – 12 – during that period.


Injuries and suspensions haven’t helped, but some of the regulars have lost form and some of the new faces haven’t quite cut the mustard as yet.


But while Ajax have had a massive dip in form following their best start to a league season, Pirates have come good at this crucial and congested part of the season before the Christmas break.


And the gulf in class between the two teams was there for all to see at Orlando Stadium.


“We tried to hold out for about 60 minutes or so, but it was going to be difficult and in the end we had to give in and it showed,” De Sa said after the defeat at Pirates.


“They were a lot better than us on the night, and individually they were a lot better. So we got what we deserved tonight.”


The likes of Lehlohonolo Majoro, who scored a brace, and second-half substitute Kermit Erasmus, who scored one himself, showed their quality with great movement upfront. And after Ajax had to chase the game after the first goal, Pirates exploited the space and got in behind the Cape side’s defence.


It’s something De Sa’s men couldn’t do, and the coach bemoaned that fact afterwards.


“I thought we would turn them a lot more, but we couldn’t get in behind them,” the Ajax coach said. “So we weren’t getting any runners. We tried to make a few changes to improve on that, but it didn’t work.”


Pirates took the lead through a comical Anssi Jaakkola own goal after Majoro was left unmarked at a corner. Defender Siyabonga Sangweni also scored the third goal from a corner, as Ajax’s defence seemed to forget how dangerous he is from set pieces and left him unmarked in the penalty area.


“I thought the defence let me down. Again defending the set pieces was very bad, very amateurish. It is something we have been working on for some time,” De Sa said. “After this match we have a lot more questions than answers right now.


“This is a young team and we have to keep on working and try to improve.” - Cape Times






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1wvSxdg

United can catch Chelsea - Carrick

Manchester United have set their sights on usurping Premier League leaders Chelsea after beating Liverpool 3-0, midfielder Michael Carrick told the club's in-house television channel.


|||

Manchester United have set their sights on usurping Premier League leaders Chelsea after beating Liverpool 3-0, midfielder Michael Carrick told the club's in-house television channel on Monday.


United were languishing in 10th place after winning only three of their opening 10 league games under new coach Louis van Gaal, but a run of six consecutive victories has seen them climb the table to third place.


Sunday's success over Liverpool at Old Trafford took them back to within eight points of Chelsea and although Jose Mourinho's side remain favourites for the title, Carrick believes United have a chance.


“We are always looking at how we can get to the top,” Carrick told MUTV. “All in all, we are in a pretty decent position at the moment.


“We need to stay up there, we need to stay in touch, then come Christmas and come January, as we've said for many years now, if we are up there challenging then we will give ourselves a great chance.”


Wayne Rooney, Juan Mata and Robin van Persie scored the goals that gave United victory over Liverpool, while goalkeeper David de Gea was named man of the match thanks to a number of impressive saves.– AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1Ac7vUV

Mourinho has no Lampard regrets

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has said he does not regret releasing Frank Lampard despite the midfielder's impressive form for Manchester City.


|||

London – Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has said he does not regret releasing Frank Lampard despite the midfielder's impressive form for Manchester City, in comments published by several British newspapers on Monday.


Lampard, 36, left Chelsea in June after a glittering 11-year spell in which he became the club's all-time leading scorer and after initially signing for New York City, he was loaned to their sister club, Manchester City.


The former England star has scored six goals this season, including the winner at Leicester City on Saturday, but Mourinho says it would have hindered the development of Chelsea's young players if Lampard had stayed.


“My view is that when you want to look forward, look to the future and have people like (Cesc) Fabregas and (Nemanja) Matic and Jeremie Boga (Chelsea under-21s midfielder), which are the next 10


years of the club, the project is to prepare for the next 10 years, not for the next year. We made the right decision,” said Mourinho.


“You can argue, 'You have John Terry and Didier Drogba.' Different. Drogba is a striker that is coming to help and support the team. John Terry is the best central defender in English football and it doesn't matter how old he is.


“The nucleus of the team has to be developed and to have a big player like Frank we would stop the development of the other guys.


“It's his life, nothing to do with us. He left Chelsea as a free agent and chooses his life. We can't complain about it. That's football.”


Lampard's loan spell at City is due to end in January, but their manager Manuel Pellegrini has revealed that he would like to keep him at the club for longer.


“Frank wants to stay, we want to keep him,” Pellegrini said after City's 1-0 win at Leicester. “We must resolve the problem with New York City and with the MLS (Major League Soccer).” – Sapa-AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1znuLzU

United ‘forcing’ their luck - Van Gaal

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal believes his methods are beginning to take effect at Old Trafford following their win over arch-rivals Liverpool.


|||

Manchester, United Kingdom – Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal felt that his side's 3-0 Premier League victory over Liverpool proved that his methods are beginning to take effect at Old Trafford.


Sunday's win, secured by goals from Wayne Rooney, Juan Mata and Robin van Persie, was United's sixth in a row and galvanised their grip on third place in the table, but there were rough edges to the hosts' display.


Liverpool created a host of chances, with David de Gea earning the man-of-the-match award for a series of spectacular saves, while Mata's goal should have been ruled out for offside.


It had been a similar story last Monday when United won 2-1 at Southampton despite registering only three attempts at goal.


But van Gaal believes that United are now a different team to the one that slithered to a seventh-place finish last season following their travails under his hapless predecessor, David Moyes.


Asked for the secret to United's current form, the decorated Dutch coach told his post-match press conference: “Because we have a way of playing that always takes into account the qualities of the opponent.


“I have a staff that always are looking for the way we can do pain to the opponent. And we found this today (Sunday) again.


“It's not for nothing that we scored the way we have scored today. You need luck, but you can force the luck, and we are forcing the luck now. That was not the case at the start.”


Rooney, who played in midfield, set United on their way in the 12th minute by sweeping home a cut-back from Antonio Valencia.


Mata headed home five minutes before half-time – a goal described with some justification by Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers as “clearly offside” – and then teed up van Persie for United's third in the 71st minute.


An injury to Marcos Rojo obliged van Gaal to deploy midfielder Michael Carrick as one of three centre-backs in a defensive set-up that mirrored Liverpool's.


The visitors regularly found a way in behind United's defence, with De Gea thwarting Raheem Sterling and substitute Mario Balotelli three times each, but van Gaal felt his players adapted well to the enforced changes.


“Only yesterday (Saturday), Rojo in a training session got injured and then I have to change my line-up again, which I have to do every week,” he said.


“But the most important thing is my philosophy and when you stick by your philosophy, every player can do that because every player has played already in that philosophy.”


Defeat completed a miserable few days for Liverpool, who were knocked out of the Champions League by Basel last Tuesday and now trail United by 10 points.


Rodgers admitted that his squad had lost some of the team spirit that saw them come within a whisker of pipping Manchester City to the title last season.


“For me, the whole scenario is about looking to build a team again,” said the Northern Irishman, who lost Luis Suarez to Barcelona in the close season and is currently without striker Daniel Sturridge due to injury.


“We had a team that was growing for a couple of years that has changed now, the squad and injuries and whatnot.


“But we're having to recapture the team ethos again and that's something we're looking to build towards.”


Rodgers sprang a surprise by dropping goalkeeper Simon Mignolet, whose form has come under scrutiny, and he confirmed that Australian Brad Jones would remain in goal for Wednesday's League Cup quarter-final at Bournemouth.


“Simon has been fine. He's a really good professional. I spoke to him the other day and he accepted it,” said Rodgers.


“I said to Simon it was for an indefinite period. He has played in a lot of games, Simon, and Brad in my first year came in and did very well.


“It is something that can happen to keepers, taking them out of the firing line and giving them time to reflect.” – Sapa-AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/12SB2bf

Pochettino hails Spurs’ character

Mauricio Pochettino was delighted with the strength of character shown by his Tottenham side after their last-gasp 2-1 Premier League victory over Swansea.


|||

Swansea, United Kingdom – Mauricio Pochettino was delighted with the strength of character shown by his Tottenham side after their last-gasp 2-1 Premier League victory over Swansea at the Liberty Stadium.


Christian Eriksen earned the visitors all three points with an 88th minute goal, after Wilfried Bony had cancelled out Harry Kane's early header.


It was enough to lift Tottenham into seventh place in the table and earn them a first win in four games.


“It was an important win, but it is also important to show character and fight and we did that,” said Pochettino.


“They are a very good side with good players and it's not easy to get three points here.


“We scored a late goal, but in football it happens. Swansea pushed us after their goal and maybe they were better than us in that period. But we were always alive in the game and it was a great goal.”


He added: “When you arrive at a new club, with different players, you need time to try and put your ideas across to the squad. However, we are in a good place and I'm very pleased today that we showed that character.


“Christian is still young and this is only his second season in England, but he is a great talent and a very important player for us.”


Having made changes after the midweek Europa League trip to Besiktas, Pochettino said: “We needed to manage our players after the game in midweek. If you make changes and you win, you are an unbelievable manager, but if I had have changed things and we had have lost, it wouldn't have been like that.”


Swansea manager Garry Monk lamented his team's lack of a killer punch in front of goal.


“It was sickening. I couldn't see that coming to be honest, but two individual errors have cost us. And, of course, we were not clinical enough at the other end.


“We created enough chances to score a number of goals. I was pleased with the way we regained momentum after their first goal and to be honest, after we scored it was one way traffic. If it was a boxing match, they would have called it off.


“It was certainly more a case of us losing it, than Spurs winning it. It's hard to take that we have come away with nothing. They had a couple of counter-attacks but they were hanging on at times. When it's like that, you have to kill off sides. We didn't and it came back to haunt us again.” – Sapa-AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1zUq41D