News sport : Brandon Jennings passed up an easy lay-up to miss a jumper

Detroit Pistons point guard Brandon Jennings has never been known as a guy who picks his spots. From his first games as a member of the Milwaukee Bucks in 2009, Jennings has stood out as someone who would not avoid taking a shot just because it wasn't sensible. In fact, he often seems to seek out the most difficult ones.


Yet none of that history could have prepared us for a choice Jennings made in the third quarter of Wednesday's game between the Pistons and visiting Dallas Mavericks. With the defense caught ball-watching, Jennings made a very nice cut towards the basket from the weak side. Caron Butler found him with a pass for what seemed like an easy lay-up ... except Jennings decided that wasn't tough enough and dribbled out for a fallaway jumper:





The official play-by-play lists this miss as a 20-footer, which seems both factually wrong and spiritually accurate. If a very long two is the least efficient shot a player can take, then a mid-range jumper taken in lieu of a very easy lay-up is definitely a 20-footer.


The game as a whole wasn't so great for Jennings either — he finished 5-of-14 for 13 points in Detroit's 117-106 loss. Chandler Parsons paced Dallas with 32 points on 10-of-17 shooting.


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







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News sport : Grizzlies outlast Spurs in 3OT after several big shots

The Memphis Grizzlies and San Antonio Spurs have one of the best on-court rivalries in the NBA, dating back to the former's upset of the top-seeded latter in the first round of the 2011 playoffs through a 2013 conference finals in which the Spurs outplayed the Grizzlies in pretty much every way imaginable. When these teams get together, fans can be sure they'll see a hard-fought contest with two veteran squads. Yet Wednesday's matchup in San Antonio involved a few more surprises than usual.


After go-ahead three-pointer from Danny Green, the Grizzlies entered the final possession of regulation at a 92-89 disadvantage with 2.5 seconds on the clock. Solid inbounds defense forced Courtney Lee to pass the ball to center Marc Gasol, who was immediately pressured by Manu Ginobili to several feet beyond the three-point arc. Gasol, who had missed all three of his long-range attempts this season and gone just 7-of-49 in his career prior to this shot, ducked under Ginobili's raised arms and launched a desperation leaner. His prayer was answered:





That unlikeliest of buzzer-beaters gave the Grizzlies a second chance at a win, but it turned out to be just the prelude to more lunacy. Gasol hit a lay-in with nine seconds left in the extra period to lead to a 10-10 standstill and force a second overtime, which turned out to be the weirdest of all. Down 109-108, Memphis caused Tim Duncan to miss two shots around the basket before Zach Randolph pulled down a key defensive rebound with seven seconds on the clock. Courtney Lee then hit a three-pointer in transition to give his team a thrilling 111-109 lead:





It turned out to be short-lived, though, because Duncan turned back the clock with his own buzzer-beater on the very next play. With just 2.6 seconds left, Duncan took the inbounds pass from Boris Diaw near the top of the key and hit a jumper while fading away to his left:





If that play looks familiar, it's likely because it's nearly identical to one of the most dramatic shots of Duncan's storied career — the fadeaway he hit right before Derek Fisher's classic, nearly impossible 0.4-second buzzer-beater in Game 5 of the 2004 Western Conference Finals. Wednesday's shot helped detract from a fairly poor night for Duncan (5-of-15 shooting from the line, 9-of-22 from the field), but the Spurs obviously had to show their stuff in the third overtime.


That didn't quite happen. Zach Randolph scored all six of the Grizzlies' points over a 2:30 stretch in the middle of the period as the Spurs' offense struggled mightily. Like many third overtimes, this wasn't a well-played five minutes. Nor was it particularly dramatic — no one scored after Danny Green's three-pointer with 40 seconds on the clock as Memphis came away with a 117-116 victory.


Drama aside, this win was a very big statement by the Grizzlies, who are now a game behind the Golden State Warriors in the loss column with a 21-4 record. Yet that placement in the standings is almost beside the point — Memphis topped Golden State at FedEx Forum on Tuesday with their inimitable grit-and-grind style and persevered through several tough moments to beat San Antonio. The Grizzlies have two tough games this weekend vs. the Chicago Bulls on Friday night and at the Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday, but they have served notice to the rest of the league this week regardless of those results. This team is a contender.


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







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News sport : Drake introduces the Raptors, comes up with some ridiculous nicknames

Many NBA franchises boast famous fans, but few have formalized the connection as strenuously as the Toronto Raptors and musical artist Drake. The Toronto native has not been shy about his fandom and gladly took on the official title of "global ambassador" for the franchise prior to last season. The relationship has taken many forms, but the most noticeable has been the annual "Drake Night" for a home game at Air Canada Centre, a big old party during which Drake essentially takes over as many in-arena responsibilities as he can.


This season's Drake Night took place on Wednesday night vs. the Brooklyn Nets, and Aubrey Graham himself did the starting lineup intros for the second year in a row. He acquitted himself pretty well:



A lot of these nicknames are corny — the "baby-faced assassin"? — but there's enough cleverness to get Drake through. The comment about Dwane Casey as the best-dressed man in the league is not inaccurate for coaches, and I'm impressed that he chose to underplay the intros instead of buying into the full-tilt insanity that drives most PA announcers. The whole thing is pitched somewhere between cool and nerdy. In other words, it was a classic Drake experience.


The Raptors did their ambassador proud, as well, dominating the fourth quarter 29-16 on their way to a 105-89 win. At 20-6, they are now a full game ahead of the Washington Wizards (due to having played two more games and winning both) on top of the East standings.


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







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News sport : Pitt fires athletic director Steve Pederson after coach Paul Chryst bolts for Wisconsin

Dec 26, 2013; Detroit, MI, USA; Pittsburgh Panthers athletic director Steve Pederson during the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl against the Bowling Green Falcons at Ford Field. Pittsburgh Panthers defeated Bowling Green Falcons 30-27. (Andrew Weber-USA TODAY Sports) On the same day coach Paul Chryst left Pittsburgh to take the head coaching job at Wisconsin, athletic director Steve Pederson learned that he would not be around to hire the next coach.


Pitt and Pederson parted ways in what chancellor Patrick Gallagher called a mutual decision on Wednesday.


"With major decisions to be made about the future of football, I thought it was in the best interest of the University of Pittsburgh for Chancellor Gallagher to assemble his own team," Pederson said in a statement. "I am a Pitt and City of Pittsburgh fan, and want what is best for everyone moving into the future."


While Pederson helped guide Pitt through conference realignment and secure a spot in the ACC, his struggles with finding a consistent football coach ultimately cost him his job.


In 2010, Pederson forced out Dave Wannstedt following an 8-5 season and hired Mike Haywood, who had turned Miami-Ohio into Mid-American Conference power. However, Haywood lasted just 16 days before he was fired following a domestic dispute at his home on New Year’s Eve.


Pederson then turned to Todd Graham to help lead the program, but Graham, who came over from Tulsa, managed just a 6-6 season before bolting to Arizona State in 2011.


Chryst, who was hired in 2011, was with the program for three seasons, but was 19-19 and was ultimately swayed to come back to his hometown of Madison, Wisc., by athletic director Barry Alvarez.


Randy Juhl, vice chancellor for research conduct and compliance, will serve as Pitt's acting athletic director and offensive coordinator Joe Rudolph will serve as interim coach for the Panthers in the Armed Forces Bowl on Jan. 2 against Houston.


For more Pittsburgh news, visit Panther-lair.com.


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Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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News sport : Wisconsin officially makes Paul Chryst its next coach

Paul Chryst, Wisconsin's new football coach, glances over at his new players during an a NCAA college football news conference at the Nicholas-Johnson Pavilion in Madison, Wis., Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2014. (AP Photo/Wisconsin State Journal, M.P. King) After more than a week of speculation and flirtation, Paul Chryst is Wisconsin’s new coach.


Chryst, who had spent the past three seasons as Pitt’s head coach, was Wisconsin’s offensive coordinator before taking the Pitt job. He’s also a graduate of Wisconsin.


Chryst was 19-19 with the Panthers.


“It’s a bit overwhelming to be able to come back to a place where you grew up, went to school and coached, where you have so many ties personally and professionally,” Chryst said. “This job has everything that we, as a family, and me, personally, are looking for. The bar has been set at a high level here and it didn’t just happen. I look forward to the challenge of continuing that tradition of success.”


Chryst had two coaching stints with the Badgers, but is best known for his time from 2005-11. During that time, Chryst was responsible for orchestrating six of the school's 10-best offensive performances. During the 2011 season, the Badgers, which boasted quarterback Russell Ball and running back Montee Ball, averaged 44.1 points per game, which was sixth-best in the country, a school record and the third-best mark in the Big Ten since 1916.


Chryst replaces Gary Andersen, who left the program to become the head coach at Oregon State. Andersen was 19-7 in two season with the Badgers.


“He brings tremendous experience, both as a head coach and offensive coordinator, and knowledge of our program to the job,” Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez said. “He is one of the best offensive minds I have ever come across and I think his consistent results show that.


“Equally as important is his character. He is one of the most genuine people I’ve met and he truly cares for the student-athletes in his program. I’m very happy we were able to hire him as our head football coach.”


For more Wisconsin news, visit BadgerBlitz.com.


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Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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News sport : Chicago Bears bench Jay Cutler for Jimmy Clausen


The Chicago Bears made a heck of a statement this offseason. They gave quarterback Jay Cutler a $126 million contract.


The team was telling everyone that even though Cutler was a mediocre quarterback for eight years, the ninth would be different. He would be paid like he was on the same level as the game's best quarterbacks. And now, 14 games later, they’re benching Cutler for Jimmy Clausen.


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ESPN.com’s Adam Schefter reported the news. It’s a stunning move by a team that is falling apart at the seams through constant backbiting, both public and private. The Bears have lost three in a row, there are reports that coach Marc Trestman will be fired, and now the team is starting Clausen (three touchdowns, nine interceptions in his NFL career) over the man they paid like one of the best quarterbacks in football less than a year ago.


Mistakes? Oh, there have been a few.


In fact, this benching might be a mistake. Cutler isn't a great quarterback, with just one Pro Bowl and one playoff appearance in nine seasons and never a quarterback rating over 90 in a season (for comparison, much maligned Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo has never posted a rating under 90 in a full season). But he's better than Clausen. The move seems to serve no real purpose. Is this a last, final statement by a lame duck head coach, scapegoating the quarterback for the offense's struggles? Is it a desperate move by a coach trying to save his job? Or did the staff become so fed up with Cutler's reckless play that they figured anyone would be better? Remember that while offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer was probably wrong to be the anonymous source on an NFL Network story ripping Cutler, nothing that he said was really wrong. Cutler has 28 touchdowns, but he also has 18 interceptions, and constantly throwing deep into double coverage doesn't help the offense. Maybe the Bears will try to trade him this offseason, and nobody should trade for a quarterback whose contract far exceeds his accomplishments, but NFL general managers and coaches who are desperate to save their jobs don't always think logically.


Who knows for sure why Trestman is making this move from Cutler to Clausen, but the truth is this: The Bears have an incredibly expensive backup quarterback.


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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 : The 10-man rotation, starring Carmelo Anthony's hats

A look around the league and the web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


C: WFUV Sports. A needed and detailed list of how well the New York Knicks do in relation to the various types of hats Carmelo Anthony wears to and from a game.

PF: Sports Illustrated. A sad but must-read breakdown at how the Milwaukee Bucks have fared with Jabari Parker, and what they’ll do from here on out.

SF: SB Nation. Claiming that someone “eviscerated” an entity with a bit, clip or column is a bit clichéd at this point, but … Tom Ziller eviscerated Bleacher Report and Kansas coach Bill Self and their collective anti-mock draft screed.

SG: SLAM Online. Matt Bonner is endorsing a (tasty) type of soda pop that I wasn’t aware was even still in business, and he gives a very smart and sensible answer to a question about whether or not we should be promoting the sale of sugary drinks.

PG: Grantland. They may have fallen last night to Memphis, but the Golden State Warriors are still glorious on both sides of the ball. Zach Lowe explains why.

6th: Sports Illustrated. Rob Mahoney with a fantastic column on the career of the fantastic Tyson Chandler.

7th: Los Angeles Times. Bill Plaschke on the emergence of the “true Kobe Bryant.”

8th: NBA.com. Some gentlemen with big basketball brains discuss the balance between attempting to achieve a great defense and/or a great offense.

9th: Salt Lake City Hoops. Taking a look at how all the ex-Utah Jazzmen are doing. Like, all of them. This is rather thorough.

10th: Sacramento Bee. Crediting Vivek Ranadive for dealing properly with the media (and by extension, the fans) in the wake of the Michael Malone firing. As we should.


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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 : Michigan reportedly has offered Jim Harbaugh $8 million a year

Could the Michigan Wolverines be floating an offer to Jim Harbaugh to make him the highest-paid coach in college football?


According to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport, the Wolverines are offering the current San Francisco 49ers coach and former Michigan quarterback a $48 million deal over six seasons.



The $8 million per year average would be more than $800,000 higher than the total compensation Alabama's Nick Saban received in 2014. Saban's salary currently makes him the highest-paid coach in college football.


As Harbaugh's time with the 49ers is possibly coming to an end after the season based on a multitude of reports, Michigan has been patient with its coaching search. While Nebraska, Wisconsin, Oregon State and others have made quick moves to hire coaches, Michigan has bided its time. And the longer that Michigan does so, the more it looks like Harbaugh could be the team's target.


Before moving to the 49ers in 2011, Harbaugh coached at Stanford for four seasons after coaching at San Diego for three. He was a candidate to coach at Kansas in 2009, but the Jayhawks went with Turner Gill. In his final season at Stanford, the Cardinal won the Orange Bowl.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.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 : Report: Royals sign Edinson Volquez for two years, $20 million

(Getty Images) What a world we live in. Edinson Volquez, who was released by the San Diego Padres 16 months ago, and then had a decent bounce-back season in Pittsburgh in 2014, is set to make $20 million over the next two seasons.


The Kansas City Royals have reportedly signed Volquez, according to Chris Cotillo of MLB Daily Dish, sticking him in their starting rotation along with Yordano Ventura, Danny Duffy, Jason Vargas and Jeremy Guthrie.


Aside from two possible imports — Chihiro Kaneko and Kenta Maeda — and one possible retiree in Hiroki Kuroda, Volquez was the best starting pitcher available on Jeff Passan's Ultimate Free-Agent tracker.


Volquez, 31, won't be James Shields, that's for sure. He may not even be the 2014 version of himself. With the Pirates, Volquez rebounded from a dreadful 2013 (hello, 5.71 ERA!) and managed a 13-7 record with a 3.04 ERA. He hadn't had an ERA under 4.00 since his rookie season in 2008.


Volquez's FIP, though, was more than a run higher than his ERA, an indication that he's a strong regression candidate. In other words: If Volquez's ERA balloons up past 5.00 like it was in 2011 and 2013, don't say we say we didn't warn you, Kansas City.


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News sport : Attempting to understand the method behind Vivek Ranadive's machinations

Sacramento Kings owner Vivek Ranadive has recently been raked over the coals, and for good reason.


He fired a very good coach in Michael Malone who had led a significantly-improved Kings team to a solid record prior to center DeMarcus Cousins’ bout with viral meningitis. He’s hired Tyrone Corbin to coach his team, perhaps for the rest of the year, despite Corbin’s uninspiring recent turn in Utah. Ranadive is also apparently begging Kings consultant Chris Mullin to take over the team, despite Mullin’s inexperience at coaching at any level, and the fact that Mullin would have to learn on the fly without assembling his own staff and without the benefit of a training camp.


Ranadive is currently ignoring the pleas from George Karl, who is practically begging for the job, despite Karl’s previous working experience with Kings general manager Pete D’Alessandro. Ranadive then added to the ha-ha chorus by meeting with former Golden State flameout Mark Jackson on Tuesday night, insisting that the Kings at least attempt to run a 4-on-5 cherry picking defense at times, and then during the most recent Kings contest against the Oklahoma City Thunder he offered this bit of lovely:



"I like to use a music metaphor. We had a Sousa marching band, which was needed when there was chaos. But now we need to shift to a jazz band, where people can be individually showcased and improvised. What we need is a jazz director. I think that's the kind of leadership moving forward."



“Jazz director.” Because Rudy Van Gelder was perched at a podium in front of Miles Davis and his various bands, clicking a baton and telling the be-boppers which modal runs to explore next.


Now that we’re done with laughing down our sleeve at this guy, is it possible to find some sort of strain of sensibility in all of this?


Ranadive hired Malone without his GM’s approval, mainly because he didn’t have a general manager in place in 2013 when it came time to hire a coaching staff. At the time, Malone was considered to be the coaching candidate to go after, the next lauded assistant that was long overdue a chance at running his own team. After the Kings ran roughshod over former coaches Paul Westphal and Keith Smart while the franchise’s creepy former owners attempted to move the team, a defensive-minded coach needed to be in place in order to shore up the nonsense.


Malone was not his GM’s choice, he was apparently not Chris Mullin’s favorite guy, and he was far from receptive to some of the dumber suggestions tossed his way. Even with relative success, these are reasons to let a guy go. Even if he is a really, really good coach.


The problem here is that this sort of maneuver only works if you have a proper replacement. If Malone was so off-putting, then the time to can him would be in the summer, because by now we’d all be months removed from out massive “let’s dump all over Vivek Ranadive” pieces, works long forgotten as the NBA churns along. Someone like Mullin may have been persuaded to dive into the pool, and the Kings would be a quarter of a season into their “jazz director” phase.


Instead, the team is stuck with Corbin, with no clear replacement on the way. If Mullin is the eventual successor but only for 2015-16 and beyond, then you’ll have a team full of players that can see it coming a mile away – working four more regular season months under an obvious lame duck. That’s no good for anyone.


(There is also the little matter of the Kings’ draft situation. If the team falls apart again, it may be saved from having to send its first round draft pick to Chicago. The selection is currently protected through picks 1-through-10 over the next three seasons; though it would be a stretch to assume that Ranadive wants to tank just to avoid giving up the 14th pick in the draft.)


The free-flowing argument is a sound one. The San Antonio Spurs charmed the league last season with their beguiling ball movement, but even before San Antonio’s ascension to the championship podium it was long established that ball movement and spacing are keys to a killer pro offense.


The issues here, in relation to the Kings, can be boiled down to two tenets.


First, the Kings don’t currently have the sort of personnel that would encourage defenses to flail about as they attempt to cover penetrators, dishers, and shooters.


Secondly, it’s more than possible to win a championship with a pass-happy offense that starts from the inside-out. Shaquille O’Neal and Tim Duncan have enough rings in the modern NBA to prove as much.


You shouldn’t go as far as to refer to Sacramento’s offense under Malone as staid; he had some continually-developing action that made the Kings an intriguing watch even when the shots weren’t falling. It’s just that the Kings don’t have the personnel, currently, to turn themselves into a mini-Spurs.


The team is second to last in three-pointers made and third to last in three-pointers attempted. Darren Collison was signed last summer with the full knowledge that the point guard was not a good three-point shooter, Rudy Gay was traded for last season with his iffy perimeter credentials already in place, and though Ben McLemore has thankfully developed into an all-around offensive threat, rookie shooter (and Ranadive favorite) Nik Stauskas has had a rough rookie year even by rough rookie standards.


Is Ranadive aware of this? It hardly matters, because he’s in charge. And new owners want to get their licks in quickly.


Just ask Mark Cuban, who knows where Vivek is coming from:



“It’s not so much meddling and hands-on. That’s not the issue,” Cuban said. “The hardest thing in professional sports for an owner is hiring a coach. Period, end of story. I’ve said that a dozen times. The second hardest thing is hiring a general manager because there’s no template. No one does bad interviews because they’re all quality just to get there. I mean, it’s just not easy.




“After that, it’s really hard to turn off some of your basic business instincts. I would always try to push myself to learn more and get involved on the business side more to kind of take all that anxiety.”




In regard to basketball decisions, Cuban took an approach that is the polar opposite of Ranadive’s after purchasing the Mavs almost 15 years ago. He intentionally didn’t make any major decisions despite public pressure to fire coach Don Nelson and clean house.




“I really tried to learn,” Cuban said. “That’s why I didn’t make any changes when I first got there on the basketball side, because I wasn’t smart enough to know where to go or what changes to make. I feel [Ranadive’s] pain. It’s not easy. It is not easy. And you make mistakes.”



Younger NBA fans may not realize how inevitable it seemed in early 2000 that Cuban would dump Don Nelson directly after buying the Mavericks.


I read about Cuban’s purchase of the Dallas Mavericks at an online kiosk in the Denver airport, and joked in an email directly after that Nelson would be out as both Mavs coach and general manager by the time my upcoming three-hour flight landed. With Nelson so deep into the development following the moves he was criticized for midway through 1999-00, however, it made more basketball sense to give Nellie’s crew one more chance. The team responded with a strong end to the season and the franchise’s first playoff appearance in over a decade the following season.


That’s not to say Cuban didn’t play around quite a bit with his new toy – he signed Dennis Rodman a few weeks later and went after heaps of free agents the following summer – but as he points out the head coaching business is an entirely different animal. The coach is your last line of communication down from the owner’s box through the general manager’s office and all other manner of capologists, scouts, analytics types and assistant coaches. He’s the guy who has the final word in the huddle, and his or her importance cannot be overstated.


Despite the ham-fisted and laughable “jazz director” analogy, it’s important to note that Vivek Ranadive’s ideals are on point. You want to have a coach delicately lording over a fluid offense that keeps opponents on their heels, and you want to have a coach that’s on the same tactical page with the front office.


The questions are, will Ranadive find the right coach, and even if he does, is this the right page?


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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 : Kurt Busch testifies he told Patricia Driscoll to leave repeatedly

In his time on the stand Wednesday, Kurt Busch said he told his ex-girlfriend Patricia Driscoll multiple times to leave his motorhome on the night of September 26.


Busch testified as part of hearing for a request for protection order Driscoll placed in the wake of her domestic assault allegations against Busch on the Friday night of Dover race weekend. Driscoll alleges that Busch slammed her head into the wall of his motorhome multiple times.


Busch said those allegations are false.


From the Wilmington News-Journal via USA Today:



Busch testified that he had been sleeping the night of Sept. 26 when Driscoll arrived at his motorhome with her then-nine-year-old son, Houston. He says he told her repeatedly to leave, but she kept bringing her son in from another room, saying that Busch needed to tell the boy that the relationship between Busch and Driscoll was over.




Busch says Driscoll came to his motorhome uninvited and unannounced.




Busch says while the two were in his bedroom, he again asked her to leave, for what he said was the fifth time. He says he cupped her cheeks in his hands, looked her in the eye and said, "you need to leave." He says he was defusing the situation.



On Tuesday, Driscoll testified that Busch was struggling with alcoholism and depression and corroborated her claims made in a report to Dover police in November. The allegations are still being investigated.


Busch, the 2004 Sprint Cup Series champion, finished 12th in the 2014 standings.


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







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News sport : Shutdown Corner Playoff Projection: Big shakeup in the NFC field


The Shutdown Corner Playoff Projection (Kevin Kaduk).

A few things happened in Week 15 that caused us to reshuffle our playoff projections.

Here's how the playoff field looks right now entering Week 16 of the NFL season, with the Arizona Cardinals still sitting atop the NFC field with home-field advantage and the Super Bowl being played on their home turf.


However, with the Cardinals' shaky quarterback situation (and injuries elsewhere), we're projecting a new team landing the coveted top seed — the Seattle Seahawks — in advance of their meeting with the Cards this weekend.


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Losses by the Green Bay Packers and Philadelphia Eagles and victories by the Detroit Lions, Dallas Cowboys and New Orleans Saints also tilted those respective divisional races and the wildcard picture. One double-digit team will miss the field entirely, and right now it's the Eagles on the outside looking in.


With that in mind, here's how the first-round matchups could end up looking if our projections are accurate.


Detroit Lions at Dallas Cowboys: Yes, the Cowboys still need to firm up a postseason bid, but we think they have a great chance to take the NFC East and host this intriguing matchup of the Cowboys' offensive prowess against the fine defense of the Lions — specifically, the Lions' stout run defense (tops in the league) against the league's leading rusher in DeMarco Murray, assuming he has no complications from his left hand injury. Cowboys offensive coordinator Scott Linehan spent the past several years calling plays for the Lions, so he certainly would have some intel on how to slow down Calvin Johnson, Matthew Stafford and the Lions' offense, too. Johnson and Dez Bryant would be a fun postseason showcase of two of the NFL's premiere wideouts.


Arizona Cardinals at New Orleans Saints: The fact that Cardinals head coach Bruce Arians appeared very optimistic about Drew Stanton's health this week, we'd have to think that Stanton would have an excellent chance to quarterback them — and boy, they'd need it, even against a lesser defense — in this game. The Cardinals are 4-3 on the road, and the Saints are a fairly stunning 3-4 at home right now, but the Saints whipped the Green Bay Packers at the Superdome, and the Cardinals earned an impressive victory over the Cowboys away from home, so don't assume the worst. These teams met in this building in the 2009 postseason — Kurt Warner's final NFL game — en route to the Saints' first and only Super Bowl victory.


Baltimore Ravens at Indianapolis Colts: This would be a rematch of the teams that met at Lucas Oil Stadium back in Week 5, an ugly 20-13 win by the Colts that featured four field goals, one passing touchdown in 87 combined pass attempts between Andrew Luck and Joe Flacco and an interception by none other than Ravens defensive lineman Haloti Ngata, who would be scheduled to return from his four-game suspension for this playoff game. Colts head coach Chuck Pagano was the Ravens' defensive coordinator from 2008 to 2011, so it would be another chance for him to beat his former team.


Cincinnati Bengals at Pittsburgh Steelers: The Bengals actually lead the AFC North right now, but we think the multiple-personality Steelers have the firepower to overtake them and earn home field in this battle. Heinz Field is where these teams will meet in Week 17, so we could have rare back-to-back games between teams — and on the same field. (The Bengals also lost to the Steelers in Week 14 in Cincinnati, 42-21, so that would mean they'd have met three times in a 28- or 29-day span, depending on the playoff schedule.) Including the Week 14 result, the Steelers have beaten the Bengals 22 of the past 30 times they've met, which included one playoff game — during the 2005 postseason, the game where Carson Palmer tore his ACL and the Bengals blew a halftime lead to lose, 31-17.


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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!






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News sport : Michael Vick has nearly paid off his $18 million debt

NASHVILLE, TN - DECEMBER 14: Michael Vick #1 of the New York Jets warming up before a game against the Tennessee Titans at LP Field on December 14, 2014 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images) Prison will always define Michael Vick. But in a very tangible way, he's almost shed one of the heaviest burdens of his days behind bars: an $18 million debt.


Vick's career out of prison, six seasons, is now as long as his career before it. But as ESPN's Darren Rovell notes, much of the second half of Vick's career, which is now in low gear in New York, has been spent paing off a $17.8 million debt to creditors. Vick declared bankruptcy while in prison on federal dogfighting charges in July 2008.


Vick has spent the last five years on a budget in an effort to pay back creditors. Vick had to pay back the Atlanta Falcons $6.5 million in salary, among many others.


Now, granted, Vick is still making a substantial amount of money, an estimated $49 million in salary since his release from prison. Rovell adds sentences like the following, apparently without irony: "As part of the plan to pay off his creditors, Vick stuck to living on a $300,000 budget, because more than 50 percent of what he was making went toward taxes and legal fees." That budget, presumably after taxes, seems like enough to scrape by.


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As ESPN notes, Vick opted to go with Chapter 7 rather than Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which meant he paid back all that he was owed, not a small percentage. To him, it was an important and necessary step to demonstrate his willingness to atone. The deal with creditors is set to expire at the end of the year, and Vick will likely sell some property to close off the last of his debt.


"I feel blessed because I came out and found myself in a position where I had a lot of people that really believed in me, people who gave me an opportunity," Vick said. "At the time, it wasn't about trying to fulfill all the bankruptcy needs, I was trying to fulfill all the needs that I had in my life because I had nothing."


Vick will never escape the shadow of the events that landed him in prison. But he's shown through his actions that he won't remain defined by them. That's admirable, in its own way.


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



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News sport : Tyson Chandler feels sorry for former teammate Carmelo Anthony

Tyson Chandler is a good dude. He’s also a smart dude, aware of his station and lot in life after teams in Chicago, New Orleans and Charlotte have essentially given up on Chandler so far in his career, and his denial at a chance to become a member of the Kevin Durant-led Oklahoma City Thunder after failing a physical. As recently as last season, even, he was thought of as a contract albatross in New York.


Working back in Dallas at the age of 32, however, Chandler is clearly having a career year with the surging Mavs. Those Mavericks visited the sad state that is Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night, and following the team’s 20-point demolishing of the reeling Knicks, Chandler was asked if he had any of the sads for former teammate Carmelo Anthony.


From the New York Daily News:



“I do. I do,” Chandler responded when asked if he feels bad for his former teammate. “He’s a competitor. I laced it up and went to battle with him the last three years. I know what kind of competitor he is. I know he wants to win. I know he’s going to take a lot of this heat. It’s unfortunate because he’s a helluva player in our league. It’s unfortunate.




“It’s so tough. He signed a contract coming back here with expectations of doing everything in his power to take his team to the next level.




“Ultimately, I feel he will with the right pieces.”



Well, no, he probably won't. At least not for a few years, anyway, because the Knicks are playing like wet garbage right now.


Anthony is a competitor. You may take issue with his defense or decisions with the ball (while he isn’t stopping ball movement as much as he was last year, his hands are still far too sticky for this offense) or defensive decisions, but the guy does work hard and play through injury. One can quibble about the “competitor” aspect of things in reference to his off the court decision-making – Anthony could have turned down the Knicks’ money to play with a would-be championship contender – but for those two and a half hours on the court Carmelo attempts to bring it.


Carmelo took the money, understandably. Tyson Chandler knows the feeling – because he willingly left a championship team in Dallas this time three years ago to join a lower rung playoff team in New York, as the Knicks were offering him far more money than Dallas was. Chandler is lucky that Phil Jackson strangely decided to deal Chandler and Raymond Felton to a great team in Dallas last summer for a stopgap center in Samuel Dalembert and an upgrade in point guard in Jose Calderon. The triangle offense is usually averse to guards like Calderon (whose contract runs until 2017) that dominate the ball, so it was an odd deal all around.


Chandler is clearly happy to be out of New York, because while he may miss his one-time adopted hometown, the center is enjoying a healthy rebirth of sorts with a terrific Dallas squad.


The Knicks, meanwhile, are not terrific. They are terrible. And their rookie coach has had enough.


Frustrated with his team’s lethargic start on Tuesday night, Derek Fisher removed the entire starting lineup in one fell swoop with 5:20 left in the first quarter. They’d have entered even earlier had there been a dead ball opportunity, as the reserves were sitting at the scorer’s table for minutes prior to the whistle. The Knicks had been outscored by 16 points at that point, and Fisher was beside himself after the contest.


From Newsday:



"I thought the start was not the right way to start a professional basketball game,'' Fisher said. "Those guys that were in there to start the game, that was a disappointment to their teammates more than anything. Guys that start the game have to mentally and physically be ready to play, and they couldn't put that out there.''




[…]




"They came ready to play,'' Carmelo Anthony said. "We didn't.''



The Knicks haven’t come correct all season. The group has lost 12 of 13 and its record currently stands at 5-22. They remain the fourth-worst defensive team in the NBA, and the ball is sticking with alarming regularity as the group half-heartedly works through its offensive sets. Phil Jackson and Fisher didn’t go into this season with championship expectations, but the team’s brain trust at least assumed it would compete while Jackson sorted through the salted crops.


Instead, things have stalled, bad habits continue, and even the team’s $125 million player is being openly pitied by a former teammate.


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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 : Bo Pelini pokes Nebraska while praising Youngstown State


In his introductory press conference at Youngstown State on Wednesday, former Nebraska and now-YSU coach Bo Pelini had some nice words for university president Jim Tressel at the expense of his former superiors.


"I love to coach football, I love to serve kids that I coach and I believe that I have a great situation here," Pelini said. "I have a tremendous athletic director, a president who understands football who's going to support me – something that I don't know if I've ever head. I have a great administration and a community that I believe in wholeheartedly."


At Nebraska, Pelini had a 67-27 record and won nine games in each of his seven seasons with the school, though it wasn't enough at a school that remembers its dominance in the 1990s fondly. He was fired shortly after Nebraska's final regular season game of 2014.


Tressel, the former Ohio State coach, became YSU's president in 2014. He was the football coach at Youngstown State before becoming the coach at Ohio State. Pelini is a native of Youngstown, Ohio, and is back coaching in the town for the first time since he was a coach at Cardinal Mooney High School in 1993.


In 2013, audio of a leaked 2011 tirade of Pelini's was leaked. After the release of the video, Nebraska president Harvey Perlman said he was disappointed about it and met with athletic director Shawn Eichorst. At the time, Eichorst said he talked with Pelini and expressed the administration's "deep concern."


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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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