News sport : New Orleans Bowl: Nevada stands in way of ULL's fourth straight bowl win

R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl

Nevada (7-5) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4)

New Orleans, La.

Dec. 20, 2014


Louisiana-Lafayette will be in familiar territory for its 2014 bowl game.


The Ragin’ Cajuns will head east to the Superdome looking for its fourth straight win for a 10 a.m. local start in the New Orleans Bowl on Saturday against Nevada.


The Cajuns overcame a 1-3 to start to win seven of its last eight games, finishing 8-4 overall and second in the Sun Belt with a 7-1 conference record. Led by dual-threat senior quarterback Terrance Broadway, a three-year starter, and sophomore tailback Elijah McGuire, ULL put up an average of 229.4 yards rushing a game, 23rd in the country.


Broadway threw for 2,073 yards and 12 touchdowns while gaining 634 yards and three scores on the ground. McGuire racked up 1,165 yards and 14 touchdowns on 7.8 yards per carry. Additionally, 238-pound senior Alonzo Harris ran for 737 yards and 12 touchdowns.


At 7-5, the Wolf Pack had an up-and-down season, but it was certainly an improvement over a 4-8 2013 campaign. Like ULL, Nevada also features a heavy rushing attack with a dual-threat senior quarterback. Cody Fajardo had an impressive senior season, throwing for 2,374 yards and 18 touchdowns while also running for 997 yards and 13 scores.


Fajardo has a slew of playmakers to give the ball to, including three wideouts with 45 or more receptions – Richy Turner (58 catches, 541 yards, 4 TDs), Jerico Richardson (53-626-3) and Hasaan Henderson (45-579-4) – and running backs Don Jackson (932 yards, 7 TDs) and James Butler (620 yards, 5 TDs).


Though it gave up 28.2 points per game, Nevada’s defense forced 26 turnovers this season. If it can force the Ragin’ Cajuns to put the ball on the ground, the Wolf Pack could reverse its bowl fortunes in recent years. Nevada has reached postseason play in nine of the last 10 seasons, but won just one twice – once in 2005 and once in 2010.


ODDS


Nevada (-1)


FUN FACT


Though he is second on ULL in rushing yards this season due to the emergence of Elijah McGuire, Alonzo Harris is third in program history with 3,260 career rushing yards. With 76 yards on the ground against Nevada, Harris can pass 13-year NFL veteran Brian Mitchell (3,335 yards) in the school’s record book.


PREDICTIONS


Graham: Nevada 31, Louisiana-Lafayette 17: Both of these teams excel in their respective running games, but Nevada has a little more versatility and few more weapons. Also, the Wolf Pack defense has been strong this season, forcing 26 turnovers.


Nick: Nevada 33, Louisiana-Lafayette 28: We'll take the mullet over the bench press in this game, as ULL coach Mark Hudspeth will be unable to press his team to victory.


Sam: Louisiana-Lafayette 31, Nevada 24: There’s just something about the Ragin’ Cajuns in the New Orleans Bowl that makes it tough to pick against them. ULL’s three-headed rushing attack of Broadway, McGuire and Harris is going to be tough for the Wolf Pack to stop. Cody Fajardo is going to keep it close, but I like ULL to pull it out in its home state.


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







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News sport : Jacksonville's Sen'Derrick Marks earned $600,000 on one play




It was one tackle in a game that was, otherwise, the definition of unmemorable. A tackle to bring a merciful end to a slapfight between two 2-11 teams, a sack of the Tennessee Titans' Charlie Whitehurst through an indifferent O-line. But for Jacksonville Jaguars defensive tackle Sen'Derrick Marks, it was the most profitable tackle of his entire career.


The sack triggered a $600,000 bonus in Marks' contract; he had to achieve at least eight sacks this season, and he now has 8 1/2. The sack preserved Jacksonville's 21-13 win against Tennessee, giving the Jaguars the tiniest measure of hope for a better year and giving Titans fans more reason to hope for Marcus Mariota in Tennessee blues.


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For his part, Marks knew exactly where he stood. After making the sack, he leaped up and made the Johnny Manziel "money" gesture before getting buried by teammates in a celebratory pile. After the game, he invited pretty much the entire city of Jacksonville to party with him.


"It was pretty awesome," Marks said. "Just the excitement of all the guys. Everybody's excited about somebody else accomplishing something. It just shows the character of our team and the guys that we have. Nobody gets that check but me, but everybody's excited for me. It's just the commitment we all have to one another and the character of each guy in here."


Maybe so, but Marks deserves plenty of credit all on his own. Coming into this season, he only had seven sacks total for his previous five years in the league, one with Jacksonville and four with Tennessee. He's more than doubled his total of four sacks last season.


In the end, Marks is getting the check, but his teammates are apparently going to help him use it. "Oh, we're going to spend some of that money," DE Red Bryant said.


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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 : Bears' Tillman hints at return, can't explain awful 2014 season

Holiday spirit is in a little shorter supply this season in Chicago with the Bears' struggles this season, but injured cornerback Charles Tillman is trying to keep a healthy perspective on the team and himself — and also giving fans a reason to smile — as best he can.


"It has just been one of those years, man," Tillman told the Shutdown Corner. "Every year, some team just has one of those years. That's us."


Tilman has been working back from a season-ending triceps injury he suffered back in Week 2 that put his career status in doubt, but he's rehabbing dutifully and taking part in his usual dose of community service — he was the NFL's Walter Payton Man of the Year last season — for which he is widely respected in the community.


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He's also at a loss for words on why the Bears' season has gone so awry. Tillman blames injuries and bad luck as the primary factors.


"I don't think anyone could have foreseen how this has gone. I always have felt that we have a chance to win the Super Bowl before the season, and this year was no different. I just think injuries had a lot to do with it. We just have not been healthy, and that's something this team has struggled with the last two years.


"I think everyone did everything they could to come into the season healthy, but stuff happens. It's football, man. The football Gods made sure we were going to all be injured this year, so that's how it went."


The Bears lost Tillman in Week 2, and other stalwarts went down throughout the season: linebacker Lance Briggs, receiver Brandon Marshall, defensive end Lamarr Houston and linebacker D.J. Williams, among them. But most of those injuries took place well into the season — after the Bears' struggles were well underway.


Their injuries from the 2013 season appeared to be more serious and plentiful, when the team lost several starters for various lengths, but still finished 8-8 and on the cusp of the playoffs.


Other factors have derailed the Bears' 2014 season. First, the struggles of the defense continued to the point where coordinator Mel Tucker was made out to be the fall guy. Tillman thinks this was unfair.


"I don't agree with Mel being the fall guy," he said. "I believe we as players have to make plays. If you blame Mel, you have to blame the players, too. It's not just one man's job or duty. You need all 11 guys and coaches on board, working together as one. If you don't have that, you lose.


"We've shown collectively how great we can be at times, but we have been inconsistent. We've been consistently inconsistent. That's a little frustrating because I know the level of talent we have. On paper, we're talented. But some days we just don't show up."


More recently, the Aaron Kromer breach of trust has divided the locker room. Tillman couldn't help but acknowledge the situation but also said it's not the kind of thing that will linger long term.


"I think there might have been a little trust lost with a few words that were said a few weeks ago, but I also know that there was an apology and we've all come to terms with that," he said. "I relate that to, if you have a problem with your wife and have a falling out, are you not going to ever trust them again?


"You still love each other. You fight and you work through it. Let's be done with it and move on. It's no different in the locker room. That tension exists, and we face each other like men, forgive each other and move on. I think that's normal."


As for the much-discussed benching of quarterback Jay Cutler, Tillman indicated that the decision was above his and his teammates' pay grades.


"Those are coach's decisions," Tillman said. "We, as a team, just have to roll with it and trust that they have the best interest of the team with the decisions they make."


Does Tillman agree with Martellus Bennett's assessment following the loss to the New Orleans Saints that some Bears have quit on the team?


"I don't know. I think guys are. I think it's just one of those years where no matter what happens, everything has gone wrong. I see guys put in the work; I see the effort. I think frustration has killed some passion, though."


Tillman has said recently he intends to return to the NFL next season, health willing, but that everything feels good with his triceps now.


"The triceps is awesome," he said. "I feel strong. ...I am lifting a little weight now. Right now, the goal is to get my arm as strong as I can.


"No Peanut punching right now; maybe some peanut jabs. It's not where it needs to be yet. But I'm getting close to hopefully making some plays next year for the team."


Is a return to the Bears in the offing for 2015?


"I [would] return to the Bears," he said. "But right now I look at it as interviewing for all 32 teams. The Bears are included in that. I have no ill will whatsoever. I am keeping all options open."


But being hurt hasn't dampened Tillman's charitable heart, and he recently found a new team to work with — Courtyard, the official hotel of the NFL — to raise some holiday spirit in a video series the hotel chain is doing called "Courtyard Camera" with NFL players.


Tillman posed in disguise as an overzealous holiday video director in a Chicago branch of the hotel and tried to recruit guests to sing songs for him on tape.


"I'm a kid at heart, and anytime there are cameras there is going to be fun to be had if I am involved," Tillman said. "My job was to get [hotel guests] to go along with it and sing 'Jingle Bells.' They had no idea who I was. I had props, a disguise, I was acting so serious ... people thought I was crazy. And no one knew who I was.


"I was screwing up people's names on purpose, pushing it right to the edge without them getting mad."


The results are pretty amusing. Have a look:



Tillman's body might be injured, but his heart is just as warm and vibrant as before.


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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 : Miss. State A.D. tweets pic of white alternate unis for Orange Bowl (Photo)

Is Mississippi State wearing a white version of its 100th anniversary uniforms against Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl?


Athletic director Scott Stricklin tweeted a picture of the jerseys, complete with Orange Bowl patch, on Thursday.



MSU wore the home version of the uniforms earlier in the year against Southern Miss. Besides being a different color, the home uniforms had "Hail State" on the front. The white ones simply say "Mississippi State."


For comparison's sake, here's what Mississippi State's regular road uniforms looked like in 2014.




The Bulldogs in white also means we likely won't get to see Georgia Tech's sweet white honeycomb helments. Maybe they'll wear gold versions?




For more Mississippi State news, visit BulldogBlitz.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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Fifa to publish Garcia report

Fifa's executive committee has agreed to publish Michael Garcia's report into World Cup corruption, according to media reports.


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MARRAKESH, Morocco – Fifa's executive committee has agreed to publish Michael Garcia's report into World Cup corruption, according to media reports.


Sky News quoted sources as saying the report would be published with “with appropriate redactions,” according to Sky sources.


It said the executive committee decided in Morocco to make the report public once the inquiry into World Cup bidding corruption is complete.


Officials reached agreement without a vote being taken.


According to Britain's BBC the executive committee “voted unanimously” for full publication of Garcia's report. The BBC cited “sources close to world football's governing body.”


Garcia on Wednesday resigned his position from Fifa,'s ethics committee, the day after the world football governing body dismissed his appeal against its summary of his investigation into the award of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.


In a statement Garcia, a former United States attorney, said there was a “lack of leadership” at Fifa, he had lost confidence in Hans-Joachim Eckert, the chairman of the ethics committee's adjudicatory chamber, and that “his role in this process is at an end.”


Russia won the right to host the 2018 World Cup with the 2022 edition going to Qatar. But following allegations of corruption, Garcia was commissioned to investigate and report on the bidding process for the events. – Sapa-dpa






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News sport : Tim Tebow spoke to Ohio State's football team Thursday night (Photo)

Ohio State coach Urban Meyer brought a former quarterback of his to speak to his football team Thursday night.


No, it wasn't Chris Leak, or Alex Smith. Not that you were going to guess either of them anyway.



Maybe this will help some people believe that ESPN doesn't have an agenda for the SEC at the expense of other conferences? Because otherwise, why would the network allow an SEC Network employee to speak to a team about to face Alabama?


Or maybe Tebow is a double agent and as part of being an SEC Network employee, was using his friendship with Meyer to spy for Alabama and give Nick Saban Ohio State's secrets? That'd be a heel-turn greater than any WWE scriptwriter could think up.


But we do know this. Tebow's presence in Columbus means he wasn't in Arizona on Thursday night preparing with the Cardinals to play on Sunday against the Seahawks.


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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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Wenger sympathises with Rodgers

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger expressed sympathy for his beleaguered Liverpool counterpart Brendan Rodgers ahead of their clash at Anfield.


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London – Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger knows all about the ups and downs of football management and expressed sympathy for his beleaguered Liverpool counterpart Brendan Rodgers ahead of their clash at Anfield on Sunday.


Rodgers is facing a stern examination of his managerial credentials this season, with last year's Premier League runners-up 11th in the table.


Wenger, who has been Gunners boss for 18 years and survived his fair share of challenges, said: “I've sympathy for every single manager in the Premier League. Everybody goes through periods where it goes a bit less well.


“Our job is to survive crises. Part of the job, not all the job.


“When you want to make a long career, you cannot only win, unfortunately.”


Arsenal return to Anfield, where last season they lost 5-1, on something of a high after victories over Galatasaray and Newcastle, finding the net four times in each game.


They conceded four goals in the opening 20 minutes last term against a rampaging Reds as their title challenge unravelled.


“We've won five of our last six games,” Wenger said.


“We want to continue our strong run. We had a good game against Newcastle and Sunday is a good game for us to show that we can have continuity in finding a good balance between attacking well and defending well.


“Liverpool are always very strong at home and that's why we want to continue to be faithful to our philosophy and play our game, but as well be solid defensively.”


Asked if the pain of last year's loss at Anfield lingers, Wenger added: “Every defeat hurts. Every defeat is a scar in your heart forever. We have as well very good memories at Liverpool. We won many games at Liverpool as well.


“And even last year, we lost against them. A week later against the same team we won 2-0 at home in the FA Cup.


“Liverpool last year scored over 100 goals in the championship, they were very good going forward.


“This season they've scored 19 until now so they are not on the same trend offensively, but I must say they started out the blocks very strong and we were too late to get into the game.”


Wenger is not yet looking beyond the next few games, though.


“It's a very important period now,” he said. “Over the Christmas period we play four Premier League games. Over Christmas we'll come back strongly I'm sure in the league.


“After, when you get over the hill to January, you look towards the end.


“How you come out of the Christmas period is of course very important.”


Wenger's latest challenge is managing a busy treatment room.


Theo Walcott, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (both groin) and Nacho Monreal (ankle) face fitness tests to determine if they can play at Liverpool.


Calum Chambers is back from suspension, but Laurent Koscielny (calf), Mikel Arteta (calf), Mesut Ozil (knee), David Ospina


(thigh), Abou Diaby (calf), Jack Wilshere (ankle), Tomas Rosicky (thigh) and Serge Gnabry (knee) are all still out.


And Wenger fears midfielder Aaron Ramsey will be out until the new year with his hamstring problem.


The Frenchman said: “I'm scared that he will miss the Christmas period. He should be back end of December, early January.” – Sapa-AFP






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News sport : Robert Upshaw's long journey from bust to budding stardom

Basketball coach Pat Geil has removed many players from practice for lackluster effort or shoddy performance.


Only once has he yanked a kid off the court for doing too well.


When Robert Upshaw enrolled at San Joaquin Memorial High School four years ago, the highly touted 6-foot-11 junior initially could only practice with his new team because of California transfer rules. Geil put Upshaw on the scout team in practice until the center's knack for swatting away shots in the paint created an unusual problem.


"He was blocking so many shots and making it so difficult to score that our starting big guys began losing confidence," Geil said. "When they got in games, they were hesitant to shoot. Eventually, we had to tell Rob, 'Why don't you sit out for a while.' Our big guys couldn't get up any shots against him in practice and it was killing us."


Scoring against Upshaw hasn't been any easier for opposing college players this season than it was for his San Joaquin Memorial teammates four years ago. The University of Washington sophomore is turning away shots at an absurd pace, averaging a national-best 4.8 blocks per game despite coming off the bench every game this season and only logging 19.1 minutes per night.


The emergence of Upshaw as a defensive anchor is a huge reason 16th-ranked Washington has won its first nine games and held opponents to anemic 33 percent shooting. The Huskies' array of tall, athletic guards have been able to defend aggressively and close out hard on 3-point shooters without fear of being beaten off the dribble since they know there's a shot blocker with a 7-foot-51/2-inch wingspan lurking in the paint to erase mistakes.


Upshaw's impact on defense isn't the only way he has contributed to Washington's quest to end a three-year NCAA tournament drought. The former top 50 recruit has also averaged an efficient 10.9 points and a team-high 7.1 rebounds per game, further validating the Washington staff's decision to offer him a second chance after Fresno State dismissed him from school the summer after his freshman season.


"What I've tried to do is be the person Washington has been missing, a big man that can block shots, run the floor, rebound and also score," Upshaw said. "I'm having success but I'm not satisfied. I know I can be a lot better than what I am right now. I think this is the start of what I can be, and I just have to keep improving."


Upshaw's evolution into an impact college player and an NBA prospect is a testament to his perseverance because there were times when it seemed his basketball career had stalled.


This is a guy who averaged an underwhelming 4.1 points and 3.8 rebounds as a freshman at Fresno State despite arriving with more hype than any recruit the school has landed in years. This is a guy who Fresno State coach Rodney Terry suspended twice as a freshman for team rules violations and eventually decided was more trouble than he was worth. This is a guy whose spot on the Washington roster was in jeopardy last spring after the coaching staff banned him from attending practices or games so he could address his off-court issues.


"I think it has made Rob a stronger person fighting through so many obstacles to get to this point," his mother Ceylon Sherman said. "Rob has always been a sweet, caring person, but the decisions and choices he was making weren't the right ones. He has matured a lot over the last year or two. Now he appreciates what he has more because he had to work harder to achieve it."




Before Upshaw could evolve into an elite basketball prospect, he first had to give the sport a chance.


Upshaw's mom played from third grade through high school and both his older brothers were basketball players too, but he preferred soccer and baseball. Only after he rocketed up to 6-foot-8 entering eighth grade did he finally grow tired of his family's not-so-subtle encouragement and decide to give basketball a try.


Even though Upshaw hadn't played basketball nearly as long as most of his peers and he was in such poor shape that he'd get tired after a couple trips down the floor, his size, footwork and coordination enabled him to quickly emerge as a potential Division I prospect anyway. By the end of his sophomore year at Edison High School, Louisville, Georgetown, Texas, Arizona and UCLA were among the many programs dispatching coaches to Fresno in order to pursue him.


Out of a large pool of elite programs Upshaw signed with Kansas State in Nov. 2011 because of his strong bond with the players and staff and his belief that head coach Frank Martin's tough-love approach would get the most out of him. Upshaw intended to honor that letter of intent until a teammate at an all-star game approached him in late March 2012 and broke the news to him that Martin had just left Kansas State for South Carolina.


"It was heartbreaking," Sherman said. "We had taken our time to look for a perfect fit for Rob, and Kansas State was everything we were looking for. We were ready to move to Kansas. We were ready. It was frustrating when it happened because we were going to Kansas State because of Frank Martin. Once he left, we had to open the recruitment back up."


Robert Upshaw (Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports) With the spring signing period only weeks away, Upshaw didn't have much time to make a decision. He didn't want to go to Kansas State anymore because he'd be playing for a staff that didn't recruit him. He didn't want to follow Martin to South Carolina either. And while some elite programs that originally recruited him were still willing to free up a scholarship to make room for him, he was overwhelmed at the thought of starting his recruiting process all over again.


For that reason, Upshaw chose the school that felt most comfortable to him. He lived minutes from Fresno State's campus, he knew most of his future teammates and head coach Rodney Terry had recruited him since his freshman year of high school when Terry was an assistant coach under Rick Barnes at Texas.


"Toward the end, Rob was just so frustrated with the recruiting process that he said he was going to give Fresno State a try" Sherman said. "I didn't want him to stay in Fresno, but against my wishes, that's what he did. It just didn't turn out to be a good fit for him."


The risk for celebrated basketball prospects who choose to play for their hometown college is that the spotlight shines brighter and the expectations are more burdensome. Success brings fame and adulation; Failure ensures ignominy and criticism.


There are a handful of reasons why the most prized recruit of Terry's tenure experienced more scorn than praise as a Fresno State freshman.


Upshaw battled knee problems leading up to the start of the season that detracted from his explosiveness and conditioning. He also often gave an uneven effort in practices and games. And he got himself in trouble often enough away from basketball that Terry was compelled to suspend him twice for a total of four games late in the season before dismissing him the following summer.


Neither Upshaw nor anyone close to him chose to offer specifics when asked exactly what led to his dismissal, but their answers were still revealing. They describe Upshaw as a goodhearted but immature kid who made the type of foolhardy decisions college freshmen sometimes make when they're living on their own for the first time.


"I made some bad choices," Upshaw said. "What happened is done and I can't change that, but I learned from it. I'm not doing it now. I'm definitely not doing it now. I'm in a better stage of my life. Basically, I just had to grow up."



The first step in Upshaw's maturation process was spending part of the summer after his freshman year at John Lucas' Houston-based treatment program.


Lucas, a former NBA star whose career was nearly derailed by substance abuse, has gained national acclaim for training basketball players and for helping rehabilitate athletes whose lives have careened off track. The tough love approach Lucas favors was exactly what Upshaw needed to recalibrate his mindset for the comeback ahead.


"John Lucas was so good for Rob," said Upshaw's former AAU coach Clayton Williams. "That's when he started to make changes and make strides. He came back a different person."


One of Upshaw's first priorities after returning home was to find a school willing to offer him a second chance. Washington emerged as one of a handful of suitors once its staff did enough research to properly weigh the risks.


Assistant coach T.J. Otzelberger visited with Upshaw and the big man's family, friends and former coaches in hopes of assessing what went wrong at Fresno State and whether the off-court issues were likely to resurface. Otzelberger emerged from those conversations confident Upshaw was ready to make the necessary changes in his life and convinced the 7-footer could fill a need for a Washington program that lacked a shot blocking center on its roster.


"We certainly did a lot of digging to find out where he was at mentally," Otzelberger said. "From everything that Rob was saying to us, we felt like he wanted to turn his life around and he seemed sincere in those overtures. We knew his ability level and we knew the challenges of finding a legitimate rim protector. Between what Rob was saying to us and the tremendous upside that he has, it made him a risk we were willing to embrace."


Even though transfer-friendly Oregon and prestigious UCLA were among the other schools that expressed interest in Upshaw, Washington was a fairly easy choice.


Playing time didn't figure to be an issue with top big man Perris Blackwell graduating after the 2013-14 season. Upshaw also fancied the idea of playing for Washington's Lorenzo Romar, a head coach with a reputation for preparing his players for life outside basketball by serving as a father figure and hands-on mentor.


When Upshaw arrived at Washington at the start of the 2013-14 school year, Romar immediately set up some stipulations for what the 7-footer had to do earn his trust. Only if Upshaw lived up to Romar's expectations on and off the floor would he have the chance to play for the Huskies when he became eligible the following season.


"More than anything, we needed to see consistency on a daily basis," Otzelberger said. "We made sure he was attending class, doing well in school and addressing any issues he had away from the floor. We encouraged him to tackle those head-on and to get appropriate help and attend counseling or meetings if needed. And from a basketball standpoint, we wanted to see that daily commitment. He hadn't always been someone who had taken care of business on the court, off the court and in the classroom, so that's what we wanted to see."


Though Upshaw endeared himself to everyone at Washington with his warm, friendly personality, his transformation wasn't instantaneous. Romar even prohibited Upshaw from attending practice or sitting on the bench during games for the second half of last season to prove he wouldn't hesitate to cut ties with the 7 footer if necessary.


There were times Upshaw wasn't sure he'd ever have the chance to play for Washington, but he gradually won over the coaching staff by attending class, persevering through extra workouts and getting into the best shape of his life. Romar reinstated Upshaw to the team this summer, shaking his hand and congratulating him the progress he had made in his first calendar year at Washington.


"Coach Romar could have given up on me a long time ago but he hasn't," Upshaw said. "He has been like a second father to me. He wanted me to change my life and he wanted me to get myself together, so he had to give me a couple consequences in order to do that. It has really helped me. Look where I'm at now."


Indeed how far Upshaw has come in the past 18 months is pretty remarkable.


The person whose self-destructive choices nearly cost him his basketball career is now back on an upward trajectory. The player once dismissed from a losing program is now an unbeaten team's breakout star. The guy once derided as a bust is now one of the most feared shot blockers in the nation.


Earlier this month, Brad Roznovsky, an assistant coach at San Joaquin Memorial when Upshaw was there, visited his former player in Seattle for two days. He returned home from Seattle extremely encouraged by Upshaw's maturation on and off the court.


"I think he has really grown up," Roznovsky said. "There are a lot of people in the Fresno area who still come up to me and make jokes about Rob, but he is proving everyone wrong right now. From where he is now to where he was a year and a half ago, it's night and day."


Video of Robert Upshaw via NZAUTV Basketball:



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Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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Can United really challenge for title?

The Premier League title race that was only expected to feature two contenders, but now, a third team is loitering with intent.


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AS Christmas draws near, Manchester United are back on familiar territory. A Barclays Premier League title race that was only expected to feature two contenders suddenly has a third team loitering with intent at the head of the chasing pack.


Winning is a habit


However, there were signs against Liverpool at Old Trafford last Sunday that suggested, for the first time in a long time, that United had rediscovered the belief that was always there during the Sir Alex Ferguson years.


United weren’t comprehensively better than Liverpool in winning 3-0, but at no point did you think they would lose. On the counter, United played with a conviction and edge that always suggested that, whatever happened in their own penalty box, they would manage to put it right in the other one.


It was not dissimilar to the way Liverpool themselves felt at the back end of last season and look what it almost did for them.


Big names back LVG


This time last year, senior players at Old Trafford — such as Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic — already had serious reservations about Moyes and Ferguson’s successor suffered as a consequence.


So far this time, Van Gaal has had no such problems and, crucially, he has quickly gained and maintained the trust and support of players such as Rooney, Michael Carrick and Darren Fletcher. Players in the United dressing room listen to these voices and it is the Old Trafford squad’s belief in their coach that has, for example, enabled Antonio Valencia and Ashley Young to perform much better as emergency wing backs than anybody ever expected.


These things can make a difference, especially during periods of transition. The decision to hand Rooney the captaincy was a clever one and it is paying off in terms of the England skipper’s performances and day-to-day influence.


An example of Rooney’s current approach is that when Van Gaal called him back to the training ground from an appointment on Merseyside to talk about a forthcoming game a month ago, the 29-year-old didn’t bat an eyelid.


United managers — just like their contemporaries at clubs like Spurs and Liverpool — will never be short of ex-coaches and players telling the world exactly what they are doing wrong.


Van Gaal has had plenty of that, but those who know him stress that he doesn’t even hear it, never mind pay attention to it.


Van Gaal can certainly get jumpy in press conferences and doesn’t like being reminded of things that have gone awry. But the key quality that the former Barcelona and Bayern Munich coach possesses is to forget all about it as soon as he has walked out of the room.


He is 100 per cent convinced that what he is doing is correct and that kind of self-belief is something you cannot buy.


Ride your luck


United have had a dreadful run with injuries and only time will tell if any of that is down to Van Gaal’s methods. The United manager has been fortunate, however, that a tiny pocket of players he really needs have managed to stay fit.


Rooney is certainly one of those — for many reasons — while David de Gea is another. The goalkeeper is on one of those runs of form that you can only dream about.


His performances against Arsenal and Liverpool not only earned his team victories, but actually stopped them losing. Take six points off United’s tally of 31 in the Premier League and Van Gaal’s record would look identical to that of Moyes a year ago and would see them outside the top six with only two points more than Newcastle.


That is how fine the margins are in English football these days.


Van Gaal and his staff will rightly claim an influence on their goalkeeper’s form — coach Frans Hoek has previously worked with Victor Valdes, Pepe Reina and Edwin van der Sar — but if a keeper is saving your skin on a regular basis then it’s best to close your eyes and hope it continues.


No Europe


While we are on the subject, the 4-0 Capital One Cup defeat at MK Dons that seemed to spell crisis back in August no longer looks like the worst result in the world either. United’s constant stream of free weeks has given them vital breathing space so far.


Title chances?


However, it must be said that United’s performances in taking 18 points from games against Crystal Palace, Arsenal, Hull, Stoke, Southampton and Liverpool probably merited about half of that total on balance of play and opportunities.


Good finishing and outstanding goalkeeping will only carry you so far and Van Gaal knows he still has issues to address in the days and weeks to come. His team struggle to keep possession for long periods and the defence — still missing some players — continues to look far too porous, particularly between the central defenders.


It is worth noting that Moyes was still being asked if his team could win the title as United put together a six-game winning streak in all competitions this time last year. And look what happened to him. – Daily Mail






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Chiefs set to make history

Kaizer Chiefs go into their final match of the year with a spring in their step after equalling Orlando Pirates’ record unbeaten run of 17 matches in a season.


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And now out to set a new record and ensure the Christmas lunch goes down well, Kaizer Chiefs go into their final match of the year tomorrow with a spring in their step after equalling Orlando Pirates’ record unbeaten run of 17 matches in a season. Victory – or even a draw – over Black Aces at the FNB Stadium will see Amakhosi set a new record that will prove very hard to beat.


And having already put one over Amazayoni in the first round, all indications are that Chiefs will emerge victorious once more, such has been their form his term.


Not that Stuart Baxter and his boys are taking anything for granted. Far from it, for the Englishman knows just how dangerous Clive Barker’s team can be. “Clive always tries to play (positively) and on a good day Aces can pass right past, over or around you – they are that good. Besides, I am aware that any team can beat us just as much as we can beat any team.”


But victory to wrap up what has so far been a fantastic season will provide Baxter with a great festive cheer.


“Of course my turkey will taste a little better if we beat them,” he laughed.


Barker has continuously praised Chiefs as the best team in the league, the old man even going to the extent of proclaiming Amakhosi champions with nearly half the season still to be played. Baxter, though, doesn’t buy it.


“I’m too old to believe all that. If they say that they are too nice and maybe they want to create in us a sense of false security. But we won’t fall for that. Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder,” he responded when told that some coaches have said Chiefs play the most beautiful football of the lot in the league. Yet to taste defeat this season, Baxter expressed pleasure at the fact that their success has been achieved in spite of Chiefs often being forced to make changes to their starting line-up.


“What is really pleasing for me is that we play different shapes and use different players yet we still manage to play with the same intensity and produce good results.” It is this fact that has Baxter not duly worried that their impending participation in continental competition (the Caf Champions League) next year could derail them from their championship run and see them usurped like they were by Mamelodi Sundowns last season.


“Last year (season) was different because we had the points but Sundowns had games in hand. Now we know that everyone is on the same games and they – Wits, Sundowns and Pirates – are all in Africa. And we’ve learnt from our experiences and maybe when the (transfer) window opens (in January) we might get some new players. But the key for us is to win every game, or at least try to like we have been doing so far.”


Against an Aces side that played a big role in their implosion with victory at the same FNB last season though, Chiefs will need to perform for the full 90 minutes instead of coming alive after the break as they have done in their recent matches. After all, Amazayoni have not lost a single match on the road this season.


Late tomorrow at nearby Orlando Stadium, Pirates welcome a Bloemfontein Celtic side that won their first match under coach Clinton Larsen who rejoined Phunya Sele Sele following the departure of Ernst Middendorp. The Buccaneers came from behind in a 1-1 draw at Moroka Swallows and will be keen to get back to winning ways if they are to remain among the chasing pack behind Amakhosi. The Birds are away to AmaZulu while Free State Stars welcome Platinum Stars, Polokwane City host Maritzburg United and Ajax Cape Town visit Mamelodi Sundowns. Sunday’s two matches see University of Pretoria tackle Bidvest Wits and Chippa United clash with SuperSport United. - The Star






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Liverpool hoping for Arsenal boost

Liverpool will hope to draw inspiration from memories of last season's thrilling 5-1 demolition of Arsenal when the teams meet at Anfield.


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London – Liverpool will hope to draw inspiration from memories of last season's thrilling 5-1 demolition of Arsenal when the teams resume hostilities in the Premier League at Anfield this weekend.


Arsene Wenger's side were routed on their last trip to Liverpool's famous stadium in February, when a devastating four-goal salvo inside the first 20 minutes left the north London club reeling.


It was the start of an 11-game winning run that took Liverpool to within sight of the title.


Their subsequent collapse has been followed by a wretched start to the current campaign, with last weekend's chastening 3-0 defeat at Manchester United leaving them 18 points behind leaders Chelsea in 11th place.


But having emerged from a taxing trip to Championship leaders Bournemouth in the League Cup with a 3-1 victory in mid-week, manager Brendan Rodgers is hopeful that his side have turned a corner.


“Slowly we are getting there. I've said that my teams have shown at Liverpool that we get better and better,” Rodgers said after Liverpool's quarter-final success at Dean Court.


“A lot of players are adapting. I've been looking to find ways and solutions to make us more creative as we haven't been that at all this season and that is the mark of the team.”


Arsenal lost 3-2 at Stoke City in their last domestic away game, but have since produced back-to-back 4-1 wins over Galatasaray in the Champions League and Newcastle United in the league.


The home victory over Newcastle left Wenger's side in sixth place in the table, five points clear of Liverpool and two points shy of the Champions League places.


Wenger has revealed that winger Theo Walcott, who has played only two games this season following a long-term knee injury, is in contention to feature after shrugging off a groin complaint.


“He is back in training today (Thursday), but only today,” Wenger told the club website. “I might take him. I don't know yet until he is back to full training. Let's see.”


Chelsea's three-point lead over second-place Manchester City, coupled with a superior goal difference (+23 to +19), means that they are practically assured of being in first place on Christmas Day.


But with Jose Mourinho's side not in action until Monday, when they welcome Stoke to Stamford Bridge, champions City can draw level with them by winning at home to Crystal Palace on Saturday.


While City are on a five-match winning run in the league, cross-town rivals Manchester United will be looking to record a seventh consecutive victory when they travel to Aston Villa.


Last Sunday's victory over Liverpool enabled Louis van Gaal's team to remain eight points behind Chelsea and five behind City, prompting captain Wayne Rooney to declare that they still have designs on the title.


Villa saw a five-game unbeaten run come to an end in a 1-0 loss at West Bromwich Albion last weekend and have a dismal home record against United, who they have not beaten in the league at Villa Park since August 1995.


Fourth-place West Ham, beaten only once in their last 10 matches, host bottom club Leicester, who are now five points from safety.


Leicester have not won since stunning Manchester United 5-3 in September, but West Ham manager Sam Allardyce says that Nigel Pearson's team are no pushovers.


“Leicester are a hard team to break down. They work very hard for each other,” he told his pre-match media conference.


“Despite their run of games without a win, they haven't been turned over by anyone – it's only ever by the odd goal – so there are a lot of dangers in Nigel's teams that we need to be well aware of.” Fifth-place Southampton are on a very different trajectory to West Ham and saw their run of consecutive defeats extended to five on Tuesday when they crashed to third-tier Sheffield United in the League Cup.


Ronald Koeman's side entertain Everton on Saturday.


Elsewhere, improving Burnley visit Tottenham Hotspur in a near dress rehearsal for next month's FA Cup third-round encounter, while Sunderland visit Newcastle on Sunday for the first Tyne-Wear derby of the campaign.


Fixtures


Saturday (1500 GMT unless otherwise stated):


Aston Villa v Manchester United, Hull City v Swansea City, Manchester City v Crystal Palace (1245 GMT), Queens Park Rangers v West Bromwich Albion, Southampton v Everton, Tottenham Hotspur v Burnley, West Ham United v Leicester City


Sunday:


Newcastle United v Sunderland (1330 GMT), Liverpool v Arsenal (1600 GMT)


Monday (2000 GMT):


Stoke City v Chelsea – Sapa-AFP






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Pellegrini backs Mangala to shine

Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini claims he has complete faith in French defender Eliaquim Mangala ahead of the Premier League clash with Crystal Palace.


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Manchester, United Kingdom – Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini claims he has complete faith in French defender Eliaquim Mangala ahead of the Premier League clash with Crystal Palace at Eastlands.


City captain Vincent Kompany has been ruled out until the start of 2015 with a recurrence of a hamstring problem, so Mangala will get a run of games at centre-back alongside Martin Demichelis.


And Pellegrini believes the France international, who joined the English champions from Porto during the close season for £24.3


million ($38 million), will prove his worth during a hectic festive period after struggling at times in his first season in the Premier League.


“Of course we have a lot of trust in Mangala. That's why we bought him,” Pellegrini said.


“Maybe he has made some mistakes in the Premier League and maybe he has delayed a bit to be settled here.


“But we continue to trust in him because I am sure he is a very good player, he is a very young player and he will be a very important centre-back for our team.”


City are also set be without influential forward Sergio Aguero against Palace as he recovers from a knee injury.


But Pellegrini remains confident that the Argentina


international will be fit in time for City's Champions League tie with Barcelona in February.


“Sergio has a torn ligament and I think it will be long before the Champions League tie against Barcelona, probably in the first weeks of January, that he will play,” Pellegrini added.


City are without all three of their main strikers at the moment, with Edin Dzeko (calf) and Stevan Jovetic (hamstring) also both set to be absent through injury this weekend.


Pellegrini is contemplating whether or not to use midfielders David Silva, Samir Nasri or James Milner out of position in attack against Palace, while 18-year-old forward Jose Angel Pozo remains another option.


“We will see what works and which players will play in that position,” Pellegrini said.


“At the moment, we are trying to keep our minds open and recover as soon as we can with all the players, because we have few strikers.”


Palace boss Neil Warnock insists his side will travel to Manchester convinced they can dent second placed City's hopes of catching leaders Chelsea.


The south London club have lost just one of their last five league games but remain in the thick of the relegation battle, positioned one point and two places above the bottom three.


“City are just hitting that form aren't they? It's always difficult to go to there with them being the champions as well and playing some wonderful football,” Warnock said.


“But we've been playing well. I know we haven't scored the goals that our play has warranted really. I don't think we have any fear.


“We realise we've really got to be on top of our game if we're going to come away with anything.


“We know our goalkeeper has got to play well, we know our back four has got to play well and we've got to create chances.


“So it's a matter of we've all got to be on top form and hope that one or two of their lads are a bit below.”


Warnock has ruled out a loan move for former England left-back Ashley Cole who has struggled to establish himself with Italian club AS Roma.


“We have already been told that there is no way he is coming back. He is enjoying himself over there. I don't think there is any chance whatsoever,” Warnock added. – Sapa-AFP






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Saints can recover from reality check

Ronald Koeman believes Southampton's clash with Everton at St Mary's will provide a vital test of his team's character.


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Southampton, United Kingdom – Ronald Koeman believes Southampton's clash with Everton at St Mary's will provide a vital test of his team's character.


Saints manager Koeman had enjoyed an almost perfect introduction to life in the Premier League during the opening months of the campaign as the Dutchman steered Southampton up to second place.


But a run of five successive defeats – four in the league followed by Tuesday's shock loss in the League Cup quarter-finals at third tier Sheffield United – has threatened to take the gloss off the club's start.


And despite a number of players being sidelined for the visit of Roberto Martinez's side, Koeman has called on his squad to provide a positive response and get their season back on track.


“Injuries and suspensions are part of football but in the last few weeks maybe that's one of the reasons we have found it tough,” Koeman said.


“We had to change too much in the team, too many players are not 100 per cent in a physical way and the team is maybe a little bit more down.


“But we know we have to accept that and there is no time to be down. We have to go on and we need to give a good reaction.


“It's about the character of the team that we have to show on Saturday.


“Every game is tough, you have to be prepared for every game, bring a lot of spirit with you. You need the qualities and you have to learn, that's the most important message.”


Koeman, meanwhile, insists he will not be able to afford to sign Galatasaray's Dutch midfielder Wesley Sneijder in the January transfer window.


“I'm interested, but I know we can't pay him,” he said.


Everton manager Martinez revealed the club are searching for the perfect formula to keep James McCarthy fit for the rest of the season.


McCarthy has been struggling with a hamstring injury recently and the midfielder will face a fitness test for Saturday's game.


And Martinez admitted the club are working behind the scenes to get the bottom of how to keep the Republic of Ireland international in prime condition and enable him to feature as much as possible.


“The type of injury he has comes from overload, playing too many games,” Martinez said.


“You get to a point as a young man you need to get the right load in training, the right way of recovering to be able to play three games in a week. That's what we are trying to find out.


“Maybe James needs to train less in order to play more games, or maybe the nutrition, maybe the way of recovering needs changing. We need to find what is putting extra pressure on his tissues.”


Everton winger Kevin Mirallas and midfielder Leon Osman will miss out against the Saints with ankle injuries, although Martinez confirmed neither player will be absent for too long.


“We were worried after the QPR game with Kevin because it was a tackle on him where the ankle was damaged,” he added.


“But the damage is the least it could be. Kevin is a good healer. He's out for Saturday but I wouldn't rule him out for most of the Christmas period.


“Leon has been receiving treatment since the Manchester City game. He has been having a specific programme for him and he has reacted really well and he doesn't need surgery.” — Sapa-AFP






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Reds must show character - Gerrard

Liverpool have made their worst start to a season after 16 games since 1964-65.


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This time last year, all was well at Anfield. Liverpool were a point ahead of Manchester City at the top of the Barclays Premier League and Brendan Rodgers was looking good for the manager of the year award.


Steven Gerrard was on his game, feeding Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge with those measured passes through midfield. But the landscape has changed drastically as Liverpool prepare to face Arsenal at home on Sunday.


‘Everyone knows if we perform the way we have done of late against Arsenal we’ll get beaten,’ admitted Gerrard. ‘When you have a strike-force of Daniel Sturridge and Luis Suarez, they are capable of killing teams in 20 minutes. It’s different this year and everyone knows that.’


Liverpool lie in 11th place, 18 points behind leaders Chelsea, who they have been drawn to face in the Capital One Cup semi-final.


Even in the moments after Liverpool reached the last four with a 3-1 win at Bournemouth on Wednesday night, captain Gerrard was on hand for a rather brutal reality check.


Last season they blew Arsenal away at Anfield, scoring four times in the opening 20 minutes and eventually winning 5-1.


This is a different Liverpool team, still adapting to life without Suarez and the injured Sturridge, who has been forced to go to Boston for treatment on his troublesome thigh injury.


‘I think they were 60-70 per cent of our goals those two. You take them out of any team in the world and it’s going to be tough and it has been,’ said Gerrard. ‘But I think this is where you find out what kind of players you’ve got in the dressing room. It’s time to roll your sleeves up and fight for the club and try to put it right as soon as possible and that’s what we’re trying to do.


‘We made mistakes against Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday and we got punished by world-class players,’ he added. ‘The first half against Bournemouth was probably as close as we’ve come to last season’s standards.


‘It’s been tough to perform of late because we haven’t played well as a team, but if we keep giving everything we’ve got then I’m sure the good days are not too far away.


‘If we can get a big result against Arsenal and build on this, then I think we can turn it around.’


Gerrard does not agree that they have turned the corner after beating a Championship team. The pressure is still on and so it should be after seven league defeats and an unnecessary exit in the group stage of the Champions League.


The scrutiny has been intense and Gerrard accused people of ‘killing’ the club during a wretched run. He made it clear that the criticism of his own performances hurts him, but accepts that is the life as a player or manager at one of the world’s biggest clubs.


‘It comes with the territory,’ he said. ‘There was a stage when a couple of my performances were under par and I got a bit of stick. It’s normal. I’ve got to accept it being captain of the club and Brendan’s got to accept it being the manager of Liverpool.


‘If results don’t go well, questions are going to be asked, criticism is going to fly, you take it on the chin and try to improve things. That’s the only way. I know when I don’t play well. I think every individual does, but collectively it has been tough.


‘For me I’ve experienced it a few times during my career at Liverpool when it gets tough under certain managers and from the outside people are trying to kill you. It’s normal. We’re at a big club, we’ve got to take that responsibility. We can’t have players hiding, we need men out there.’


In many ways this was Gerrard at his best, rallying the team and reminding them publicly of their responsibilities to the club. But with Liverpool seven points behind West Ham in fourth place, Champions League qualification appears a tall order for this team.


Gerrard said: ‘It’s a tough question and it’s going to be tough to do it. We knew it was going to be tough the moment we lost Luis and the injuries we’ve had to Daniel of late. Everyone in the country knows the job to get in the top four becomes that awful lot harder. But we’ll keep fighting until the end and if people are going to write us off, we can’t control it.


‘I tell players individually and I tell them in the dressing room. But if you’re sitting in that dressing room and you don’t know that the performance levels haven’t been good enough of late, you’re at the wrong place.


‘All I can control is what goes on in the dressing room and try to help other players to perform well. But certainly, on the performance against Bournemouth, there’s still a chance.’ – Daily Mail






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News sport : Mark Cuban finalized the Rajon Rondo trade at the 'Colbert Report' finale, per Keith Olbermann

In a rather swift and shocking December surprise, the Dallas Mavericks and Boston Celtics moved quickly to negotiate and finalize a deal sending Rajon Rondo from Boston to Dallas. The timing of the transaction, pitched a good two months prior to the NBA’s trade deadline, was telling – Rondo is an odd player, and the Mavericks have forever been an intriguing (and winning) experiment under Dallas owner Mark Cuban; a man who mixes equal amounts basketball know-how and love for tossing himself in front of a television camera.


Cuban put those two loves together on Thursday night in typically busy and visible fashion. He was one of dozens of celebrities that gathered to sing Stephen Colbert’s “Colbert Report” character off into the televised sunset, but prior to the sing-a-long Cuban was furiously working to sign off on the Rondo deal, which sent Jameer Nelson, Brandan Wright, and a pair of picks to Boston for the mercurial guard.


ESPN anchor Keith Olbermann, no stranger to the camera himself, noticed as much:




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Cuban is not the Mavericks’ head of player personnel; Donn Nelson has ably held that role for years, but no other NBA owner packs as much analytical and scouting punch as the Mavericks’ el jefe.


It’s true that his team’s franchise cornerstone, the legendary Dirk Nowitzki, was drafted a year and a half prior to Cuban purchasing the team, but Cuban has intelligently tossed himself into the world of basketball analytics while still encouraging his hired basketball men to do their job. It’s a delicate balance and the Mavericks haven’t been championship contenders since the team’s 2011 NBA Finals win, but the franchise has been in the championship mix routinely since 2001, and it’s hard to argue with Cuban’s approach.


The ability to work through salary structures, possible promises on contract extensions, and noise from all manner of scouts, coaches and Mavericks employees in real time on one smartphone also helps. This is an entirely different era than the one that, say, Boston general manager Danny Ainge was working in when he was dealt from Boston to Sacramento for Joe Kleine and Ed Pinckney 25 years ago.


The Mavericks are taking a calculated risk with Rondo. The team boasts the league’s best offense by miles, and even the brainiest of NBA analytics swabbers can’t agree on whether or not Rondo works as some underrated basketball boffin, or a destructive me-first element that values gaudy assist totals over a seamlessly-churning five-man offense. Wright and Nelson were having fabulous years for the Mavericks, but their presence won’t be badly missed on this deep outfit, and the picks sent to Boston (likely a 2016 first rounder after restrictions are minded, alongside a second round selection) won’t likely tip the scales for this win-now outfit.


It’s a fascinating deal, true to Dallas’ team name. To watch it all go down in real time in the green room of a tiny New York City soundstage, even for someone as experienced as Keith Olbermann, must have been equally as fascinating.


(Hat-tip: Seth Rosenthal at SB Nation.)


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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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