News sport : Titans coach knows fans want team to lose, possibly get #1 pick




There comes a point for every NFL team that's pretty bad when they have to make a choice: just how bad do we want to be? Granted, the NFL isn't like the NBA, where tanking can get you a franchise-changing player, but when you've got the opportunity to hold the first pick in a stocked draft, how much are you willing to do to get it?


The Tennessee Titans face such a choice, and head coach Ken Whisenhunt understands that his fans' desires and his team's desires may not run in the same direction. The Titans want a victory, the fans want the opportunity to pick up a player who could get them many more victories down the road.


"From a fan's perspective, I understand that, but you want to win. That's what you're geared in to do," he said. "That's why we're in this business. We're trying to do that. I don't worry as much about that until the season's over, but I certainly respect their feelings on that."


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Worth noting: over his last 27 games, Whisenhunt is 3-24. That's not a typo. It's also a painful reminder of the last two season in Tennessee. The Titans now stand at 2-13, tied with Tampa Bay for the worst record in the game. A Tampa Bay victory over New Orleans, certainly a possibility, combined with a Tenneseee loss to Indianapolis would give the Titans the inside track on a player like Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota.


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News sport : Western Michigan walk-on Grant DePalma awarded scholarship (Video)

Western Michigan linebacker Grant DePalma received an awesome Christmas gift from head coach P.J. Fleck.


DePalma, a junior, walked on to the team after attending an open tryout. At 5-foot-9 and 218 pounds, he’s not the typical Division I linebacker, but he worked his way up from the scout team last year to become one of the team’s top defensive players, so Fleck – with a little help from Santa Claus – rewarded him with a scholarship.



DePalma led the Broncos with 97 total tackles this season. He also registered eight tackles for loss and 2.5 sacks on the season. He redshirted the 2013 season after transferring to WMU from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, an engineering college in Terre Haute, Ind.


“That guy’s what our program’s all about,” Fleck told his team of DePalma.


The Broncos, in Fleck’s second season, finished the season at 8-5 after losing to Air Force in the Idaho Potato Bowl on Dec. 20.


For more Western Michigan news, visit BroncoBlitz.com.


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News sport : Giants punter visits NYPD precinct, laughs about Christmas Eve drug test

It's been a lively couple of days for Giants punter Steve Weatherford. First, he spent a solemn hour before practice Tuesday visiting a precinct of the New York Police Department to offer support in the wake of last week's tragic shooting of two officers.


“What they do for us on a daily basis, I know it doesn’t get enough credit,” Weatherford said, according to the New York Daily News. “People don’t say ‘Thank you’ enough for the times that they don’t need the police because everything is under control and everybody is safe. It’s a very thankless job, and I just wanted to go there and really just tell them ‘Thank you for doing what you do for us, for putting your life in danger on a daily basis to afford us the safety and security so we can sleep peacefully at night,’ and ‘I appreciate everything that you do.’”



Then, on Christmas Eve, he arrived at the Giants practice facility to find an unexpected gift: a random drug test:



The grin probably means Weatherford isn't too worried. The Giants don't have much to play for, but Weatherford, at least, is still bearing the blue proudly.


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News sport : Did Beach Boy Mike Love once give Kevin Love a stapler for Christmas? (Video)

A recently released credit card ad features interviews with three NBA players – Cleveland’s Kevin Love, Washington’s John Wall, and Oklahoma City’s Stephen Adams – and asked them what their worst Christmas present ever turned out to be.


It’s a pretty funny clip, with all manner of dry humor, but the initial portion of it got us to pondering. Was Beach Boys founder Mike Love the “uncle on my dad’s side” that gave Kevin Love his worst Christmas gift ever?


Watch:



A quick bit of internet research reveals that Kevin’s father, former NBA and ABA forward and all-around mensch Stan Love (who spent a chunk of his post-playing career trying to protect his cousin Brian Wilson from assorted hangers-on), only has one brother.


That brother’s name is Mike Love, whom you might know as the guy in the hat from the Beach Boys.


You also might know him as a bit of a prickly pear.


This seems perfectly in line with something that Mike Love – who rightfully fought for and won significant songwriting royalties on endless Beach Boys hits during Kevin Love’s youth – would do.


“I’m owed millions of dollars from writing the lyrics to ‘Good Vibrations,’ but I wouldn’t have gotten there without the help of my stapler. Here’s a stapler, kid. Wanna learn how to meditate?”


(Hat tip: For the Win.)


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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 : Nick Young compares the Kobe-less Lakers to ‘Django Unchained' and 'Driving Miss Daisy'

Tuesday night should have been another pile-on for the hapless Los Angeles Lakers.


Lakers coach Byron Scott decided to rest Kobe Bryant in anticipation of a trip to Chicago to play the Bulls on national television on Christmas Day, the visiting Golden State Warriors had already beaten the Lakers by a combined 44 points spread out over two contests, and the NBA’s best team seemed primed to destroy the Lakers on Los Angeles’ home floor.


Because the NBA is the NBA, though, the obvious storyline took shape.


Los Angeles moved the ball, it ran a semblance of a structured offense, and it downed the Warriors by a 115-105 score. Seven players scored in double digits against the NBA’s best defense so far this season, as the rest of the league rolled its eyes. What a tidy package to behold.


Following the win, Laker guard Nick Young was ebullient in comparing his team and its prospects to two celebrated motion pictures. From ESPN Los Angeles’ Baxter Holmes:



“Some guys just played like ‘Django Unchained' -- they were free tonight,” he said.




And what would Young tell Bryant?



“Pretty much going to have to tell Kobe to pass me the ball, pass us the ball,” Young said. “Tell him to take the backseat for a little bit. He can be ‘Driving Miss Daisy’ and I can be Miss Daisy and drive.”

The Lakers managed 28 assists on 46 field goals, and led by as much as 24 against the NBA’s best team. Vlade Divac even nailed a half-court shot for charity. If this were a one-night treatment pitched to a movie studio, it would be laughed out of the office for reading as too hacky.


Laker guard Jeremy Lin, in his first year with the team, was as circumspect as always in his attempts to sideswipe ripping on Kobe Bryant. From Holmes’ report:



“We learned a lot about ourselves [Tuesday night],” said Lakers guard Jeremy Lin, who finished with 11 points and five assists off the bench.




Such as?




"I think we learned --”



Pause.


“I would say it’s just another stepping stone."



So pile on, righto?


Eh, perhaps.


As Eric Freeman pointed out in the wake of Vlade’s lovely shot, one-game sample-sizes are not to be obsessed over. The Warriors were playing on the second night of a road back to back and hardly had the time to prepare for the Lakers’ newfound spark, as the formerly Kobe-centric offense is easy to load up on as you happily encourage Bryant to fire away from 20 feet. That hacky screenplay treatment isn’t to be trusted, though – the Lakers aren’t going to turn into world-beaters just because big, bad Kobe isn’t stealing all the shots.


Still:



Kobe, for one, sent out yet another salvo that credited the management that handed him $48.5 million for turning things around eventually, even though we’re over six months away from every big free agent turning the Lakers down. From Sam Amick at USA TODAY:



"I really do trust management," he reiterated to USA TODAY Sports. "I mean I really, really do. They'll get things turned around pretty quickly. I'm not really concerned about that."



What’s he going to say, his front office stinks? Kobe’s completely above that.


On Monday we haughtily chided Bryant for betraying his giant basketball brain in his attempts to launch contested 21-footer after contested 21-footer, while pointing out that the team’s loss to Sacramento has to serve as a low point. The win over the Warriors might not be a suitable appreciation of the Lakers’ Kobe-less potential, but both Bryant and borderline-feckless coach Byron Scott have to use this as a teachable moment.


They can fly into Chicago to take on a white-hot Bulls team with a somewhat-rested Bryant, going up against a defense that attempts to ice all movement – one that still has major issues with rim protection despite its top ten defensive ranking. If Bryant gives in, it could be a lay-up line or three-point fest for all involved. Kobe doesn’t have to have 14 assists, and he doesn’t have to have 29 points. He can be part of a team. Part of, say, those seven double-figure scorers.


It’s up to Kobe. Because for one night, at least, the Lakers sure seemed to be having a lot of fun without him.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Seahawks fan overcome with Christmas gift from team


So this is Alex, and he's a hardcore Seahawks fan. He's also the fortunate recipient of a pretty sweet gift from the team: a signed helmet. Alex is overcome with emotion, exactly the way the rest of you ungrateful types ought to be when you get gifts.


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The home video is VERY long and VERY home-video-ey; the good stuff starts at about the 2:30 mark, but we've excerpted it right here for you:



Congrats to Alex, and nice work, Seahawks. Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays, everyone.


(Helmet tip: SB Nation)


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News sport : Andrew Wiggins dunked on Kevin Love, which is not symbolic (Video)

Pretty sweet dunk, right?


Let’s stop for a minute to remind ourselves that the Kevin Love-for-Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett was a fantastic move for the Cleveland Cavaliers. Love may be struggling this season, relative to his previous All-Star play, but he tossed in as many points on Tuesday (20) as Wiggins and Bennett combine to average per game.


That dunk wasn’t technically on Love, I suppose, but that’s only because Kevin didn’t bother to jump up to defend the toss in against his former Minnesota Timberwolves team. A very Kevin Love-like move, and a very Cleveland Cavaliers-like move.


Anyone calling this move symbolic, though, is just trolling for hits.


Wiggins might be leading all rookies in scoring, but the youngster still has a single digit Player Efficiency Rating – around half of what Chicago rookie Nikola Mirotic is producing this year. Bennett has bounced back from the worst year of any top overall pick in modern NBA history, but that wasn’t hard to do. He’s rebounding well, he’s thankfully stopped shooting three-pointers, and he never turns the ball over, but he’s also a scoring forward that isn’t shooting nearly enough times to make his court appearances worth it.


Meanwhile Love, at his lowest ebb and on a team that still doesn’t know what to do with him, is still averaging 17 points, 10.5 rebounds and two and a half assists for the league’s fourth-best offense. And he has four more months to figure out just when and where to get his; something that should come in time, as we saw on Tuesday when the Cavs demolished the Minnesota Timberwolves by 21 points.


All of this might stick in the craw of Wolves el jefe Flip Saunders, who remarked on Monday that Love “turn(ed) on Minnesota” by forcing a trade away from the franchise that ruined his first six years in the NBA while effectively handing him a three-year contract as opposed to the five-year deal he deserved.


According the Flip, he ain’t allowed to talk about Love a no-mo:




That’s an odd one. I suppose the league can technically accuse Saunders of tampering – Love will be a free agent this summer when he opts out of his contract – but it was Flip that looked foolish in the wake of his comments.


At some point Saunders is going to have run out of things to talk about, I suppose. Like handing the Philadelphia 76ers what could be a completely unprotected 2017 first round draft pick for the services of the middling Thaddeus Young (averaging 14.5 points as Minny’s leading scorer this season, with just 4.5 rebounds a game, making just over half his free throws) just to round out a roster made up entirely of prospects.


Minnesota did well with the Love transaction. On paper, trading even a superstar like Love for the last two top overall picks in the NBA drafts (with their names redacted) is a killer deal. It’s just fine for this swap (with Thaddeus Young excluded) to be a win-win, even if Love isn’t dropping 26 a game anymore, and even if Wiggins and Bennett are dealing with the expected struggles of two players whose ages combine to top out at just a year over the age Kevin Garnett will turn this May. Minnesota may be currently awful and the Cavs might be underachieving, but both should be happy with their lot.


Let’s just stop pretending that this is some either/or situation worth making December statements about, and enjoy the dunks, aiight?


(Tweets via Pro Basketball Talk.)


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News sport : Listen to Joe Cocker reminding that the NBA is fan-tastic (Video)

Joe Cocker passed away on Monday. The first band he was ever in was called 'The Cavaliers,' and he played a big part in one of the greatest NBA commercials of all time.


Watch:



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Khedira keen on new Real deal

Germany midfielder Sami Khedira has dismissed transfer speculation and rather aims to renew his contract at freshly crowned Club World Cup champions Real Madrid beyond the season.


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Stuttgart – Germany midfielder Sami Khedira has dismissed transfer speculation and rather aims to renew his contract at freshly crowned Club World Cup champions Real Madrid beyond the season.


Khedira, 27, told Wednesday's edition of the Stuttgarter Nachrichten paper that he expects to see more playing time soon at the Spanish club after some injury-plagued months.


“I have reached a good fitness level and am very optimistic that I will soon get my share of playing time,” Khedira said.


Khedira said he was not deterred by an abundance of first-class midfielders at the Liga leaders, saying “I like strong opposition” and also praising newly hired Germany team-mate Toni Kroos as an “outstanding” key player.


Little playing time after the arrival of Kroos and Colombian James Rodriguez fuelled speculation that Khedira's days at the club were numbered, but he ruled out a January move and rather wants to stay at the club he joined in 2010 beyond the end of the season.


“I will be happy if we can find a solution,” Khedira said. – Sapa-dpa






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Khune, Alexander may make Afcon squad

Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba was at pains to stress that his preliminary Afcon squad did not close the door to players who did not make the squad.


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On announcing his provisional 34-man squad for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon), last week, Bafana Bafana Shakes Mashaba was at pains to stress that it was not cast in stone. Players left out still had an opportunity as he continued to mull over his options.


The tournament takes place in Equatorial Guinea from January 17 to February 8 next year.


Now reports suggest that Mashaba may have a few tweaks in mind before he releases his final 23-man squad for Afcon duty on December 30.


Two names regularly mentioned are Kaizer Chiefs goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune and Polokwane City midfielder Cole Alexander.


Khune, once the captain and regular number one of Bafana, had been out injured for three months. He is back, fit and ready, and sitting on the Soweto club’s bench, which is perhaps why Mashaba omitted him, probably scared off by Khune’s lack of recent game time.


But a glance at the goalkeepers in the Afcon squad – Darren Keet (KV Kortrijk, Belgium), Brilliant Khuzwayo, (Kaizer Chiefs), Jackson Mabokgwane (Mpumalanga Black Aces) and Siyabonga Mpontshane (Platinum Stars) – reveals a decided lack of international experience. Mpontshane, in fact, is not even a regular at his club.


Khune’s wealth of experience, charisma and leadership ability would be a strong shoulder to lean on, even if he is just a squad member.


And, then, there’s Alexander.


With Ajax Cape Town’s current troubles, they must be wandering around the corridors of the club’s headquarters in Parow wondering just how they allowed this top-class midfielder to get away.


Alexander is a product of the Cape club’s successful youth academy, but was never considered good enough. He simply never got sufficient opportunities.


The Mitchell’s Plain man was even sent on loan to Vasco da Gama and Chippa United, where he performed admirably. Yet, always on his return to Ajax, he was back struggling to make the starting team.


When Roger de Sa arrived, it looked again like Alexander was going to struggle.


The lad from Lentegeur admits that he could see the writing on the wall – he wasn’t in De Sa’s plans for the season.


So, when Boebie Solomons approached him to head north and play for Polokwane, he jumped at the chance.


He knew it would be tough, he knew the changed environment would be a challenge, but he was desperate to play.


He knew he had it within him to make it at the top, and he took the chance.


And what an inspired decision it proved to be.


Solomons, the man who took him to the Limpopo Province club, has since been fired, re-surfacing at National First Division side, Cape Town All Stars, and replaced by Serbian Kosta Papic.


Alexander acknowledges the role Solomons played in his sensational revelation this season, and says the Cape Town coach was just unlucky in that he didn’t get the results during his time there.


But the foundation he built has been carried on impressively by Papic, with Alexander an influential member of the squad’s magnificent form in the campaign.


He’s held things together in midfield, scored some cracking goals, and has played with composure and maturity. Alexander is blossoming and, on current form, he is certainly one of the best performers in the PSL at the moment.


And, rest assured, Mashaba has been watching.


Don’t be surprised if Alexander gets a late call to join the Bafana squad. If it happens, he will certainly have deserved it.


Ajax’s loss has been Polokwane’s gain… and now it could also pay dividends for Bafana. - Cape Argus






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Van Gaal keen to repay Fergie’s faith

Louis van Gaal has revealed he feels under pressure to succeed at Manchester United to repay the generous support of Old Trafford legend Alex Ferguson.


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Manchester, United Kingdom – Louis van Gaal has revealed he feels under pressure to succeed at Manchester United to repay the generous support of Old Trafford legend Alex Ferguson.


Ferguson has given his backing to van Gaal in recent interviews, claiming the United manager can restore the team to the lofty levels which Ferguson himself attained in his 27 years as boss.


Certainly, van Gaal's efforts in leading United into a top three position as the Premier League enters the Christmas period have been impressive and generated an air of optimism at the club not felt since Ferguson retired in 2013.


However, that backing has come at a cost, according to van Gaal.


“It's fantastic,” said van Gaal on Tuesday. “When you come to Manchester United, because I know Sir Alex, you hope that he will support you.


“And when he is supporting you, he is doing that not only this week but in other conferences he gave.


“He showed a lot of confidence and belief in me and you need that as a trainer-coach, as manager of Manchester United.


“You need that belief and support of managers like Sir Alex. I am very happy with that because then you can work more easily.


“But it's also pressure because he believes in you and that gives you that pressure that you have to get results. It's not so easy to win Premier League matches.”


United, unbeaten in seven games, open their festive fixture list with a home clash against Newcastle on Friday and van Gaal insists he has already succeeded in one of his primary aims - making Old Trafford a venue where other teams fear to play.


Since losing at home to Swansea on the opening day of the season, in his first competitive match in charge, United have won seven and drawn one of their eight games.


“I have said after the first loss against Swansea that it's a pity we came back from the United States and won everything and then lost our first match in the Premier League,” said van Gaal.


“We want to build a fortress at Old Trafford and we have made that already because we have won a lot.


“I'm happy with that but then we have to continue because seven (wins) is too few I think.


“So we have to continue and that's the most difficult point because it's not easy to win games in the Premier League.”


Meanwhile, van Gaal has paid tribute to captain Wayne Rooney's versatility, but insists he still remains an important attacking threat.


The England forward played in a deep midfield role in last weekend's 1-1 draw at Aston Villa but van Gaal does not accept that Rooney's days as a goal threat are behind him.


“Wayne is a player who can play in different positions and I like that because I like multi-functional players, that's why I can use him as a midfielder, also as a striker and an attacking midfielder,” he said.


“The last game he was more defensive midfielder. I like that he is also coming into the 18 yard box because he can score goals.


“He has the ability to run from box to box and that is also a little bit that he has to 'feel' in a match - read the match - and he can do this.


“But that's a matter of time and he can do that. I like him closer to their area than our own goal.” – Sapa-AFP






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Title not won in December - Pellegrini

Many Premier League managers highlight the importance of negotiating the hectic Christmas period, but Manchester City's Manuel Pellegrini is in a relaxed mood.


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London - Many Premier League managers highlight the importance of negotiating the hectic Christmas period, but Manchester City's Manuel Pellegrini is in a relaxed mood with his side trailing leaders Chelsea by three points.


Second-placed City, who have 39 points from 17 matches, begin the holiday fixture schedule with a trip to West Bromwich Albion on Friday before hosting Burnley and Sunderland in quick succession.


Having won six successive league matches, City have closed the gap on Chelsea but Pellegrini does not think the next few weeks will define the champions' season.


“We are not thinking about Chelsea,” Pellegrini told a news conference on Tuesday. “We are just thinking about our team.


“We know it is important to have our own pressure. You never win the title in December.


“We have a long five months to continue playing as well as we are doing so far and we will see at the end of the season which team has most points.”


City can take heart from claiming two titles in three seasons, but Pellegrini does not think that will give his side an edge against Chelsea, who last won the prize in 2010.


“It is always hard to win, the first time and the second time,” Pellegrini said. “I think there is the same degree of difficulty from one year to another.


“We have the players in a high level of performance. We are trusting what we do, so in the same way we played poorly two months ago, we are now doing very well.”


City played without a striker in their 3-0 win over Crystal Palace last weekend as first-choice forwards Steven Jovetic, Edin Dzeko and Sergio Aguero were all injured.


Pellegrini will again have to make do without a recognised striker against West Brom, but the Chilean hopes Jovetic, who has missed the last three games with a hamstring strain, will be back soon along with captain Vincent Kompany.


“Maybe Jovetic and Kompany will be back soon, at the end of this week or next week,” he said.


“But Edin Dzeko and Sergio Aguero will be back until the second part of January.” — Reuters






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Chelsea out to maintain advantage

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho does not want to give title rivals Manchester City any reason to cheer over the festive season.


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London - The omens are good for a Chelsea side heading into Christmas top of the Premier League tree but manager Jose Mourinho does not want to give title rivals Manchester City any reason to cheer over the festive season.


Having beaten Stoke City 2-0 at the Britannia Stadium on Monday, the London club ensured they went into a busy fixture schedule leading the table with 42 points from 17 matches.


The last three times Chelsea have been top on Christmas Day they have gone on to win the title, but with in-form City hot on their heels three points behind, Mourinho is taking nothing for granted with testing matches to come.


Sam Allardyce's fourth-placed West Ham United travel to Chelsea's Stamford Bridge ground on Friday before Mourinho's men head to Southampton on Sunday and then make the short trip across London to face Tottenham Hotspur on New Year's Day.


“Now we have to focus on the three matches we still have until the end of this period,” Mourinho told reporters after the victory at Stoke.


“Playing against Big Sam is a hard job for us, we have to cope with it. The three-point lead we have is a little advantage, it is a little pillow we have to protect us.


“We have been top of the league since day one and we are there because we are playing really well. Our Christmas fixtures are more difficult than any other one (club).”


Second-placed City travel to West Bromwich Albion in search of a seventh straight league win but they are still without injured strikers Stevan Jovetic, Edin Dzeko and Sergio Aguero.


Captain Vincent Kompany is also missing for Manuel Pellegrini's side but midfielder David Silva, having scored twice in City's 3-0 home win over Crystal Palace last weekend, is ready to strike against struggling West Brom.


“I like to play in the middle, even though I can play on both wings,” Silva said. “When I play in the middle I get chances to score. That is why I scored the two goals. But I will be happy to help the team when the strikers are back.”


Elsewhere on Friday, third-placed Manchester United, whose progress up the league was slowed with a 1-1 draw at Aston Villa last weekend, host Newcastle United while Arsenal welcome London rivals Queens Park Rangers to the Emirates. – Reuters






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No injury returns for United

None of Manchester United's injured players are likely to be fit for the next Premier League match against Newcastle United.


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London - None of Manchester United's injured players are likely to be fit for the next Premier League match against Newcastle United, manager Louis van Gaal said on Tuesday.


Daley Blind, Marcos Rojo, Luke Shaw, Marouane Fellaini, Ander Herrera and Chris Smalling missed the 1-1 draw at Aston Villa and only Smalling has an outside chance of returning against Newcastle at Old Trafford on Friday.


“For a few players it is fine because they are recovering quickly,” Van Gaal told reporters.


“You also have players who are not recovering so quickly, so I have to rotate. I have a lot of injured players, that is the problem with these matches.”


United's 1-1 draw at Villa ended a run of six successive wins which has lifted Van Gaal's side to third.


“We want to build a fortress at Old Trafford and we have made it that already because we have won a lot, and with great results,” Van Gaal said.


“We have to continue, but there are no easy games in the Premier League.”


United travel to Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday and Stoke City on Thursday before an FA Cup third-round trip to Yeovil.


“My record in away matches as a coach is not so bad,” Van Gaal said.


“Away, teams are more open and want to attack but here they want to defend. That is why we have to build up a certain playing style so we can dominate. I'm saying every week that we are dominating for 45 or 60 minutes. We have to dominate for 90 minutes.”


Radamel Falcao headed the equaliser against Villa, only his second goal for United, and Van Gaal is looking for more from the on-loan Colombian striker.


“He can be in great form, but the team has to be in great form. That allows Falcao to show his qualities,” the Dutchman said.


“When the cross is not coming from Ashley Young, then he cannot show what he has done in the last match.” – Reuters






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News sport : Navy beats San Diego State 17-16 in Poinsettia Bowl

Any blooper reel of the 2014 bowl season will be centered around the fourth quarter of Navy's 17-16 win over San Diego State.


The final 15 minutes of the game featured four turnovers, an incredibly confusing officiating sequence, an odd choice to go for it on fourth down and a missed game-winning field goal that ultimately gave Navy the victory.


Let's start with the missed field goal. After Austin Grebe put Navy up by a point with 1:27 left, San Diego State got into Navy territory after QB Quinn Kaehler hit WR Eric Judge for a 32-yard gain (Judge was ruled to have fumbled on the play – the fifth turnover of the fourth quarter – but the fumble was overturned). Four plays later, an incomplete pass set up a 34-yard field goal attempt for Donny Hageman, who was 3-3 on field goals throughout the game.


But on his fourth attempt, Hageman simply pushed it way right from the left hash. Navy got the ball back with 20 seconds to go and SDSU only had one timeout. The game was over.


Now on to the confusing officiating. On Navy's go-ahead drive, the Midshipmen went for it on fourth-and-one with 3:43 left at the San Diego State 44. The call was a fullback dive to Chris Swain, who rumbled for 13 yards and fumbled after he tumbled to the ground at the 31. While the play was being blown dead, SDSU's Damontae Kazee instinctively picked up the ball. As Navy's Jamir Tillman attempted to tackle him, Tillman grabbed Kazee's facemask.


A flag was thrown and after Swain was ruled to be down by contact before the fumble, the facemask was assessed against SDSU. While Swain's non-fumble was being reviewed, the officials gathered together and it was apparent from the TV cameras that one official was saying the penalty was against Navy.


After the review, which didn't overturn the fumble that the ground clearly caused, Navy was assessed a 15-yard penalty for a facemask foul that happened on a tackle that officially didn't happen. Snce the ball was blown dead on the field and via the review, Kazee's recovery meant nothing. However, the penalty was marked off and instead of having first down at the 31, Navy had a first down two yards behind where the fourth-and-one play took place.


Grebe's field goal happened six plays later.


The Navy drive was set up by a fumble by SDSU's Donnel Pumphrey with just under six minutes left. That turnover was the seventh of the game and the fourth turnover in six fourth quarter possessions. Navy had four fumbles, including two in the final quarter, and SDSU's other turnover of the final period came via an interception.


And while the seven turnovers aren't the highest tally of the young bowl season as the Miami Beach Bowl had nine, at least the Miami Beach Bowl was a pointsapalooza. The Poinsettia Bowl was a slog. SDSU started with the ball inside Navy territory after three of the Midshipmen's fumbles. Two drives turned into field goals.


The third, which ended with 8:45 left in the fourth quarter, ended on downs. With the Aztecs leading 16-14, SDSU coach Rocky Long head-scratchingly eschewed a 29-yard field goal attempt that potentially would have given the team a five-point lead and made Grebe's field goal late in the game a non-entity.


On fourth-and-five from the 12, San Diego State passed the ball instead of kicking the field goal. Kaehler's pass fell incomplete and Navy had the ball back still down two.


With the win, the Midshipmen finish the season 8-5. San Diego State ends 2014 at 7-6.


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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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