News sport : LeBron James on his Cleveland Cavaliers: 'We're not a very good team'

We’re at a point where comparisons to the 2010-11 Miami Heat are laughable.


Those Heat had their issues. They started Mike Bibby in postseason games. Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Erick Dampier, and Jamaal Magliore all had to man the middle. The superstar triptych of LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh seemed afraid to step on each others’ toes.


By the time spring rolled around, however, they still had that superstar triptych. They mustered a top five finish on both ends of the floor, and after an embarrassing Eastern Conference final Game 1 blowout the team won four straight gritty games against the Chicago Bulls as it moved on to the NBA Finals.


This year’s Cleveland Cavaliers figure to be on no such course as presently constructed, and as currently playing.


LeBron James is not coming through with the sort of year we expected. Kevin Love was benched in the fourth quarter of his team’s most recent win, Kyrie Irving is currently on the shelf for a scary knee injury, and center Anderson Varejao is out for the season. On the team’s home floor on Sunday night, the miserable Detroit Pistons outscored the Cavs by an 86-48 mark over the final two and a half quarters of the game to finish the night with a boo-heavy 103-80 win.


Following the embarrassment, LeBron James did our job for us:



''We're not a very good team, as far as on the court, where we're still trying to find our way,'' said LeBron James, who had 17 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists for Cleveland. ''Right now we're just not very good in every aspect of the game that we need to be to compete every night.''



The loss was sadly typical of Cleveland’s usual 2014-15 low points. James just about needed one shot and/or free throw appearance to score each point, and he was far from dominant. Kevin Love was not in the game plan following the first quarter, and the Pistons absolutely went mad from behind the three-point arc.


Watch:



Now, fluke elements do come into play here. Even after that 54.8 performance from deep, Detroit still ranks in the bottom third of the NBA in three-point percentage. And, frankly, there are some looks from Brandon Jennings and Caron Butler that, in a vacuum, you would certainly want them to attempt. The Pistons did make some bad shots in this win.


They also made a lot of open, easy, and good shots in the win.


We knew even in the summer that if the Cavaliers were to race out to a Heat-styled dynastic turn, they’d have to produce what was easily the top offense in the league in order to overcome their defensive issues. Issues that no amount of proper coaching and tricky elements could be eliminated because of the personnel in place.


The man they hired to coach, David Blatt, has largely abandoned some of the more complicated aspects of his international offenses in order to kowtow to NBA orthodoxy, and partially as a result the Cavs are “only” fourth in the NBA on that end. That might seem like an achievement worth crowing over, especially when considering all the new faces on board, but fourth isn’t good enough. The Eastern-leading Toronto Raptors, for example, are ranked tops in the NBA on offense, which is enough to move past the mitigating detail that is their 18th-ranked defense.


These are the sort of rankings that most expected from Cleveland this season, a middling defense alongside an offense from the ages. The Cavs have the fifth-worst defense in the NBA this season, however, one that doesn’t figure to improve anytime soon even with Varejao (who at times was overrated by many, defensively) out for the year.


And it isn’t as if teams are going to line up in order to give the Cavs any help.


Names have been bandied about, with Memphis’ Kosta Koufos in the clubhouse lead, but why would any squad queue up to make Cleveland’s day? The Grizzlies actually need Koufos badly, even as a reserve center, because of the team’s stylings on either end and the possibility for injury or fatigue from starting big man Marc Gasol. He’s of paramount importance to their play, and though the Cavs have the tidy option of relinquishing a first round draft pick back to Memphis (protected heavily this year, protected to the top five in the years following) from a 2013 deal, it may take even more to pry a big man that can defend and finish away.


It may even take Dion Waiters in a trade. That’s how poor Cleveland’s leverage is right now.


Clouding things even further is Waiters’ play of late – he’s actually been quite good on (mostly) both ends. Of course, he’ll still do this …



… but he’s valuable.


With that in place, why would an efficiency-driven front office in Memphis, one working with the sixth-overall offense in the NBA right now, deal a needed big man for a swingman that is always one brain synapse away from tossing up a left-leaning (like, George McGovern-style) 24-footer? All for a player that would most certainly act as a reserve for Tristan Thompson, the Cavs’ starting center – one that shares the same player representative as LeBron James?


Cavs general manager David Griffin is still your 2014-15 NBA Executive of the Year. One shouldn’t care if other teams finish with better records (as was the case in 2010-11, when the Bulls’ Gar Forman won the award ahead of Pat Riley), because David Griffin still put LeBron James and Kevin Love on a team that already featured Kyrie Irving. If he whiffed on a coach that some think LeBron is uneasy about, so be it. This is your Executive of the Year. He signed LeBron. He traded for Love.


Kvetching over James’ supporting cast is useless. Yes, Mike Miller, James Jones, Shawn Marion and Lou Amundson seem like the sort of signings that helped doom the aging Heat in years’ past, but who else was Griffin going to sign? There weren’t any mythical big man defenders or lights-out swingman stoppers floating around last July. This was the best the Cavaliers could do, and Griffin shouldn’t be judged for failing to acquire hypothetical players that don’t exist or (at best) aren’t available in reality. Do you really think Memphis would have traded Marc Gasol for Andrew Wiggins and Anthony Bennett?


Cleveland is “just” 18-12 and still very much in the mix. There is always the mental image to be had of LeBron locking down on Kyle Lowry or Jimmy Butler this May, much in the same way he did to Derrick Rose in the Eastern Conference finals back when the 2010-11 Chicago Bulls blew past the Heat in the regular season. This is more than salvageable, and anything can happen in a seven game series. Even against a team from the Western Conference.


This has to be the bottom, though. The squad will not be able to approach the realm of the mediocre on defense, but they have to at least start trying to. And the offense, once David Blatt rightfully decides to throw his position around, has to achieve top rank.


It’s the only way to save a season that should be starting to worry northern Ohio. Clowntime is over, and chill mode has to end.


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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!






from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nba-ball-dont-lie/lebron-james-on-his-cleveland-cavaliers---we-re-not-a-very-good-team-154040555.html

News sport : Belk Bowl: Also known as the Grantham Bowl

Belk Bowl

Louisville (9-3) vs. Georgia (9-3)

Charlotte, N.C.

Dec. 30, 2014


Did you know Todd Grantham is getting to face his former team?


If you've been paying attention to college football this season, you probably knew that. Grantham, Louisville's defensive coordinator, was Georgia's defensive coordinator in 2013 and joined Bobby Petrino's staff with the Cardinals in January.


Grantham was at Georgia for four years, so it figures that he'll have a good idea of what the Bulldogs would want to do on offense. However, any advantage from that possibility could be muted with the departure of Georgia offensive coordinator Mike Bobo to Colorado State. Tight ends coach John Lilly will call the plays for Georgia, and while there will likely be some distinct similarities to Georgia's offense under Bobo, he could introduce some unexpected wrinkles.


One of those similarities will likely be a heavy dose of freshman RB Nick Chubb, who stepped into the feature back role in Todd Gurley's absence. Chubb was a first-team all-SEC selection with 1,281 yards and 12 touchdowns in 2014. He had over 20 carries in a game four times in 2014. There's a very good chance the Belk Bowl will be game No. 5.


For Louisville's offense, the question is at quarterback. Petrino has left his options open between Kyle Bolin and Reggie Bonnafon after Will Gardner's season-ending knee injury. Bonnafon started the final game of the season against Kentucky but he too was sidelined with a knee injury. Bolin stepped in and was 21-31 for 381 yards and three scores.


No matter who starts, it's a good bet that both will see time.


Vegas odds: Georgia (-6.5)


FUN FACT


Chubb's going to have to pull a Melvin Gordon or Samaje Perine if he's going to break Herschel Walker's Georgia freshman rushing record. As a freshman in 1980, Walker had 1,616 yards. Chubb needs 336 yards to break it.


PREDICTIONS


Graham: This is a tough one because while I believe in Chubb, I'm not sure he's going to find a lot of success against this Louisville defense. And I simply don't trust Hutson Mason to win this one for the Bulldogs. I'm going to go against conventional wisdom and take the Birds. Louisville 27, Georgia 24.


Nick: Is an average quarterback in Hutson Mason better than indecision between two? Georgia's the pick here, but this game doesn't seem like it will have an outcome that would be surprising. Georgia 30, Louisville 24.


Sam: Belk: You know Louisville's defense is gearing up for Nick Chubb and daring senior Hutson Mason to win the game for Georgia. Mason may not make all the throws, but he generally doesn't make mistakes either. Mason gets the job done in his final game. Georgia 27, Louisville 26.


For more Georgia news, visit UGASports.com.


For more Louisville news, visit CardinalSports.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!







from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/ncaaf-dr-saturday/belk-bowl--also-known-as-the-grantham-bowl-153322221.html

News sport : Buffalo Bills quarterback Kyle Orton announces retirement


The Buffalo Bills better hope EJ Manuel is better in his third season, or they have another Plan B, because they just lost their starting quarterback to retirement.


Kyle Orton announced he will retire from the NFL. Assuming this isn't a trick to get out of his contract, which worked this summer when the Dallas Cowboys were forced to cut him, Orton is done after 10 NFL seasons.



“I just have been going at it for 10 years and it’s just a family decision and I’ve decided to get home and be a dad and call it a day,” Orton said, according to the Bills' web site.



In walking away now, Orton leaves a $5.4 million base salary on the table for 2015, according to OverTheCap.com. He also would have been the favorite to start for the Bills next season, because Manuel fell out of favor in Buffalo.


A 2013 first-round pick, Manuel was benched after four games with the Bills at 2-2. Orton came in and the Bills went 7-5, and were alive for a playoff spot until a Week 16 loss at Oakland. Even though the Bills were eliminated before Week 17, Manuel still didn't play in a meaningless game at New England, a really bad sign for what the coaching staff thinks about his future.


Buffalo will likely explore its options this offseason. Turning back to Manuel doesn't seem to be what the Bills want to do, but there might not be many better choices available to them. Even though Orton was never a special quarterback during his time with the Bears, Broncos, Chiefs, Cowboys and Bills, he did probably give Buffalo its best chance next year to snap a playoff drought that dates back to 1999. Orton told the Bills' site that nothing will change his mind, so the Bills need to figure out their next move at quarterback.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nfl-shutdown-corner/buffalo-bills-quarterback-kyle-orton-announces-retirement-152109591.html

News sport : Kansas State turns four-point lead into two-point loss in 3.8 seconds


Between the strength of the Big 12 and a dearth of quality non-conference wins, Kansas State already faced an uphill climb to reach the NCAA tournament entering Sunday's game against Texas Southern


The path is now even steeper for the Wildcats after they collapsed in stunning fashion during the final seconds of their 58-56 loss to the Tigers.


Kansas State led by four points when guard Jevon Thomas made the mistake of fouling Tonnie Collier while contesting his 3-point attempt with 3.8 seconds to go. Collier sank the first two free throws and intentionally missed the third one, a play that almost never works except this time when Chris Thomas scored a game-tying put-back with 0.9 seconds to go after Kansas State's Nino Williams crumbled to the ground on the box-out.


Even then, Kansas State was assured no worse than overtime with a successful inbound pass, but Thomas made another costly blunder, throwing a long pass to Marcus Foster that landed out of bounds without anyone touching it. Gifted an inbound opportunity under the basket, Texas Southern took advantage as 6-foot-9 Jason Carter cut to the basket, caught a lob pass in the paint and beat the buzzer with a game-winning five-foot jump shot.


Kansas State's loss is especially damaging because Texas-Southern entered Sunday's game with a 2-9 record this season. Though the Tigers have played a tough schedule and own an impressive win at Michigan State earlier this month, the SWAC contenders are still 178th in the KenPom rankings and will surely drag down the Wildcats' RPI.


It would be easier for Kansas State to absorb such a loss if the Wildcats (7-5) had accomplished more already in November and December. They have a couple of decent wins against struggling Purdue and middling Texas A&M, but they've also lost to small-conference Long Beach State and rebuilding Tennessee in addition to a 23-point blowout loss to Pitt.


Bad as the final seconds were for Kansas State on Sunday, the Wildcats never would have been in position to lose if they had sunk a few more free throws down the stretch. They shot 8 of 20 from the foul line during the game and missed 6 of 8 in the final 69 seconds to pave the way for Texas Southern to pull off a miracle comeback.


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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!


Follow @JeffEisenberg






from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/ncaab-the-dagger/kansas-state-turns-four-point-lead-into-two-point-loss-in-3-8-seconds-150832554.html

News sport : Marc Trestman and GM Phil Emery fired by Chicago Bears after 5-11 season

Chicago’s Marc Trestman experiment is over after just two seasons.


Plucked from the Canadian Football League and hailed as an offensive genius who would finally lift the mercurial Jay Cutler to elite quarterback status, Trestman was fired by the Chicago Bears on Monday after posting a 5-11 record in 2014 and an overall mark of 13-19 the past two seasons.


Trestman isn't the only one leaving Halas Hall looking fo a new job. The Bears also said goodbye to general manager Phil Emery after just three seasons. It was Emery who conducted an exhaustive search for his first head coach and ended up choosing Trestman over Bruce Arians, the presumptive NFL coach of the year with the Arizona Cardinals this season. Emery is also paying the price for signing quarterback Jay Cutler to an expensive extension last offseason.


How disastrous was Trestman and Emery’s tenure in the Windy City? Well, consider this: Trestman was let go after just 32 games, the second-shortest stay in team history to Paddy Driscoll’s 24 games in 1956-57. Dave Wannstedt and Dick Jauron, in comparison, were kept around for 96 and 80 games despite similar winning percentages.


The McCaskey family admitting a mistake and quickly moving on seems like a progressive move for the usually conservative franchise. But it should be noted that Emery’s hiring of Trestman was viewed by some as a progressive and “thinking outside the box” move.


Armed with black-rimmed glasses, a law degree and vocabulary stocked with ten-dollar words, Trestman didn’t look like your typical football coach.


(Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports) His resume was different, too with offensive coordinator or assistant coaching stops with nine different NFL teams before finally getting a head coaching opportunity north of the border with the Montreal Alouettes. He’d win back-to-back Grey Cups with the Alouettes in 2009 and 2010.


Trestman returned to the NFL (and the United States) on Jan. 16, 2013, just two days before his 57th birthday, when he was named the 14th head coach in the long history of the Chicago Bears.


Fans in Chicago initially didn’t know what to make of the soft-spoken coach who couldn’t have been more different from the exalted Mike Ditka had he tried. Trestman touted building relationships with “valued people” instead of tearing players down. He was an offensive mastermind in a city where Dick Butkus still looms large. He favored an analytical approach to the game instead of a loud one based on emotion.


The 2013 Bears got off to a 3-0 start but that proved to be the extent of Trestman’s honeymoon in Chicago. Despite building a top-five offense while journeyman Josh McCown subbed in for an injured Jay Cutler, Trestman’s team featured a dregs-of-the-league defense and backfiring decisions like opting to have Robbie Gould kick a potential 47-yard game-winning field goal on second-and-7 against the Minnesota Vikings instead of opting to get the ball closer. (Gould would miss the attempt and Chicago later lost the game.) The Bears went 8-8 in 2013, missing out on the playoffs after losing to the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field in Week 17.


The 2014 season brought higher expectations with the return of a healthy Cutler, receivers Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery and a defense that was retooled through free agency. A Week 1 loss at home to the Buffalo Bills quickly dashed those dreams and led to a nightmare season that bottomed out with a 51-23 loss to the New England Patriots in Week 8 and a 55-14 thrashing at the hands of the Green Bay Packers just two weeks later on Sunday Night Football.


In firing Trestman and Emery, the McCaskeys are acknowledging the disaster that was the 2014 season. Offensive coordinator Aaron Kromer made headlines this month when it was revealed he was the source of disparaging comments made toward Cutler in the media. A plan to replace Cutler with Jimmy Clausen lasted just one week after Clausen suffered a concussion in a Week 16 game against the Detroit Lions.


Trestman wasn't the sole source of the Bears' problems, of course. He wasn’t the one who handed Cutler a monster contract that weighed down the franchise nor was he the one who failed to draft any difference makers on defense, instead relying on expensive and aging free agents like Jared Allen.


He wasn’t the one who, well, hired himself.


Whichever GM and coach inherit the franchise will have to retool both sides of the ball, which is no easy taks considering the amount of money that has been committed to the offense. The Bears have the seventh pick in next spring's NFL draft and must replenish a defense that has been among the NFL's worst the past two seasons.


Trestman, who will turn 59 on Jan. 15, should be fine. He’ll get paid for the two years that remain on his Bears contract and should still be in demand in the league as either an assistant coach or offensive adviser.


But after waiting for so long for an NFL team to take a chance on his quiet and reserved approach, Trestman’s first head coaching opportunity will likely be his last.


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Kevin Kaduk is a writer for Yahoo Sports .. Have a tip? Email him at kevinkaduk@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nfl-shutdown-corner/marc-trestman-and-gm-phil-emery-fired-by-chicago-bears-after-5-11-season-144554562.html

News sport : Detroit paper mixes up Jim and John Harbaugh on front page (Photo)

The Detroit Free Press got the Harbaugh brothers mixed up for the front page of its newspaper on Monday.


Jim Harbaugh, the former San Francisco 49ers coach, is looking like he'll be the Michigan head coach. And the Free-Press teased their story on Harbaugh's possible arrival at the top of the front page with a picture of his brother John, the coach of the Baltimore Ravens.




Yes, that's a Baltimore hat on John's head.


We realize mix-ups happen, but we're not sure if or how that passed through anyone in sports -- the hat should have been the giveaway. But on the bright side, it's better to do this now than at any point after Jim Harbaugh would become Michigan's coach, right?


Any announcement of his arrival will likely be Monday or Tuesday.


Newspaper front via Newseum.org.


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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!







from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/ncaaf-dr-saturday/detroit-free-press-mixes-up-jim-and-john-harbaugh-on-front-page--photo-143344913.html

News sport : After blowout loss, Atlanta Falcons fire coach Mike Smith


Maybe Mike Smith would have saved his job with a win on Sunday, although there's no guarantee that would have been enough. But he didn’t even come close.


After the Atlanta Falcons were embarrassed 34-3 by the Carolina Panthers, in a game that decided the NFC South championship, it was clear that Smith’s time with the Falcons was over. Owner Arthur Blank made it official on Monday, firing Smith after seven seasons. The team announced the move.


Smith departs with a 66-46 record and four playoff appearances. But he had just one playoff win and the Falcons took a tumble the past two years. Atlanta was 4-12 in 2013, and just 6-10 this season. The Falcons were alive for a playoff spot in the last week of the season because the NFC South was horrible, and clearly that wouldn’t be a good enough reason to keep Smith around.


The Falcons might have made the playoffs had Smith not played a big hand in blowing a couple winnable games. Shaky clock management decisions by Smith allowed the Detroit Lions and Cleveland Browns to pull off last-season victories over the Falcons. Smith’s job security has been a topic in Atlanta for most of this season.


The Falcons reportedly had already hired a search firm to identify head-coaching candidates before the final game of the season was played, so it wasn’t exactly a big surprise when Smith was let go. The Falcons are building a new stadium, and Blank would like to get some positive momentum going before they move into their new palace. The job could be enticing because the Falcons already have an established quarterback in Matt Ryan.


But it won’t be Smith leading that charge to the new dome, although he had some good years in Atlanta. The final two seasons, and a really ugly loss in the final game, were enough to cost Smith his job.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nfl-shutdown-corner/after-blowout-loss--atlanta-falcons-fire-coach-mike-smith-143033158.html

Platini set for another term

Uefa President Michel Platini is set to serve a third term after no rival candidate emerged before the deadline.


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Nyon, Switzerland – Uefa President Michel Platini is set to serve a third term after no rival candidate emerged before the deadline.


The former France captain was first elected to run European football in 2007 and stood unopposed for a second term in 2011.


Platini will be confirmed for a third term as president through 2019 at the Uefa Congress in Vienna in March after Uefa announced “the cut-off deadline of 24 December 2014 has passed for submissions of candidacy” with no rival candidates.


In his second term, Platini enforced Financial Fair Play rules to curb club losses, introduced a minimum 10-game ban for racist abuse by players, and changed the 2020 European Championship format to feature 13 host countries.


Platini has ruled out challenging Sepp Blatter for the Fifa presidency in May. – Sapa-AP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/platini-set-for-another-term-1.1799755

News sport : Geno Smith posts only perfect passer rating of 2014 (NFL in 90)

Those of you who thought Geno Smith would post the only perfect passer rating for a game in 2014, please raise you hands.


Liars.


But no foolin', the wildly inconsistent New York Jets quarterback went 20-of-25 for 358 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions in Sunday's 37-24 win over the Miami Dolphins. In doing so, Smith became the only quarterback in 2014 to post a perfect mark of 158.3 and the first since Alex Smith of the Kansas City Chiefs did it on Dec. 15, 2013. (Only three other quarterbacks have posted a perfect mark this decade: Tom Brady in 2010, Robert Griffin III in 2012 and Nick Foles in 2013.)


The win may have been too little, too late for Rex Ryan and the Jets, who posted a 4-12 record and finished in last place in the AFC East. But it may give at least a little bit of hope to Jets fan, who saw their team win two late games to fall out of the top spots in next spring's NFL draft. The Jets will pick sixth, a spot where Marcus Mariota and Jameis Winston will no longer be available.


If not, perhaps that isn't the biggest deal for the Jets, who could draft a quarterback in later rounds while hoping a new coaching regime can help Smith show more of the measured promise he has occasionally shown over his first two years in the league.


We cover all that and more in this week's edition of NFL in 90.


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Kevin Kaduk is a writer for Yahoo Sports .. Have a tip? Email him at kevinkaduk@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nfl-shutdown-corner/geno-smith-posts-only-perfect-passer-rating-of-2014--nfl-in-90-125709334.html

Wenger lauds ‘solid’ Arsenal

Arsenal remain unconvincing in many areas and yet this was a day to savour for Arsene Wenger as four teams above his dropped points.


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Arsenal remain unconvincing in many areas and yet this was a day to savour for Arsene Wenger as four teams above his dropped points and his players produced the sort of character they are usually accused of lacking.


Two goals in three minutes just before half-time were enough to clinch victory at West Ham and, although more clinical finishing would have given the scoreline a healthier glow, they have emerged from two London derbies in three days with six points. Wenger smiled with satisfaction and hailed his players for their resilience, especially after they played for 40 minutes with 10 men against Queen’s Park Rangers on Boxing Day.


‘We had a solid, combative and united performance from the first to the last minute,’ said the Arsenal boss. ‘We made more chances and deserved to win the game . . . everyone did their job well. We were a bit jaded and had to dig deep.’


Santi Cazorla opened the scoring from the spot, having reclaimed penalty duties from Alexis Sanchez who stole them against QPR and missed, and Danny Welbeck pounced for the second as West Ham were still fuming at referee Neil Swarbrick’s decision to award the penalty.


Swarbrick had not endeared himself to the home crowd in the fifth minute when he ruled out Alex Song’s splendid volley because Diafra Sakho and Cheikhou Kouyate were offside.


The penalty multiplied their anger but both decisions were understandable — even though Hammers boss Sam Allardyce took issue with the offside, complaining about inconsistencies and a goal scored against his side by Romelu Lukaku at Everton in November.


Kouyate pulled one back after the break, Arsenal wobbled at the back, and goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny struggled with high balls.


Substitute Enner Valencia almost levelled late on but, equally, the visitors should have extended their lead from one of many chances they carved open on the counter.


West Ham goalkeeper Adrian produced a string of saves to thwart Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Sanchez and Cazorla, while Welbeck, having scored his first goal for nearly a month, dragged a couple of decent chances wide of the target.


For a change, the win was not about Arsenal’s precision in attack but their determination and courage at the back, helped by Laurent Koscielny, back for only his third appearance during nearly three months of problems with his Achilles tendons.


Koscielny is always a solid presence, but others stepped up too. Per Mertesacker produced one terrific clearance, heading behind for a corner as Andy Carroll loomed over him, and Francis Coquelin, making his first Premier League start in nearly two years, added bite in midfield.


In fact, Allardyce can be flattered by the team Wenger selected because the Arsenal boss rarely tinkers on account of the opposition. Coquelin was brought in alongside Mathieu Flamini to fight for the knock-downs won by Carroll.


Arsenal finished the game with the only six senior defenders in their first-team squad all on the pitch. ‘We need to be stable defensively,’ said Wenger. ‘We’ve missed important players at the back.


‘I felt Coquelin played well. He tired but in the first half he was very influential.’ With Kevin Nolan and Mark Noble on the bench, Song was West Ham captain against the club he left for Barcelona in 2012, but he played most of the first half like someone too desperate to prove a point, often caught in possession while over-elaborating.


Song was more commanding after the break and started the match by lashing a sweet volley into the net. He chose not to celebrate — unlike Allardyce who pumped his fists in the air — but there was a flag up and referee Swarbrick ruled it out.


Kouyate and Diafra Sakho were offside and jumped out of the way of the ball in front of Szczesny. It seemed like a good decision but, it’s true, on another day it might have been allowed.


Arsenal went ahead four minutes before the break when Winston Reid tripped Cazorla as he ran at goal, and the Spaniard sent Adrian the wrong way from the spot. For the second, Mathieu Debuchy eluded Kouyate and Oxlade-Chamberlain ran the ball to the line before cutting a low cross into the centre where Welbeck slid in behind James Tomkins.


Kouyate struck early in the second half, climbing above Debuchy to meet a cross from Tomkins, the centre-half who found himself on the right wing and skipped past Cazorla as if he wasn’t there.


It offered hope, but that is where the fightback ended, and Arsenal have won their last eight against West Ham. A win at Southampton on New Year’s Day and Arsenal will be back in the top four. ‘I always had belief,’ said Wenger.


They are 13 points behind leaders Chelsea and expect key players like Mesut Ozil and Aaron Ramsey back next month. They couldn’t, could they? – Daily Mail






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/wenger-lauds-solid-arsenal-1.1799678

United will be better - LVG

Louis van Gaal believes Manchester United are still in the Premier League title race despite missing a chance to close the gap on the top two.


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London – Louis van Gaal believes Manchester United are still in the Premier League title race despite missing a chance to close the gap on the top two.


Van Gaal's side paid the price for their failure to convert a number of first half chances when they were held to a 0-0 draw at Tottenham on Sunday.


That meant they stay 10 points behind Chelsea, who were held by Southampton, and seven adrift of second placed Manchester City, who were also frustrated in a draw with struggling Burnley.


Van Gaal admits his side cannot afford a repeat of this wasteful display.


But he is confident United are improving and capable of reeling in Chelsea and City during the second half of the season.


“When you cannot win such type of matches when (you are the) better team – like against (Aston) Villa and also now – then it is very difficult to be the champions at the end of the season,” Van Gaal said.


But asked if he still believed his side could be champions, he said: “Still, because we are improving every week.


“Of course, of course, we shall be better in 2015. So watch.”


Van Gaal claimed it was impossible for his injury-hit squad to maintain top form having beaten Newcastle 3-1 just two days earlier.


“When you play your best first half of the season as Manchester United and you are playing in White Hart Lane and playing a top six club and you play like that and create six to eight open chances then you have to finish them,” he said.


“If you don't reward yourself, normally the opponent wins.


“You could see also the difference in the second half. It was not football anymore and a struggle for life.


“I have said already a month ago. It is scientifically proven that (the) body cannot recover in 48 hours.


“When the Premier League allow that to play matches you see what it is like, the second half is much different to the first.


“Not only for Manchester United but also Tottenham Hotspur. I think Tottenham could have played much better than today.


“Manchester united could also, in the second half, have played much better. But you cannot do that in the second half.”


Tottenham keeper Hugo Lloris kept his side in the game during the first half but United's David De Gea was prominent after the break.


United survived late Spurs pressure to maintain a clean sheet and Van Gaal believes that is another sign of his side's progress.


“I asked David de Gea how many clean sheets he had and now he has six already,” he said.


“So maybe now you will remember what some people said at the beginning of the season. It is a matter of organisation I think.”


Meanwhile, Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino acknowledged the demands of playing two games in quick succession, but refused to complain.


“The condition was for both teams the same. We never complain about when the opponent has the same condition as you,” he said.


“For Tottenham, from the beginning of the season, is the team that has had less recovery days in every competition.


“I never complain about that. I think Manchester had the same hours to recover as us.


“We showed we are more solid as a team. It is true in (the) first half they had most chances but in the end the result is fair.


“Lloris is one of the best goalkeepers in the world and I repeat that every week. That's not new for me.


“The clean sheet is important. I think that always you need to improve. But I am happy with the performance.


“I am very pleased because the players made a big effort today less than 48 hours after playing again. Therefore I think the effort was great.” – Sapa-AFP






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Torres returns to Atletico on oan

Spain forward Fernando Torres has agreed to return to Atletico Madrid on loan from AC Milan until the end of the 2015-16 season.


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Madrid - Spain forward Fernando Torres has agreed to return to Atletico Madrid on loan from AC Milan until the end of the 2015-16 season, seven and a half years after leaving his boyhood club, the La Liga champions said on Monday.


Torres, 30, has been struggling for goals since joining Chelsea from Liverpool in 2011 and moved to Milan on loan in August.


Chelsea and Milan agreed on Saturday to make the switch permanent, paving the way for Torres to be loaned to Atletico.


The deal is subject to Torres passing a medical and will be finalised on Jan. 5 when the Italian transfer window opens, Atletico said on their website (http://www.clubatleticodemadrid.com).– Reuters






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Pellegrini slams complacent City

Manuel Pellegrini accused his Manchester City players of complacency after they allowed a two-goal lead to slip away in a costly 2-2 draw against lowly Burnley.


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Manchester, United Kingdom – Manuel Pellegrini accused his Manchester City players of complacency after they allowed a two-goal lead to slip away in a costly 2-2 draw against lowly Burnley.


The defending champions wasted the opportunity to pull to within a point of Premier League leaders Chelsea, who were held by Southampton earlier on Sunday, after first half goals from David Silva and Fernandinho had put City well in control at Eastlands.


An early second half effort from Burnley's George Boyd was followed by a dramatic 82nd minute equaliser from Ashley Barnes which ended City's bid for a club record 10th consecutive victory.


“The way we're playing, we need to run a lot of metres,” said Pellegrini.


“Maybe leading 2-0 we thought that the game was over but until the last whistle the game has never finished. We couldn't continue with the same pace.


“In football, two balls can decide the score. At the beginning of the second half, Burnley scored a clear offside goal; after that, with a rebound, they scored the second.


“We played very well in the first half but it's clear that we couldn't keep the same intensity as we had in the first half.


“In the second half, they scored the early goal and that was very important for them. They grew a lot and had a lot of trust in what they could do.”


Pellegrini, who revealed he had left Yaya Toure out of his squad as a precaution after the Ivory Coast international reported a slight groin problem, remained defiant about City's title chances despite the setback.


“Of course, this was a chance to have two points more, but not a chance for anything else,” he said.


“We have to play the complete second round (of fixtures). We have finished the first round with 43 points, which is a good amount of points.


“After leading 2-0, it's more disappointing to lose the two points but we have all the second round to see who is the best team.”


Stevan Jovetic returned as a second half substitute, meaning City's run of games without a fit, recognised first team forward is over, but news about the fitness of club captain Vincent Kompany, laid off with a hamstring injury, is less positive.


“We will see tomorrow if he's fit for the next game,” said Pellegrini whose side next face Sunderland on New Year's Day.


“It is very difficult to know for now. He still has some problems in his calf.”


Pellegrini also blamed the fixture schedule, and the fact his players had to perform on a heavy, snow-bound pitch at West Brom on Boxing Day, for their poor second half showing.


But opposite number Sean Dyche not only named the same starting line-up that lost to Liverpool on Boxing Day but also resisted the temptation to make a substitution during the 90 minutes at the Etihad.


“I find it incredible people are making that point,” said Dyche. “When I was playing, we would put out the same team if we were playing well.


“I don't over-think it. If the team is ready to play, we play and today the players were ready to deliver.


“I keep reading about 'struggling Burnley,' But the expectation was we had no chance at all.


“If you look at the way the team is performing, we're not struggling, we're playing really well and I'm delighted with all the players.


“I'm intrigued to see where the journey is taking us and I've been very much enjoying the way the team has been playing.” – Sapa-AFP






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Jose furious after Fabregas call

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho claimed that there is a “campaign” to get his players wrongly punished for diving following his side's 1-1 Premier League draw at Southampton.


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Southampton, United Kingdom – Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho claimed that there is a “campaign” to get his players wrongly punished for diving following his side's 1-1 Premier League draw at Southampton.


After Eden Hazard had cancelled out Sadio Mane's opener for Southampton on Sunday, referee Anthony Taylor booked Chelsea's Cesc Fabregas after he went down under a challenge by Matthew Targett in the second half.


Television replays indicated that the official may have made a mistake, as Targett appeared to make contact with Fabregas after slipping, but Mourinho suggested that there was more to it than that.


He listed previous incidents when Chelsea players had been booked for perceived dives, including one involving Diego Costa against Burnley on the opening weekend of the season.


Diving had also been the topic of post-match conversation after a 2-0 home win against Hull City earlier this month, which saw England defender Gary Cahill topple to the turf in an eye-catching manner.


“Why was it not a penalty? Because the referee made a mistake,” Mourinho said. “People make mistakes – he made a mistake. A big mistake, but a mistake.


“I think it is the result of something that looks like a campaign. In the first match, Diego got a yellow card when it should have been a red card (for the defender) and a penalty at Burnley.


“A few months later, Fabregas gets a yellow card. The double punishment is unbelievable. You have a penalty and probably you win the game. You don't get the penalty and you get a yellow card.


“We have had bad yellow cards for simulation. I am not saying all, but we are speaking about crucial decisions. For example, the game against Hull City – do you think the most important thing was Cahill or Filipe Luis almost with a broken leg?”


Chelsea's Boxing day fixture had also featured a simulation controversy, with West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce having accused Branislav Ivanovic of going down too easily during his side's 2-0 defeat.


On that occasion the officials punished neither side.


Asked who he thought was behind the “campaign”, Mourinho replied: “I don't know, but after the game against West Ham – a good game, a normal game – (Enner) Valencia made a very bad dive and at the end of the game, Sam is speaking about Ivanovic. What is this? Why?


“It is not against me because I am not on the pitch, but against Chelsea, yes. Do you want me to tell you the two most important things that happened in my matches, in my opinion? Filipe Luis and Eden Hazard could be in hospital now with broken legs.”


The point kept Chelsea at the top of the Premier League table, three points ahead of Manchester City, who surrendered a two-goal lead to draw 2-2 at home to Burnley.


“Chelsea have been playing very well since the beginning of the season. We are top of the league because we deserve to be,” added Mourinho defiantly. “I am so happy with my players.”


Ronald Koeman, the Southampton manager, was also delighted, having seen his players defend for most of a second half that saw home midfielder Morgan Schneiderlin sent off late on for two bookable offences.


Southampton, who are in fourth place, had previously lost home fixtures against City and Manchester United, and the Dutchman was satisfied that his players had applied the lessons learnt the hard way from those defeats.


“One point against Chelsea is maybe three points against another opponent,” Koeman said.


“The difference was we played until the last second. We didn't make stupid mistakes like we did against United and City.”


Koeman, who was a colleague of Mourinho's at Barcelona when Louis van Gaal was coach, admitted the Fabregas incident could well have gone against his side.


“Maybe it's a penalty. I don't know,” he said. “If it's a penalty they can be disappointed about that decision, but it's part of football.” – Sapa-AFP






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Wenger eyes top four spot

Arsene Wenger believes Arsenal are gathering momentum at the right time after they enhanced their prospects of qualifying for the Champions League.


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London – Arsene Wenger believes Arsenal are gathering momentum at the right time after they enhanced their prospects of qualifying for the Champions League with a hard-fought 2-1 win at West Ham.


First half goals from Santi Cazorla and Danny Welbeck at Upton Park on Sunday were enough to help Arsenal leapfrog West Ham in the Premier League table.


And, after a spluttering campaign, the Gunners are back on course to finish in the top four and seal a coveted place in Europe's elite club competition.


“The Champions League is vital for us,” Wenger said. “We have done it 17 years so I'm entitled at least to believe we can do it.


“It's still all to do. When you look at the league, everyone fights very hard for it. Southampton, Tottenham, Man United, so many teams who can fight for these positions.


“I always had that belief, but it's far from done. We just want to win the next game and be consistent in our performances.


Another victory at fourth placed Southampton on New Year's Day would be a further step in the right direction for Wenger's side.


“If you look at our recent results we look to be more stable. We have a big game in front of us now at Southampton,” Wenger added.


With the transfer window set to open on January 1, Wenger knows there will be speculation about moves in and out of the Emirates Stadium, but the Gunners boss is focused on getting his injured players fit rather than any wheeling and dealing.


Out-of-favour Germany striker Lukas Podolski continues to be strongly linked with a January move to Inter Milan.


But Wenger has played down the prospect of him moving on and is more concerned at seeing the likes of Mesut Ozil, Aaron Ramsey and Jack Wilshere return from spells on the sidelines.


“There's nothing concrete there with Lukas,” Wenger added.


“At the moment nobody goes out. Ozil is coming back at the back of January, so of course there is a lot of competition up front.”


West Ham were surprise challengers for a Champions League place before back-to-back defeats derailed their charge.


But boss Sam Allardyce is hoping for a response against West Bromwich Albion to mark the start of the new year as he looks to get his side back on track.


“The players have once again given their all. I cannot question their commitment all season,” Allardyce said.


“We have to go again now and we have only lost two games.


“Of course we want to bounce back against West Brom now.”


Allardyce was also frustrated that referee Neil Swarbrick and his assistant ruled out Alex Song's early strike due to Diafra Sakho standing offside in front of Arsenal goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.


“If we'd been allowed that goal we wouldn't have lost. We would have kicked on and Arsenal would have found life very difficult from then on,” Allardyce said.


“I've not spoken to the ref because I don't see any point in confronting him when you know you're 100 per cent right and he hasn't had the visuals. You can't get anything out of telling him how wrong he's been.


“Going on what we were told at the start of the season, they got it horribly wrong. He (Sakho) wasn't in the eye-line of the keeper. He didn't touch the ball.


“Yes he was offside, but we've seen so many of those allowed as goals. I've not seen one 'not given'.


“Can you tell me what is an offside? Now I'm totally and utterly confused and bewildered. There are far too many inconsistencies.” – Sapa-AFP






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