News sport : Kevin Sumlin actually fired the pool boy who overheard him on the phone

While Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin was having a phone conversation to finalize the hiring of the Aggies’ next defensive coordinator, an A&M student who was cleaning his pool sent out a tweet that ultimately cost him his job.



When Sumlin replied, people weren’t entirely sure if he was being serious, but in a radio interview with ESPN’s Mike & Mike on Wednesday, Sumlin confirmed that he was.


Sumlin said that he was actually on the phone with John Chavis, who he hired away from LSU the day after the pool boy, Rustin McFarland, overheard him on the phone. Sumlin said the decision to fire McFarland came down to an invasion of privacy.


(The pool boy question comes around the 15:00 mark)


“We try to teach lessons to young people and I’ve got a great company that built my pool and (McFarland’s) boss is a good friend – I’ve known him for a long time,” Sumlin said. “I was on the phone. Obviously everybody wanted to know who we were going to hire as a D coordinator and I was on the phone with John Chavis at the time and (McFarland’s) looking through the pool and I’m coming out of the car and he’s still standing around, looking.


“The message is if you come to somebody’s house and somebody hires you, whatever you’re doing – it’s a little bit personal. If you’re invading privacy, it’s not a public deal and Twitter is public. So, you know, guess what? Don’t come back.”


Sumlin said it’s a lesson for young people, including his players, to take social media seriously.


“Guys are going to make mistakes. Think before you tweet,” Sumin said.


McFarland definitely received that lesson loud and clear.


For more Texas A&M news, visit AggieYell.com.


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News sport : National Championship Preview: Ohio State's O-line

The first College Football Playoff National Championship Game is finally upon us and Dr. Saturday has your pregame prep covered. Every day leading up to the game, we’ll breakdown a piece of each team and preview its role in the upcoming title game. Previous previews: Ohio State's front 7, Oregon's front 7, Ohio State's secondary.


Season highlight: Ohio State’s starting left guard Billy Price said he thought the Big Ten title game against Wisconsin completed the turnaround of the Ohio State offensive line and he was right. The game showed complete domination by a line that allowed just one sack and five tackles for loss while the offense rolled up 558 total yards and seven touchdowns in a 59-0 performance.


Player to Watch: Guard Pat Elflein was one of just two Buckeyes with starting experience on the line this season and as the year has progressed, he has become the anchor. In the semifinal against Alabama, Elflein actually slid over to center when Jacoby Boren was injured late in the first half. Three plays later, the Buckeyes scored their first touchdown of the game on a 3-yard run by Ezekiel Elliott.


Strengths: Ohio State can run the ball. There was definitely some doubt about whether the Buckeyes could do it against Alabama and one of the best defensive lines in the game, but those concerns were alleviated when the Buckeyes rattled off 281 rushing yards against a defense that was allowing less than 100 rushing yards per game and had not allowed a 100-yard rusher this season. Elliott finished with 230 yards. Since struggling against Navy and Virginia Tech, Ohio State has not rushed for fewer than 219 yards and has rushed for 300 yards three times.


Weaknesses: While the running game has been good, opponents haven’t had much trouble getting into the backfield. Teams average 5.21 tackles for loss against the Buckeyes and Alabama managed a season-high tying 11. The only other team to have 11 tackles for loss on Ohio State was Virginia Tech, the team's only loss of the season. The Hokies also managed a season-high seven sacks. The Buckeyes have been much better since that game and have definitely cut down the sack totals, but did allow three to the Tide.


Overview: Ohio State’s offensive line was the most talked about weakness leading up to the 2014 season. It had just two players with starting experience — not even fulltime starting experience — and was filling holes with a bunch of unknowns.


When quarterback Braxton Miller suffered a season-ending shoulder injury during fall camp, even more attention was placed on a line that needed to gel together quickly and protect and young, inexperienced quarterback.


It didn’t respond well.


The Buckeyes were shaky at best against an undersized Navy defensive front and allowed five tackles for loss and a sack while the offense had to come from behind to win the game.


Things got worse the following week when the Buckeyes allowed 11 tackles for loss and seven sacks to Virginia Tech. Quarterback J.T. Barrett threw three interceptions and the running game had its lowest output of the season with 108 yards. Overall, the Ohio State offense mustered just 327 total yards.


It was the low point of the season for Ohio State's offensive line and a rallying point of sorts for left tackle Taylor Decker, Price, Boren, Elflein and right tackle Darryl Baldwin. From that game on, the line steadily improved. There were hiccups here and there, but it opened holes for the Buckeyes to be one of the dominant running games in the country and it kept its quarterback clean.


The biggest test of the line’s cohesiveness and growth came in the Big Ten title game against Wisconsin when it adjusted to its third quarterback of the season and kept him fairly unscathed.


Oregon doesn’t present as big of a threat to the offensive line as Alabama did. The Ducks have been gashed in yardage this season and haven’t done a great job of getting into the backfield. However, where the Buckeyes offensive line will truly be tested is in the red zone. While Oregon allows a lot of yards, it doesn’t allow a ton of points and touchdowns are often hard to come by once teams get into the 20s.


Elliott has rushed for more than 200 yards in each of his past two games and quarterback Cardale Jones has shown he can use his big frame to bowl over defenders and pick up yardage. Oregon hasn’t faced a lot of good backs in the Pac-12 and definitely hasn’t faced a lot of good power backs. The ground game is definitely an advantage for the Buckeyes and if its offensive line can continue to open holes, it might be the difference in the game.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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News sport : Georgia hires Brian Schottenheimer as offensive coordinator

ST. LOUIS, MO - NOVEMBER 3: Offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer calls a play against the Tennessee Titans. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images) Georgia has its next offensive coordinator.


The school announced on Wednesday that it has hired Brian Schottenheimer, the long-time NFL assistant, as the Bulldogs’ offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Schottenheimer was the offensive coordinator for the St. Louis Rams for the past three seasons and hasn’t coached in college since 2000, when he was USC’s tight ends coach.


Schottenheimer will replace Mike Bobo, who had been with the program since 2001 but accepted the head-coaching job at Colorado State in December.


“This is a great opportunity to become a Georgia Bulldog for both my career and my family,” Schottenheimer said in a statement. “I'm thrilled to be part of an elite program with such national tradition and a great staff already in place. I look forward to working with young men and being a positive and significant influence on their lives as we develop them athletically, academically, and socially.”


Before his time with St. Louis, Schottenheimer was the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the New York Jets from 2006-11 and also was the quarterbacks coach for the San Diego Chargers from 2002-05 and the Washington Redskins in 2001.


In addition to his one season at USC in 2000, Schottenheimer coached wide receivers at Syracuse in 1999.


The son of longtime NFL head coach Marty Schottenheimer, Schottenheimer played at Florida under Steve Spurrier from 1994-96 and was the backup quarterback behind Heisman Trophy winner Danny Wuerffel.


“I'm excited to have Brian join our coaching staff,” said head coach Mark Richt. "His NFL experience will be a perfect fit for how we like to play offensive football here at Georgia. He'll be excellent in developing our players in both the running and passing games which will benefit them while they are at Georgia and for their future.”


With Schottenheimer running the offense, the Rams were 28th in the NFL this season in total offense, averaging 314.7 yards and 20.3 points per game.


For more Georgia news, visit UGASports.com.


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News sport : Draymond Green's mom thinks he'd be an All-Star if it 'wasn't a popularity contest'

Draymond Green campaigns. Loudly. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) There are plenty of reasons to love the Golden State Warriors right now. (I wrote about my personal favorite on Tuesday.) But while plenty of well-deserved praise continues to be lavished on Stephen Curry's ball-handling derring-do, Klay Thompson's career-best 3-point marksmanship and the free-flowing offense that's torching opponents to the tune of 108.7 points per 100 possessions, the league's fourth-best mark, more and more NBA fans and observers are taking notice of the phenomenal contributions being made by Draymond Green.


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Green's not quite a household name, but the third-year forward has gone from intriguing 2012 second-round pick to seemingly indispensable starter on the team with the NBA's best record this season, filling in all the blanks for a Warriors squad that has vaulted into the ranks of real-deal title contenders after a disappointing first-round playoff ouster last spring. As the Dubs' third or fourth option, Green's 12.1 point-per-game scoring average doesn't leap off the page, but he's in strong company as a stat-sheet stuffer — only Green, Tim Duncan. Marc Gasol and Paul Millsap are averaging at least 12 points, eight rebounds, three assists and a steal per game this season — and there's a strong argument to be made that his positional versatility and ability to fit seamlessly in just about any lineup combination ranks among the top reasons for Golden State's scintillating start.


The more you watch Green, the more you see what he adds to the Warriors — the communication, the passing-lane disruption, the surprisingly stout post defense, the extra floor spacing, the attitude and swagger — and the more you think that there ought to be an All-Star team for guys like that. Well, what if there was, and it was called the Western Conference All-Star team?


We can say, with some certainty, that the 24-year-old forward's got at least one vote — the #NBAballot belonging to his mother, Mary Babers-Green:



It's always cool when your mom's got your back. (Shouts to moms, especially Moms D.)


Mrs. Babers-Green definitely has a point when it comes to All-Star fan voting, which can often produce rosters heavier on established stars than the most deserving players. As of the second round of ballot returns, Green didn't place in the top 15 among Western frontcourt vote-getters, trailing not only the three players in position for starting spots (Anthony Davis of the New Orleans Pelicans, Blake Griffin of the Los Angeles Clippers and Marc Gasol of the Memphis Grizzlies) but also at least a dozen other Western forwards and centers, from the exceedingly deserving (say, DeMarcus Cousins) to the, um, more questionable sort-of celebrity selections (looking at you, Nick Young).


But while the fan ballot's likely a lost cause — barring an epic get-out-the-vote campaign by the Warriors' public relations and social media teams, that is — Green's do-all-the-little-things game would seem to make him just the sort of player who'd earn recognition from the coaches who select the All-Star reserves that fill out the midseason exhibition's rosters. Given the paucity of available slots, though — just three dedicated frontcourt openings along with two backcourt players, plus two more "wild card" spots that can be given to players regardless of position — and the sheer number of other deserving prospective frontcourt candidates (off the top: Boogie, Duncan, Tyson Chandler, Dwight Howard, LaMarcus Aldridge, Dirk Nowitzki, maybe Kevin Durant and maybe more) — it could be awfully difficult to find a slot for Green.


In the event he doesn't receive recognition next month, then, let's give him some now. After two years spent coming off the bench under Mark Jackson, a season-opening injury to David Lee led new Warriors head coach Steve Kerr Green to slide Green into the starting five. The Michigan State product has proved a hand-in-glove fit in Golden State's lineup, responding to increased floor time by improving on the per-minute scoring, rebounding, assist-dishing and shot-blocking numbers he turned in as a freshman and sophomore, while also posting career-best field-goal (44.3 percent) and 3-point shooting (34.5 percent) marks.


He's been even more impactful on the other side of the ball, though, using his combination of length, strength and quickness to take on multiple assignments, sharply limiting the production of both opposing small forwards and power forwards and ranking third in the NBA (and tops among non-centers) in ESPN's Defensive Real Plus-Minus metric. The Warriors' meat-grinder D has kept choking out the league even with paint-protecting menace Andrew Bogut sidelined, and Green's capacity to guard multiple positions has been a huge reason why.


While Green's individual numbers might not properly illustrate his influence, collective statistics offer a better view of the bigger picture. With Green on the floor, the Warriors are holding opponents to just 93.6 points-per-100, a significant amount below Golden State's already league-leading mark; when he's sat, the Dubs have given up 101.9 points-per-100, a still-good mark that would put rank just outside the NBA's top 10 defensive units. The Warriors have been 16.8 points per 100 possessions better with Green on the court than off it, the second starkest on-off splits on the Warriors behind only MVP candidate Curry (an absurd +23.8-per-100). You'd be forgiven if you chalked the Warriors' official site's argument that Green might deserve "both the Most Improved and Defensive Player of the Year awards" as in-house hyperbole, but last I checked, Tom Haberstroh is on ESPN.com's payroll, not Golden State's:


According to SportVU data provided to ESPN Insider, Green has defended 38 drives by point guards this season, and those 38 drives have resulted in a measly 15 points, for an average of 0.39 points per drive. The league average on points per drive: 0.63. Also: Among the 18 players who have defended at least 75 post-ups, no one has held their opponent to a lower payoff than Green (0.68 points per post-up). The guy does everything. [...] For defensive player of the year, that's my leader in the clubhouse.

The closer you look, the stronger the case becomes. Green knows, however, that he might not necessarily have the full-throated support of opposing coaching staffs around the league, as he told Tim Kawakami of the San Jose Mercury News:


“I got into it, like, with every guy my rookie year,” Green said Tuesday, chuckling. “I had enemies on every team my rookie year.

“It was part of the way — I had to make my way, you know? But after everybody knows who you are, they get used to it, they say that’s how he is. Guys respect a hard worker.”

That respect means an awful lot, but as a slew of players told me a couple of years back, the validation that comes with being named an All-Star — with being recognized as part of the league's elite — matters quite a bit, too. For Green's part, though, he's trying not to keep his sights set on bigger prizes, according to Kawakami:


"I don’t get all up into the personal stuff, but [the idea that he merits All-Star consideration is] amazing, man. I mean, it just makes me think about how [far] I’ve come, from being a second-round pick to everybody really saying I couldn’t play in this league. From struggling offensively my rookie year to everybody saying, ‘Well, he’s pretty good defensively, but offensively, we just can’t have him on the court.’

"So I replay all that stuff in my mind and then to see that … I mean, it’s a blessing. It puts a smile on your face because I know how hard I’ve worked. To hear that, just to hear it … I don’t think it’ll happen, but just to hear that is amazing to me."

Amazing, yes, but given just how valuable Green's proven this season, not unbelievable. And if voters and coaches can't see that ... well, Mrs. Babers-Green might have to take a page out of Dwane Casey's book and resort to less friendly methods of getting out the vote. Nobody wants that, right?


Hat-tip to CSN Bay Area.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Athletics successfully woo Brett Lawrie superfan

(@blawrie13) The Oakland Athletics have gone to great lengths to win over a new fan. Thanks to a thoughtful gift from the ball club, it appears 6-year-old Amelia Lyttle is abandoning her former beloved Toronto Blue Jays for the Athletics.


The young baseball fan became an Internet hit when her father posted a video on YouTube of her crying, lamenting the blockbuster November trade that sent third baseman Brett Lawrie – her favorite player – from Toronto to Oakland.



The video eventually got the attention of Lawrie himself who treated the fellow Langley, B.C. native to pizza to cheer her up.


But thanks to a savvy PR-move Amelia has since been converted to an Athletics fan. When the Lyttle family returned home following a holiday vacation a care package full of Athletics swag was waiting for them.



In a bizarre presumed oversight, part of the care package included a doll with the likeness of Josh Donaldson – the very player that went from Oakland to Toronto in the trade.


Regardless, the move worked. Amelia’s father Alex told the Toronto Star that she was “super excited” and that the Athletics have won her over:



“I think she will forever be an Oakland fan because she’ll remember the time someone took to do that for her.”



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News sport : Jameis Winston accuser files federal lawsuit against Florida State

Nov 30, 2013; Gainesville, FL, USA; Florida State flag is held up before the team runs through it against the Florida Gators at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. (Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports) The woman who accused Jameis Winston of rape has filed a federal civil lawsuit against Florida State’s trustees saying that the university violated her Title IX rights.


According to the Orlando Sentinel, Winston’s accuser says the school did not properly investigate the alleged December 2012 incident in which the star quarterback has never been charged and was recently cleared in a school code of conduct hearing.


Winston, who announced his intention to declare for the 2015 NFL Draft on Wednesday, has maintained that the two had consensual sex.


Now, in the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Orlando, the woman is asking for a trial by jury for the school’s “clearly unreasonable response” to the allegations and is seeking damages from the school for allowing a “hostile educational environment.”


The woman, who is no longer a Florida State student, is listed as Jane Doe in the complaint. The school has long defended its handling of the case, but the accuser and her attorneys have said the school intentionally did not comply with Title IX policies and deliberately delayed the investigation into the star quarterback.


Part of the complaint reads:



“Had FSU . . . instead complied with its own policies and federal law by promptly investigating plaintiff’s rape and sanctioning Winston while protecting plaintiff’s safety, Winston would have been removed as a threat to plaintiff long before ever suiting up to play football in a Seminoles jersey, and plaintiff would be on campus progressing toward an FSU degree. Instead, plaintiff was forced to leave campus while Winston remains, having suffered no consequences.”



Additionally, the complaint says that Florida State stalled the Tallahassee Police Department’s investigation into Winston “so that Winston’s FSU football career would be unaffected.”


Per the Sentinel, the woman is seeking “an unspecified amount of damages but not limited to reimbursement and payment for her educational expenses; payment of expenses incurred as a result of the sexual assault; damages for emotional pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life and lost future earnings.”


The lawsuit focuses on Florida State’s Title IX obligations under U.S. Department of Education statutes and does not name Winston or the Tallahassee Police Department.


A separate investigation into Florida State’s handling of Title IX investigations is being conducted by the U.S. Department of Education.


For more Florida State news, visit Warchant.com.


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News sport : Pau Gasol echoes Carlos Boozer's year-old thoughts on 4th quarter benchings

Remember the mid-point of Chicago’s 2013-14 season, when then-Bull Carlos Boozer was asked about his repeated fourth quarter benchings?



“I think I'm very productive in the limited minutes that I am getting so I can do even more if I was out there more. But as long as we're winning, that's the main thing. But yeah, I do want to be out there in the fourth quarter. Let's make that clear."



Remember the official Chicago Bull reaction, via general manager Gar Forman?



"I'm disappointed that Carlos didn't keep that in-house.”



Disappointingly, Boozer has continued his harangue as a current member of the Los Angeles Lakers. From a discussion following Tuesday’s practice:



"The times that I'm not (on the floor), as long as we win I can be OK with it. But I still want to be there when we're playing for the money. So it's just me, who I am, who I've been, and who I want to continue to be. I understand where it's coming from. There's dialogue and we understand each other … I want to be on the floor 48 minutes. I know I don't have to be, but at the end of the day when the game is played and it's down the stretch I like to be on the floor."



Actually, because you already read the headline (and because you might know that Boozer played nearly all of the fourth quarter minutes in his team’s last game), you know that it was Pau Gasol that said this. That it was Pau that pointed out that, yeah, he’s a competitor that would prefer to be in the middle of the action during the game’s most important moments.


Will there be any reaction from Forman this time around?


Hell no. The reason Forman won’t react is because the Bulls are winning at a far greater rate this year with Gasol sometimes sitting out nearly the entire fourth quarter, and because Gasol is a far better player than Carlos Boozer ever was with the Bulls. Forman won’t even be asked about this.


That shouldn’t be the reason that Forman doesn’t raise a similarly-toned hackle, however.


The reason for the silence should be because Forman should have stayed silent in the first place, in regards to Boozer. Chicago coach Tom Thibodeau was absolutely right to bench Carlos Boozer for entire fourth quarters at a time, but Carlos Boozer was absolutely right to honestly tell a reporter (that asked) that as a professional with a competitive streak in him he’d really, really like a chance to help his team in the fourth quarter.


What you don’t want in that situation is a check-casher that comes off as blasé about his 12-minute demotion. Boozer said the absolute right things, and the Bulls continued apace.


Carlos Boozer had many faults as a player, so many that the Bulls will eventually pay him over $13 million to not play for them this year, once his Los Angeles Lakers checks clear. He’s an easily mockable guy for various reasons, and we’ve all had our fun with him over the years … but he wasn’t wrong here.


Gasol?


He’s not being shut out of fourth quarters completely, as Boozer was almost by definition (only a playoff injury to Taj Gibson forced him into fourth quarter action during Chicago’s final 2014 playoff game) last season. On average he plays less than half of the fourth quarter, a sound move considering the 34-year old is playing his highest minutes per game average in three seasons. It’s hard to argue with the results, either, as Chicago remains the NBA’s best fourth quarter team. Taj Gibson remains an underrated low (really low) post scorer, and Joakim Noah is rounding into shape after a poorly-diagnosed knee injury.


Gasol ain’t arguin’, though. Neither was Boozer. They were just being honest about something that must be pretty fun – standing in triumph on the court, as opposed to in warm-ups on the bench, when the final buzzer sounds and John Deacon’s bass line from “Another One Bites the Dust” kicks in. It’s a sweet gig to begin with, but playing a decisive role in a win makes things so, so much sweeter.


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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 : Watch Matthew Stafford's reaction on the field to officials picking up flag


While the talk of the NFL remains a controversial non-call in the Dallas Cowboys' playoff win last Sunday, there haven't been too many angry quotes from the Detroit Lions about it.


But quarterback Matthew Stafford was wired for sound for the game, and his reaction to the call to the officials presumably sums up the reaction of his teammates.


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When the flag on Cowboys linebacker Anthony Hitchens was picked up, after the penalty on Hitchens was announced by referee Pete Morelli, Stafford was understandably angry.


"That’s unbelievable!" Stafford said to Morelli. "That’s unbelievable and you know it!"


The rest of the clip (the full clip will be on NFL Network's "Inside the NFL" on Wednesday night) is of Stafford on the sideline, in disbelief and looking for an explanation. He is told face-guarding isn't illegal and there wasn't contact on tight end Brandon Pettigrew. Stafford seems flabbergasted that the call was overturned.


"Congratulations, man," Stafford sarcastically tells field judge Barry Anderson, as he is explaining the call. "First time in history that’s happened."


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






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News sport : National Championship Preview: Oregon's O-line

The first College Football Playoff National Championship Game is finally upon us and Dr. Saturday has your pregame prep covered. Every day leading up to the game, we’ll breakdown a piece of each team and preview its role in the upcoming title game. Previous previews: Ohio State's front 7, Oregon's front 7, Ohio State's secondary.


Season highlight: This season’s game against Stanford’s second-ranked scoring defense and third-ranked total defense was definitely one of the highlights of the season. Not only did Oregon’s offense run for 269 yards, pass for 258 yards and score six total touchdowns, it also allowed just one sack against a team that ranked No. 5 nationally in sacks. It also only allowed four tackles for loss.


Player to Watch: Hroniss Grasu is not just the team’s center, he’s the anchor of the offensive line. Grasu missed the final three games of the year with a leg injury, but was back for the Rose Bowl against Florida State. In that Florida State game, the offensive line allowed one tackle for loss and no sacks.


Strengths: In the past few games, Oregon has really tightened up its offensive line. In the Pac-12 title game and in the College Football Playoff Semifinal, quarterback Marcus Mariota was hardly touched — three tackles for loss and no sacks — and the offense is playing about as well as it’s played all year. The Ducks have rushed for more than 300 yards in each of the last two contests — the first time all season — and have passed for more than 300 yards as well.


Weaknesses: If there’s one thing that has plagued this Oregon offensive line, it’s injuries. Consequently, Mariota has been sacked a lot (29 times) and there have been a lot of tackles for loss, but those numbers are a little misleading. Throughout the season, the Ducks had to piecemeal their offensive line with several younger players who were exploited in their first starts. While that was definitely a weakness early, the depth has become a bit of a strength as the Ducks head into their final game of the season.


Overview: Oregon was supposed to have one of the best offensive lines in the country this season.


It had five returning starters that had helped Oregon lead the Pac-12 in rushing, scoring and total offense in 2013. But those plans fell apart early in the season when left tackle Tyler Johnstone suffered a season-ending knee injury during fall camp.


That forced Jake Fisher to move over from right tackle to Johnstone’s spot and put Andre Yruretagoyena at right tackle. That worked well until Yruretagoyena suffered a foot injury against Michigan State in Week 2 and Fisher injured his knee against Wyoming the following week.


When those two players went down, things started to unravel quickly. During the following two games against Washington State and Arizona, Mariota was sacked 12 total times.


And the injuries didn’t stop there.


Tackle Matt Pierson suffered a knee injury against Stanford on Nov. 1 and then Grasu was injured against Utah on Nov. 8.


Yet somehow, the offensive line has rallied late in the season to look like the line many thought it would be when the season started. But a lot has changed. Fisher is back starting at left tackle and Hamani Stevens, who is making his 27th consecutive start and filled in for Grasu at center, is at left guard. Grasu, as noted above, is at center, while Cameron Hunt, who jumped in this season because of injuries, makes his 11th start at right guard, and Tyrell Crosby, who has started the past four games, will be the right tackle. Yruretagoyena and Pierson are both backups.


For the most part, Mariota and the running backs have gotten use to this line in some way, shape or form, and now the line has gotten used to each other. The offensive line is coming off its two best performances of the season, and will need to continue that trend against Ohio State's highly aggressive defensive line.


However, that aggressiveness has been used against Ohio State at times, and Alabama showed that the running game could be effective. Ohio State is allowing 142 rushing yards per game, but Alabama was able to rattle off 170, with bruiser Derrick Henry leading the way with 95. And that was in spite of Alabama going away from the run late. The Tide probably could have put up even more yards as the offensive line continued to knock the Buckeyes off the ball and open big holes for the running game.


Oregon is coming off back-to-back 301-yard rushing performances, their best performances of the season, and they’ve done it with a multitude of backs led by Royce Freeman and Thomas Tyner. Neither of Oregon’s backs are as big as Henry, but against Florida State, both players carried defenders for extra yards.


The offensive line was the key to Oregon getting on the board early, establishing the run and executing after turnovers in the second half. It doesn’t need to do anything special against Ohio State to be successful, it just needs to keep doing what it’s been doing.


For more Oregon news, visit DuckSportsAuthority.com.


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


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News sport : Rick Ross got the Miami Heat logo tattooed on his face

It hasn't been an easy season for the Miami Heat, whose strong start to their first post-LeBron campaign devolved into a dismal 5-12 December amid injuries to the likes of top gun Chris Bosh, who missed eight games with a left calf strain, and offseason acquisition Josh McRoberts, who's likely out for the season after surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee. Erik Spoelstra's club has ranked 21st among 30 NBA teams in points scored per possession since the beginning of December while posting the league's third-worst defensive efficiency mark during that timeframe — Miami has allowed 108.7 points per 100 possessions over the last 19 games, better only than the cratering Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks — and has dropped to 15-20, just 1 1/2 games up on the Indiana Pacers for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.


In such trying times, fans can either succumb to the reasons why their support for the hometown team might waver, or they can choose to double down and reaffirm their devotion in a major way. Let it never be said that Rick Ross is a fairweather fan.


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Yep, that's the Maybach Music Group mogul sporting some fresh ink of the Heat's flaming-basketball logo near his right eye after a recent trip to Farmingdale, N.J., tattoo shop Unroyal Ink. If this seems like a somewhat remarkable display of fandom for the girthy gruntsman, let's remember that he's already allegedly plunked down $100,000 on the proposition that the Heat will finish this season with a better record than LeBron James' Cleveland Cavaliers, who presently sit four games north of Miami at 19-16 and just added J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert from the New York Knicks in a three-team deal aimed at bolstering their wing rotation for the remainder of the season.


And, since we're talking about LeBron and J.R., let's also remind you that we've seen some much more eye-popping displays of ink-related fandom in recent years, including this full-back LBJ tat and this full-throat J.R. homage, to say nothing of li'l brother Chris Smith's shoutout to his big bro. Comparatively speaking, Ross' face-flame seems downright demure.


Then again, y'know, it's on his FACE. Then again, given Ross' predilection toward accessorizing with large reflective eyewear, and the nearby presence of the logo of MMG artist/Dion Waiters pal Meek Mill's DreamChasers mixtape series, it won't be the only thing for folks to focus on when they sneak a peek at Rozay. Whether it serves as enough of an eye-catching motivator to get Dwyane Wade and crew back on track, propel them up the Eastern standings and keep Ross' 100-stack investment safe, however, remains to be seen. We'll have to keep an eye on Miami's Thursday night matchup with the Portland Trail Blazers; it's a good bet that Ross will be. (We're guessing it'll be his right one.)


Hat-tip to SI.com's Extra Mustard.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Rob Ryan getting another season as New Orleans' defensive coordinator

(AP) The news that a defensive coordinator is staying with his NFL team usually isn't that noteworthy, but Rob Ryan staying with the New Orleans Saints is an exception.


The Saints' disappointing season had a few identifiable moments, and many of them included coach Sean Payton and Ryan yelling at each other on the sideline. They're both passionate, high-strung individuals. It worked in 2013 when the Saints had a shocking defensive turnaround from a terrible 2012 behind Ryan's schemes, when the Saints ranked fourth in yards allowed.


It did not work in 2014. The Saints tumbled to 31st in total defense. That's not all on Ryan. But with the public bickering between the head coach and defensive coordinator, it seemed like the relationship would be done.


Not so. Larry Holder of the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported that Ryan will return for another season, although there could be changes to the personnel on defense and the defensive staff as well according to Holder.


Like his brother Rex, who was just fired by the New York Jets, Rob Ryan's style is popular with most players.



"I don't want to play for any other defensive coordinator other than Rob Ryan," linebacker Curtis Lofton said last week, the Times-Picayune said.



But results will have to be better. Ryan's creative pressure schemes didn't have the same effect in his second New Orleans season. The Saints went 7-9 and were eliminated from the playoffs in a blowout loss to Atlanta in Week 16.


Either the Saints will get better, or you can probably plan on more sideline shots of Payton and Ryan disagreeing with each other.


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






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Bafana in their element - Jordaan

SA Football Association president Danny Jordaan believes Bafana Bafana's superior form on foreign soil will elevate them to a successful Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) campaign.


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Johannesburg – SA Football Association president Danny Jordaan believes Bafana Bafana's superior form on foreign soil will elevate them to a successful Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) campaign.


“This team has dismissed the idea that you can't play to win when playing away from home,” Jordaan said at the team's send-off in Johannesburg on Wednesday.


“So when you go there to play, continue to show no fear. The team has made it this far and there is no reason it can't go further.”


Bafana had shown outstanding form since coach Shakes Mashaba took charge in August, with an undefeated record of five wins and three draws.


It was their performances away from home though which had been particularly been impressive. During their Afcon qualifying campaign, Bafana beat Sudan and Congo-Brazzaville in their respective countries.


The Safa boss said he had “all the confidence in the world” that the team would represent South Africa well.


“We have all the faith in the team that they will make us proud. The belief and pride we once had in the team has been restored.”


Jordaan said the team was not burdened with unrealistic expectations.


“We are not saying that you must go there and we want you to win the tournament. What is expected is for the team to go out there and show courage.”


Bafana Bafana were jetting off to Gabon for a pre-tournament camp and were also scheduled to play a warm-up match against Cameroon on Saturday in Libreville, before Afcon kicked off on January 17.


They take on Algeria in their first Afcon match at the Estadio de Mongomo on January 19.


Coach Mashaba's men were drawn in group C as well against Ghana and Senegal in what was considered one of the toughest groups in the tournament.


Mashaba thanked Jordaan for the support he had received in the five months since his appointment as coach.


“Mr President, we are where we are because of the confidence you have shown in us,” Mashaba said.


“The players in this team are willing to fight for the honour of the country, and much of it is as a result of your backing.”


The 23-man Bafana squad headed into East Africa confident and without fear of other nations after having held their own in the last few months, he said. – Sapa






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News sport : Tyronn Lue is gracious to a fan reminding him of his literal lowest moment (Video)

Many in the NBA consider Cleveland Cavaliers associate coach Tyronn Lue to be the NBA’s next great head coach. A fierce bidding war over Lue’s services took place during the 2014 offseason, with the Cavs dogged in their pursuit to employ Lue as the NBA liaison between rookie head coach David Blatt, and the Cavs’ star troika of LeBron James, Kevin Love, and Kyrie Irving.


That’s right. The Cavs basically tilted their whole franchise in attempts to let Lue do the unheralded and behind the scenes work for what they thought would be a 60-win championship team. He’s that highly respected.


He’s also the dude that Allen Iverson famously crossed over in the 2001 NBA Finals, leading to a startling Game 1 win for the Philadelphia 76ers.


That move led to the iconic image of Iverson stepping over Lue on the floor of the then-Lakers home Staples Center court, an image that eventually made it to someone’s t-shirt, which eventually made it back to Lue when the Cavaliers visited the Philadelphia 76ers on Monday.


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Lue was gracious enough to pose with the fan, watch:



Tyronn made nearly $22 million in his decade-long career, he’s won two championship rings, and he’ll run his own team someday. He can handle your shirt.


(Hat tip: Pro Basketball Talk.)


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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 : Bills GM blaming Manuel's struggles on coaching to prospective hires

The Buffalo Bills are not ready to move on from quarterback EJ Manuel.


That's at least the message that Bills GM Doug Whaley is sending to prospective head coaches that the team is interviewing. In fact, per the Buffalo News, Whaley is going so far as to say that coaching has been the reason that Manuel has not progressed in his two NFL seasons.


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Doug Marrone walked away from the Bills after two seasons, and it was clear that Marrone had little faith in Manuel after he benched him after four games this season, going instead with Kyle Orton, who joined the team in the preseason.


Moreover, Marrone failed to re-insert Manuel into the lineup for the season finale even when the Bills were eliminated from the postseason. Orton summarily retired the day after the season ended.


It's clear that the Bills want their next coach to work with Manuel, the team's first-round pick in 2013, and try to develop him into the team's starter.


The Bills have interviewed — or plan to interview — a slew of candidates, including offensive-centric coaches Pat Shurmur, Mike and Kyle Shanahan, Hue Jackson, Greg Roman, Frank Reich, Adam Gase and Darrell Bevell. But they also have spoken with or are scheduled to talk to defensive-minded coaches such as Jim Schwartz, Teryl Austin and Dan Quinn and have expressed an interest in Rex Ryan, too.


The Bills lack a first-round pick this year following the trade for Sammy Watkins in the 2014 NFL draft, so finding another starter-worthy quarterbacks — especially with a weak free-agent class at the position — could prove to be difficult.


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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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