News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring Kobe Bryant and how this all ends


Kobe Bryant exits. (Chris Humphreys-USA TODAY Sports)

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


C: The Triangle. The great Brian Phillips on Kobe Bryant, who "is showing us what happens when an alpha dog dies ungracefully, the way alpha dogs are supposed to die."


PF: San Jose Mercury-News. Marcus Thompson III with a strong column/profile on Draymond Green, who might not be popular enough to get an All-Star berth, but who has put in the work to become one of the most valuable players on the best team in basketball, and who's about to reap his reward in restricted free agency this summer: "'If [the Golden State Warriors are] expecting a discount, they’re crazy,' a close friend of Green said."


SF: Bleacher Report. Sean Highkin on how Nikola Mirotic's ability to slide down from power forward to small forward has given the rolling Chicago Bulls a boost, and could help coach Tom Thibodeau solve some rotation issues on the wing moving forward.


SG: ESPN.com. A tremendous read from J.A. Adande on John Wall, the leading All-Star Game vote-getter among Eastern Conference guards and leader of the playoff-bound Washington Wizards: "The story of Wall's success is the story of his overcoming obstacles not once but twice."


PG: Liberty Ballers. Jake Pavorsky sits down with Shawn Chapman-McDaniels, the mother of Philadelphia 76ers rookie K.J. McDaniels, to discuss tweeting it real, irrepressible exuberance and being a "team mom."


6th: Pattern of Basketball. Jonathan Tjarks on why the talent and versatility of the Atlanta Hawks' big men has fueled their rise to the top of the East, could be the determining factor in their championship chances, and may well tell us an awful lot about the next step in the evolution of NBA basketball. (And if you've got 10 minutes to spare, I'll tell you the story of my life , go check out this great BBallBreakdown of the Hawks' multifaceted offense, featuring commentary from head coach Mike Budenholzer and vaunted sniper Kyle Korver.)


7th: San Antonio Express-News and Eye on Basketball. Jeff McDonald and Zach Harper on how crunch-time failures in execution have caused both the San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Clippers to stumble, and whether these late-game hiccups should give Gregg Popovich and Doc Rivers cause for concern as their teams fight for Western Conference playoff positioning.


8th: Deadspin and The Reversal. So, as it turns out, that Andrew Wiggins is actually pretty good, and getting better as the season goes along!


9th: ProBasketballTalk. Dan Feldman on one particular way in which J.R. Smith's shot-jacking might properly be viewed as altruism rather than selfishness.


10th: Austin Clemens. Young Mr. Clemens' new shot chart app is awful pretty, and allows you to look up not only individual players' shot charts going back to the 1997-98 season, but also whole teams' charts. You can also filter by quarter, by field-goal percentage or points-per-shot, and all other sorts of goodies. Very neat.


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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 : Houston hires Major Applewhite as offensive coordinator

Texas offensive coordinator Major Applewhite watches players warm up before an NCAA college football game against Oklahoma State, Saturday Nov. 16, 2013, in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Michael Thomas) New Houston head coach Tom Herman hired a coach who is very familiar with the state of Texas to be his offensive coordinator.


The school announced Thursday that Major Applewhite, the record-setting Texas quarterback and longtime collegiate assistant, will lead the Houston offense and serve as quarterbacks coach.


Applewhite did not coach in 2014, but he previously spent seven seasons as an assistant – including four seasons as co-offensive coordinator – at Texas under Mack Brown.


“Major has always been innovative on the football field with a focus on an explosive offense, both as a coach and player,” Herman said. “He is bright and has been on an elevated level in our profession beginning early in his career. Along with his offensive background, he is very well-respected in the state of Texas which will provide benefits on the recruiting trail.”


Before coaching at his alma mater, Applewhite spent a year as offensive coordinator at Alabama in 2007 – Nick Saban’s first year as head coach. He also had stints at Rice as offensive coordinator and at Syracuse as a quarterbacks coach.


During his playing career at Texas from 1998-2001, Applewhite threw for 8,353 yards, 60 touchdowns and 28 interceptions.


Before confirming the hire of Applewhite, Herman also hired Todd Orlando as defensive coordinator, Craig Naivar as assistant head coach and co-defensive coordinator, Jason Washington as special teams coordinator and cornerbacks coach, Drew Mehringer as wide receivers coach and Corby Meekins as tight ends coach.


Herman will round out his tenure as Ohio State offensive coordinator in the College Football Playoff National Championship on Monday night against Oregon.


For more Houston news, visit CougarsDen.com.


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News sport : Detroit vs. everybody: How the Pistons have become the NBA's hottest team

Stan Van Gundy and the Pistons are rolling. (Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports) As they entered the last full week of December, the Detroit Pistons owned a depressing troika of bottom-three NBA marks — the league's third-worst record, at 5-23; its third-least-efficient offense, averaging just 97.6 points per 100 possessions; and its third-worst "efficiency differential," with opponents outscoring them by a whopping 8.2 points per 100 possessions. Despite the presence of some intriguing young talent in the locker room and (for the first time in several years) a bona-fide NBA leader on the sidelines, the Pistons desperately needed an overhaul, some tiny spark to shake the sheets and catalyze the combustible elements that had thus far refused to catch fire.


Well, as we learned, new Pistons boss Stan Van Gundy doesn't do "tiny." He prefers "all-cleansing inferno." Thus, the stunning Dec. 22 decision to waive underperforming forward Josh Smith — just 17 months into the four-year, $54 million contract he received from Van Gundy's predecessors — under the belief that the Pistons would be better off eating the remaining $27 million they owed him and allowing him to ply his trade elsewhere than continuing to pay him to wear Detroit's red, white and blue.


“Our team has not performed the way we had expected throughout the first third of the season and adjustments need to be made in terms of our focus and direction,” Van Gundy said in a statement.


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The immediate returns of that shift, as you probably know, have been simply stunning. Seven straight wins, six of 'em by double-digits, with five coming on the road, highlighted by impressive dispatches of the defending champion San Antonio Spurs and 26-11 Dallas Mavericks on consecutive nights in a brutal Texas back-to-back.


"Right now, they’re one of the best basketball teams in the NBA, just with the way that they’re playing together and how hard, and the kind of energy they’re playing with," Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said after a loss in which his Mavericks never led and in which the interior duo of Greg Monroe and Andre Drummond (37 combined rebounds) nearly outrebounded Dallas (43 total boards) by themselves. "You’ve got to admire what they’re doing."


The remarkable turnaround has given Van Gundy's new-look crew a new lease on life, with the Pistons now sitting just 2 1/2 games out of the No. 8 seed in the East. While that certainly illustrates the punchlessness of the lower tiers of the conference, it also indicates just how unthinkably far the formerly moribund club's come in a little over a fortnight, and begs the question: if the Pistons keep playing anywhere near this well, how much different might their position in the East's shuffled-up hierarchy look come springtime? (For what it's worth, the postseason prediction model created by former ESPN.com writer John Hollinger gives the Pistons a 60.4 percent chance of making the playoffs as of Friday.)


With a suddenly fascinating matchup against the similarly surging and East-leading Atlanta Hawks on tap in Auburn Hills on Friday night, let's take a look at just what's gone right for Detroit over the course of this seven-game streak, and try to get our arms around how likely it is to continue going right as Smith's exorcism continues to get smaller and smaller in the Pistons' rear-view mirror.


Styles make fights, and fit matters. Many observers saw the Pistons' problem coming as soon as Joe Dumars got Smith to put pen to paper — a frontcourt of Smith, Drummond and Monroe featured three very large men who did their best work from the elbows and in, and precisely zero reliable shooting from midrange or beyond. It's awful tough to build a balanced and effective offense in today's NBA when defenses can sag off the perimeter without fear of being burned by open outside shooters; true to form, the Pistons struggled to score when the three big men shared the floor.


Under Maurice Cheeks and John Loyer last season, the Pistons averaged 102.5 points per 100 possessions with Smith, Drummond and Monroe together on the court, a bottom-third-of-the-league offensive efficiency mark. Seeing the spacing issue — and, even more damningly, the defensive problems that followed from a lineup tilted more toward size than speed, as Detroit allowed 110.5 points-per-100 in Smith-Drummond-Monroe minutes last season, which would've placed dead last in the NBA — Van Gundy tried to stagger the trio, running them out for just 174 total minutes over 15 appearances this season. Detroit fared far better defensively in those minutes than it had last year, allowing just 101.6 points-per-100, but the spacing issues got progressively worse, choking out the Pistons offense to the tune of just 98.4 points scored per 100 possessions, a pitiful mark that would rank 29th among 30 NBA teams over the course of this full season, ahead of only the barely trying Philadelphia 76ers.


Van Gundy's a dynamite coach, one of the sharpest X's-and-O's minds the game's got, but even he couldn't figure out how to build an at-least-middling offense around three players engaged in a near-constant turf war that choked off dribble penetration and did a lot of opposing defenses' work for them. Smith's absence means redistributing his minutes and his touches to other players, and thus far, Detroit seems to be thriving on this particular flavor of socialism:



"Spread" is a key word here, because it's not merely the redistribution of Smith's minutes that matters; it's the type of players to whom they're being redistributed, and the type of offense said players allow Van Gundy to operate.


Detroit's primary Smith replacements have included Jonas Jerebko (13.9 minutes per game before Smith's exit, 22.1 since) and recent addition Anthony Tolliver (12 minutes per game over five contests since his trade from the Phoenix Suns). Neither Jerebko nor Tolliver are as dangerous as Dirk Nowitzki out on the perimeter, but they're more credible long-distance threats than Smith, and when they're on the floor, their defenders have to hew a bit closer to their marks, creating clearer driving lanes for the likes of Brandon Jennings and D.J. Augustin when they come off screens and attack in the pick-and-roll. (It certainly doesn't hurt that Jerebko's actually coming through when he gets left alone, making 50 percent of his 3-balls over the past seven games.)


Combine the Smith-for-Jerebko/Tolliver trade with more minutes for finally healthy marksman Jodie Meeks, some decent stretches from respectable-enough veteran wing Caron Butler, and a savvy decision by Van Gundy to split up Drummond and Monroe rather than trying to force-feed them into the lineup at all times and all of a sudden, the Pistons' half-court sets have some room to breathe.


Here's a screenshot of one pick-and-roll Pistons possession from the Smoove era, during a Nov. 17, 2014, matchup with the Orlando Magic:



Nowhere to go.

As Jennings enters the paint after taking a high screen from Monroe, he's running smack into a Drummond post-up. (And a not-so-hot one, thanks to Magic center Nikola Vucevic pushing him a couple of steps further away than Van Gundy would probably like.) Check out how far Tobias Harris (No. 12 in blue) has moved away from Smith (No. 6 in white) at the bottom of the screen to help on the drive — a move he could make because he wasn't at all concerned about Smith making him pay from just above the break on the right wing.


With Evan Fournier stationed between Jennings and screener Monroe trailing the play, the point guard is surrounded by four Orlando defenders with no real viable options for making something happen; the result of the play is a turnover. (And a pretty funny one, at that.)


Now here's a screenshot of a Jennings-helmed pick-and-roll possession with the new-look Pistons, from Detroit's Sunday victory over the Sacramento Kings:



More room to breathe.

As Jennings drives to left into the paint after taking a right-wing screen from Monroe, he's got three pretty viable shooting options in front of him — Meeks in the left corner, Jerebko on the left wing and Butler at the top of the key. The Kings don't necessarily play them all straight up — Gay, in particular, has sunk below the free-throw line to help on the drive — but Jennings has more room to move and, with Monroe fanned out along the right block, only on-ball defender Darren Collison to beat to get a layup. He's able to use his quickness to turn the corner on Collison, put up a scoop shot with his strong left hand, and get a bucket plus the foul.


Bombs away, and get a move on. The difference in spacing, floor balance and outcome help point toward the massive chasm between the Pistons' offensive effectiveness prior to Smith's ouster and the avalanche of buckets that have come since.


Before waiving Smith, the Pistons averaged 97.6 points per 100 possessions, attempted 23 3-pointers per game, and connected on 33 percent of them. Over the last seven games, they've roasted opposing defenses to the tune of 111.5 points-per-100, thanks in large part to jacking up nearly five more 3-pointers per game and cashing in on a scorching 40.7 percent of them. The Pistons have generated more than 31 percent of their total points from beyond the arc during this run, the fourth-highest score in the NBA during that stretch — as he did with the Magic, Van Gundy's emphasizing the long ball with personnel who can handle that job, and it's paying major dividends.


Detroit's effective field-goal and True Shooting percentages have gone through the roof. The Pistons' distribution of shots, and the success rate on them, is some real night-and-day stuff when you check 'em out side-by-side:



Before and after. (Green is good.)

Meeks has been every ounce the rocket launcher Van Gundy hoped for in free agency, averaging 16.1 points per game on 58.8 percent shooting from deep during the streak.


"I don't think [Smith's absence] is the reason" for the offensive explosion, Meeks recently told Pistons.com's Keith Langlois. "It's a lot of things. Maybe roles were expanded, maybe we just finally clicked. This is how the offense is supposed to be run."


The ever-mercurial Jennings has been a big part of the solution, too, turning in arguably the hottest five-game stretch of his career before tapering off in the wins over San Antonio and Dallas ... where his slack was very capably picked up by Augustin, who popped for 45 points in 44 minutes during the Texas trip, headlined by a blistering fourth quarter against Dallas in which he repeatedly burned the Mavs in the pick-and-roll, scoring 17 points on 6-for-8 shooting in the stanza.


“I have just been trying to be aggressive these last few games," Augustin said after the win. "I’ve been attacking and looking for my own shot. Things just opened up for me tonight.”


And with defenses having to pay more attention to the Pistons' resurgent shooters, and Detroit's point guards pressing the action off screens, that's created more room and opportunity for Drummond to play like the pick-and-roll-finishing, board-crashing monster he looked like last season:



... and for Monroe to flash the interior scoring and passing skills that had all too often been restricted by previous attempts to force him to play power forward next to Drummond and Smith in that giant lineup:



Things have opened up for the entire team, really. With Van Gundy splitting up Drummond and Monroe, ramping up the minutes for Jerebko and Tolliver, and judiciously deploying a slew of capable-enough-to-very-good deep shooters — Meeks, Augustin, Butler, Jennings, Kyle Singler and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope — on the wing and in the backcourt, he's made the Pistons about as close as he can at this stage to the sort of team with which he won in Orlando, as Jonathan Tjarks writes at RealGM:


What is happening in Detroit is a lot bigger than Josh Smith. This is the triumph of four-out basketball in action, a team being radically transformed from one of the worst teams in the NBA to one of the best merely by doing a better job of spacing the floor. By releasing Smith and making a few tweaks to their rotation, the Pistons went from 1-2 three-point shooters to 3-4 three-point shooters on the floor for most of the game. When guys are allowed to play in space, the game becomes really easy. [...]

All that success on offense, in turn, is having a tremendous impact on the defensive side of the ball.

“We have gotten better on both ends of the floor,” Stan Van Gundy said. “Everybody we put in contributes. When the ball goes in, it helps. It gets your energy up and you defend a lot better.”

The numbers seem to back up Van Gundy's position. Before Smith's exit, the Pistons were allowing 105.8 points per 100 possession, which ranked 24th out of 30 NBA teams. Over the last seven games, they've put the clamps on, allowing just 94.3 points-per-100, significantly stingier than the Golden State Warriors' league-best defensive efficiency rating thus far this season. They're holding opponents to just 42.8 percent shooting from the floor and 30.5 percent from beyond the arc, showing more activity in getting out to shooters and in getting their hands in passing lanes.


That increased energy is translating into turnover creation — Detroit's forcing cough-ups on 16.4 percent of its opponents' possessions over the last seven games, up from 14.2 percent over the first 28. That, in turn, has fed the Pistons' transition game, as Detroit has racked up 18.4 fast-break points per game during their streak, up from 11.9 per contest before getting rid of Smith.


Detroit's not playing at Warriors-like warp speed or anything, averaging a middle-of-the-NBA 97.61 possessions per 48 minutes, but that's an increase of two possessions per game over where they were before, and if those two possessions are runout layups, that can make a big difference on a nightly basis. Plus, as SB Nation's Mike Prada notes, the increased pace isn't just about fast-breaking; it's about getting into the frontcourt faster, forcing the defense to backtrack in transition, getting into your sets quicker and having more time to take advantage of the acres of space you've got in front of you now. Detroit's sure been doing that lately.


Whether they'll be able to continue to do so, of course, remains to be seen. The next three weeks ought to go a long way toward helping us find out, as Detroit faces a pair of meetings apiece with the East-leading Hawks and the third-seeded Toronto Raptors in addition to matchups with the recently reloaded Cleveland Cavaliers (who figure to have LeBron James back in the fold), Anthony Davis' New Orleans Pelicans, and a pair of surprisingly tough outs in the Indiana Pacers and Milwaukee Bucks before closing out January by welcoming their ol' buddy Josh back to town when they take on the Houston Rockets.


It's likely, as Seth Partnow of Nylon Calculus writes, that the Pistons' scintillating shooting will come back to Earth, and that even with Drummond plugging the middle and Van Gundy's schemes in full effect, Detroit won't be able to keep shutting down the opposition like they're the league's best defense. Some of this stuff, though — the spacing, the rotations and, perhaps most importantly, the attitude — seems like it could be sustainable.


"One of the things I really liked [in the win over the Mavericks] is we finished with almost an entirely different group than we finished with last night [against the Spurs]," Van Gundy said Wednesday. "At one point, with 4:40 to go, I turned to my assistants on the bench, I said, ‘Do we want any subs?’ And I had Brandon and Andre standing up going, ‘Hell no!’ You know, this group is rocking. So that’s what we’ve got right now, attitude-wise. It’s different people every night and nobody seems very concerned about it. They just want to try and win games.”


Whether you chalk that up to removing Smith from the locker room, the structural difference that his absence has made on the court or just a streak of unsustainably hot shooting, the Pistons are doing just that these days, transforming from a team nobody wanted to watch into a team nobody wants to play. What a difference a few weeks, and a few tweaks, can make.


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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 : Report: Super Bowl ad sales slower, still solid




A new Variety report indicates that perhaps the Super Bowl isn't quite the advertising gem it's been in the past.


NBC has sold 95 percent of its advertising slots with only a few weeks remaining before the game. However, last year's Super Bowl had sold out by Thanksgiving.


The reason? The cost surely has something to do with it. Every year sets a record for the cost of a 30-second commercial, and this year, the cost is $4.4 million to $4.5 million, depending on a variety of factors. That's a lot of coin to drop for one of about 65 advertising slots, even given a worldwide audience of over 100 million.


Still, plenty of advertisers are willing to spend that kind of money; Anheuser-Busch, for one, has bought seven spots, at least one of which will try its hardest to make you cry. Movies and fast-food companies will have a high presence; automakers will be reducing their buys. First-time advertisers include Carnival cruises, Loctite, and smartphone accessory manufacturer Mophie.


NBC expects all ad spaces will eventually sell out, and we expect you'll be tired of seeing most of the ads long before they officially air.


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



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News sport : Michigan confirms hires of Durkin as DC, Drevno as OC

Jan 3, 2015; Birmingham, AL, USA; Florida Gators interim coach D.J. Durkin during the 2015 Birmingham Bowl against the East Carolina Pirates at Legion Field. (Marvin Gentry-USA TODAY Sports) Jim Harbaugh officially has his two coordinators at Michigan.


The school confirmed the hire of D.J. Durkin as the Wolverines’ new defensive coordinator on Thursday and the hire of Tim Drevno as the team’s offensive coordinator on Friday.


Durkin spent the past five seasons at the University of Florida where started as linebackers coach in 2010 and was promoted to defensive coordinator in 2013. Durkin will also coach linebackers at Michigan.


“D.J. is one of the top young defensive coordinators in football, and I look forward to having him work with our student-athletes,” Harbaugh said. “He will make an excellent addition to our staff.”


Durkin served as the Gators’ interim head coach in the team’s 28-20 win over East Carolina in the Birmingham Bowl on Jan. 3. Under his watch, Florida finished 15th in the country in total defense in 2013 and eighth in the country in total defense in 2014.


Before arriving at Florida, Durkin spent three seasons as defensive ends and special teams coach on Harbaugh’s staff at Stanford from 2007-09. He also coached at Bowling Green, his alma mater and was a graduate assistant at Notre Dame.


"Reuniting with Jim at the University of Michigan is an opportunity that I could not pass up," Durkin said. "We had some great times working together at Stanford, and I look forward to producing great results at Michigan. I look forward to coaching in the Big Ten after growing up in that footprint. I am excited to return to the Midwest and recruit and teach some of the best and brightest young men in the country.”


Drevno comes to Michigan after spending the 2014 season as the offensive line coach and run game coordinator at USC. Previously, he coached the offensive line under Harbaugh with the San Francisco 49ers from 2011-13 and at Stanford from 2007-10. Additionally, he was Harbaugh’s offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at the University of San Diego from 2003-06.


"I am excited to reunite with Tim and have him serve as the offensive coordinator for our Michigan program," Harbaugh said. "Tim is an outstanding offensive line coach and is a technician that works very hard at making his student-athletes better players and students. He will be an outstanding member of our coaching staff."


Drevno also had stints at Idaho, San Diego State, UNLV, Montana State and Cal State Fullerton. He will also coach the offensive line at Michigan.


"I am excited to join the University of Michigan and work with Coach Harbaugh again," Drevno said. "We have a long history together, and I have great respect for what he has accomplished as a coach. I am excited to be in Ann Arbor and can't wait to get to work with the players and staff to build on this program's great tradition."


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


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







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News sport : National Championship Preview: Oregon's receivers

Jan 1, 2015; Pasadena, CA, USA; Oregon Ducks running back Byron Marshall (9) runs the ball during the first half of the 2015 Rose Bowl college football game against the Florida State Seminoles at Rose Bowl. (Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports) 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, Oregon's secondary, Oregon's O-line, Ohio State's O-line, Oregon's running game, Ohio State's running game, and Ohio State's receivers.


Season highlight: Like Ohio State, Oregon had its best receiving game against Michigan State. The Ducks had 17 catches for 318 yards and three receiving touchdowns in a 46-27 rout. It wasn’t the Ducks’ best game of the season in terms of numbers, but it was their best performance against one of the nation’s best defenses.


Player to watch: Former running back Byron Marshall has emerged as the team’s top receivers with 66 catches for 834 yards and five touchdowns. He’s one of the team’s most versatile players as he also is fourth on the team in rushing with 51 carries for 386 and three touchdowns touchdowns. Look for him to run some reverses and catch passes out of the backfield. He likes to move around to make it difficult for defenses to key on him.


Strengths: Oregon is really good at using a lot of guys in a lot of different ways to keep defenses off-balance. Nine different players have at least 10 catches and all of those players have at least 100 yards. Eight players have at least 300 yards. Even more impressive is that 11 different players are averaging double digits in yards per catch. It’s hard to key in on any one receiver in this offense because so many guys get involved.


Weaknesses: Oregon will be without one of its top receivers in Devon Allen, who suffered what is being reported as a season-ending knee injury during the opening kickoff of the Rose Bowl. The loss of Allen is tough because he's an NCAA track champion with top-end speed that put a lot of pressure on opposing defenses. Oregon was able to adjust without him against Florida State, but Ohio State’s secondary is much better and a much bigger challenge.


Overview: It’s all about options for Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota and he has plenty of them. With nine different players having at least 10 catches already this season, Mariota has a plethora of receivers from which to choose.


Choosing which one to pay the most attention to is going to be one of the biggest challenges for the Ohio State secondary heading into this game. Marshall has led the team in receiving this season, but he hasn’t been the team’s top target the last couple games. That honor has gone to Darren Carrington, who has 291 yards and three touchdowns in the past couple contests, which equals 41 percent of his season total. Similarly, tight end Evan Baylis had six catches against the Seminoles, which was two more than he’d had all season.


Marshall, who actually graced the cover of Sports Illustrated this week, had five catches in each of the past two games, but for just 23 and 20 yards respectively.


Ohio State did a nice job of locking down Alabama’s star receiver Amari Cooper, who caught nine passes for 71 yards and two touchdowns. It was only the second time this season Cooper didn’t average at least 10 yards per catch. The Buckeyes also nabbed three interceptions, including one that was taken back for a touchdown late in the third quarter. Still, Alabama was able to gain 237 passing yards, which is more than the Buckeyes’ 191.6 yard average.


Overall, Oregon’s passing game is going to be up for a challenge against an Ohio State passing defense that ranks fourth in the country in pass efficiency defense and fourth in interceptions with 24. Defensive back Vonn Bell and Doran Grant lead the team in interceptions and Bell is second on the team in total tackles. However, this Ohio State defense hasn’t seen a passing game as multiple and dangerous as the Ducks’ this season.


Something will have to give.


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 : National Championship Preview: Ohio State's receivers

Ohio State wide receiver Devin Smith, right, catches a 39-yard touchdown pass as Wisconsin cornerback Sojourn Shelton defends during the first half of the Big Ten Conference championship NCAA college football game Saturday, Dec. 6, 2014, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) 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, Oregon's secondary, Oregon's O-line, Ohio State's O-line, Oregon's running game, Oregon's running game, Ohio State's running game..


Season highlight: The Ohio State receiving corps was able to rack up 300 receiving yards in a 49-37 win against Michigan State that put the Buckeyes’ passing game on the map. Prior to the bowl game against Baylor, Michigan State had only allowed one other team to pass for 300 yards (Oregon, 343). Ohio State amassed four 300-yard passing games this season, but only one was against one the nation’s best defenses.


Player to Watch: Devin Smith has been the favorite of Ohio State’s two quarterbacks this season simply because of his athleticism and his ability to get open deep. Smith leads the team with 32 catches for 886 yards and 12 touchdowns. That’s a 27.7-yard average. His longest catch of the season was 80 yards and he has had a catch of at least 30 yards in every game in which he’s played this season. Smith is an invaluable weapon, especially for a young quarterback, because he goes up and gets every ball no matter how poorly it’s thrown.


Strengths: The Ohio State receivers catch nearly everything thrown in their path. The Buckeyes rank second in the country in team passing efficiency despite the fact that it prefers the run over the pass. Just once this season did now-injured starter J.T. Barrett throw for less than 60 percent — the loss to Virginia Tech where he threw 31 percent — and five times this season he completed 70 percent or better. Third-game starter Cardale Jones doesn’t have numbers as strong as Barrett’s, but he did complete 70.6 percent of his passes in his first start and he’s completed long passes of 44 and 47 yards in his two starts.


Weaknesses: If there’s a weakness to this receiving corps, it’s at quarterback. As noted above, Jones started out like a veteran against Wisconsin, but against a much better defense in Alabama, he only completed 51.4 percent of his passes. He did play better down the stretch and had some nice conversions on third down in the second half to help the Buckeyes to the win. Jones does have a cannon for an arm, it’s just a matter of settling down and avoiding the slow start, especially against a team like Oregon.


Overview: While Ohio State might have one of the best passing efficiency ratings in the country, the Ohio State receiving corps seems to pride itself on being much more than just a bunch of guys who catch passes.


During the semifinal game against Alabama, receiver Evan Spencer found fellow receiver Michael Thomas in the end zone for what ended up being an amazing, twisting, toe-tapping catch. It was Spencer’s first pass of the season, but not the first time a receiver has attempted a pass.


Following the game, Spencer didn’t spend a lot of time bragging about the pass, but rather the block he made during running back Ezekiel Elliott’s 85-touchdown run.


Smith had a 47-yard touchdown grab in the semifinal, but took just as much pride in downing several punts that pinned Alabama in its own end.


And then there’s Jalin Marshall, the only other receiver who has attempted a pass this season and is in charge of the wildcat offense. He’s called a “hybrid back” in Ohio State circles simply because of his diversity, which also includes being the fourth-string — and now backup — quarterback.


It's the little things that make this receiving corps good, but it’s been their ability to adapt to the rotation of quarterbacks that have made them special. Ohio State’s receivers had little trouble getting into a rhythm with Barrett after former starter Braxton Miller was lost for the season with a shoulder injury.


Against Wisconsin, the receiving corps rallied around new starter Jones and helped him throw for 257 and three touchdowns in his first start. Smith had 137 of those yards and all of the passing touchdowns.


Oregon’s passing defense will be without its top player in Ifo Ekpre-Olomu, but the passing defense seemed to do pretty well without him against Florida State. While the Seminoles threw for 348 yards, a lot of it was when it was trailing by a large margin and trying to get back into the contest. In fact, Oregon’s pass defense numbers are a little misleading simply because many teams abandon the run and become pass-heavy when they get into a deficit.


Ohio State might not have have a Hiesman Trophy winner at quarterback like Florida State, but it definitely has the same amount of diversity, which will put a strain on the Oregon defense. Ten players have caught at least 10 passes in the Buckeyes’ offense, and nine have at least 149 yards.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.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!


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






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News sport : Ohio State QB Cardale Jones says he can throw the ball '80-85 yards'

Ohio State quarterback Cardale Jones throws during Big Ten Conference championship NCAA college football game against Wisconsin in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File) Even though he started the season third on Ohio State’s depth chart, Cardale Jones has always been known for having a big arm.


Now, following injuries to Braxton Miller and J.T. Barrett, Jones, a 6-foot-5, 250-pound redshirt sophomore, put his skills on display in wins over Wisconsin in the Big Ten title game and Alabama the College Football Playoff semifinal.


But just how far can Jones throw the ball?


Jones told USA Today that he can throw the ball 80-85 yards. If that’s not impressive enough, Jones’ teammate Evan Spencer offered this:



“You guys haven’t seen all of his power,” Spencer, a senior wide receiver, said. “I’ve seen Cardale on one knee throw the ball 65 yards. I was dumbfounded. You haven’t seen everything he’s got, trust me.”



Jones’ roommate, Tyvis Powell, witnessed that throw.



"Last year, a friend was doing a project where she wanted to study quarterbacks throwing the ball with someone hitting them," Powell said. "I pushed him while he was throwing. He was still throwing 60, 70 yards off a push. Then he got down on a knee and threw it. I was like, 'This is ridiculous.' "



Jones’ longest completion has been only 47 yards. If we’re lucky, we may get to see that arm strength on display in Monday’s College Football Playoff National Championship against Oregon.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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







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News sport : NFL against the spread picks: Will a favorite fall?


History tells us that at least one of the four home teams will fall this weekend. However, it's hard to pick out which one. Or two. Or more.


The collective strength of the four top seeds in the divisional round is rare. The last time there were four favorites of at least 6 points or more in this round, as is the case this week, was 2007 according to the database of OddsShark.com. That year three of the four favorites didn't cover and two lost outright. Indianapolis lost to San Diego and Dallas lost to the Giants.


On the surface you'd pick all four favorites to win straight up, but it's unlikely that happens. And picking the games with the spreads this week is really tough.


Let's take a look at divisional round, with the spreads from the Yahoo Pro Football Pick 'em, as usual:


Baltimore Ravens (+7) over New England Patriots


This is the perfect example of how tough this weekend's games are to call. I think the Patriots win. They're good, deep and balanced. Bill Belichick is 7-1 in the divisional round after a bye. The Patriots, not counting a Week 17 game that meant nothing for them, are 10-1 in their last 11. The Ravens were 1-6 against winning teams in the regular season, with the lone win coming in Week 2.


But some favorite is going down this weekend, or at least not covering.


The Ravens looked very strong last week, and that seems to be their M.O. Turn it on in the playoffs. They've played New England tough before. I can't tell you that football-wise I believe the Ravens win straight up. But I'm forcing myself to pick some underdogs. The Ravens are as good as any.


Seattle Seahawks (-10.5) over Carolina Panthers


The Seahawks have won six in a row, all by double digits. Now they're rested, at home and ready to make a run for a second straight Super Bowl title.


[Join FanDuel's $2M Divisional Round fantasy league: $25 to enter; top 17,475 teams paid]


Recently in this round, underdogs getting this many points have mostly covered. OddsShark.com said since Jan. 15, 2006 underdogs of 8 or more points in the divisional round are 10-3 against the spread. But I don't know how the Panthers offense scores enough to cover. Seattle's points allowed over its winning streak: 3, 3, 14, 7, 6, 6. It's not the 1976 Steelers' run of shutouts, but it's really impressive. The Panthers' defense is good too, and have played the Seahawks well recently. Their linebackers have the speed to bother some of the things the Seahawks like to do. But those games were in Carolina. This is in Seattle, where the Seahawks have a great home-field advantage.


According to ESPN, there have been six teams with a record or .500 or worse since 1970 to win in the wild-card round, and the first five all lost, and by an average of 20 points. I don't think the Panthers have a realistic shot to win, so it's tough to take them even getting a lot of points.


(AP) Dallas Cowboys (+6) over Green Bay Packers


This is one of the tougher lines of the season. I'll take the Cowboys because they can run the ball and this is a really good team. Again, they're 13-2 in games in which Tony Romo hasn't missed time with injury. That's impressive. They can run the ball and keep it close.


Yet, would it surprise anyone if the Packers blew this one open? They're amazing at home, particularly Aaron Rodgers. They're 8-0 at home and only one game was decided by less than 6 points, and that was against New England.


Still, Rodgers' calf injury is a bit of a mystery, the Cowboys are a good team and some favorites are not covering. But, ask me in an hour and I might have a different answer. It's a really hard game to get a read on.


Denver Broncos (-7) over Indianapolis Colts


I can't take the underdog here. The matchup is too good for the favorite.


We know the Colts are a one-dimensional offense. The Broncos have the cornerbacks to limit the Colts' receivers. The crowd noise won't help Indianapolis protect Andrew Luck against pass rushers Von Miller and DeMarcus Ware.


The Broncos aren't the same explosive offense they were last season, or even in the first half of this season. But they're still capable of hitting a few big plays and grinding out the game on the ground. And a week off to get healthier can't hurt.


In another day down the road, in another place, the Colts would have a much better chance. Luck is great, but I don't think he can win this by himself. Or cover the spread either.


Last week: 1-3

Season to date: 129-126-3


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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 : Former Dolphins fullback Rob Konrad falls off fishing boat, swims 9 miles to shore

Miami Dolphins fullback Rob Konrad high-steps into the end zone as he scores against the Carolina Panthers in the second half Sunday, Nov. 4, 2001, in Miami. The Dolphins won 23-6. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

If you figured former Miami Dolphins players spent their NFL retirements fishing off the South Florida coast, you'd be right, only it's always he smooth sailing you might imagine, as Rob Konrad can now attest.


In a strange saga you probably found far-fetched even when it was scripted into an episode of "Dexter," the erstwhile Syracuse fullback swam nine miles back to the Palm Beach coast after falling off his fishing boat, according to the Associated Press.


If Konrad's story to police is to be believed, he fell from his 36-foot boat trying to reel in a fish and couldn't get back aboard the auto-piloted vessel, so he swam to shore. According to WPBF-TV, friends alerted authorities when the 38-year-old didn't show up for dinner, and the U.S. Coast Guard sent out a helicopter search party.


Except, the Coast Guard didn't discover the 6-foot-3 Konrad, who played at 255 pounds, until he reportedly turned up wearing only his underwear on the shores of South Florida around 4 a.m. Needless to say, he was treated for potential hypothermia when he arrived.


"He was lucky he was able to swim nine miles throughout the night in the dark in the frigid waters," Coast Guard public affairs specialist Mark Barney told Syracuse.com. "He was pretty exhausted."


You think? Just to recap, Konrad allegedly swam through what the Florida Museum of Natural History has statistically proven to be the world's most shark-infested waters for ROUGHLY 10 HOURS!


Either that or he's the real Bay Harbor Butcher.






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Ozil, Ramsey boost for Arsenal

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has confirmed that midfielders Mesut Ozil and Aaron Ramsey are back in training after lengthy spells on the sidelines.


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London - Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has confirmed that midfielders Mesut Ozil and Aaron Ramsey are back in training and in contention for Sunday's game against Stoke City after lengthy spells on the sidelines.


Germany international Ozil has been out since early October with a knee ligament injury, while Ramsey has not featured since the start of December, leaving Wenger short on goals and creativity in midfield.


“Aaron Ramsey, Ozil and Mathieu Flamini are back in training. (Danny) Welbeck is not available, (Olivier) Giroud is back from suspension,” Wenger told reporters.


“Ozil will train with the squad today, he's been sick, he will be available. Will I start him? I don't know.”


Another player whose place in the starting lineup is perhaps not guaranteed is goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny, who was fined by the club after being caught smoking in the changing room following their defeat to Southampton on Jan. 1.


The Pole has apologised, Wenger said, but it seems his manager will still leave him sweating on his place in the side.


“I've not selected the first 11 yet,” Wenger added.


“I don't want to talk about what happens in our dressing room because what happens stays in the dressing room. Apart from the fact it doesn't stay in the dressing room,” the manager joked.


“He's a serious boy who works very hard. He's not the first to make a mistake and not the last.”


Arsenal's season is yet to truly ignite and they sit sixth in the table ahead of the visit from traditional bogey team Stoke, who inflicted an embarrassing reverse on Wenger's side at the start of December.


Then Arsenal shipped three goals in the first half, rendering their second-half fightback academic in a 3-2 defeat.


Stoke's traditionally combative approach has frequently exposed Arsenal's famed soft underbelly and with Mark Hughes's side comfortably placed in mid-table, Wenger is expecting another testing afternoon.


“Stoke are always especially motivated against Arsenal,” he said. – Reuters






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Liverpool can attract big names

Brendan Rodgers insists Liverpool will remain an attractive destination for the game’s top players.


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Brendan Rodgers insists Liverpool will remain an attractive destination for the game’s top players, even when they lose one of their biggest stars.


Liverpool’s manager was determined yesterday to draw a line under Steven Gerrard leaving, stressing it was time to ‘concentrate on football’ when asked about his captain’s revelation that he would have stayed had a contract been offered last summer.


What Rodgers did recognise, however, is that the 34-year-old’s move to LA Galaxy leaves a ‘void on and off the pitch’. One ramification is that he will never be able to use the line ‘come and play with Steven Gerrard’ again when making a big sales pitch.


Rodgers, though, is refusing to lose heart. ‘We have to have confidence that in the time I have been here there have been some outstanding players who have come,’ said Rodgers. ‘But there is no doubt we need to replace that quality, either through some young players getting an opportunity or our players stepping up to the mark.


‘But it is also about bringing in that quality. It has been difficult and over the last couple of years some of our top players have gone, the likes of (Luis) Suarez and (Jamie) Carragher.


‘They were fantastic players. Steven is going to move on. I want to work with that level of player. As a coach, I enjoy working equally with the stars as I do with young players, so I am not purely one who needs to work with young players.


‘If you speak with the elite players, they will say they enjoyed working with me. But for us it is something that needs to be done. This is Liverpool — we have to be in the running for the world’s best.’


Yet even with Gerrard, Liverpool have found it difficult to woo big names and in the last two years they have missed out on Alexis Sanchez, Diego Costa, Willian and Henrikh Mkhitaryan. They struggle to complete deals, but Rodgers says Liverpool’s name still appeals.


‘We have to believe it can be done,’ said Rodgers. ‘Last season, after nearly winning the league, we were in a position to attract a level of player. The team has changed, but the great name of Liverpool is the same. It is a big attraction. Hopefully, come the end of the season, we will be in the Champions League having won something as well.’


One positive for Rodgers is that he should be able to call on Daniel Sturridge again by the end of the month. The striker has returned from intensive rehabilitation in the United States. ‘We have to trust the work he has done,’ said Rodgers. ‘When he comes back he hopefully sustains his fitness.’


Meanwhile, Dr Zaf Iqbal, Liverpool’s first-team doctor since 2010, has left his post abruptly. No reason has been given for his departure. – Daily Mail






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Mourinho facing misconduct charge

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho was charged with misconduct by the FA following comments he made about referee Anthony Taylor.


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London - Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho was charged with misconduct by the FA following comments he made about referee Anthony Taylor after last month's 1-1 draw at Southampton in the Premier League.


The Portuguese was furious with Taylor after he booked Chelsea midfielder Cesc Fabregas for diving in the Dec. 28 match.


Mourinho said the referee's failure to award a penalty was a scandal and that he should be ashamed.


He added that his team were being unfairly targeted in a campaign waged against them after Fabregas became the fifth Chelsea player to become involved in a row over diving in a matter of weeks.


The Spaniard, though, appeared to be tripped by Southampton defender Matt Targett in the penalty area.


“In other countries where I have worked, tomorrow in the sports papers it would be a front-page scandal because it is a scandal,” said Mourinho.


“It is not a small penalty, it is a penalty like Big Ben. In this country, and I am happy with that, more than happy with that, we will just say that it was a big mistake with a big influence on the result.


“I will go to the referee and wish him a good year and tell him he will be ashamed,” added Mourinho.


In a statement, the FA said his remarks constituted improper conduct in that they allege and/or imply bias on the part of a referee or referees and/or bring the game into disrepute.


Mourinho has until 1800 GMT on Jan. 13 to respond to the charge.


The FA will not take any action against him following the comments he made before the game against Stoke City on Dec. 19 but gave him a formal warning as managers and players are banned from making pre-match media comments about officials.


Before the game Mourinho said he hoped referee Neil Swarbrick “does his job”.


“I like these matches,” added the Chelsea manager. “It's no problem with a good referee that can understand what is aggressivity or when aggressivity finishes and when the rules of the game start.


“I know it is difficult for every team to play this kind of match but again I'm not worried. The referee is there exactly to judge what is aggressivity. And aggressivity I always welcome, it makes the game much more beautiful and difficult.” – Reuters






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Valdes joins United as De Gea’s backup

Manchester United signed former Barcelona goalkeeper Victor Valdes as a backup to fellow Spaniard David de Gea.


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Manchester, England – Manchester United signed former Barcelona goalkeeper Victor Valdes as a backup to fellow Spaniard David de Gea.


The 32-year-old Valdes, who has been at United training with the first team since October while rehabilitating from a knee injury, signed an 18-month contract, with the option for a further year.


“He joins the club as the No. 2 goalkeeper and is a great addition,” United manager Louis van Gaal said.


Valdes, who tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee in March before being released by Barcelona, won every major honor with the Catalan giant, and the 2010 World Cup and 2012


European Championship with Spain.


Valdes is preparing to fight for his first-team place at United.


“Now, in the moment, (De Gea) is the best goalkeeper in the world,” Valdes said. “His performances every day and in every game shows everybody that his level is very high. He has had a great year.”


Valdes' signing is likely to increase the chances of the 30-year-old Anders Lindegaard leaving the club in January. United's other goalkeeping options are 21-year-old Sam Johnstone, who is on loan at Doncaster, and 24-year-old Ben Amos. – Sapa-AP






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Time to move on from Gerrard exit

Steven Gerrard's departure at the end of the season will leave a void at Liverpool but will open the door for others, manager Brendan Rodgers said.


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London - Steven Gerrard's departure to LA Galaxy at the end of the season will leave a void at Liverpool but will open the door for others, manager Brendan Rodgers said.


The 34-year-old captain, who has spent his entire career at Anfield and is worshipped by the fans, agreed this week to continue his illustrious career in California with the Major League Soccer champions.


Gerrard has been quoted as saying he would have stayed at Liverpool had he been offered a new contract in the close season, while Rodgers admits his departure will be a huge loss.


“No doubt Steven is still a top class player and him leaving in the summer will leave a void on the pitch and off the pitch also,” Rodgers told a news conference.


“But we will have to move forward and bring in the best players we possibly can into this wonderful club.


“History shows that great players here have moved on and it's an opportunity for the club and other players to go and grab the mantra and make their presence here felt.”


Gerrard said at the weekend the turning point in his decision to depart came when Rodgers told him he could no longer play every game.


He did not blame the club for effectively making up his mind to leave but said he was ready to commit his future to Liverpool in the summer after they finished as Premier League runners-up.


“If a contract had been put in front of me in pre-season I would have signed it,” Gerrard was quoted as saying by the Liverpool Echo on Tuesday.


“I'd just retired from England to concentrate all my efforts on Liverpool. I didn't want my club games to be tailored.”


Gerrard can still play a pivotal role in Liverpool's season which offers a League Cup semi-final against Chelsea, an FA Cup run and the Europa League as well as trying to climb the Premier League table and grab a top-four spot.


They are currently eighth, seven points behind fourth-placed Southampton.


“It will be tough to qualify for the Champions League but I'm looking forward to the challenge in the second half of the season,” Rodgers said. “Seven points may seem a lot but it can be whittled away.”


Liverpool face an away trip to Sunderland on Saturday. – Reuters






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