Hlatshwayo hoping for good Afcon

Wits defender Thulani Hlatshwayo says he is looking forward to playing in the Africa Cup of Nations tournament in Equatorial Guinea next week.


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Johannesburg – Wits defender Thulani Hlatshwayo says he is looking forward to playing in the Africa Cup of Nations tournament in Equatorial Guinea next week and hopes Bafana Bafana will get their hands on the trophy for a second time, after winning in 1996.


“I would like to win something with Bafana Bafana –, the Afcon tournament in particular. Zambia were the surprise package and won it and that's inspired us to believe we can also do well,” Hlatshwayo said.


“We won this tournament in 1996 and we now want to be new talk of the town by winning again.”


Bafana were pitted in group C against number-one ranked Algeria, Ghana and Senegal in the opening round of the tournament and despite the tough challenge ahead, the defender said Bafana did not fear any of their opponents.


“The good thing about this group of players is that we have respect for all the teams in the tournament but are not scared of them.


“We did well against Zambia, against Cameroon and we hope the same continues when we face Mali.


“These are big guns on the continent. They have big name players while we have lesser-known players but we are not intimidated. We are prepared to fight to the end.”


Bafana's Afcon preparations continue when they play Mali in Bitam, Gabon, on Wednesday. – Sapa






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Chiefs ready for Bundesliga side

Kaizer Chiefs manager Bobby Motaung believes his side will deliver a sucker punch against Germany’s TSG 1899 Hoffenheim when they meet at the FNB Stadium.


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Johannesburg – Kaizer Chiefs manager Bobby Motaung believes his side will deliver a sucker punch against TSG 1899 Hoffenheim in an friendly game on Friday at the FNB Stadium.


“Every game at Chiefs is associated with pressure so there is no friendly match. We always play for our pride and our fans will want us to continue where we left off,” he said in Johannesburg on Monday.


“We know that the second round of the league will be tougher but, as professionals, we are ready starting with the game on Friday.”


The German Bundesliga side are in the country for a mid-season summer training camp which also includes a clash against the premier league's University of Pretoria.


Chiefs reached the halfway stage of the league unbeaten after 18 matches, opening an impressive 15-point gap over second-placed Mamelodi Sundowns, who had a game in hand.


Motaung remained confident that the new year would bring more of the same.


“I guess all the teams would have wished to finish the first round like we did. We were simply outstanding and all credit to the boys and coach who did well,” he said.


“We prepared well and that is what we are trying to do for the last leg of the league race”.


Amakhosi take on Hoffenheim without their regulars who were with Bafana Bafana in Gabon, ahead of the Africa Cup of Nations tournament which kicks off over the weekend.


Goalkeeper Brilliant Khuzwayo, defender Eric Mathoho, midfielders Reneilwe Letsholonyane and Mandla Masango, and striker Bernard Parker were away doing national duty.


However, Motaung said the return to full fitness of skipper Itumeleng Khune, Thato Moleko and Katlego Mphela would give the German team a run for their money.


Management still had to sit down with the coach to map the way forward for striker Kingston Nkatha, he said, who had signed a contract with SuperSport United without his present club's consent.


“Nkatha played a key role for us in the first half of the season and it is the coach who will give us a directive and take it from there. Of course we are not happy that he went behind our backs to sign with United but we must find a remedy as soon as possible.


“There are a lot of issues to consider before making a decision but he is still a Chiefs player until the end of the season.”


New signee David Zulu from Chippa United was expected to make his debut in Chiefs' colours and Motaung said more signings might be on the cards as they tried to bolster their squad ahead of the CAF Champions League.


“We also have the Nedbank Cup and the league to play so it is going to be a challenging year.


“We are hoping to get the ball rolling as soon as the league restarts and ... show our intentions of winning our second league championship in three seasons.” – Sapa






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City and the Lampard fiasco

Manchester City’s reputation is in tatters after a trail of misinformation and confusion over their signing of Frank Lampard.


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Manchester City’s reputation at home and abroad is in tatters after it emerged they have been responsible for a trail of misinformation and confusion over their signing of Frank Lampard.


City are already fighting to keep the American public onside after their decision to retain Lampard’s services for the second half of the Barclays Premier League season, rather than release him to play in MLS for feeder club New York City FC as planned. The club’s image took a further pounding after they were forced to admit they had unintentionally misled the public on both sides of the Atlantic from the moment it was announced Lampard had ‘signed’ for NYCFC on a two-year deal last summer. That, was not true. Nor was the subsequent announcement that the 36-year-old had joined City on a ‘loan’ until the end of the calendar year. The truth, yesterday admitted by City, is that Lampard put his name only to a pre-contract agreement with NYCFC, stipulating that he would join them on January 1.


The only binding contract he signed was with City, one that saw him contracted to the club for one season with a ‘break clause’ inserted that would enable him to head to New York for MLS pre-season in January if deemed convenient.


We know now that City, quite legally, removed that clause on New Year’s Eve in order to keep him until the end of the season.


Under pressure from the media and unhappy fans in America, City finally admitted some of this yesterday only to then find themselves in trouble with the Premier League.


In releasing five points of clarification yesterday lunchtime, City admitted making ‘mistakes’ and ‘errors’ in their initial announcements regarding Lampard.


However, the Premier League were furious to see City claiming that Lampard’s contract with them had only been until December 31 and that there had been no break clause. Instead, City claimed, Lampard had merely signed a second short-term contract with them on December 31.


This angered Premier League officials as not only was it not true, it would also have been in direct contravention of Rule T11 that stipulates no player contract can be for less than 12 months.


After contact from the League yesterday, City backed down and privately conceded that Lampard’s contract had been for the whole season.


But they have not broken any rules throughout and will not face any punishment. But yesterday the headline in the influential New York Post labelled the whole Lampard situation as a ‘fraud’. Even though representatives from NYCFC are due to meet disgruntled fans for talks today, it seems all goodwill in MLS has already been lost.


Over here, City face searching questions about why the whole saga has been characterised by untruth and misinformation from the start. City’s stance yesterday was that the initial announcements — in New York and Manchester — were simple mistakes.


There is no direct proof to the contrary but it seems incredible that a club of City’s size — with an ever expanding communications team — could make such an error, given that announcements about Lampard’s ‘signing’ were followed up by tweets and other social media news flashes essentially carrying the same message.


One school of thought, popular in America, is that it was in City and NYCFC’s best interests to announce Lampard’s ‘signing’ to help season-ticket sales along in the US. City deny this and say the announcement was just an error. It would perhaps not have had the same effect had it been revealed that he had actually signed for City with a clause meaning he ‘may’ come to New York in January.


That is all speculative and suggestions that Lampard never intended to switch to New York this month are quite wrong. It is only Lampard’s impressive form on the field that has seen him retained. He has simply proved more valuable to manager Manuel Pellegrini than anybody ever imagined he would.


Calls made to Lampard’s representatives to ask why a former England captain allowed himself to be part of something that has subsequently turned out to be misleading were also not returned.


Earlier on, however, Lampard did issue a statement designed to ‘clear up’ any confusion.


The statement said: ‘I want to make it completely clear about my situation as I have read a lot of lies and nonsense over the last few days. When released from Chelsea last year at the end of my contract I signed a commitment to play for NYCFC for two years starting January 1, 2015. I was then offered the chance to train and be part of the Man City squad in the interim to keep myself in the best shape going into New York.


‘This period has since been extended by Man City and I will now start playing for NYCFC at the end of this current Premier League season. There has always been a constant dialogue between all parties in this time to find the best solution for everyone. I can say that I am very excited about arriving in New York and giving everything to the team to make us a success in the MLS as soon as possible.


‘Thanks everyone for your ongoing support and I wish everyone a healthy and happy 2015!’ – Daily Mail






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United no better off under LVG

Manchester United’s defeat against Southampton left them with 37 points from 21 matches, exactly the same total they had this time last year when David Moyes was manager.


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London - Louis Van Gaal said it would take him three years to transform Manchester United into a potential title-winning team when he became manager last summer, but judged by Sunday's loss to Southampton, he might have to wait a lot longer than that.


United, who spent 150 million pounds ($226.76 million) on new players in the summer, failed to get a shot on target at home for the first time in more than five years as they went down to a 1-0 defeat to the Saints who had not won at Old Trafford since 1988.


The defeat leaves United with 37 points from 21 matches, exactly the same total they had this time last year when David Moyes was manager, and they have scored one goal less. Moyes was sacked in April after less than a season in charge.


Van Gaal, who left Colombian striker Radamel Falcao out of the squad raising doubts about his future at the club, still had Angel Di Maria, Robin van Persie and Wayne Rooney in attack and Juan Mata went close twice to scoring late in the game.


An additional thorn in Van Gaal's side on Sunday was that Southampton are coached by fellow Dutchman Ronald Koeman and the one-time Ajax Amsterdam colleagues have not been friends since Van Gaal was forced out of the club by Koeman in 2004.


The two gave each other a cursory handshake after the game which Van Gaal said Southampton were lucky to win.


“We didn't create so much but we dominated the game. They came for a draw and they go away with a victory, that is disappointing,” he added.


“We played a much better game than Southampton. They were lucky to score out of nothing.”


United slipped to fourth, one place behind Southampton, and while there are still questions over how much progress they have made since Moyes left, there are also questions over the future of Falcao at United.


United must pay 46.0 million pounds ($69.51 million) to AS Monaco if the striker is to remain at United permanently when his loan deal ends in the summer.


Van Gaal said he opted to include teenager James Wilson on the bench rather than Falcao because of the England Under-20 international's pace.


“Falcao wasn't injured, he was just not selected in the squad,” Van Gaal said.


However, when Van Persie came off injured after 61 minutes, Ander Herrera replaced him, not Wilson.


Eight minutes later United went behind with the goal that sealed Saints victory. – Reuters






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Can Everton hold onto Barkley?

Martin Keown says Everton midfielder Ross Barkley has all the potential to be the leading player of his generation.


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One midfield star might be about to leave the red half of Merseyside but, if things continue as they are in the blue half, another could soon be on his way.


Ross Barkley is the closest thing we have to the new Steven Gerrard.


He is still a long way from becoming the complete player who Gerrard is, but he has all the potential to be the leading player of his generation.


The big problem is, can Everton keep pace with the growth of his talent? Wayne Rooney was the last great star to come through at Goodison Park but Everton could not hang on to him.


Now he has won 12 trophies at Manchester United while Everton have won nothing in 20 years. If that drought continues, will Barkley be forced to follow Rooney’s lead?


It would never be allowed to happen but Brendan Rodgers must be looking over the fence because Barkley is the perfect replacement for Gerrard.


When I saw a young Barkley out on loan at Sheffield Wednesday, I didn’t know why he wasn’t in the Everton first team. The first time he picked up the ball he surged forward, beat three players and pinged a pass with his left foot. Next time he did exactly the same with his right.


It was like watching the Ronnie O’Sullivan of football. Young players don’t always translate early success to the first team, but Barkley was always destined for the top. He had a slow start, his broken leg halting his progress, before making his mark last season. But it’s those setbacks that have made his breakthrough more meaningful.


Everton invested a lot of time and effort developing Barkley and he will feel he owes them, and Roberto Martinez, his loyalty.It was Martinez after all, not David Moyes, who Barkley flourished under and he will want to repay that faith.


That is an admirable trait for a young man of his talents but it won’t be long before people start questioning whether he would fare better away from Goodison.Everton are a fantastic club, and I can speak from experience, but at the moment they are shopping outside Harrods — just on the fringes of the big sides.


Barkley is Everton born and bred and his dream will have been to lead them to glory. But they are in freefall. They rescued a draw in the FA Cup against West Ham but four straight Premier League losses is alarming for a squad of their quality.


They still try to dominate possession but are ineffective with it. They are averaging around 50 passes more per game this season but have lost nine times.


This time last year they had lost only twice.Barkley has been played all over midfield and has struggled to have the same impact. Every time he scores it feels like he has to run 50 yards and beat a team before smashing it in. It’s time to play him higher up the pitch and build the team around him.


Look at how Gareth Bale improved when Tottenham moved him forward. There’s no doubt Barkley has the talent to develop along similar lines.


If Everton continue to struggle, their best player could be prised away.


He is Everton’s next Rooney but, like his predecessor, unless the club gets back to where it was last year, holding onto Barkley could soon become an impossible task. – Daily Mail






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Refs are picking on us - Chelsea

Chelsea assistant coach Steve Holland has hinted that there is a campaign against the Premier League pace-setters by referees.


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At Chelsea’s training ground yesterday lunchtime there was an empty space in the area usually reserved for Jose Mourinho’s sponsored Jaguar.


Instead his assistant first team coach Steve Holland was the back seat driver after Chelsea’s manager pulled out of his pre-match briefing because he is upset with the FA over his latest misconduct charge.


Holland proved more than capable, occasionally steering towards controversy with some strident views on ‘the campaign’, the mood around the Chelsea camp and the delicate issue of Frank Lampard.


This, even by Chelsea’s standards, was spiky stuff.


‘There is a frustration among all of us, not just Jose, because of an accumulation of events which surfaced at the Southampton game with Cesc Fabregas,’ Holland said in the minutes after he finished off the final training session ahead of today’s clash with Newcastle.


‘With Cesc, if they don’t want to give a pen, that’s a mistake, but to book him really compounds that pain.


‘First you’re saying it’s cheating and second he misses a game at some point. Bookings can’t be rescinded. That was a really painful day for us, hence the strength of feeling in the group.


‘We don’t really do draws. The objective is to win and if we don’t then the mood is always different.


‘People don’t walk around laughing or joking. The mood is up and down depending on the result.’


Safe to say, then, that the Grizzly Bear is in a bad place after the FA rapped his knuckles because of his demand for strong refereeing at Stoke City and subsequently charged him for his comments directed at Anthony Taylor after the Southampton game.


In the absence of Mourinho, it was left to Holland to move the subject on to Eden Hazard and some of the more enthusiastic challenges carried out by defenders in the Barclays Premier League. There are, in support of Holland’s argument, various pictures of Hazard’s socks being cut to ribbons in recent weeks.


Chelsea’s assistant head coach added: ‘With the diving thing, the technology is so good now and you can watch it back five times to highlight someone being in the air a bit longer than he should have done. But look at Hazard at Stoke. If he doesn’t see that coming and doesn’t get his studs off the ground, that challenge finishes his career.


‘If players anticipate challenges they try to get their feet off the ground. That makes it a very difficult job for referees.


‘But Hazard just gets on with it. He’s incredible with the stick he takes. That is part of it — if he’s a model pro and gets up straight away after being whacked, that could discourage a referee from taking action against a player who is trying to take him out of the game.Five minutes later he gets whacked again because the player hasn’t got a yellow card. It’s all part of what a player thinks is right or wrong.


‘Filipe Luis was on the receiving end of a tackle (by Tom Huddlestone) against Hull on the halfway line. Those two tackles were career-ending tackles if they connect, no doubt. Yet we spend two or three days talking about how long a player has spent in the air rather than what is done about the perpetrators of those challenges. Where’s the logic in that?


‘If nothing’s done, players like Hazard will not be able to show supporters the ability that he undoubtedly has.Eden is a very honest, top guy, that’s for sure. I’m sure he’s learning to protect himself because you can’t rely on anybody else to do it. You have to do it yourself.’


He was also willing to expand on the complex issue surrounding Lampard after the clumsy handling of his aborted move to New York City. Mourinho always dodges this one, but Holland was happy to put forward his own ideas on the issue.


He said: ‘What has occurred now wasn’t the original plan, that’s clear.’


Some Chelsea supporters are disgruntled over the situation, and Holland added: ‘I think that would depend from fan to fan, but Frank is entitled to make the decision that is best for him and supporters are free to feel the way they do. Frank was a fantastic player for Chelsea, who will be revered by supporters forever. Now he is a City player, a club we are directly challenging with. Whatever has happened, that’s the situation.


‘He’s scoring goals and I am not surprised by that because he has always had that ability. It’s a difficult situation.


‘By leaving, it’s activated a part of him that perhaps wouldn’t have been activated if he’d stayed here.’ –Daily Mail






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Wenger relaxes on smoking issue

Arsene Wenger has opened the door to his players smoking the occasional cigarette by insisting it does not have an adverse effect on performance.


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Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has opened the door to his players smoking the occasional cigarette by insisting it does not have an adverse effect on performance.


Arsenal goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny has been reprimanded after being caught smoking in the showers following the Gunners’ 2-0 defeat to Southampton at St Mary’s on New Year’s Day.


The Poland international has been left sweating on his place for tomorrow’s clash against Stoke after Wenger refused to guarantee his presence in the starting XI.


Colombia international David Ospina will replace Szczesny, whose position as No 1 was already under threat prior to the smoking incident, should Wenger decide to axe the 24-year-old.


It is not the first time an Arsenal player has been caught in a smoking-related storm. William Gallas and Jack Wilshere have both been publicly criticised by Wenger for smoking in public.


But the Arsenal manager seems relaxed about members of his squad having the odd cigarette, saying: ‘Does the occasional cigarette affect performance? No.


‘If you make a good pass on the football pitch that is what people want to see.


‘I’m sure there are some top sportsmen who smoke, but it is not a good example. The best is you don’t smoke.’


Commenting on whether Szczesny or Ospina will start at the Emirates Stadium tomorrow, Wenger added: ‘I have not selected the starting 11 yet. Will I take the (Szczesny) incident into account? I take everything into account.


‘I don’t want to talk about it because what happens in our dressing room stays in our dressing room. Every club has its internal discipline and rules. It doesn’t necessarily need to be public.


‘Ideally you want everybody to behave in the perfect way. I like Wojciech as a person, when he makes a mistake he stands up for it. He’s a guy who learns from his mistakes.


‘He has apologised. He made a mistake. He is not the first one and not the last one.’


Wenger speaks from a position of knowledge having been a smoker himself in his younger days. A video of the Frenchman puffing on a cigarette while on the bench as Monaco coach has gone viral this week amid the controversy surrounding his keeper.


‘The other day I was on French television and they showed me on the bench smoking a cigarette. I didn’t even think it was me,’ said Wenger.


‘At that time, I remember Marcello Lippi at Juventus smoked a cigar during the whole game in every game.


‘I grew up in a pub where you did not see from here to the window because of the smoke and I spent my youth selling cigarettes. But times have changed. Society has had an evolution. In some respects in a positive way, in others a negative way.


‘One of the positives is that people don’t smoke any more. But my issue is that the players here are judged on their performances.


‘Ideally, the best way to have a high level of performance is to behave as well as possible, as close as possible to the rules that allow you to perform.


‘I am against smoking, but I have grown up in a period where I had to accomplish military service, and at the end of the month we got paid by cigarettes, so it incited us to smoke.


‘After, of course, slowly it became banned and it doesn’t exist anymore, but when I was a boy I grew up surrounded by smokers. I smoked myself when I didn’t play anymore.’ – Daily Mail






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Messi denies Enrique rift

Barcelona's Lionel Messi denied he asked for coach Luis Enrique to be replaced or that he is seeking an exit from his boyhood club.


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Barcelona - Barcelona forward Lionel Messi has denied he asked for coach Luis Enrique to be replaced or that he is seeking an exit from his boyhood club and a move to England.


The Argentina and Barca captain was responding for the first time to widespread reports of a falling out with Luis Enrique, who took over from Messi's compatriot Tata Martino at the end of last season.


Messi's apparent dissatisfaction with the coach's management style and tactics was said to have prompted talks with Chelsea and Manchester City on a possible move to the English Premier League, while Catalan television claimed Messi had demanded Luis Enrique be sacked.


“I haven't asked for anything to stay here because I have never wanted to go anywhere else,” Messi told Barca's TV channel after Sunday's 3-1 La Liga win over champions Atletico Madrid.


“I have also heard that my father has spoken to Chelsea and City but it's all lies,” added the 27-year-old.


“There have been stories that I had bad relationships with (Pep) Guardiola, (Samuel) Eto'o, (Zlatan) Ibrahimovic and Bojan (Krkic), that I have got rid of people.


“That is in no way true. I never asked for them to get rid of the coach or anyone else. There is no rivalry between Luis Enrique and me.”


Messi's status as a hero to Barca fans for his key role in their most successful era makes him a powerful figure at the club but he dismissed claims that he has influence over important decisions.


“I am tired of hearing things about me,” Messi said. “They say that I run the club when I am just another player. I don't make those decisions, nor have I asked them to be made.


“It hurts because (the stories) have come from the Barcelona-based media and not from Madrid.


“There are people who want to damage the club and it's important that now more than ever we are united because there are important things ahead.”


Messi had a busy night against Atletico, netting one goal, setting up Neymar and Luis Suarez to score and conceding a penalty for the first time in his professional career.


He also picked up a rare booking for a high-footed challenge on Atletico goalkeeper Miguel Angel Moya.


The win lifted Barca to within a point of leaders Real Madrid, who have a game in hand, with Atletico are three points further back in third. – Reuters






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Mashaba happy with Bafana’s preparations

Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba believes the friendly match against Cameroon gave his side the test of what was to come in the Africa Cup of Nations.


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Johannesburg – Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba believes the international friendly match against Cameroon gave his side the test of what was to come in the CAF Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea.


South Africa held the Indomitable Lions to a 1-1 draw on Saturday at the Stade de L'amitie in Libreville, Gabon.


Bafana got off to a slow start and conceded an early goal but regrouped, forcing a draw in an exciting contest which ended 1-1.


“We create chances but we don't finish them off,” Mashaba said in a statement on Sunday.


“They were all over us in the opening 30 minutes but my boys were very resilient and withstood the pressure and showed great grit.


“We knew we would come back and come back we did in the second half. The Cameroonians gave us what to expect in Equatorial Guinea.


“Cameroonians are strong, big and physical and this is what you expect from West Africans.”


Bafana captain Dean Furman was full of praise for his team-mates.


“We got off to the worst possible start so early in the game and for about 20 minutes we didn't recover from that, but started picking up in the last 15 minutes of the first half,” Furman said.


“We had a good talk with the coach at half time and he told us to believe in our ability, believe in our team and that's what we did.”


Furman said key to their success was the sense of competition within the side.


“(Sibusiso) Vilakazi came on and he was great – that's the thing about our squad, everyone is fighting for places, everyone wants to start, everyone wants to have the jersey on,” he said.


“The boys who came on made a big difference and we are proud of our second half performance. We can only get better from this.”


Meanwhile Bafana Bafana have received accolades from Cameroon coach Volcker Finke.


“Yes they are in a tough group but they are doing well,” Finke said.


“While preparing for our match against them, I watched tapes of their last two games – the 2-1 win over Sudan and the 2-2 draw against Nigeria.


“I can tell you now many teams are in for a surprise from South Africa. They look like they can get into the second round, that is very possible.”


Meanwhile, Orlando Pirates defender Ayanda Gcaba has been called up to replace club mate Patrick Phungwayo, who was withdrawn from the Bafana squad due to knee injury.


Gcaba was expected in Libreville, Gabon on Tuesday to join his compatriots after he had completed his medical assessment.


Phungwayo returned to South Africa on Saturday night after an MRI scan revealed he had a tear that needed time to heal. – Sapa






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United lack cutting edge

How could a front six including Angel Di Maria, Robin van Persie, Wayne Rooney and Juan Mata fail to get a single shot on target in a 1-0 home defeat by Southmapton?


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MANCHESTER, England - How could a front six including Angel Di Maria, Robin van Persie, Wayne Rooney and Juan Mata fail to get a single shot on target in a 1-0 home defeat by Southmapton?


That was the question that Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal would have been wrestling with over his Sunday supper.


On paper it looks a formidable array of attacking talent, especially with wing backs Antonio Valencia and Luke Shaw providing width on the lush Old Trafford turf.


Yet the reality was worrying.


Following an impressive climb up the table after a slow start to the season under Dutchman van Gaal, United have managed only one win in their last five and the goals have dried up.


Since a 3-1 win over Newcastle United on December 26, they drew 0-0 with Tottenham Hotspur, 1-1 with Stoke City and on Sunday lost to Southampton in the league for the first time in 27 years.


Despite having plenty of possession they created precious little against a well-drilled Southampton unit that cost a fraction of the hundreds of millions it cost to assemble United.


British record signing Di Maria, playing up front alongside Van Persie, looked woefully out of position.


The 60 million pounds Argentine is at his best on the left, running at defenders and providing cunning passes to the strikes, but too often on Sunday he was asked to be little more than a hold-up player with his back to goal.


Van Persie cut a frustrated figure and, like Di Maria, was eventually substituted while Rooney grafted hard to little effect in the hole behind the strikers, rarely getting a sight of Southampton's goal.


Colombian striker Radamel Falcao was not even on the bench - a strange decision by Van Gaal considering he had scored two goals in his last four league appearances and was fit.


United lacked rhythm and Van Gaal does not appear to know the right combinations up front.


Fourth spot is a sign of progress considering the defensive injuries he has had to absorb but the reality is he has the same amount of points (37 from 21 games) as David Moyes managed at United last season before being sacked.


The former Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss was in a tetchy mood after the game when reminded of that fact.


“Yes. You have waited until this moment to put this question? This moment I have the same points as David Moyes? OK,” he told reporters.


“We have to be better, we have to improve and that is why we are working hard and working on that.


“I have said already we were the dominating team, but we have to create more when you are the dominating team. I think Southampton came for the draw, and went away with the victory.” – Reuters






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News sport : Peyton Manning not ready to commit to coming back next season


DENVER – The narratives about Peyton Manning failing in the playoffs yet again feel different this time.


Because this wasn’t Manning, not as we’ve known him since he came into the NFL in 1998.


Maybe Sunday’s 24-13 loss to the Indianapolis Colts was it for Manning. After a game in which Manning struggled to throw the ball – that was a theme for most of the second half of the season – he couldn’t say if he would return for another season with the Denver Broncos.


“Uh, yeah, I guess I just can’t give that simple answer,” Manning said. “I can’t say that. I could not say that.”


This isn't how Manning wanted to go out, and it’s certainly not how the Broncos envisioned this postseason going.


Manning said he wasn’t hurt. He said he suffered a thigh injury against San Diego on Dec. 14, but that’s the only injury he had and he felt good coming into Sunday’s playoff game.


Maybe he’s just a 38-year-old quarterback with multiple neck surgeries on his medical record. Time catches up with all athletes. As great as Manning has been, he won’t be an exception to that.


The Broncos told us a while ago that Manning wasn’t the same quarterback he was just a year ago. In the second half of the season the Broncos built their offense around running back C.J. Anderson. You don’t do that if Manning, who had arguably the greatest season for a quarterback in NFL history in 2013, was at his peak. They knew.


Manning and the offense was limited against the Colts. The first drive went well. A 32-yard pass to Julius Thomas set up a touchdown. That was the last time the Broncos got into the end zone, and that was the longest pass for Denver the entire game. The Broncos set an NFL record for points scored in a season in 2013. This isn’t that offense. Manning’s arm, which has not been all that strong since his neck surgeries, really seemed to weaken as the season went on. Manning had just a 76.8 rating in December. To put that in perspective, Jets quarterback Geno Smith had a 77.5 rating for the season. Manning’s rating against the Colts, when he was 26-of-46 for 211 yards, was just 75.5.


Even in the last couple minutes, needing 11 points to tie, the Broncos kept throwing short and hoping the receivers broke a big play. Manning tried taking some shots downfield in the first half but they were all well off.


(USA Today Sports Images) Manning said there weren’t any instances against the Colts in which he saw a possible play but physically couldn’t deliver the ball (“I don’t think so, no,” he said), but he said he didn’t play well enough. It was the culmination of a fairly long slump to end the season.


“I didn’t play as well, consistently, in the second half of the season,” Manning said. “I can’t give you a great reason for that.”


The one reason everyone will wonder about as the Broncos head into the offseason is if it’s just the effects of aging. If that's the case, it's not something that will get better over the offseason.


“I’m not smart enough to be able to answer every single question with reasons for things,” Manning said when asked how much his age had to do with his struggles. “I’ve always taken a pretty accurate look and fair evaluation of myself, I’m as honest with myself as anybody else is and probably as critical with myself as anybody else is. And I didn’t play well enough today. Didn’t play well enough consistently in the second half of the season.”


The Broncos now enter what will be a fascinating offseason. They were built to win now, a team coming off an AFC championship hoping to keep Manning’s Super Bowl window open with the help of several free agents brought it by general manager John Elway. That push resulted in a one-and-done playoff season.


“Mr. Elway made the changes to make us a better team and we just didn’t go out there and execute,” defensive tackle Terrance Knighton said.


Manning couldn’t immediately commit to coming back, and he’ll be 39 years old next year if he does. It's hard to imagine Manning retiring this offseason, after this loss, but the list of quarterbacks who have had great seasons at 39 years or older is very thin.


Manning isn't the only question. The Broncos have key free agents like receiver Demaryius Thomas and tight end Julius Thomas. There was a report from Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer that Broncos coach John Fox could be fired if Denver didn’t beat the Colts.


“I don’t make those decisions,” Fox said of that report.


The Broncos were built to win now behind the 2013 NFL MVP. After failing to even win a playoff game, everything seems up in the air for Denver and its quarterback.


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






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News sport : Teemu Selanne memories from those who walked the beat

Next to Teemu Selanne's teammates and those that worked for the team, the next group of people Selanne saw the most at work were the beat writers.


For the Anaheim Ducks, there is a small core of scribes that have followed the team throughout the years. Some have moved on, and some have stuck around. Instead of quizzing Teemu's former teammates for stories they've probably told 100 times by now, I thought it would be an interesting perspective to get some of the beat writers memories of Anaheim's 'Great 8.'


I'll start with my own. Granted I have more fan related memories than I do from this side, but there is one interaction that will always stick with me.


My first time ever in an NHL locker room was following a Ducks game. I had no idea what I was doing; I didn't know the protocol at all. This didn't stop me from pretending to act like I had it all together.


Standing in the middle of the locker room as other reporters were off in their conversations with other players, I pretended to text on my phone, trying to listen to what everyone else was doing. Teemu came out one of the rooms, went over to his stall, and I could tell he was looking at me. It was probably because I was shaking as I held my phone.


He walked right up to me (vomit rose in my throat), and asked if I needed a quote for my story. He also added that I looked scared, and I shouldn't be because these are regular guys you have to go up and talk to or they won't. I thanked him profusely and held my phone up for a quote. When we were done, he walked away, I left the locker room exhilarated. As I went to turn off the recorder on my phone, I realized I never turned it on in the first place. Damn it.


It ended up not to matter, though. He gave me what I needed - confidence.


Next we move on to Rich Hammond, currently walking the SoCal hockey beat for The Orange County Register. He primarily covers the Kings, but he still has his fair share of Teemu memories:



My opinion of a player’s character is rarely based on his locker-room affability or whether he says something quotable. It’s fairly easy for a bad guy to fake it for a few minutes, or a good guy to have a cranky moment.




If you want to learn about someone, ask his opponents. Talk to the people who battle against him, who are paid to make him miserable on the ice. Do they like him? More importantly, do they respect him?




When it comes to Teemu Selanne, there’s no question. I’ve been around the Kings, at close range, for a decade. They gritted their teeth when Selanne scored big goals against them, first with the Ducks, then the Sharks and Avalanche, then the Ducks again. They often hated what he did, but they didn’t hate him.




It’s easy to joke about Selanne, about his penchant for fast cars, his loose command of certain English phrases and his loose-lips approach to handling reduced playing time, but that’s as far as it ever went.




Consider what happened last May 17, at the end of Game 7 of a second-round playoff series.



The Kings, having rallied from a 3-2 series deficit, beat the Ducks in Game 7 on the road. They ended Selanne’s career, denied his bid for a dream farewell. They celebrated for a bit on the ice, then gathered near their bench and stopped.



Selanne gave a goodbye salute to Honda Center fans, and the Kings stood and tapped their sticks on the ice in tribute. Even Kings fans, who lustily jeered the Ducks moments earlier, stood and applauded.




After the game, Kings coach Darryl Sutter, who often talks as though he’s being charged by the word, gave a lengthy, heartfelt tribute to Selanne and called him "a special player and a special person."




Kings captain Dustin Brown expressed similar sentiments, and it wasn’t lip service. I’d seen that level of respect from Kings players only once before, after they beat Martin Brodeur and the New Jersey Devils in the 2012 Stanley Cup Final.




As for my personal memories of Selanne, they’ll run very similar to those of other writers. He was unfailingly polite and thoughtful. It didn’t matter if you were a Ducks beat writer or a visiting beat writer, if you were at the rink every day or once a decade. Selanne brought a joy to the game that transcended all areas.




I’ll remember, in his last couple seasons, glancing at a blur on the ice, generated by a nice move to the net or an impossibly quick release on a wrist shot. I’d do a double take, thinking it couldn’t be a 40-year-old man.




Selanne’s stats say it all. Well, almost all. The rest is said by the respect he received from opponents.​



Jon Rosen is currently working as the LA Kings Insider; however, back during the 2011-2012 season, he reported for FoxSports.com and FoxSportsWest.com. His memories of Teemu vary. One of the funniest stories he mentioned was that of an interaction with current Ducks defenseman Sami Vatanen and fellow Finn:



There were a few things last year I remember, though they're mostly about Sami Vatanen. I remember Vatanen saying about the Mercedes Selanne loaned him "I don’t know if I like that car actually, but it’s free."



Selanne's love of cars is well known. The fact he loans them out to teammates is awesome, and frightening considering the youngster had just joined the big club.


After the Kings defeated the Ducks last season, Rosen reflected back on his childhood memories of Selanne:



I was in sixth grade when Teemu Selanne scored 76 goals as a rookie. It was the same year the Kings advanced to play the Canadiens in the Stanley Cup Final, and a friend and I would occasionally interrupt class with high-pitched, cartoonish “Tee-mu!” calls for a short period until we moved on to other ways to distract our peers. For those of my generation, there always seems to be a nostalgia and longing to the early-to-mid 1990s, and those who recalled witnessing the joy, personality and skill embedded in Selanne’s play were probably taken back to those halcyon days while watching him absorb a hearty salute as he took a lap for the final time as a player on an NHL ice surface. Thank you, Teemu.



Curtis Zupke covered the Ducks for The Orange County Register and now NHL.com. He has a couple of memories that come to mind when he thinks of Teemu:



Last season, when his farewell tour was nearing the home stretch, the Ducks lost to Toronto at home. Me and some of the other writers were there a long time afterward filing our stories, a couple of hours after the game at least.




As me and Elliott Teaford of the L.A. Daily News were driving past the tunnel we spotted Teemu's car parked off to the side in front of a throng of fans. He had stopped to sign autographs, and he obviously wasn't going to leave until he signed them all. This was hours after the game ended. That's Teemu in a nutshell - even after a loss he's still in a good mood and happy to interact with the fans.




A few years ago, on a random off day, I was covering Ducks practice and Teemu walked through the dressing and asked me 'How are you doing?' Simple question, right?




Well, that was the first time a pro athlete ever asked me how I was doing. And it wasn't just polite. He genuinely wanted to know.




Let's put it this way ... Kobe Bryant ain't asking me how I'm doing. That pretty much sums up the kind of genuine people person he is.




The other thing that immediately comes to mind is after the Ducks played that incredible regular season game against Chicago two seasons ago. They won, 4-2, and afterward we asked Selanne if the game was as fun to play in as it was to watch.




"You just grab a hot dog and a beer and go watch," he said. "Good seats out there."



I still laugh when I think about that quote.


Finally, we have Eric Stephens. He currently walks the beat for the The OC Register, and probably spent the most time covering Teemu over the last handful of years.



There are a lot of great Teemu stories but one happens to stick out for me. It was the night of his initial return to Winnipeg in 2011 as a player after 15 years away. The new Jets were back after moving from Atlanta and the anticipation for Selanne's first game back in the city where he started was unlike anything I had seen personally.




The night remains one of greatest events I've had to cover simply because of the unbridled love and adulation Winnipeg fans showed for their former superstar after so many years. The noise in the intimate MTS Centre was deafening and you could see the sincere appreciation that Selanne had when he raise his right hand and motioned to his heart.




But the thing that really defined Selanne in my eyes is afterward. The Ducks were on a road trip, had just played in games on back-to-back nights and took a 5-3 loss to the Jets. Players were already on the bus, ready to go to sleep and head off to the next city. And yet there were maybe 150-200 people in an area within in the bowels of MTS waiting for Selanne to finish his press conference and visit with them.




Visit with them Teemu did. He met with every single person, young and old, dearest friend and occasional acquaintance. Different members of the Ducks' media relations staff took turns trying to pull the winger away, telling him and anyone near him that he had to get to the team bus. It didn't matter. Teemu wasn't leaving until he greeted everyone with a shake of the hand, a bear hug, a kiss on the cheek, a snap of the camera.




Somehow, Teemu made it to the bus. Everyone got their moment with him. Everyone left with a smile. That's No. 8 for you.







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News sport : Don't expect Ohio State RB Ezekiel Elliott to carry the ball in his left hand, he doesn't trust it

NEW ORLEANS, LA - JANUARY 01: Ezekiel Elliott #15 of the Ohio State Buckeyes runs the ball against the Alabama Crimson Tide during the All State Sugar Bowl at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome on January 1, 2015 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) Ezekiel Elliott doesn’t trust his left hand.


Ever since Ohio State’s leading rusher broke his wrist during the first week of fall camp, he’s learned to play without it.


I can't carry the ball in my left hand with the brace, so at all times I carry it in my right hand,” Elliott acknowledged to the media on Saturday.


Elliott suffered the injury when he jumped up for a ball and landed funny on the wrist. X-rays revealed a broken bone and he had surgery to insert a screw to stabilize the fracture. Elliott acknowledge that after the season he’ll have another surgery for a permanent fix.


“It's kind of reached a point where it won't get any better,” Elliott told media on Saturday. “It may get a little worse, but it won't get better.”


But the injury hasn’t done anything to damage his running game. Elliott has 237 carries for 1,632 yards and 14 touchdowns this season. Elliott has topped 200 yards in each of the past two games and has four rushing touchdowns.


One of those touchdowns was a dynamic 85-yard score against the Crimson Tide. On that score, Elliott cut through the line on the left and went streaking down the left side. However, he’s holding the ball in his right hand the entire way down the field. While most players would tell you that you should always carry the ball in the outside hand, Elliott knows his right hand is much safer.



Of course, there wasn’t an Alabama player close enough to Elliott to strip the ball, but throughout the season defenders have targeted that left wrist in an effort to cause fumbles. So, just to be safe, Elliott adapted to only using his right arm to make sure he didn’t give defenders the option.


“It's something I had to get used to as the season went on,” Elliott said about only using his right hand. “When I first had surgery, just getting out there and practicing with it and only keeping it in that hand. It's become second nature, it's easy.”


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!


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News sport : Trent Richardson, former third overall pick, inactive for playoff game

Y(USA Today Sports Images) ou have to start wondering if Trent Richardson will be on an opening-day roster to start next NFL season.


Richardson's fall has been stunning. He had seen his playing time dwindle to just about nothing, and this week it will literally be nothing. The Colts declared him inactive for Sunday's playoff game at the Denver Broncos. The Indianapolis Star reported Richardson was working with the punt team in practice this week, but the Colts apparently decided they didn't need his punt coverage skills against Denver.


He wasn't going to play much at tailback either. He logged just one snap on offense last week, according to Pro Football Focus. The Colts have found that even though Richardson was the third overall pick of the 2012 draft and they traded a first-round pick to the Cleveland Browns to acquire him in 2013, they have better options.


Richardson has averaged just 3.1 yards per carry with the Colts. He had just one game with 10 or more carries since Oct. 19.


So what happens with Richardson now? It's possible the Colts could give him another chance to become a contributor, although a salary a little north of $3 million might force them to move on. If Richardson gets cut, will he get another chance? He might get another look in a training camp, but there's no reason based on what he has done in the NFL so far that he could make a team.


It has been a pretty tough ride for Richardson in Indianapolis, and his deactivation seems to be rock bottom.


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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: Cardale Jones

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, Ohio State's receivers, Oregon's receivers and Marcus Mariota.


Season highlight: It's hard not to talk about the Big Ten Championship Game against Wisconsin, isn't it? Thrust into the starting role after J.T. Barrett broke his ankle against Michigan, Cardale Jones entered the game with not only the weight of the Big Ten title on his shoulders, but also a College Football Playoff berth. He has big shoulders. He threw for 257 yards and three touchdowns as the Buckeyes routed Wisconsin 59-0. You know what happened next.


Strengths: By now, you've probably heard about Jones' arm strength. He boasts he can throw the ball 0+ yards. That arm strength can come in handy, because he can make lots of throws that other quarterbacks can only dream about making. Plus, he's a viable runner as Alabama's offense showed. Jones was brutally effective as a runner too, punishing Alabama defenders when he scrambled and on designed runs.


Weaknesses: The arm strength pro can also be a con. While having a howitzer for an arm means you can elicit oohs and ahhs from opposing teams and fans, it can be a nasty temptation too. Jones nees to avoid thinking he can make a throw that may not be there or attempt to throw a missile into a porthole. He was also much more effective running north and south against Alabama and running over defenders. If Oregon flushes him from the pocket, the Ducks will want to push him towards the numbers.


Overview: Here's where we'll mention the maturity Jones has found over the past season. While he's still known for his infamous tweet about school and sports, Jones has been able to redefine himself over Ohio State's last two games. And it's an opportunity that he's taken advantage of because he's made changes.


"Physically he's a very talented guy that he's always been that way," Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said Saturday. "However, in the last six months, yeah, he's really grown up as a person that can use his skill – you know, a guy that's very talented but just is immature and doesn't use it, it's kind of a waste of time. But he's really grown up here, and especially the last couple weeks, his practice routine and his attention to detail is off the charts right now."


It's not just Meyer saying those things about Jones, either. His roommate, safety Tyvis Powell, raves about how Jones has changed and so do other teammates. Yes, he started out as Ohio State's third-string quarterback, but there's no lack of confidence in him.


And now in his third start, Jones is on an even bigger stage. Yes, Marcus Mariota is the best quarterback in the game, but that's not an indictment of Jones. That's a statement that's probably true no matter the opponent.


Jones has very capable receivers in Devin Smith, Michael Thomas, Jalin Marshall and others. And there's Ezekiel Elliott, too. All he needs to do is take what the Oregon defense is giving him in the passing game.


Yes, that's an extremely broad statement, but the Alabama game is a perfect example. The Buckeyes knew that they could throw on Alabama from the start, but Jones' confidence didn't start to bubble until he started hitting his receivers crossing the field in the middle of a wide open Alabama secondary.


If Ohio State can find a similar hole in Oregon's pass defense, Jones is capable of exploiting it. If he does, his confidence, which has skyrocketed over the last month, will keep growing. If it matches his arm strength, an Ohio State win is far from a crazy thought.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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