News sport : ESPN using cameras in pylons for National Championship broadcast

ARLINGTON, Texas – ESPN's broadcast of the National Championship Game between Oregon and Ohio State will include cameras embedded in the pylons in the corner of the end zones.


It's the second time ESPN has used the technology, which was first tried at the FCS Championship on Saturday.




The pylons include two cameras stacked on top of each other. One faces down the sideline while the other runs down the goal line. The field of vision from the goal line pylon cameras runs from approximately the 12-yard-line to three yards deep in the end zone.




Pylons in the back corners of the end zones are also outfitted with cameras. In addition to being available for viewers at home, officials at the National Championship Game will have access to replays via the pylon cameras for any reviews.


Pylons that include cameras are a little lighter than a traditional pylon because they must be hollowed out for the equipment. Each pylon communicates with an antenna stationed on the sidelines on the goal lines.




The four antennas have an operator to ensure that the wireless signal from the pylons to the antennas isn't being interfered with by the wireless signals in AT&T Stadium and he or she can move the antennas up and down or side to side if necessary for the best signal between the pylons and the antennas.


According to those who were setting up the pylon cameras before the game, the crew made significant progress with the strength and reliability of the signal between the cameras and the antennas over the last few days to ensure that the cameras would have a significant chance of providing a unique replay angle for any goal-line or boundary plays near the end zone during Monday night's telecast.


The wireless signal between the cameras and the antennas is then transmitted back to the ESPN truck via a cable that runs from where the antennas are stationed. Much of the testing process approximately four hours before the game was centered around getting as strong a signal as possible between the antenna and pylon.




With an approximately 15-yard span, the cameras don't have limitless utility. However, as the technology continues to be ironed out, they will become a fantistic addition to most football broadcasts in the future. Just think if this play in the Music City Bowl had a pylon cam replay available? LSU might have won the game.



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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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News sport : College Football Playoff title game chat

Will Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota give Oregon its first national title or will Urban Meyer and the Buckeyes pull off another upset?


Join the Yahoo Sports crew start as they break down all the action in the inaugural College Football Playoff national championship game.



Live Blog: College Football Playoff title game chat






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News sport : Denver Broncos let coach John Fox go after another playoff loss


It's rare that a team has a coach come in, go 46-18 and win four division titles in four seasons with a Super Bowl appearance and then lets him walk, but the Denver Broncos want to win now.


And, apparently, John Fox took the fall for the failure to bring home a Lombardi Trophy.


The wording of the reports, first from Fox Sports' Jay Glazer and ESPN's Adam Schefter, is that Fox and the Broncos decided to part ways. No matter how you put it, Fox is a free agent after meeting with Broncos general manager John Elway on Monday, and the Broncos need a new head coach. Maybe Fox wants to coach elsewhere (the San Francisco 49ers are already being speculated as a good fit), but it doesn't happen unless the Broncos were ready to move on as well. After the Broncos lost their playoff opener to the Colts 24-13, apparently they felt a change was needed.


The Broncos have two hot candidates in offensive coordinator Adam Gase and defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio, and either might take over. The bigger question is the status of quarterback Peyton Manning, who couldn't commit to playing next season after the playoff loss and might be in decline as he enters his age 39 season anyway. But the Broncos will definitely be moving on without Fox, who guided a very good run.


The Broncos won a division title with Tim Tebow at quarterback, then was the AFC's No. 1 seed in back-to-back years and the No. 2 seed this year. The 2012 and 2014 seasons ended with disappointing playoff losses in the divisional round, however. Even an AFC championship at the end of the 2013 season was overshadowed by an ugly 43-8 loss to the Seahawks.


A lot will be changing for the Broncos this offseason. Starting with the head coach.


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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 : Chris Kirk closes Hyundai TOC with impressive, speedy 62

Chris Kirk made the best of going off first in the final round of the Hyundai Tournament of Champions.


Kirk tied the competitive course record at Kapalua's Plantation Course in Hawaii, shooting 11-under 62 in an efficient two hours, 48 minutes to jump from last place into the top 10 at the first PGA Tour event of 2015.


The 2014 Deutsche Bank champion started his run with three consecutive birdies beginning at the par-4 fourth hole. A birdie at the par-5 ninth, the second on the side after the fifth, sent Kirk out in 4-under 32. As the final tally indicates, Kirk had an outstanding back nine, dropping seven birdies, including a chip-in from just off the green at the short par-4 13th hole. A two-birdie at the par-5 finisher locked up the round of the week.


Kirk admitted some rust in the first three rounds, which particularly showed in his short game. Finally warm after three rounds, and with nothing to lose, Kirk flexed his game on Monday.


As for why Kirk played alone, he was the odd man out in the field that was originally 34 players. However, Kevin Stadler withdrew ahead of the third round, leaving the last-player to go off by themselves each of the last two days.


While the tee time wasn't desirable, the result sure was.




Ryan Ballengee is a Yahoo Sports contributor. Find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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News sport : The Suns create foam hands in honor of Gerald Green's amputated right ring finger

You’d be forgiven in forgetting that Phoenix Suns swingman Gerald Green is missing just over half of the ring finger on his right hand. The high-flyer doesn’t really advertise it, nor does he appear to enjoy talking about it, and it certainly doesn’t adversely affect the guy’s game. He can’t palm a ball with that hand, but that hasn’t stopped him from turning into one of the game’s most electrifying players – Green has also rounded out into an excellent shooter from both the three-point arc and free throw line.


The Suns, it appears, have no such hesitation when it comes to celebrating Green’s unique handprint. As first noticed by Rodger Sherman at SB Nation, the team is going to hand out foam hands that line up perfectly with Gerald’s right mitt.


Take a look:



It should be mentioned, and I’m sure the comment section will take care of as much, that this design also somewhat resembles a rather X-rated hand gesture that far too many of us were caught making in college group photos in the late 1990s, but that’s just fine.


Green, a free agent this summer, lost part of the finger after a (you guessed it) dunking accident during his youth. His per-game stats have gone down slightly this year with Phoenix’s addition of Isaiah Thomas to an already-crowded backcourt, but his efficiency has risen and he remains a stellar player that will have plenty of suitors during the offseason.


He’s got his own foam finger tribute, as well, which is as cool as achievements come.


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






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News sport : Hawks show out, bring Highlight Factory back to rout Wizards

The Atlanta Hawks are feeling themselves right now, and really, can you blame them? They've been playing absolutely brilliant basketball for the past six weeks, riding a balanced approach to playmaking, scoring and defense to wins in 22 of their last 24 games, vaulting them to the top of the Eastern Conference.


On Friday night, they went on the road and took out a red-hot Detroit Pistons club that had won seven straight games. On Sunday, they hosted the Washington Wizards, who entered at 25-11, tied with the Toronto Raptors for the second-best mark in the East, winners of three straight led by All-Star point guard John Wall ... and absolutely mopped the floor with them, blitzing the NBA's fifth-stingiest defense with three 30-plus-point quarters en route to a 120-89 blowout that improved gave Mike Budenholzer's club its eighth straight win, improving their conference-best record to 29-8.


It wasn't just that the Hawks hammered the Wiz, though, turning on the jets after Washington drew within two points midway through the third quarter with a blitzing 16-2 run to regain control before blowing the game wide open in the fourth. It was the way they did it. Last week, I lauded Atlanta's "just get the job done" approach; on Sunday, the Hawks showed they can rack up some style points in the process of taking care of business, too.


[Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball]


Check out the way sophomore point guard Dennis Schröder — whose strong play over the last 25 games (8.4 points, 3.3 assists, 2.2 rebounds and just under one steal in 18.1 minutes per contest) has earned him backup duties behind surging starter Jeff Teague — styles and profiles (no Nature Boy) after putting up this late-in-the-shot-clock 3-pointer with just over one minute left in the fourth quarter:



Once more, with feeling, on a continuous loop:



Sure, that's an awful bold move for someone who's only made 23.3 percent of his 3-balls during his brief NBA career, but it's the kind of thing you can get away with when you're holding a huge lead and riding a tidal-wave winning streak. (Making the shot helps, of course. Just ask Swaggy P.)


Schröder was far from the only Hawk to show out in front of the Philips Arena faithful on Sunday, though. Reserve forward Mike Scott put a little extra sizzle on a second-quarter Atlanta fast break with this save and one-touch pass to big man Al Horford for the flush:



After much deliberation, I've decided that the appropriate emojis for Scott's work here are: 👍 🏀 🚚. (Horford would do his best to return the favor later, swatting a Paul Pierce layup to kickstart a fourth-quarter runout that would lead to Scott throwing down a right-hand tomahawk dunk. It's nice to share.)


Even Kyle Korver — known much more for his metronomically consistent shooting motion, long-range marksmanship and peerless fundamental work — got into the act, throwing a little bit of razzle-dazzle into the proceedings with a behind-the-back dish to set up DeMarre Carroll for a slam:



Slick as the dish was, however, Korver apparently had a different kind of highlight in mind.


“Well, I was thinking about trying to dunk it,” he said after the game, according to Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Then I saw John Wall and I’ve seen too many highlights of him getting blocks from behind. This is just one of those things where I was up in the air, it wasn’t for very long, but it was long enough to know I wasn’t going to get the dunk. I saw DeMarre and flipped it around my back. I hope it looked good.”


It did, and it was effective, too. It's been a little while since Atlanta's style of play really fit its home gym's ancestral nickname, but with plays like these leading to a 31-point blowout of a darn-good division rival that keeps the Hawks' hellacious stretch running unimpeded, it sure seems safe to say that the Highlight Factory is rocking and rolling once again.


Even within the eye-catching highlights, though, Atlanta stayed true to its many-hands-make-light-work style. Eight Hawks scored in double figures, led by Korver's 19 points on 6-for-8 shooting (including 5-for-7 from deep, improving his league-best 3-point mark to 52.4 percent). The Hawks notched 34 assists on 42 made field goals, scored 31 points on the 20 Wizards turnovers they forced, and nearly doubled Washington up in fast-break points (21-11) to improve to 16-3 at home, and the offensive explosion nudged Atlanta up to sixth in offensive efficiency, just below the Phoenix Suns, which puts them in hailing distance of joining the West-leading Golden State Warriors as just the second team in the league to rank in the top five in both points scored and allowed per possession.


“We were clicking tonight," Korver said after the game. "At this point, I don’t think we’ve played a better game. We just had that one stretch in the second quarter. Otherwise, that’s as good as we’ve played this year."


And as good as they've looked in the process, too.


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News sport : Receiver Jalin Marshall is ready to be Ohio State's emergency quarterback

Jan 1, 2015; New Orleans, LA, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide linebacker Reggie Ragland (19) hits Ohio State Buckeyes running back Jalin Marshall (17) knocking his helmet off during the third quarter in the 2015 Sugar Bowl at Mercedes-Benz Superdome. (Derick E. Hingle-USA TODAY Sports) DALLAS — Ohio State knows all about contingency plans.


When it takes the field for the College Football Playoff National Championship Game on Monday night, it will do so with its third-string quarterback Cardale Jones, who already has helped the team defeat Wisconsin to win the Big Ten title and Alabama to get to this game.


But what if Jones were to sustain an injury against Oregon?


Stephen Collier is the fourth quarterback listed on the roster, but he’s redshirting and the coaching staff already has said it has no plans to burn that redshirt even in such an important situation. So that leaves the quarterbacking onus on receiver Jalin Marshall, who played the position in high school and has been the team’s wildcat quarterback all season.


“I did play quarterback in high school, so it was something that I did want to do,” Marshall said. “But preparing for this? It’s kind of overwhelming. So, you kind of got to just maintain your nerves and try to focus on what you’ve got to do. Being the backup quarterback is hard for me because I didn’t play all year, but the coaches have prepared me well as a staff and teammates have faith in me. And I have faith that if I do get put in that situation, we’ll be all right.”


Marshall doesn’t sit in on quarterback meetings, but he has been taking reps in practice and gets plenty of feedback from quarterbacks coach Tom Herman and receivers coach Zach Smith. He said he probably takes 50 snaps per practice and probably throws the ball about 20 times. He’s admittedly rusty and laughs about the fact that he’s thrown two passes this season and both have fallen incomplete. He said after fellow receiver Evan Spencer completed a touchdown pass in the semifinal against Alabama, he was willing to relinquish the backup quarterback position.


“They kind of gave me a hard situation right there,” Marshall said of his two incomplete passes. “One of them was a trick play and the other one, that was my fault, I guess. So yeah, they tease me a lot. Evan went in there, threw one pass and completed it. They say he should be the backup quarterback. And you know what I say? Let him be. I’d rather stay and win where I’m at. But like I said, if Cardale does go down, I’ll be ready.”


While making it to the national championship game with a third-string quarterback is already amazing, winning it with a fourth-string player whose not even listed as a quarterback on the roster would be downright absurd. Still, the team is ready just in case Jones goes down against the Ducks and would rally around Marshall in the same way as it's rallied around the other quarterbacks who have stepped in before him.


“I think it’s definitely challenging at first but he did that in high school and that’s how he made his mark as a football player early on,” Spencer said. “So he knows how to accept that role and how to have to succeed in that role and that’s why he’s in the position he is with the opportunity, God forbid something were to happen, that he would be thrown in there. We all have the most confidence in him. We’ve seen him do things in practice and we know that we’d be all right.


“We all are depending on people when they come into the game, we’re depending on them and they know that. That’s why I think we’ve been so successful because we’ve had people go down and we’ve had people step in knowing that the entire team is depending on them and that’s why they’ve played so great. And I think it would be no different if he was thrown into this situation.”


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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News sport : Reports: Oklahoma hires East Carolina offensive coordinator Lincoln Riley

Oct 19, 2013; Lawrence, KS, USA; An Oklahoma Sooners helmet sits on the field before the game against the Kansas Jayhawks at Memorial Stadium. Oklahoma won the game 34-19. (John Rieger-USA TODAY Sports) Less than a week after Josh Heupel was fired, Oklahoma reportedly has a new offensive coordinator.


According to multiple reports, head coach Bob Stoops has hired East Carolina associate head coach. offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Lincoln Riley to run the Sooners’ offense. The 31-year-old Riley, a Texas native, has been with East Carolina since 2010, when he became the youngest coordinator in the FBS. This past season, the Pirates were fifth in the country with 533 yards per game.


Riley’s offenses have taken claim of the ECU record books. Four of his five seasons are the four best in program history in terms of total yardage, including 6,086 yards in 2013 and 6,929 yards in 2014.


Before arriving at East Carolina, Riley spent seven seasons on the staff at Texas Tech under the tutelage of Mike Leach and his air raid offense.


He’ll replace Heupel, who called plays for the Sooners for the past four seasons. Oklahoma was 20th nationally in points per game this season but struggled to a disappointing 8-5 record. Stoops also fired co-offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach Jay Norvell.


For more Oklahoma news, visit SoonerScoop.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 : Damian Lillard bangs on Lakers, dominates late, leads Blazers to 30th win

Since entering the NBA in the 2012 draft, Damian Lillard has established himself as the type of player who's exceedingly comfortable on big stages and in pressure-packed moments, especially when the clock's ticking down in the closing seconds and he's got to make a play to deliver his Portland Trail Blazers a victory. He's become about as deadly a late-game option as the NBA has to offer, delivering dagger after dagger. (After dagger after dagger after big huge giant flippin' dagger.)


Sometimes, Lillard throws those daggers, like some kind of Colin Farrell-as-Bullseye, from a couple of steps behind the 3-point arc. Sometimes, though, he decides to get up close, like some kind of Colin Farrell-in-"In-Bruges," and end things right in your mug. The Los Angeles Lakers got just that sort of personal touch late in the fourth quarter on Sunday night:



We respect your desire to get up in Lillard's kitchen 40 feet away from the basket, Ronnie Price — especially after giving Dame off-ball space allowed Nicolas Batum to find him on a back-cut alley-oop earlier in the game, and especially after suffering a broken nose while taking a charge against these very same Blazers in a loss last Monday — but when you enter said kitchen, you have to be careful, lest you yourself wind up getting cooked. (And apparently Dame doesn't find the rim-protecting efforts of Jordan Hill and Ed Davis particularly intimidating.)


"At that point in the game, I knew it was getting really physical. They had cut the lead down, so I knew I had to go strong and I did," Lillard said after the game, according to Joe Resnick of The Associated Press. "There was a perfect amount of space, and [Hill] jumped late."


Clearly.


Lillard's loud and-one throwdown pushed Portland's lead to nine with 1:04 remaining and effectively put a tidy bow on a 106-94 win that marks the Blazers' fourth straight W, their eighth in their last nine games, and their 17th in 21 contests since the start of December. That such a scintillating run of form hasn't led them to the top of the Western Conference only goes to show just how good the Golden State Warriors have been; as it stands, the Blazers find themselves just one game back of Golden State for the top spot in the conference, and also as the first team in the NBA to reach 30 wins this season. The Lakers, on the other hand, fell for the third time in four games to drop to 12-26, the second-worst record in the West, ahead of only the bottoming-out Minnesota Timberwolves.


Byron Scott's club stayed within hailing distance for three quarters, and knotted the score at 75-all on a layup by Nick Young with just under 10 minutes remaining in the fourth. From there, though, Lillard took over, scoring eight points in 52 seconds to give the Blazers an 11-point lead with 7:22 left. When the Lakers made their last push, cutting their deficit to seven on a Wesley Johnson 3-pointer with 2:12 left, Lillard perked up again, scoring his team's final nine points over the final 87 seconds — including that emphatic tomahawk — to seal the victory.


He finished with 34 points on 13-for-23 shooting, including a 4-for-8 mark from 3-point land, to go with seven assists, three rebounds and three turnovers in 37 minutes. Seventeen of those points came in the final eight minutes and 16 seconds of the fourth quarter, an output remarkably similar to the 16-points-in-the-final-5:11 that he hung on L.A. in Portland's win last Monday, and a late-game explosion that's becoming an all-too-common sight for Blazers opponents. Lillard now has 232 fourth-quarter points this season, most in the NBA, with only Jamal Crawford of the Los Angeles Clippers (213), Kyrie Irving of the Cleveland Cavaliers (206) and Dwyane Wade of the Miami Heat (204) in his ballpark.


As we noted earlier, though, such late-game heroics aren't anything new for Lillard. According to Basketball-Reference.com's Shot Finder, Lillard's made 45 shots to either tie a game or take a lead in the final five minutes of contests since going pro, second only to Houston Rockets star James Harden (47) and a handful of makes ahead of LeBron James and Stephen Curry (40 each) over the past three seasons. It's at the point that, even when the ball doesn't bounce Portland's way, the calm and cool point guard out of the Bay by way of Weber State is just about the last person any opponent wants to see with the ball in his hands and grains of sand left in the hourglass.


And yet, as Lillard sees it, his predilection toward taking over and propelling Portland past the finish line isn't about continually proving and re-emphasizing to everyone that he's the man, as he told Bleacher Report's Kevin Ding last week:


"When you try to make everything about yourself, that's hero ball,"Lillard said. "Not when you just happen to be the guy to make a few shots and give energy and get the team going."

And once Terry Stotts' Blazers get going, they're capable of producing some pretty brilliant basketball, as evidenced by this dynamite offensive possession from the third quarter captured by CBS Sports' James Herbert:



Off a broken play, all five Blazers touch the ball in the space of four seconds, with Chris Kaman — whose versatile offensive game has been exactly what Neil Olshey hoped for when he signed the reserve center in free agency — passing up a bunny on the interior to set Wesley Matthews up for an wide-open in-rhythm 3-pointer. It's a trip that recalls the defending champion San Antonio Spurs' "good-to-great" playmaking ethos — sure, you might be able to get off a decent shot, but if you keep moving the ball and making the defense shift, you're probably going to be able to find an even better one, so let's not settle — and one that indicates just how well the Blazers are operating these days, with an offense that ranks eighth in the NBA in points scored per possession and, more importantly, a very stingy third in points allowed per possession.


Stotts' charges are sharing both ball and burden as they look to build on last season's second-round playoff run. If they keep it up, led by their unflappable All-Star point guard, these Blazers won't be the West's "best-kept secret" very much longer.


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Messi raises doubts about his future

Barcelona forward Lionel Messi raised eyebrows when he said in passing that he did not know where he would be next year.


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Zurich - Barcelona forward Lionel Messi raised eyebrows when he said in passing on Monday that he did not know where he would be next year.


Messi was asked during a press conference ahead of the Ballon D'Or Player of the Year ceremony if he wanted to finish his career at Barcelona or at Argentina's Newell's Old Boys in his hometown of Rosario.


“I'm not sure what's going to happen, whether I'd go to Newell's,” he said. “I don't know where I'll be next year although I've always said I want to end my career at Barcelona but...nobody knows what the future holds.”


Messi said on Sunday night that he had denied asking for coach Luis Enrique to be replaced or that he is seeking an exit from his boyhood club.


“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.


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 Gerardo Martino at the end of last season.


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News sport : Injury news on Peyton Manning explains some of his struggles


it turns out Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning was dealing with a pretty serious injury.


ESPN's Adam Schefter, citing two sources, reported that Manning tore his quad against the San Diego Chargers on Dec. 14. The Broncos knew about the injury, but Manning "did what he could to intentionally conceal the injury from as many people as he could," Schefter said. In that game Manning went straight to the locker room after trying to throw a block on a run by C.J. Anderson, but Schefter said Manning hurt his thigh rolling out right on a completion to Emmanuel Sanders earlier in the second quarter. He stayed in the game after that play.


On the other hand, Vic Lombardi of CBS 4 in Denver emphatically said sources told him it was not a tear, just a strain. Either way, a serious injury could change the perception on Manning and his future.


If Manning had a serious quad injury that could heal in a long offseason, could he return and play like he did in the first half of this season? It's possible. That is, if he decides to return. He sounded very unsure about whether he wanted to play again next season, although that might have been due to the emotions of a heartbreaking 24-13 playoff loss to the Indianapolis Colts.


Manning was asked if he was healthy after the game on Sunday. He did not divulge that he was seriously injured, and in fact downplayed the thigh injury.


"It’s hung around but I felt like I tried to manage it," Manning said. "I felt like I could manage it. Completed some passes, won some games with it. So just — it hung around, just that one thigh, but there is nothing more to it than that. And I thought — felt good with it coming into the day."


Why he didn't say anything about the severity of the injury can be interpreted in a number of ways. Maybe he didn't want to make excuses for a performance in which he was dreadful throwing downfield, and only passed the 200-yard mark on the last play of the game.


If Manning's struggles can be attributed to the quad injury and there can be some debate there, because the Broncos started to dial back his role in the offense and give more to Anderson well before Dec. 14 then that might change outlook for the 2015 season. If he wants to come back.


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News sport : National Championship Preview: The Predictions

The first-ever College Football Playoff National Championship Game is finally here and we at Yahoo Sports think we know what the outcome will be, after all, we’ve watched both of these teams all season. Here’s a look at how Yahoo’s college football writers Pat Forde, Graham Watson, Nick Bromberg and Sam Cooper see the championship game shaking out.


Yahoo Sports Pat Forde Pat Forde: I picked Ohio State to lose to Michigan State. I picked Ohio State to lose to Wisconsin. I picked Ohio State to lose to Alabama. So by now I've seen the light and am ready to jump on the Buckeyes bandwagon, right? No. I'm down with the Ducks. They were my pick on Selection Sunday and all the more now, after watching them trample Florida State. Oregon won't be able to count on getting five turnovers this game -- but neither will Ohio State be able to count on a repeat of the three it got from Alabama in the Sugar Bowl. The Ducks have the fewest turnovers in the nation (10), including just three interceptions -- which is the total Blake Sims threw to the Buckeyes. Urban Meyer has made Ohio State faster -- but it still isn't as fast as what Oregon will put on display Monday. Oregon 41, Ohio State 31.


Yahoo Sports Graham Watson Graham Watson: Both Ohio State and Oregon have played well down the stretch of the season, which makes this an incredibly tough pick. Ohio State is charmed. It’s won some close games and it’s done so with its backup and third-string quarterbacks. That is a major accomplishment. Oregon has worked through injuries to the offensive line and injuries to key skill players and yet has somehow persevered to get to this point. However, when you look at these two teams, the competition they’ve faced and who’s more ready to face the other’s offense and defense, I have to lean toward Oregon. The Ducks have so many weapons, but their most important weapon is quarterback Marcus Mariota. He’s so smart and so dynamic and can hurt teams in so many ways that it’s tough to go against him. The Ducks jump out to a big lead and carry this one the entire way. Oregon 45, Ohio State 31.


Nick Bromberg Nick Bromberg: Oregon is going to be just fine without Darren Carrington. The Oregon offense has a newfound confidence in RB Thomas Tyner, making he and Royce Freeman a formidable rushing duo to compliment Marcus Mariota. Plus, Mariota still has Byron Marshall, Charles Nelson and Dwayne Stanford to throw to. Ohio State will get yards and put up points on Oregon's defense, but the Ducks' offense won't miss a beat. A Heisman winner is getting the national title for the second-straight year. Oregon 41, Ohio State 35


Yahoo Sports' Sam Cooper. Sam Cooper: These teams are evenly-matched on both sides of the ball. We know all about the offenses, but both defenses are underrated and boast disruptive defensive lines. Ohio State has shown remarkable resiliency over the course of the season, but I'm not sure Cardale Jones and the Buckeyes will be able to keep up with Marcus Mariota and the Ducks' offense over the course of 60 minutes. Oregon will pull away late to win its first national title. Oregon 48, Ohio State 38.


For more Oregon news, visit DuckSportsAuthority.com.


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News sport : Reports: Pitt hires Arkansas offensive coordinator Jim Chaney

Pat Narduzzi speaks at a news conference in Pittsburgh where he was introduced as the new head football coach for Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic) New Pittsburgh head coach Pat Narduzzi dipped into the SEC and hired Jim Chaney away from Arkansas to be his offensive coordinator, according to multiple reports. The news was first reported by Sports Illustrated.


Chaney has been at Arkansas for the past two seasons, calling plays for the run-oriented Razorbacks under Bret Bielema. Arkansas averaged 31.9 points per game this season, up from 20.7 in 2013.


He previously coached more pass-heavy attacks as the offensive coordinator at Purdue (where he mentored New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees) from 1997-2005 and at Tennessee from 2009-2012. He also spent time in the NFL with the St. Louis Rams and coached at Cal State Fullerton and Wyoming.


Along with Josh Conklin (defensive coordinator) and Andre Powell (running backs coach/special teams coordinator), he’ll join the staff of Narduzzi, a first-time head coach who was hired after much success as defensive coordinator at Michigan State for the past eight seasons.


Pitt went 6-7 this season under Paul Chryst, who left to accept the head-coaching job at Wisconsin, his alma mater.


For more Pittsburgh news, visit Panther-lair.com.


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News sport : Louisville DB Terrence Ross suspended after felony assault arrest

LOUISVILLE, KY - NOVEMBER 29: Bobby Petrino the head coach of the Louisville Cardinals gives instructions to his team. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images) Louisville defensive back Terrence Ross has been suspended from the football team following a weekend incident, according to the Courier-Journal.


Ross, a redshirt freshman, was arrested and charged with “felony assault of a probation or police officer, misdemeanor possession of marijuana and disorderly conduct.”


The 21-year-old Ross, who played in three games and registered five tackles for the Cardinals last season, was booked at 1:37 a.m. on Sunday morning and was released after posting $1,000 bail. No details of the arrest were made available.


In a statement from spokesman Rocco Gasparro, Louisville confirmed that it is aware of the incident and that Ross has been suspended.


“The football program is aware of the situation and is continuing to gather information,” Gasparro said. “Terrence Ross has been suspended and the matter will continue to be evaluated.”


According to WAVE-3, Ross was also arrested in November for criminal mischief when he “damaged the door of a residence near the University of Louisville campus in March when he rammed it with his shoulder.”


In addition to his five tackles this season, the 6-foot-1, 200-pound Ross returned two kicks for 28 yards. He missed his true freshman season and took a redshirt in 2013 due to a torn ACL.


For more Louisville news, visit CardinalSports.com.


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Saints on course for CL - Tadic

Southampton are on track to qualify for next season's Champions League, the club's Serbian striker Dusan Tadic believes.


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Southampton are on track to qualify for next season's Champions League, the club's Serbian striker Dusan Tadic believes.


He was the goal hero for the Saints on Sunday in a fighting 1-0 win away to Manchester United.


It was Southampton's first win at Old Trafford since 1988 and moved the south-coast club above United into third in the Premier League.


If they stay there through until the end of the season they will have made it into the Champions League at the end of a season in which many thought they would struggle given the number of quality players they lost to transfers.


“Yes, the season is long, but we have a great belief,” he said when asked whether Saints were good enough to end the season in the top four.


“We have beaten Arsenal and Manchester United and they are direct opponents for what we want to achieve. That's really important


“We just need to believe in our skills and to see what is good and what is not good, and to keep going.”


Tadic was one of 10 signings new manager Ronald Koeman made in the summer to offset the impact of losing the likes of Luke Shaw, Adam Lallana and Dejan Lovren.


The 26-year-old was part of the Saints team that lost to United last month even though their opponents only managed two shots on target.


Tadic felt it was fitting, therefore, that Saints won on Sunday despite having just one shot on target themselves.


“Last time we played really well and deserved to win, but we didn't get three points,” the midfielder said.


“Now we did get three points even though maybe we don't deserve to.”


Despite scoring the winner, Tadic was criticised by Koeman for removing his shirt in his goal celebration - an act that earned him a booking.


Tadic himself admits he has no idea why he celebrated like he did.


“You never think about the celebration. I don't know why I do that, but it doesn't matter,” the former FC Twente man said.


“It's important that we are all happy.” - AFP






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