Chiefs won’t be bullied by Khune

Bobby Motaung says Kaizer Chiefs will not be bullied into offering goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune a new bumper contract.


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Johannesburg – Kaizer Chiefs’ Bobby Motaung says the club would not be bullied into offering goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune a new bumper contract that does not meet their strict budget requirements.


Khune is yet to agree to a new deal with Chiefs and has entered into the final six months on his current deal, which means he is allowed to talk to other teams and sign a contract wherever he likes.


“I don’t think we would break the bank. We have standards at Chiefs and criteria of how we deal with our contracts and we stick to that,” Motaung said in Johannesburg on Tuesday.


“If there is a bigger offer, it’s about money for him. We’ve had players who have done that before.


“We won’t be shaken by clubs that offer more money. Players have come and left with this type of situation in the past and we have allowed them.”


Despite having spent his entire career with Chiefs, Khune has been linked with big-money moves elsewhere, including Mamelodi Sundowns and Soweto rivals, Orlando Pirates.


However, Motaung was unfazed by what he called “pressure on the media” to speculate on the future of the country’s top shot-stopper.


“He is our captain, so that question, I don’t know how to answer it, would I like him to stay?


“Khune has been a baby of Chiefs for how many years now? It’s like somebody saying, do you want your son to be your son?


“We’re not in a panic situation as a club. He’s not under pressure as a player. The contract only expires in June.”


Motaung made it clear that Chiefs had been trying to tie Khune down to a new deal for the last 12 months, alluding to a lack of decisive action from the player.


“We’ve been talking to him every month.


“We don’t put a gun to the player’s head. He must know what he wants and when he wants the contract.


“The player must also apply his mind. If he has not applied by now, he should be knowing what he wants.”


Chiefs expect Khune’s agent to be in the country this week to begin negotiating a new deal.


“His agent is not from here, he is from overseas so he’ll be arriving before Friday. We’ll have those discussions when he arrives,” Motaung said.


“It’s unfortunate that his agent is from overseas and he (the agent) felt that he would like to come here in January.


“I don’t know how he manages Khune but we are waiting for him to come. If Khune was managed locally, I think maybe this would have been resolved.” – Sapa






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News sport : Tyson Chandler's obvious flop fouls out DeMarcus Cousins, Mavs win in OT

The NBA has made an effort to crack down on flopping with official warnings and fines for several seasons now, but players continue to embellish contact when they feel like it gives them an edge. For the most part, that's because it works. A stern lecture and minor fine aren't going to stop them from doing what it takes to win.


For proof, just look at the final minute of regulation in Tuesday's game between the Sacramento Kings and Dallas Mavericks at Sleep Train Arena. With 21 seconds on the clock and the game tied at 99-99, DeMarcus Cousins was called for an offensive foul while attempting to win better post position against Tyson Chandler. Another look at the play — or even a first look from any angle other than that of referee Lauren Holtkamp — proved that Chandler's head did not jerk back due to any contact from Cousins:



It was Cousins's sixth foul, disqualifying the Kings' best player by far on a night when he already had 32 points, 16 rebounds, and nine assists (plus nine turnovers) in 40 minutes. Monta Ellis missed a potential game-winner on the ensuing possession to maintain the tie and bring about overtime, but the damage had been done. Without Cousins, the Kings scored just five points in the extra period on their way to a 108-104 loss. It also didn't help that head coach Tyrone Corbin did not have his team foul for 11 full seconds in a 104-103 game with only a few seconds difference between the shot and game clocks.


While the absence of Cousins can't have caused all the Kings' issues in overtime it sure played a big part. Akis Yerocostas of Sactown Royalty summed up the effect of Chandler's flop pretty well:



Well, it would be more accurate to say that Chandler accepted a forthcoming warning in exchange for the win, because he hasn't been officially notified for a flop yet this season. That seems like a pretty good trade.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Hammers battle past 10-man Everton

West Ham United goalkeeper Adrian converted the decisive spot-kick in a penalty shootout against 10-man Everton to send the Londoners into the FA Cup fourth round.


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London - West Ham United goalkeeper Adrian converted the decisive spot-kick in a penalty shootout against 10-man Everton to send the Londoners into the FA Cup fourth round after a pulsating replay at Upton Park on Tuesday.


Adrian fired past opposite number and Spanish compatriot Joel Robles immediately after the Everton keeper had crashed his spot kick against the crossbar as West Ham won 9-8 on penalties.


The match had finished 2-2 after extra time following a highly entertaining 120 minutes at Upton Park.


“What a game. It's a long time since I've experienced so many highs and lows in one game of football,” West Ham manager Sam Allardyce told reporters.


“All the players gave everything, it really was a fantastic cup tie and we got a little bit of the magic of the cup going our way tonight.”


Everton, who have a fantastic record against West Ham, particularly in London, had to play more than half the game with 10 men after Aiden McGeady was sent off for a second yellow card after 56 minutes.


The visitors had fallen behind six minutes after the break when Enner Valencia slotted past Robles from a tight angle after running on to Andy Carroll's pass.


Everton's task got harder when McGeady was dismissed for bringing down Mark Noble but Kevin Mirallas curled in a superb free kick from the edge of the box after 82 minutes to make it 1-1 and send the game into extra time.


Romelu Lukaku fired Everton ahead six minutes into the extra period, dedicating his goal with a skywards salute to fellow Belgian and former Vfl Wolfsburg midfielder Junior Malanda, who was died in a car accident in Germany on Saturday.


Substitute Carlton Cole, however, sent the tie to penalties when he stabbed home from a corner with seven minutes of extra time remaining and just over a minute after coming on.


“It was a great cup tie, I am very proud of the team and it's one of those things when you lose on penalties,” Everton boss Roberto Martinez told reporters.


“I thought it was a terrific performance, we played with vitality, and I think our fans appreciated our dynamic play and for them to give us a standing ovation at the end was great.”


West Ham visit Bristol City in the next round after the third-tier side overcame Doncaster Rovers 2-0 in another replay.


Also on Tuesday, Fulham edged Wolverhampton Wanderers 5-3 in a penalty shootout, after the game finished 3-3 following extra time, to seal a trip to Premier League Sunderland. – Reuters






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News sport : Mark Hendrickson, now a grandfather, wants a shot with Orioles

(Getty Images) Granpda isn't ready to let the kids have all the fun just yet.


Mark Hendrickson, who recently became a grandfather, is pining for one more chance to pitch in the major leagues.


At 40 years old he's attempting a comeback with the Orioles, telling Roch Kubatko of MASN.com he feels he still has something to prove:



I still have the desire. To me, it's unfinished business. The last two years, I've come a long way in my delivery and I'm a better pitcher now than I've been in a long time. I'm just trying to perfect a new delivery. That's what I'm doing, and that's why I'm here



Hendrickson has already had a fascinating professional sports career. The 6-foot-9 left-hander didn't make his big league debut until 2002 because from 1996 to 2000 he was playing in the NBA. He has 10 years of experience pitching in the majors, but his last appearance came with Baltimore back in 2011.


After spending 2013 in the Orioles' minor league system, he played independant ball last season for the York Revolution. With the Revolution he posted a 1.54 ERA in 55 appearances. Using a sidearm delivery
suggested to him by Baltimore manager Buck Showalter, Hendrickson reached out to Showalter recently and asked him for a tryout.


He threw in front of members of the Orioles staff on Monday and will take the mound again on Wednesday. It's Hendrickson's opportunity, maybe his last one, to show what he can do. If he impresses, he could earn an invite to spring training.


"I'm a grandfather, for goodness sake, and that was two months ago," Hendrickson said. "Now there's extra motivation. How many active grandfathers have been in the big leagues? Well, that right there is motivation in itself."


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Israel Fehr is a writer for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter.






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News sport : LeBron James pushes coach David Blatt out of the way to argue call during Cavs-Suns

LeBron James made his return to the Cleveland Cavaliers lineup on Tuesday after missing two weeks with left knee pain and a strained back. His overall form after the longest layoff of his professional career looked to be a matter of some debate in the early going — on the plus side, sweet dunk; on the minus side, not-so-sweet transition defense — but his facilitating game sure seemed to be on point.


Don't believe me? Just ask Cavaliers head coach David Blatt, who found himself on the receiving end of James' assistance in moving away from the referees so that he didn't get a technical foul while complaining about an offensive foul call on James during the second quarter:


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That's the way it seemed to me, at least — Blatt was furious and about to get himself T'd up, and James wanted to step in front to A) plead his own case and B) give his coach the chance to cool off. Because of the nature of LeBron's action, though — literally pushing the first-year Cavs coach back toward the bench — and the context in which it comes, with Cleveland scuffling at 19-19, and folks' memories stretching back to that time that James bumped Erik Spoelstra in the midst of some early-season struggles during his first year with the Miami Heat, LeBron's physical suggestion that his coach take a load off raised more than a few eyebrows on Tuesday night.


Including, it seemed, new Cavaliers guard J.R. Smith:



That look you're seeing is J.R. wondering why he never thought of just moving any of his past coaches out of the way so he could do the thing he wanted to do. Can it be that it was all so simple, all this time?


While it's unlikely that James' push speaks to any larger beef broiling between Bron-Bron and Blatt, it's equally unlikely that this clip — divorced from the actual in-game context in which it occurred, natch — won't garner an awful lot of the wrong kind of attention for a Cavs team that's had more than its fair share of that this season.


If Cleveland can begin to right the ship and rack up some wins with James back in the fold, stuff like this will all fade to the far recesses of our minds, like the Spo bump in the aftermath of four straight Finals trips and two NBA championships. If the Cavs continue to flail, though, every little thing — every jolt, shove and bristle — will keep generating headlines and headshakes.


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



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News sport : New York Jets hire Cardinals defensive coordinator Todd Bowles

Todd Bowles (Getty Images) The New York Jets will still be a creative, blitzing, difficult defense to prepare for, even without Rex Ryan.


The Jets landed Todd Bowles, the Arizona Cardinals defensive coordinator who has been in high demand since Arizona's season ended. He was considered one of the top available candidates and interest was high. The Atlanta Falcons also sought a second interview with Bowles, but the Jets got their second interview with Bowles first, and didn't let him leave without the job.


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Bowles' defenses in Arizona the last two seasons were known for being very aggressive, with many creative blitzes. Despite an offense that had three different starting quarterbacks, Arizona went 11-5 and got a wild-card spot in a competitive NFC. Arizona allowed 18.7 points per game, the fifth best mark in the NFL. Bowles was interim head coach for the three games with the 2011 Miami Dolphins after Tony Sparano was fired, and Bowles went 2-1.


Bowles, who was a defensive back for eight NFL seasons (seven with the Washington Redskins and one with the San Francisco 49ers), takes over a Jets defense that ranked sixth in yards allowed under Ryan. There is talent on that side of the ball. The problem is offense. The Jets have struggled to find stability at quarterback for many, many years. How Bowles fills out his offensive staff will be key to his success.


The dominoes are starting to fall in the NFL vacancies. Rex Ryan was hired by the Buffalo Bills, and now perhaps the hottest candidate remaining has gone to the Jets. Now that teams don't have Bowles as an option anymore, the others with vacancies might start to move quickly to get the best of the remaining candidates.


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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 : Mo Williams sets Wolves record with 52 points to stop losing streak at 15

Why are you passing, Mo? (Thomas J. Russo-USA TODAY Sports) Long basketball careers are supposed to hew to a standard schedule. A player enters the NBA with considerable talent but a lack of experience, improves steadily as he learns more, hits his prime around 28 or 30 years old, and slowly deteriorates until he becomes a husk of his former self and finally retires after becoming a subject of internet derision. We see players at various points in this journey every season. It is the league's version of the circle of life.


Minnesota Timberwolves Mo Williams is theoretically at the end-of-career portion of his basketball life cycle. The 32-year-old guard has seen a progessive dimming of his star since making the All-Star Game alongside Cleveland Cavaliers teammate LeBron James in 2009. He joined the Wolves as a free agent this summer with the intention of serving as a veteran presence on a young team but has been thrust into a larger role since Ricky Rubio went down with a high ankle sprain in this season's second week. He has responded by averaging 11.0 points on 39.7 percent shooting in 26.4 minutes, which doesn't exactly bode well for his future.


It is in this context that Williams has come through with the most surprising individual performance of the 2014-15 season to date. Minnesota visited the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday night in the midst of a 15-game losing streak, just three defeats shy of the longest in franchise history. He responded by breaking the franchise single-game scoring record with 52 points, one more than Corey Brewer's equally shocking (or more shocking!) performance in the final week of last season.


Here's a look at his shot chart:



Yes, that's 19-of-33 shooting overall, including an absurd 17-of-29 on shots outside the paint. It was crazy enough that injured Pacers star Paul George could only look on in disbelief after one crazy basket:



The Wolves' 110-101 win has finally raised their record to 6-31, which makes the 5-35 New York Knicks the only five-win team remaining in the league. Yet the story that will remain not the end of the streak, but that of Williams, who joins Brewer and the immortal Tony Delk on the list of most surprising 50-point games in recent NBA history. Williams had previously scored 40 points twice in his career, hadn't scored 30 since March 2012, had only scored 30 twice in the last five seasons, and hadn't scored more than 25 points in a game this season. There was no evidence to suggest this was possible, let alone probable.


As if he knew to emphasize the ridiculousness of it all, Williams ended his night with an airball:



We should cherish this game, and not just because Williams almost certainly won't reach this scoring peak again in his career. His performance is the sort of randomly fascinating event that makes the logically too-long NBA season entertaining despite any reasonable arguments that it should be shorter. We don't know when another random veteran — C.J. Watson? — will put forth an unlikely 50-point game, but we will know that it will happen eventually. Thankfully, the NBA rewards our faith in the unexpected with amazing regularity.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Oklahoma overwhelmed by the pressure at West Virginia

Oklahoma has started a key stretch of its season with a thud.


The 18th-ranked Sooners traveled to No. 16 West Virginia on Tuesday night fully aware they needed to handle the Mountaineers' pressure, limit turnovers and get a little boost somehow from the bench. None of it happened and West Virginia ran away with an 86-65 victory.


It's the second straight loss for the Sooners who have five of their next six games against ranked opponents, including both games in the rivalry with Oklahoma State and a rematch with the Mountaineers.


Oklahoma committed 22 turnovers that led to 27 West Virginia points. All five Sooners starters committed at least two miscues, despite going into the game focused on the pressure and trapping coach Bob Huggins has the Mountaineers executing so well.


West Virginia guard Javon Carter came off the bench to singlehandedly more than double the point production of the six Oklahoma reserves who played in the game. Carter scored 18 points. The Oklahoma bench scored eight.


The Mountaineers rolled the Sooners despite an off night from their best player, point guard Juwan Staten, who made just one of nine shots but dished eight assists.


While Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger has to figure out how to get more out of his core group because the bench seems to be so lacking, Huggins' team continues to surpass expectations considering it had to replace two guards who transferred in the offseason and was thought to be a second-teir team in the Big 12 at best. Nine Mountaineers combined for 16 steals against the Sooners.


West Virginia has two losses this season by a combined three points and boasts victories over UConn, a North Carolina State team that just beat Duke and now the Sooners. Things are shaping up nicely in Morgantown. Concerns loom in Norman.


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[Kyle Ringo is the assistant editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at kyle.ringo@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Jeff Gordon: 4-time Cup champion and trike race master (Video)

Jeff Gordon was at the Washington Wizards game on Tuesday night and competed in a tricycle race with a fan.


Gordon is apparently very good at trike racing.


Gordon got a good start (what do you know?) and smoked the fan, who wasn't even in the camera frame by the time the video ends.


You can tell there's carryover from Gordon's day job.


Gordon then had some fun with his NASCAR race restart issues after the trike race on Twitter.



Well done, Jeff. If the Daytona 500 comes down to a green-white-checker finish with a bicycle pedal start, our money is on you.


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







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News sport : Kurt Busch testifies his ex-girlfriend is a trained assassin

Kurt Busch testified Tuesday that Patricia Driscoll, his ex-girlfriend, was a trained assassin.


Busch was on the stand once again as part of his testimony in a four-day hearing surrounding a no-contact order that Driscoll is seeking against Busch.


After the relationship between the two ended, Driscoll came to Busch's motorhome at Dover in September. There, she says Busch assaulted her and slammed her head against the wall of the motorhome. Busch refutes the allegations.


Busch previously testified that he told her to leave repeatedly on that Friday night.


From the AP:



''Everybody on the outside can tell me I'm crazy, but I lived on the inside and saw it firsthand,'' Kurt Busch said when his attorney, Rusty Hardin, questioned why he still believed Patricia Driscoll is a hired killer.



Busch said Driscoll asserted many times that she was a trained assassin and per the AP, she hasn't disagreed with the statements in her testimony. A decision from the hearing, which concluded on Tuesday, is expected in the coming weeks.



Busch said Driscoll repeatedly asserted her assassin status and claimed the work took her on missions across Central and South America and Africa. He recounted one time when the couple was in El Paso, Texas. He said Driscoll left in camouflage gear only to return later wearing a trench coat over an evening gown covered with blood.


A day earlier, Busch's said his ex-girlfriend told him she was a mercenary who killed people for a living and had shown him pictures of bodies with gunshot wounds.



In December testimony from the hearing, a personal assistant to the two said Driscoll said in September she was picked up and slammed to the ground while on the Mexican border.


Driscoll runs the Armed Forces Foundation, which is set up to benefit United States soldiers. She's also involved with Frontline Defense Systems, which is a defense contracting company.


According to Give.org, the Armed Forces Foundation does not meet its charity standards.


Busch aso said that Driscoll was monopolizing his life. AFF held events at NASCAR tracks and Driscoll played a significant role in Busch's double-race Memorial Day weekend when he ran the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600.


Busch moved to Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014 after spending a year with Furniture Row Racing. He made the Chase after winning at Martinsville in the spring. He saw a sports psychologist after parting ways with Team Penske after the 2011 season.


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







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News sport : LeBron James returns from 2-week injury layoff for Cavs-Suns

LeBron eyes his return. (Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports) The King is back, and not a minute too soon for the Cleveland Cavaliers. In a video posted to Bleacher Report on Tuesday, LeBron James announced that he would play for the Cavs in the night's game vs. the Phoenix Suns at the U.S. Airways Center. James had missed eight straight games with lingering pain in his left knee and a back strain. The Cavs went 1-7 during that time to see their record drop to 19-19.


LeBron practiced on Monday in Phoenix and was announced as a game-time decision for Tuesday. He then created a minor stir by attending and enjoying Ohio State's College Football Playoff National Championship victory over the Oregon Ducks. It now appears that his short trip to Texas did not hinder his plans to rejoin the Cavs for their visit with the Suns.


The Cavs figure to be very glad to see their superstar return to the court. Since LeBron's first missed game on December 30, the Cavs have struggled at both ends of the court, obtained several new players via trade, and weathered a minor controversy involving head coach David Blatt and struggling power forward Kevin Love. They are also in the midst of a five-game losing streak. A loss to Phoenix would drop their record below .500 for the first time since a November 24 loss to the Orlando Magic put them at 6-7.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Fantasy golf power rankings: Sony Open in Hawaii

It's Tuesday, and that means we reveal our Devil Ball Golf power rankings for this week's PGA Tour event, the Sony Open in Hawaii.


The long-time Hawaiian Open is played at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, which is a classic, tree-lined track that's fairly short by modern tour standards. However, the targets are also small, placing a premium on approach shots, particularly into the par 4s on this par-70 course. Low scores can be had with a hot putter.


Here's a look at our top five.



  1. Chris Kirk: Kirk closed the TOC on a tear, with a course-record-tying 62 at the Plantation Course. He was runner-up here a year ago to Jimmy Walker and in fifth position in 2013. No brainer.

  2. Jimmy Walker: Walker may have let the TOC slip away to Patrick Reed in a playoff, but the Sony Open defending champion is clearly on form. Well worth a look.

  3. Zach Johnson: The 2009 Sony Open winner looked great at Kapalua, although he didn't figure in the playoff. He was T-8 here last year and this old-style course fits hits game perfectly.

  4. Matt Kuchar: Kuchar closed nicely at the Tournament of Champions, following up on a lousy third-round effort. He's been in the top eight in his last three Sony Open starts.

  5. Russell Henley: The 2013 winner here was knocking on the door of the Kapalua playoff and has been playing some hot golf dating back to last calendar year.


Feel free to ask specific fantasy questions on Twitter @RyanBallengee. Good luck!




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







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News sport : Cowboys, Jason Garrett finally get contract done, and it's good money

The Dallas Cowboys get head coach Jason Garrett become a free agent. But not for long.


Two days after the Cowboys lost in the divisional round of the playoffs to the Green Bay Packers, Garrett and the Cowboys agreed to a five-year, $30 million contract, as first reported by ESPN's Chris Mortensen.


That's $6 million per year for those who hate math. There are currently seven head coaches who are believed to make more in the NFL on a per-year basis: Bill Belichick, Sean Payton, Pete Carroll, Jeff Fisher, John Harbaugh, Tom Coughlin and Chip Kelly.


Three more — Mike Tomlin, Andy Reid and Mike McCarthy — also are believed to make $6 million per year.


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Of those 10 coaches, only Kelly has not coached in a Super Bowl, and seven of them have won the big game at least once.


Garrett has not. He has one playoff victory in his his four-plus seasons as head coach, plus a regular-season mark of 41-31 that included three straight 8-8 finishes before this seasons division title at 12-4.


Is Garrett as accomplished as the rest of the $6 million-and-up club? No, but he has similar or better marks than those right below him — the likes of Bruce Arians, Jay Gruden, Bill O'Brien, Lovie Smith, Chuck Pagano and Marvin Lewis.


It's an interesting debate, but Garrett is probably earning — all things considered for one of the most profitable sports franchises in the world — about the right amount.


But he certainly has much more to prove, too.


The report from NFL Network that defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli is returning is extremely promising; if offensive coordinator Scott Linehan comes back, the Cowboys will enjoy some nice coaching continuity. That said, how the contract negotiations play out with Dez Bryant and DeMarco Murray are another story entirely.


It's interesting to see, though, that Jones will pay good money for Garrett considering he once bristled at the idea of overpaying for a coach and famously said that any of "500 people" could do Jimmy Johnson's job back in the 1990s.


It's also interesting that, with nine more games under his belt next season, Garrett will pass Johnson as the longest-tenured coach in the Jones era with 81 games as a head coach. Yes, Garrett already has coached eight more than Bill Parcells did in Dallas. (And for those wondering, Garrett would need to coach another 22 seasons — when he turns 71 — to catch Tom Landry's 418 games coached.)


Jones knows he has a coach who can win. This season proved that. The Cowboys still have clear room for improvement in a few areas, and that's saying something for a 12-win team. Assuming the team is not demolished in free agency, Garrett should have the nucleus of a strong team and a quarterback in Tony Romo he believes in.


That right there is worth $6 million per year. You know, assuming they win more playoff games and such.


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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : LSU hires Alabama LB coach Kevin Steele to be its defensive coordinator

(Spruce Derden-USA TODAY Sports) Two weeks after John Chavis left LSU for Texas A&M, the Tigers have a new defensive coordinator.


After a few reports surfaced, LSU Sports Information Director Michael Bonnette confirmed that head coach Les Miles has hired Alabama linebackers coach Kevin Steele to replace Chavis.


The 56-year-old Steele has spent the last two seasons with the Crimson Tide as director of player personnel in 2013 and as linebackers coach in 2014. Previously, Steele was the defensive coordinator at Clemson from 2009-2012 and at Alabama in 2007 and 2008.


Additionally, Steele served as the head coach Baylor from 1999-2002 and has had other stops as an assistant at Florida State, Nebraska, Tennessee, Oklahoma and New Mexico State. He also coached linebackers with the Carolina Panthers from 1995-98.


LSU ranked ninth nationally this season in total defensive, giving up an average of 316.8 yards per game. The Tigers were also fifth in scoring defense (17.5 points allowed per game).


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News sport : Greg Cosell's Playoff Review: How the Colts upset Denver


The Indianapolis Colts were the only team to pull an upset in the divisional round, and it’s worth a closer look to see how they did it.


The Colts did a great job changing things up on offense against the Denver Broncos, their defense baited Peyton Manning and Denver's offense into doing things they weren't comfortable with. And of course, quarterback Andrew Luck played very well.


To start, let’s look at what the Colts offense did to beat Denver’s defense. The Colts had a good mix of “11” personnel (one back and one tight end) and multiple-tight end personnel, both “12” and “13.” Tight end Coby Fleener continued to align all over the formation. The Broncos mixed and matched personnel, trying to find the right matchups with Indianapolis. The Colts did a nice job keeping them off balance.


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Indianapolis also mixed in some up-tempo offense, with Luck snapping the ball right away. And they had a better run/pass ratio balance than they did the week before against Cincinnati.


All of these things only matter if the players execute. Left tackle Anthony Castonzo was asked to block DeMarcus Ware one-on-one (the Colts rarely slid protection to help him) and he was up to that challenge. The Colts’ offensive line as a whole was excellent from the beginning of the game. The Broncos were not able to get any consistent pressure on Luck, and Luck also did an excellent job taking short throws to keep the rush quiet.


The Colts also showed a semblance of a run game. They at least showed some commitment to it, and for a second week in a row Zurlon Tipton flashed some downhill decisiveness and power.


And then, Luck made some big plays.


In the second quarter, Luck hit Donte Moncrief for 22 yards. It came against man coverage and demanded anticipation and pocket toughness by Luck, as defensive tackle Terrance Knighton got inside pressure, and precise ball location. This is the kind of throw that is demanded in a playoff game.



Dwayne Allen caught a 3-yard touchdown on another great throw by Luck. Cornerback Aqib Talib was all over Allen on his inside pivot route, and Luck threw it early with anticipation and precise ball location. That was the only spot he could throw it for a touchdown.



An 18-yard pass to T.Y. Hilton on second and 9 early in the fourth quarter was another example of Luck being outstanding in the face of pressure. The Broncos ran a “man free blitz” out of the “double A gap” alignment. Luck had subtle pocket movement and never took his eyes off his downfield focus, so he could guide the ball to Hilton with accuracy. It was high-level quarterbacking.



The Colts were very good on the other side of the ball too.


Early on it was evident the Broncos game plan featured a lot of their six-offensive line sets and blocking tight end Virgil Green as Denver used the running game and C.J. Anderson. The Colts played it well, and the Broncos abandoned the run game early. We did not see the six-offensive line set with Green after the first quarter.


That left the Colts to take away the passing game, and they did that too. As the game progressed the Colts played more man-to-man coverage, with corners Vontae Davis and Greg Toler playing press man. Manning threw more deep balls than you usually see because the Colts’ man coverage was presenting those throws to him, but he did not connect on any of them. Manning also took some deep shots when the coverage dictated otherwise (like a bailed corner) and he missed some short-to-intermediate results as a result.


Manning was not a comfortable quarterback. At times he looked like he was hurrying himself and playing fast. There was no rhythm to the passing game. That’s not all on Manning. The Broncos receivers couldn’t consistently create separation against Indianapolis’ corners. They struggled to get open, and at times the Colts corners looked like they ran the routes for the Broncos receivers. The Broncos got in the red zone just once.


To pull off an upset in the playoffs, you need a lot of components clicking together. Everything went pretty well for the Colts in Denver.


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NFL analyst and NFL Films senior producer Greg Cosell watches as much NFL game film as anyone. Throughout the season, Cosell will join Shutdown Corner to share his observations on the teams, schemes and personnel from around the league.






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