News sport : DeAndre Jordan crushes Brook Lopez on the alley-oop

Brook Lopez has had a rough go of it lately with the Brooklyn Nets, serving at the center of various trade rumors and reports that the franchise has soured on their max-deal big man's capacity for stardom. Given that context, what Los Angeles Clippers center DeAndre Jordan did to Lopez in Thursday night's game at Staples Center probably qualifies as overkill.


A little more than halfway through the second quarter, Chris Paul teed up a perfect alley-oop pass for Jordan, who finished on an earthbound Lopez with the trademark power we've seen many times before. Take a look:





Lopez's teammate Mirza Teletovic effectively summed up everyone's reaction:



Better luck next time, Brook. Wherever you may be.


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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 : Braves sign outfielder Jonny Gomes to one-year deal


(Getty Images)

Veteran outfielder Jonny Gomes has a new home according to our own Tim Brown:




Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com adds that the Braves will pay Gomes $4 million in 2015.


Atlanta is undergoing a bit of makeover with John Hart taking over as general manager for Frank Wren, who was fired after the Braves finished below .500 for the first time since 2008. Gone are Jason Heyward, Justin Upton, Evan Gattis, and Tommy La Stella. The trades have netted the Braves mostly prospects but Hart did get well-regarded right-hander Shelby Miller in exchange for Heyward and also signed outfielder Nick Markakis to a four-year pact.


Gomes, 34, split last season between Boston and Oakland and he wasn't particularly productive, he hit just .234 with six home runs in 112 games, but he's still useful against left-handed pitching. He has a career slash line of .277/.376/.485 when facing southpaws and will likely form a platoon in left field with Zoilo Almonte.


FanGraphs projects Atlanta to have the second-worst record in the big leagues next season, besting only Philadelphia. Adding Gomes certainly won't do much to change that, his reputation as a strong leader and beloved teammate notwithstanding. At the very least we're quite sure he'll be welcomed in the clubhouse with open arms by first baseman Freddie Freeman.


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News sport : LaMarcus Aldridge needs thumb surgery, and the Blazers might be in big trouble

We started to get bad vibes after Wednesday's reports that the results of a magnetic resonance imaging exam on the left hand that LaMarcus Aldridge injured during the Portland Trail Blazers' Monday's win over the Sacramento Kings were "inconclusive." We knew something definitely wasn't right when Blazers general manager Neil Olshey confirmed the Thursday morning report by Sean Deveney of the Sporting News that Aldridge's left thumb was in a cast heading into today's follow-up MRI.


On Thursday night, we learned that our fears were well-founded:



The three-time All-Star power forward suffered the injury while defending Kings center DeMarcus Cousins early in the second quarter on Monday night:


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Aldridge left the game at the 10:26 mark of the second quarter and did not return, finishing the game with 10 points on 4-for-7 shooting in 13 1/2 minutes.


Inside the Blazers' locker room prior to Portland's Thursday meeting with the Boston Celtics, the news — as you might expect — wasn't greeted warmly, as Jason Quick of the Oregonian reports:


Wesley Matthews was sitting in front of his locker and perusing his phone, when I mentioned "Bummer.''

"What?'' he asked, and I pointed to Aldridge's stall, where a horde of media had gathered for a 6:10 availability with Aldridge.

"Torn ligament. Surgery. Out 6-to-8 weeks,'' I told Matthews.

Matthews chucked his phone over his right shoulder and immediately got up from his chair and left the locker room.

Jeff Stotts of the great medical/injury information blog In Street Clothes notes that Aldridge's injury is the same one suffered this offseason by Los Angeles Lakers wing Nick Young. Swaggy P was expected to miss eight weeks, as well, but came back closer to the six-week end of the spectrum, which offers something, at least, for Blazers fans looking to remain optimistic as they grapple with the notion of life without their leading scorer (23.2 points per game) and rebounder (10.2 boards per contest).


Here, however, is the dark cloud within that silver lining:



The Blazers have been excellent this season, riding a balanced attack (10th in the league in points scored per possession, fifth in points allowed per possession) to a 31-12 record that's good for the No. 2 seed in the West (behind only the on-another-level Golden State Warriors) and an 8 1/2 game lead over the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Northwest Division. But they've rolled up that record against a less-than-murderous slate of opposition; a handful of different strength-of-schedule measurements all peg Portland's schedule thus far as one of the seven easiest in the league. As you can see from the rundown above, that's about to change in a hurry.


The Blazers' timeframe would keep Aldridge sidelined for anywhere from 18 to 24 games, slating his return somewhere between the first and third week of March. That's an awful long time to be without your top gun, especially in as dangerous an environment as the Western Conference; while it's very nice for Portland to have that 8 1/2 game division cushion, it probably wouldn't serve as a seismic shock to see the now-surging Thunder take a sizable bite out of that lead in the weeks ahead.


The challenge for Blazers coach Terry Stotts will be to keep the margin from disappearing entirely. On that score, it'll be nice to be able to rely on Damian Lillard, who's in the midst of his best season as a pro (22.1 points, 6.2 assists, 4.7 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game) and has become one of the league's most lethal fourth-quarter performers.


But the Blazers will need more than All-Star play from their All-Star point guard. With starting center Robin Lopez still recuperating from the broken bones in his right hand and reserve big man Joel Freeland still working his way back from a right shoulder strain, Portland's frontcourt was already stretched thin. And Olshey saying Thursday that it's possible that neither Lopez nor Freeland will return before the mid-February All-Star break, Stotts will have to lean even more heavily for frontcourt productivity on the likes of Chris Kaman, Thomas Robinson, Meyers Leonard and Victor Claver, and on small-ball lineups featuring Nicolas Batum and versatile reserve Dorell Wright sliding up to the four spot.


Batum has struggled mightily this season, averaging just 9.4 points in 33.7 minutes per game while shooting a career-low 39.5 percent from the field and just 28.1 percent from 3-point land, but he did have a bounceback outing (27 points on 9-for-15 shooting and 6-for-8 from long distance, 10 rebounds, five assists and a block) in Portland's Wednesday loss to the Phoenix Suns. Blazers fans must now hope even more fervently that the Frenchman's sweet shooting in Arizona was a sign of an impending return to form.


Despite the daunting prospect of facing the double-tough schedule ahead without their most accomplished interior scorer, it's possible that Stotts, one of the league's sharper tacticians, will be able to bubblegum-and-duct-tape together enough solutions to be able to weather the storm, fend off challenges from the snarl of teams below them in the standings (the Memphis Grizzlies, Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Clippers, San Antonio Spurs, Suns and Thunder) and keep the Blazers in position for home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs until Aldridge returns. This is, after all, a deeper, more talented and experienced Portland team than we've seen in the past couple of years, and Lillard sure looks to be more than capable of carrying the weight of superstar-level expectations; Dame seems like the kind of dude who will hear droves of people saying, "Oh, no, this is baaaaad news for Portland," internalize it all, pressurize it into some kind of "nobody believes in us!" anger diamond and go average 30-7-7 for the next six weeks just to prove a point.


That said, there's a reason why the Blazers' offensive efficiency drops from top-five-in-the-league (108 points per 100 possessions) to just-above-bottom-five (100 points-per-100) when Aldridge sits down. It's not just that he's one of the game's elite midrange shooters, a pick-and-pop maestro whom defenses just can't leave alone at the elbows and near the arc lest they suffer the same fate as the Houston Rockets. It's all the open space and opportunity that his shooting, and the threat of his shooting, opens up for Lillard, Batum and 3-point-bombing shooting guard Wesley Matthews. It's the added bonus afforded by the continuity and familiarity that the Blazers' core has built up by playing so many minutes together over the past few seasons. It's the knowledge that, virtually regardless of what happens on an offensive possession and how badly a defense blows it up, they can almost always get a decent look just by giving it to the 6-foot-11 cornerstone with the high, nearly unblockable release.


It's hard to replace all that. Well, no, scratch that; it's probably impossible to replace all that. But the Blazers will have to do their best to keep plugging along, and Aldridge — reportedly in good spirits as he spoke briefly with media after the announcement — will do his best to both get back as quickly as possible and make sure he's healthy enough to stay back once he returns. From Joe Freeman of the Oregonian:


"It's tough. We have been in a pretty good rhythm most of this season. We've lost guys a lot this season. This is a totally different season from last year. But we have a lot of guys here that can step up and play better and make plays. So I feel like the team shouldn't stall. We're going to get guys back soon, so it's going to be good for us."

While Aldridge is to be commended for putting a brave face on bummerific news, we'll have to agree to disagree that anything about this is "good" for the Blazers. The difference between Portland contending for a title and missing the playoffs entirely could very well rest on how well and how quickly a tiny stretch of connective tissue on the outside of a thumb heals. It seems an absurd statement, but it also feels like a sadly appropriate margin of error in this unrelenting Western Conference.


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News sport : Erik Johnson joins group of of players injured for All-Star Game

Dear all players who do not want to come to Columbus for the All-Star Game ... we are having a great time. Your loss.


Erik Johnson became yet another who pulled out with an injury -- this one of the lower body variety according to the Colorado Avalanche's Twitter handle. No timetable was given on his return.


From the Denver Post on Thursday morning:


I’m not giving away sensitive state secrets here, because it’s apparent that Erik Johnson is banged up. He rarely has been practicing and one reason we’re weren’t able to speculate that this might be coming was that the Wednesday morning skate was optional, with only 13 skaters out there with backup goalie Calvin Pickard.


The big goal of an NHL player is not for 'Team Foligno' to defeat 'Team Toews' in an epic blood bath. When Erik Johnson scored a goal in his driveway growing up, it probably wasn't in a black or white and neon jersey. But in one day, the All-Star Game lost him, Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Sergei Bobrovsky. Geez.


For those who wanted P.K. Subban in the All-Star Game ... if he hasn't reached a beach somewhere, here is the NHL's opportunity correct the 'snub.' And if Subban has turned off his cell phone. Oh well.


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Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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News sport : Manu Ginobili whips perfect behind-the-back bounce pass for Patty Mills layup

Those of us who've been lucky enough to watch Manu Ginobili's entire NBA career are intimately familiar with his bona fides as a passing and playmaking wizard. With each nationally televised San Antonio Spurs game, though, comes a new opportunity for the Argentine legend to introduce himself to a brand new crop of young and impressionable fans.


Thankfully, Manu took advantage of that opportunity late in the first quarter of San Antonio's Thursday matchup with the Chicago Bulls:


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A seemingly innocuous right-wing feed from fellow reserve guard Patty Mills that becomes, in one fluid whipping motion,it into a picture-perfect behind-the-back bounce pass that — naturally — hit Mills perfectly in stride on a cut through the Chicago defense to set up a give-and-go layup finish ... that's just classic Manu. The vision to see a pass others wouldn't consider to be a viable option, the stones to throw it, the skill to drop it perfectly in place and the panache to look smooth while doing it.


This, really, is perhaps the ultimate argument for why Gregg Popovich shouldn't rest his aging vets for national TV appearances when the schedule gets crunched up; every time he does, we miss a chance at seeing a little bit of Manu magic happen. (Fortunately, there's always the playoffs.)


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News sport : Sidney Crosby out of All-Star Game with lower body injury

In one day the NHL lost a Vezina Trophy winner and two former Hart Trophy winners from its All-Star Game roster.


Sergei Bobrovsky, gone. Evgeni Malkin, gone. The latest? Sidney Crosby ... with a "lower body" injury. You. Have. Got. To. Be. Kidding Me.


The Penguins posted this release:



Penguins forward Sidney Crosby will miss the 2015 NHL All-Star Game due to a lower-body injury, it was announced today by executive vice president and general manager Jim Rutherford.



Crosby has been playing with the injury and will need about a week to heal.


As a result of missing the All-Star Game, Crosby will not be permitted to play in Pittsburgh’s game on Tuesday, January 27 versus Winnipeg.


For lack of better term, this stinks. Crosby is the face of the NHL and the reason why people tune in for these events. Also, he had been playing with the injury, but just decided at almost 7 p.m. on a Thursday he couldn't make it for the game? OK!


In Wednesday evening's #rivalrynight game against Chicago, Crosby was held without a point and played 23:06. But hear can't play next Tuesday, so it's all good. We should all hold him to that.


Now as for the theme of the day ... which NHL possible All-Star replacement player on vacation hasn't turned off his cell phone?


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Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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News sport : Filip Forsberg to replace Evgeni Malkin in All-Star Game

Consider Thursday, Filip Forsberg’s Bar Mitzvah – the evening in which he went from a rookie star to an All-Star! Or went from boy to man. Or mild-mannered student to superhero. No, Filip wasn’t bitten by a radioactive spider and turned into an … ok I’ll stop there.


He’s an All-Star because Evgeni Malkin has a lower-body injury and couldn’t play in the game. Also, if you’re the NHL can you really disturb any of #theplayers vacation plans?


It would be like ‘Hey, uh Nicklas Backstrom – can you not go to Mexico for a few days and come to Columbus instead?’ No way that could happen. No frikken way. (Ed note: I have no idea where Nicklas Backstrom is going for the break. He’s just really good and didn’t make the team and would be a logical substitution).


Sadly for Brian Elliott he had his cell phone on earlier when the NHL called to have him replace Sergei Bobrovsky. And he was so close to going to the Bahamas.(Ed note 2: In all sincerity, good for Elliott on wanting to participate).


Jeff Skinner jumped in back in 2011, and was given the total rock star treatment by the Raleigh, N.C. faithful. Of course – like Forsberg – Skinner was going to partake in the rookie stuff, which is how he was named anyway.


On his own merits Forsberg is still a worthy candidate. He has 40 points in 45 games on the season to lead Nashville. He will now compete in the game, rather than just the skills competition. And every time he accrues one of those points, Martin Erat demands another trade … or a Washington Capitals fan cries about that trade.


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Josh Cooper is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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News sport : Ohio State's Tyvis Powell and Darron Lee troll Marcus Mariota, Melvin Gordon and Amari Cooper on Twitter

Ohio State safety Tyvis Powell became a Twitter sensation last week when he called out roommate Cardale Jones for his rent money prior to Jones announcing his intention to return to the Buckeyes.


On Thursday, Powell had Twitter abuzz again when he started taking subtle shots at Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota, Wisconsin running back Melvin Gordon and Alabama receiver Amari Cooper.



Of course, linebacker Darron Lee, who also became a Twitter star with his comparisons of Jones to LeBron James, had to chime in with an answer.






While this is some high-level trolling by Powell and Lee, it’s important to note that all three players — Mariota, Gordon and Cooper — are currently training for their NFL careers and all are expected to be high draft picks.


So yes, while they might be a little sad about losing the Big Ten title and ultimately the national title to the Buckeyes, I’m sure those three players will have no problem consoling themselves with their piles of NFL money.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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News sport : Two former UNC student-athletes sue school, NCAA over academic welfare

(AP Photo/Gerry Broome) Two former University of North Carolina student-athletes have filed a lawsuit against the university and the NCAA claiming that neither entity is doing enough to ensure that student-athletes are receiving a proper education.


The suit is seeking damages for all student-athletes affected by UNC academic scandal.


According to CNN’s Sarah Ganim, the suit was filed by Michael Hausfeld, one of the lawyer’s in the O’Bannon suit against the NCAA.


Rashanda McCants, a former women’s basketball player, and Devon Ramsay, a former football player, are named as plaintiffs, though the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday afternoon in Durham County court, is seeking class-action status. McCants is also the sister of Rashad McCants, a starter on the 2005 UNC men’s basketball team that won the national championship.


Ramsey was kicked off the football team in 2010 after receiving improper help from a tutor. Ramsey's attorney, Robert Orr, convinced the NCAA that his client had been wrongly accused and Ramsey was allowed to return to the team. However, he then suffered a career-ending knee injury.


This is the second lawsuit to emerge from North Carolina’s academic fraud scandal.


Former football player Michael McAdoo filed his lawsuit against the schoolin U.S. District Court in Charlotte in November. McAdoo was a former football player who had been kicked off the team in 2010 after the NCAA determined he had received improper help from a tutor.


Last October, UNC acknowledged that 3,100 students – approximately 1,500 of them student-athletes – were steered into bogus classes that were geared toward gaining easy grades and keeping student-athletes eligible. The school also said that many academic and athletic officials knew about the scheme, which went on for 18 years (1993-2011).


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News sport : Kansas State could play its spring game at Kansas City's MLS stadium

Kansas State could play its spring football game off-campus this year at Kansas City’s Sporting Park, home of the city’s MLS team Sporting KC.


Kansas State’s home venue, Bill Snyder Family Stadium, is undergoing construction this spring and there’s concern about the safety of fans coming to watch the game, athletic director John Currie told the Kansas City Star.


“We have been exploring possible options and locations away from Bill Snyder Family Stadium for this year’s spring football game,” Currie told The Star in a statement. “We can confirm that we have reached out to Sporting KC and have had preliminary discussions about bringing the spring game to Kansas City tentatively on the afternoon of April 25. We will make an announcement with full details once the process has been completed.”


The north end of Bill Snyder Family Stadium, which houses the team’s locker room, weight room and coaching offices, was demolished following the 2014 season. The current construction infringes on some of the artificial playing surface in the north end and won’t be completed until closer to the start of the 2015 season.


Sporting Park, which is located on the Kansas side of Kansas City and about 117 miles from Manhattan, Kan., hosted last year’s NCAA Division II football championship, but has never hosted a football practice or contest while Sporting KC was in season.


For more Kansas State news, visit GoPowerCat.com.


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News sport : Reports: Utah State hires former Oklahoma OC Josh Heupel

In this Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014 photo, Josh Heupel, Oklahoma co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, answers a question during media day in Norman, Okla. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki) A few weeks after getting fired as co-offensive coordinator at Oklahoma, Josh Heupel reportedly has a new job.


According to multiple reports, Heupel is headed to Utah State to be its offensive coordinator under head coach Matt Wells.


Heupel, a former Sooners quarterback who was the program’s offensive coordinator for the past four seasons, was let go on Jan. 6 after the Sooners trudged to an 8-5 finish. Before being promoted to offensive coordinator, Heupel served as Oklahoma’s quarterbacks coach from 2006-2010. He also was a graduate assistant with Oklahoma in 2004 after a brief NFL career.


He’ll replace Kevin McGiven, who left Utah State to be the quarterbacks coach at Oregon State under former Utah State head coach Gary Andersen.


Before his time as quarterback at Oklahoma, Heupel had playing stints at two colleges in Utah – Weber State and Snow Junior College – so he’s familiar with the state.


The Aggies went 10-4 in 2014, culminating with a 21-6 win over UTEP in the New Mexico Bowl.


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News sport : Meet Tennessee State OT Robert Myers: 6-foot-5 ... 6-9 with the afro

MOBILE, Ala. — With hundreds of coaches and scouts in attendance, the Senior Bowl is a great place to get noticed. For good reasons and for bad.


For Tennessee State OT Robert Myers, we're not sure which category to put him in.


On the one hand, his on-field performance in a decent group of tackle has been somewhat up and down. A mixed-bag first day was followed by a very strong Wednesday practice and then, disappointingly, an ankle injury that kept him out of the Thursday practice — the final session before Saturday's game.


But this much we know: His hair game is strong. Very strong. Check out the locks on young Mr. Myers.


"My coaches in college thought I should cut it down," he said with a smile that suggested Myers never seriously considered the possibility. "I get a little buzz about it."


Nice pun, son.


Myers made quite the entrance on Tuesday morning at the weigh-in, striding confidently across the stage with his bi-colored hair and a nice physique. The man in charge of measuring heights made sure, Myers said, to measure from his skull — and not on top of the afro. He said he's had this style of hair for about a year and a half, and Myers hasn't had it cut in about 10 months.


"Not everyone can wear it like this, so I am just trying it out for a while," he said.


Scouts might come for the hair, but they stay for his play. At least that is Myers' hope.


Myers said one thing that has allowed him to play well this week before getting hurt is that a lot of the offensive concepts of the Tennessee Titans, who are coaching Myers' North squad this week, are very similar to the Tigers' system, with slightly different verbiage.


"The Titans' offense is very similar," he said. "Different words for the same things, basically. Just learning a new vocabulary.


"Even hurt [Thursday] I am trying to help out with the guys, getting them in the right spots."


All in all, even with the injury, Myers likes what he has done in a few short days.


"I think I made a mark," Myers said. "I think I got some attention with my play. I think I've done enough to change the minds of people."


And maybe changing minds on a different kind of 'do, too.


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News sport : In meeting with Obama, Jayhawks give president a No. 1 jersey

President Barack Obama is a huge college basketball fan. So it only made sense for him to pay the Kansas Jayhawks and coach Bill Self a visit Thursday when he visited campus as part of his post-State of the Union tour.


Obama, who shares his NCAA Tournament bracket publicly each year, joked during his visit that he had lost the state in his two presidential elections. He also praised Self and the Jayhawks for winning 10 straight Big 12 Conference titles and being tied atop the conference once again with Iowa State.


The Jayhawks presented Obama with a Kansas jersey bearing his name prior to his speech at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Kansas players took to Twitter to share their excitement in getting to meet Obama.





One day before Obama's visit to campus, junior guard Evan Manning had some fun with his fellow students.




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News sport : Warriors revel in proving they are 'that good' after 4th straight blowout of Rockets

Here's how Houston Rockets star James Harden referred to the Golden State Warriors before their matchup on Saturday night:



The clip of Harden telling his huddled-up teammates that the Warriors — who entered that contest with an NBA-best record of 31-6 — were "not that good, man," despite having already beaten Houston twice by double figures this season, was later deleted from the Rockets' Instagram account. Nothing's ever really gone on the Internet, though, even if the "Swag Champs" might have wished it would disappear after a third straight major loss to that "not that good" team.


Houston had a chance to bounce back from their troika of beatdowns on Wednesday, and ... well, it didn't go so hot:


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The firing-on-all-cylinders Warriors needed just under seven minutes to build a double-digit lead, which Golden State center Andrew Bogut punctuated by emphatically rejecting Houston star Dwight Howard at the rim, twice:



While Houston charged back to keep things tight for a while behind a steady stream of trips to the line and delivered dimes from Harden, the Rockets just had no answer once Golden State hit the gas just before the midpoint of the second quarter.


Steve Kerr's club ripped off a 20-3 run that spanned nearly 7 1/2 minutes, putting the clamps on Houston (just 1-for-12 shooting after a Dwight Howard dunk at the 7:26 mark) while cranking up their own ball movement and shotmaking (thanks in large part to Klay Thompson's 11 points in that stretch) to turn an in-the-balance contest into a 20-point blowout by halftime. The lead would balloon to 30 on a Draymond Green triple with 5 1/2 minutes left in the third, and the Dubs cracked the century mark with 50 seconds left in the frame.


A mid-fourth garbage-time run keyed by the likes of Alexey Shved, Corey Brewer, Joey Dorsey and Jason Terry — a surge that came after Josh Smith got ejected, because there's apparently no performance-enhancing drug greater than getting rid of Smoove these days — brought Thompson, Green and Stephen Curry back off Kerr's bench, but Houston drew no closer than nine. The result: a fourth straight double-digit defeat for the "Swag Champs" at the hands of the West's best team, who now stand at 34-6, winners of 17 straight at the rollicking Oracle Arena, with the last 10 home wins coming by at least 13 points. (Yeah, that's a record.)


Curry continued his MVP campaign with 22 points and 10 assists (albeit against six turnovers, which will cost him) in 34 minutes, boosting his season shooting marks above the fabled 50-40-90 line — 50.1 percent from the floor, 40.2 percent from 3-point land, 91.5 percent from the charity stripe — while also showing a bit more fire than we're accustomed to seeing from Dell's son after a third-quarter bump from Trevor Ariza:



Holding Curry back to keep him from getting in trouble — just another critical won't-show-up-in-the-box-score contribution from Draymond Green. Send that man to the All-Star Game!


The bad blood between these two teams stretches back two seasons, and as the Curry-Ariza brouhaha showed, it seems to reaching a new and rolling boil, perhaps sparked by Harden's recent pre-game denigration of the Dubs' talents. It's no surprise, then, that the Warriors seemed to particularly relish the victory that locked up a season sweep of Kevin McHale's squad, according to Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group:


Here is a transcript of a smiling [Draymond] Green, dripping with sarcasm after the game, in response to the [Harden] video:

Q: With the way you guys have been beating teams lately, do you think getting up by these big margins might have that effect on teams?

A: I mean, I’m sure they were a little frustrated because we’re not that good. So to get up by 20 like that in the half and then come out in the third quarter I’m sure is a little frustrating. But hey, we’re not that good. Shouldn’t be up by 20 at half. Happens though, right?

Q: What’d you think of that, ‘They’re not that good thing?’

A: Uh, [Harden's] right. We’re nowhere near where we’re going to be at the end of this year. We’ve got to continue to get better and stay healthy and then we’ll look back at this point in the season and say, ‘Man, we weren’t that good.’ So he’s right.

Green then turned to teammate Brandon Rush: We’re not that good. Well, you saw it. You got Twitter?

Rush: Yeah, I got Twitter.

Green: You got Instagram? Then you saw. We’re not that good…I guess we’re not that good…Yeah, you know if we’re not that good…Four losses to somebody ain’t that good. [...]

Q: Seventeen consecutive home wins is pretty good, stands alone in franchise history. What does that mean to you?

A: Seventeen in a row at home, that can’t be all this year can it be? It can’t be if we’re not that good.

Curry wasn't quite as demonstrative as his power forward, but he took the opportunity to enjoy himself, too, according to ESPN.com's Ethan Sherwood Strauss:


After the game, Curry was less sarcastic but equally pointed: "We showed we are pretty good, especially against them."

Well, there's no disputing that.


The Warriors averaged 115 points per game against the Rockets this year, shooting just under 50 percent from the floor as a team and a crisp 38.2 percent from 3-point land en route to their four-game sweep. Against the league at large, Houston's allowing just 99.5 points-per-100, marking them as the NBA's fourth-stingiest defense; against the Warriors this season, they gave up 109.6-per-100, which would slot them in just north of the circling-the-drain Minnesota Timberwolves, owners of the league's most permissive D.


No matter how you slice it, Golden State whipped the Rockets from pillar to post during the regular season, outscoring the Rockets by a whopping 13.8 points per 100 possessions, a simply monstrous number. Then again, it's not like the Warriors have singled out Houston specifically for this sort of beatdown. (Well, maybe they did on Wednesday night.) They're actually doing this to pretty much everybody.


Through 40 games, Golden State — owners of the NBA's third-best offense (110.2 points-per-100 scored) and top-of-the-pops defense (97 points-per-100 allowed) — has outscored its opposition by 13.2 points per 100 possessions. The No. 2 team in that "efficiency differential" stat, the Dallas Mavericks, is +7.8-per-100. NBA.com's stat tool has these sorts of advanced stats stretching back to the 1996-97 season; in that time, only four teams have finished a full season above +10-per-100 — the 2012-13 Oklahoma City Thunder (+11), the 2008-09 Cleveland Cavaliers: (+10.3), the 2007-08 Boston Celtics (+11.5) and the 1996-97 Chicago Bulls (+12). This, it is fair to say, is bonkers.


The statistical indicators that the Warriors might actually be an all-time great don't stop there, though. From SB Nation's Jesus Gomez:


The Warriors have an average margin of victory of +11.3 points points per game, well above the second-place Hawks, who come in a distant second with a +7.1 average. If that holds until the end of the season, the Warriors will become only the eighth team in history to finish with an average point differential of over 10.

The other seven teams? The 1970-71 and 1971-72 Bucks, the 1971-72 Lakers, the 1991-92, 1995-96 and 1996-97 Bulls and the 2007-08 Celtics. Six of those teams went on to win the championship; the only team that didn't was the 71-72 Bucks, who lost to the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals.

Looking like a world-class wrecking crew at the halfway point doesn't necessarily mean you're going to be hoisting the O'Brien in late June; just ask last year's Indiana Pacers. Nor, to be fair, does finishing the full season with a chart-topping differential — as Gomez notes, last year's San Antonio Spurs won the championship after leading the league in margin of victory, but the previous four differential leaders didn't, and while the '96-'97 Bulls and '07-'08 Celtics won it all after finishing +10 or better per-100, the '08-'09 Cavs and '12-'13 Thunder didn't. (Then again, lest we forget, that Thunder team lost Russell Westbrook just two games into the playoffs.) A lot can happen between now and the start of the playoffs; by springtime, the Warriors might look a lot more vulnerable than they do this Thursday.


Some folks, though, still seem to think the Warriors ain't all that right now. Take it away, Superman:


After the game, Howard was asked if the Warriors were the best team in the league. "I think the [Atlanta] Hawks are the best team," he said. "Think they got the best record, right?

Now, that's not technically true. The Warriors have a better winning percentage and lead the Hawks by two in the loss column.

Oh, well. It's like I always say, Dwight: Never let the facts get in the way of a good story, especially when said story might help in some small way soothe the pain of the butt-kicking you just received.


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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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Chikhaoui hands Tunisia victory

Yassine Chikhaoui's glancing header three minutes from time secured Tunisia a 2-1 win over Zambia in their Afcon Group B match.


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Ebibeyin, Equatorial Guinea - Yassine Chikhaoui's glancing header three minutes from time secured Tunisia a 2-1 win over Zambia in their African Nations Cup Group B match at Estadio de Ebebiyin on Thursday.


It gives Tunisia four points and a strong chance to advance to the quarter-finals while Zambia, who were tournament winners in 2012, are in deep peril but have only themselves to blame after missing a host of chances.


Emmanuel Mayuka, who had two good first half opportunities, broke the deadlock on the hour with a rasping shot but will rue heading straight at Tunisia goalkeeper Aymen Mathlouthi in the 41st minute and then, on the stroke of halftime, miscuing a shot straight in front of goal.


Zambia dominated most of the first half exchanges and eventually got reward for their attacking application when Mayuka was found unmarked at the back post to fire home from close range. He was set up by a pass from captain Rainford Kalaba, who jinxed his way through a static Tunisian defence.


Mayuka later went off with a groin injury.


A missed effort from Evans Kangwa was further evidence of a wasteful night, allowing Tunisia to stay in connection.


Tunisia equalised from a 70th minute corner where Syam Ben Youssef touched the ball on for Ahmed Akaichi to score at the back post as Zambia's defence were caught ball-watching.


Youssef Msakni, restored to the starting line-up, then set up the winner with a chase of a long ball, which he kept in play before chipping in a cross that Chikhaoui connected after timing his run into the defence with perfect precision.


Both Tunisia and Zambia drew their opening game but Zambia must now win their last game against Cape Verde on Monday while a draw for Tunisia against the Democratic Republic of Congo, at the same time in Bata, should be enough to see them into the quarter-finals.


Reuters






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