News sport : Possible NCAA violation discovered in Vanderbilt rape case testimony

Could a rape trial involving former Vanderbilt football players uncover NCAA violations?


According to testimony in the case involving former Vanderbilt football players, alcohol consumed on the night of the alleged incident was purchased by a possible booster. The purchase would be an impermissible benefit under NCAA guidelines if Angela Gentry meets the NCAA's definition of a booster.


From the Tennesseean:



The alleged victim in the case testified under oath that a booster purchased drinks for Commodores football players on June 23, 2013, a violation of the NCAA’s “extra benefits” rule.




Bylaw 16.02.3 rule states that athletes may not be provided with money, gifts, loans, flowers or other items from anyone representing an institution, including fans.




Angela Gentry, who is from West Palm Beach, Fla., was identified in earlier court filings as being a person who picked up the alcohol tab for Vanderbilt players. She could meet the NCAA’s definition for a booster.




In an interview with The Tennessean in June 2014, Gentry admitted to having met one of the accused former players, Brandon Vandenburg, once. Gentry denied regularly buying drinks for athletes, but said it may have happened on occasion.



It's unclear if the NCAA would investigate the incident and possibly hand down any minor penalties.


The testimony is part of the trial involving Vandenburg and former player Cory Batey. They, along with Brandon Banks and Jaborian McKenzie (whose trials are at a later date), are charged with rape involving an unconscious student. The woman testified for 90 minutes on Thursday about the alleged incident, and identified the woman in video from the incident as herself.


In her testimony, she said she's never been as drunk as she was that night.


McKenzie testified earlier in the week that Vandenburg was "amped" before the alleged incident. The four players accused were dismissed from the team following the allegations.


For more Vanderbilt news, visit VandySports.com.


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







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News sport : Seahawks corner says Rob Gronkowski isn't that good


First, a disclaimer: "Bulletin-board material" is a farce.


If an NFL player needs an opponent to say something out of line about him or his team to get excited to play a game, he's probably in the wrong profession. If a player needs that extra motivation for a Super Bowl, it's really time to retire.


So we don't point out Seattle Seahawks cornerback Jeremy Lane's comments because they are so-called "bulletin-board material" before the Super Bowl. They're just hilariously wrong.


Here's Lane on New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski, via the Seattle Times:



“I actually don’t think he’s that good,” Lane said. “He’s OK. But he does have a big body, and from what I’ve seen on tape, he don’t like your hands being put on him. So if we put our hands on him and shake him up a little bit, he won’t catch that many balls as he should.”



He's OK? You can argue (and I have) that Gronkowski is the most dominant tight end in NFL history. He has 52 touchdowns in 65 games. He has double-digit touchdowns in four of five seasons and played only seven games in the season he didn't reach 10. Tony Gonzalez reached double digits in touchdowns three times in his 17 NFL campaigns. Shannon Sharpe had two in 14 seasons. Oh, and Gronkowski is also a fantastic blocker. So yeah, his best receiving seasons are better than any other tight end in NFL history and as a bonus he's a plus blocker, unlike a lot of the most prolific receiving tight ends through the years. He's "OK" in the same way that any Hall-of-Fame tight end was "OK."


But this Seahawks defense that Lane is a part of is more than just OK as well. They're one of the best defenses ever. It'll be quite fun to see if they can control Gronk. Not many opponents have.


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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 : Impatient Duke fans once wanted Mike Krzyzewski fired

Three years into his tenure at Duke, the man now known as his era's most successful coach didn't appear to be on the road to shattering records or hoisting championship trophies.


In fact, a vocal segment of the Blue Devils fan base wanted Mike Krzyzewski out.


Duke fans celebrate their 79-65 win over Pitt, marking Mike Krzyzewski's 999th career win. (USA TODAY Sports) One of Duke's Tobacco Road rivals had just completed a stunning championship run under beloved coach Jim Valvano. The other was at the apex of its power under legendary coach Dean Smith. The Blue Devils on the other hand had just concluded back-to-back 17-loss seasons under Krzyzewski culminating with a 43-point shellacking in the 1983 ACC quarterfinals against Virginia.


"Durham was not a pleasant place to be in 1983," said former Duke forward Jay Bilas, a freshman on the 1982-83 team. "There was a lot of discontentment around the program, and it was vocal. Heck, there was a petition circling around calling for Mike to be fired. I saw it. One of the Iron Dukes showed it to me, which I thought was kind of a classless move. But there were a lot of people who were really unhappy."


Duke is very fortunate its athletic director had more patience and foresight than most of its deep-pocked alumni did at the time. Tom Butters' faith in Krzyzewski was so unwavering that he called the Duke coach into his office a few weeks into the 1983-84 season and awarded him a five-year contract extension to drive home the message that no change was imminent.


The same overzealous alumni who wrote Butters angry letters calling for Krzyzewski's firing later wrote fawning letters urging the athletic director to pay his basketball coach whatever it took to keep him from leaving. Krzyzewski gained the support of Duke fans by taking the Blue Devils to 11 Final Fours and capturing four national championships, winning so many games along the way that he could become the first Division I coach to claim his 1,000th college victory on Sunday against St. John's.


"Someone who never gets enough credit is Tom Butters," said Bobby Dwyer, an assistant coach under Krzyzewski his first three seasons at Duke. "When we struggled a little bit our second and third year in particular, he never wavered. He was rock solid. I look around nowadays and it seems like people aren't as patient with coaches as they used to be. Tom Butters deserves a lot of credit for the success Duke basketball has had the last 30 years."


If Butters warrants more praise for standing by Krzyzewski during his early struggles, he also should receive more recognition for making the unpopular decision to hire him in the first place.


When Duke coach Bill Foster resigned in 1980 to accept the same position at South Carolina, Butters began a search to find a replacement. Krzyzewski became a candidate despite going 9-17 at Army the previous season because Duke associate athletic director Steve Vacendak urged Butters to consider him.


"Tom turned to me and he said, 'How bad do you want my job?'" Vacendak said. "He said, 'Let me see if I've got this right. You want me to hire a coach whose name I can't pronounce, I can't spell and who has a losing record at Army to be the head coach at Duke?' I said, 'Yup, that's your man.'"


Vacendak's recommendation stemmed partially from the glowing praise of his high school coach, a good friend of Krzyzewski's. The Duke associate athletic director also had witnessed one of Krzyzewski's practices in advance of a game against Navy and emerged impressed with how the Army coach assessed the strengths and weaknesses of his opponent and prepared his team.


Open-minded yet unconvinced, Butters consulted with Bob Knight and then flew Krzyzewski to Durham for an interview. The Duke athletic director came away certain Krzyzewski had the potential to be an outstanding coach, yet he let the 33-year-old leave for the airport without a job offer because he was fearful of how the public would perceive such an off-the-radar hire.


Only minutes later, Butters reconsidered. He dispatched Vacendak to bring Krzyzewski back from the airport, so he could offer the job in person.


Duke's student newspaper proclaiming this is not a typo the morning after Krzyzewski was hired in 1980 "I wasn't too surprised because if you know Tom Butters, you know that perception is never going to trump reality with him," Vacendak said. "He probably did anticipate this wasn't going to be what the public expected or even wanted but he was going to hire the best man for the job."


The hiring indeed inspired disbelief, especially after the Durham papers had reported that the new coach would be chosen from among Old Dominion's Paul Webb, Mississippi's Bob Weltlich and Duke assistant Bob Wenzel. Butters joked with reporters that they had gotten the first letter of Krzyzewski's surname correct before introducing him as ''Coach Who?''


Though Butters defiantly called Krzyzewski ''the most brilliant young basketball coach in the country," the Durham media was skeptical this unknown coach could hold his own in the cutthroat ACC. The Duke student newspaper summed it up best the morning after the hiring of Krzyzewski, running a headline that read "This is not a typo."


Enough talent remained from the previous season for Krzyzewski to lead Duke to 17 wins and an NIT bid his first year, but the threadbare roster he fielded in year two simply wasn't ACC-caliber. Foster had endured some lean recruiting years late in his tenure and Krzyzewski and his staff had struck out in their pursuit of Chris Mullin, Jim Miller, Bill Wennington and a handful of other premier prospects.


Duke went 10-17 that season under Krzyzewski, its worst record since the 1920s when the Blue Devils weren't even members of a conference. Fans clamored for Krzyzewski to abandon his trademark aggressive man-to-man defense for a zone that would better hide the team's lack of talent but the second-year coach wouldn't budge, instead opting to work even harder in recruiting to find players who better fit his system.


The string of near-misses in his first recruiting cycle taught Krzyzewski not to cast such a wide net the second time. He targeted only eight elite prospects even though he had six scholarships to fill, selling them on his vision for the program and what they could build together at Duke if they came.


Winning a recruiting battle against some prominent Midwest programs for Weldon Williams gave Krzyzewski credibility even if the career reserve never made the impact projected. Outdueling Syracuse and Arizona for Bilas was significant too. The key to the class, however, was landing coveted shooting guard Johnny Dawkins because fellow top prospects Mark Alarie and David Henderson both were eager to play with the high-scoring Washington D.C. native.


"I think everyone would agree the lynchpin was Johnny," Dwyer said. "Once we got those kids, they were the foundation. They weren't just great players. They were great people. They had all the intangibles you could want."


In today's era of college basketball, a star-studded No. 1 ranked recruiting class like that would probably win right away. In an era when college basketball's best players stayed in school for three or four years, it was much harder for a freshman-heavy team no matter how talented they were.


Duke endured another 17-loss season in Krzyzewski's third year and went 3-11 in ACC play. The embarrassment of a 24-point drubbing at home against rival North Carolina in the regular season finale was only trumped by the humiliation of a 109-66 mauling from Virginia in the ACC quarterfinals.


Hours after suffering what still stands as the most one-sided loss in Duke history against the Cavaliers, Krzyzewski and a handful of Duke staffers went out for a late-night meal at a nearby Denny's.


Johnny Moore, Duke's sports information director at the time, tried to lighten the mood by raising his glass of water and saying, "Here's to forgetting tonight." Krzyzewski then raised his own glass and famously answered, "Here's to never forgetting tonight."


Later in the meal, Dwyer suggested an uncommitted prospect that Duke could still pursue.


"Mike said, 'No, we're going with what we got,'" Dwyer recalled. "He said, 'We've got good kids. We've built a good foundation. If we can't win with what we've got, we deserve to get fired.'"


Of course, Krzyzewski did not get fired thanks to the Butters' faith in him. He got a contract extension, much to the relief of many of the talented young players who would eventually form the nucleus of the 1985-86 Duke team that won 37 games and lost in the national championship game to Louisville.


"He came into the locker room and we had a very short meeting before practice," Bilas said. "He said, 'Look, I just signed a new extension. If any of you were concerned in any way, there's nothing to be concerned about. Now let's go practice.' Everybody felt better after that. It was never a problem, but you just felt better."


The notion of Krzyzewski ever getting fired became more and more laughable as years went by and the Duke coach began his assault on the record books. By 1992, he had won his second championship. By 1994, he had been to seven Final Fours in nine seasons. By 2005, he had been appointed the savior of USA Basketball.


In an era of instant gratification when coaches seldom get more than a few years to prove themselves, Krzyzewski's success serves as reminder of the value of patience.


The no-name coach many Duke fans wanted gone three years into his tenure is now one of the legends of his sport 900-plus wins later.





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Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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News sport : D'Qwell Jackson says he had nothing to do with deflate-gate


Indianapolis Colts linebacker D’Qwell Jackson cleared up his role in deflate-gate, which is to say he had no role in it.


Multiple reports said the controversy with the New England Patriots using under-inflated footballs during the AFC championship game started when Jackson intercepted Tom Brady’s pass. As the story went, Jackson noticed the ball was flatter than usual, and that news moved to the equipment manager to the coach to the general manager to the NFL to the game officials, who swapped out the under-inflated balls after halftime.


Jackson said he just wanted a souvenir. That’s common. Many players save balls after scoring touchdowns, or defensive players save interception balls, to put in their trophy case. Jackson had no inkling that would lead to the story of the week in the NFL.



"I made a great play on a great player, so I handed (the ball) off and next thing I know, I'm in the middle of DeflateGate,” Jackson said to the Indianapolis Star. “I don't know how that happened."



Jackson said he didn’t even know there was a controversy until Monday morning, the Star said. On the ride home from the airport, his driver told him there was a growing controversy about the Patriots and under-inflated footballs. That's the first he had heard about it. It says something about how outraged the Colts were that their middle linebacker had no clue anything was going on during the game.


Jackson told NFL.com the only odd thing he noticed was that the Patriots were using the Colts' footballs late in the first half. But he had no idea why; he just found it strange the Patriots had run out of their own footballs to use.


Jackson said he didn’t even notice anything different about the ball he intercepted.



“I wouldn't know how that could even be an advantage or a disadvantage," Jackson said to NFL.com. "I definitely wouldn't be able to tell if one ball had less pressure than another."



The ironic thing is that the ball he wanted to keep as a souvenir is now in possession of the NFL as the league investigates the matter. Jackson’s name has come up with the controversy many times, but he says he personally had nothing to do with it.



"I mean, Anderson Cooper asked my agent if I could come on his show," Jackson said. "I'm honored that he wants to talk to me, I guess, but I really just wanted my souvenir from a special accomplishment in my career."



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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 : Boston College looking for OC after Ryan Day heads to NFL

Boston College is in need of an offensive coordinator.


The Philadelphia Eagles announced Thursday that Ryan Day would be the team's new quarterbacks coach. Day served as Boston College's offensive coordinator for the past two seasons.



He came to Boston College in 2013 after Steve Addazio was hired as the team's head coach. Day was Temple's offensive coordinator in 2012 and coached at Boston College for a total of nine seasons. From 2007-2011 he was the team's wide receivers coach and was a graduate assistant in the 2003 and 2004 seasons.


The Eagles went to the Pinstripe Bowl this year as Day's run-heavy offense continued to flourish with Florida transfer Tyler Murphy. In 2013, running back Andre Williams (now with the New York Giants) was a Heisman finalist with 2,177 yards rushing.


In 2014, Boston College was 15th in the country in rushing yards. QB Murphy ran for 1,184 yards while RB Jon Hilliman had 860.


For more Boston College news, visit EagleAction.com.


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







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City can win without Toure - Pellegrini

Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini has told his players they must believe they can win without Yaya Toure after failing to do so in the four league games he has missed this season.


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London - Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini has told his players they must believe they can win without Yaya Toure after failing to do so in the four league games he has missed this season.


Toure is currently on international duty with Ivory Coast at the African Nations Cup and his departure has coincided with City losing to Arsenal and drawing with Everton in their last two Premier League outings.


The only other two league games he has missed this season have ended in draws with Burnley in December and Arsenal earlier in the campaign.


Having cancelled out a substantial deficit to Chelsea, they have since fallen five points adrift of the Premier League summit once more.


With a crunch clash against the leaders to come next weekend, Pellegrini has urged his players to overcome the psychological blow of losing the powerhouse midfielder, who will be unavailable until next month.


“He is very important player for us,” the Chilean was quoted as saying by the Guardian.


“But for the moment we must continue playing and not thinking it is impossible to win without him because I don't think this team depends on just one player.”


City, who face an FA Cup fourth round trip to second tier Middlesbrough on Saturday, arrive back in Britain after a winter break in Abu Dhabi on Friday, around 21 hours before kickoff.


Pellegrini decided to stay away an extra day after being given the option to return on Thursday, but denied that the tight turnaround could cause problems.


“We are not worried about the travelling element. There is only a few hours difference between and we will return to the CFA (City Football Academy) on Friday and prepare for the game as normal,” he said on the club website (www.mcfc.co.uk).


“It was the right time to have a break and we've enjoyed our stay in Abu Dhabi. Last January we played eight or nine games so it was important to have this time so we can return refreshed.”


Middlesbrough are second in the Championship and Pellegrini is not planning to rest players and risk an upset.


“Of course there are always opportunities for players to impress and stake a claim for a place but we are playing on Saturday and not in midweek and we will have a full week to recover before we play Chelsea so with that in mind, I will try and put out the strongest team I can,” he said. – Reuters






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Ribery voices Ballon d’Or frustration

Franck Ribery says only Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi seem capable of winning the Ballon d'Or.


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France's Franck Ribery says only Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi seem capable of winning the Ballon d'Or and has voiced his frustration after Bayern Munich team-mate Manuel Neuer missed out.


Portugal's superstar Ronaldo won the prestigious award for the second year running earlier this month in Zurich with Messi second and goalkeeper Neuer third.


Much to his frustrations, Ribery missed out on scooping the 2013 title, also finishing third behind the superstar pair despite strong displays in helping Bayern win that year's Champions League title.


“I was really angry, but it is the same every year: you don't know what you have to do in order to win the vote,” Ribery told Munich daily AZ.


The Frenchman questions whether it is even worth a Bayern Munich player even bothering to attend the gala award ceremony in the future.


Between them, Ronaldo and Messi have won the award for the last seven years and Ribery questioned what more Neuer could have done to dethrone them after winning the World Cup with Germany.


“It clearly appears that winning the World Cup isn't enough,” Ribery fumed.


“For the last two or three years, Neuer has been the world's best goalkeeper and had won titles with the club.


“In Brazil, he was the best goalkeeper and is a world champion, but that's clearly not enough. I don't understand it!


“If a Bayern player is again nominated, we should consider whether it is worth travelling to the award ceremony.


“For what? Perhaps to have a photo taken? No!


“That is just politics for me.


“Every player needs to know: if Ronaldo and Messi are there, the third nominated player doesn't have a chance.”


Ribery has played for Bayern since 2007 and says he is set to finish his career at the Bavarian giants with his contract to expire in 2017 when he will be 34.


“I'll have to see how I feel and how my body reacts. I can afford to stay relaxed about it,” he said.


“Perhaps it is important for Bayern that I play here for another year or two after that. We'll see.” – AFP






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Crunch time for Bafana

Shakes Mashaba believes Bafana Bafana can win the Africa Cup of Nations despite the team fighting for their livelihood against Senegal.


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Mongomo – A bullish Shakes Mashaba believes Bafana Bafana can win the Africa Cup of Nations despite the team fighting for their livelihood against Senegal tonight at the Estadio de Mongomo.


It’s crunch time for Mashaba’s charges after they lost their first match in Equatorial Guinea against Algeria. Bafana are bottom of Group C following their 3-1 defeat, while Senegal are second after their 2-1 win over Ghana.


Bafana now basically have to win both their remaining match against The Lions of Terenga and the Black Stars (Monday) if they want to qualify for the quarter-finals of the tournament.


The coach, though, is confident that they will get over these two hurdles and progress all the way to the final.


“The feeling is still the same, it hasn’t changed. We still think we can go on and win the tournament,” Mashaba told reports at the pre-match press conference last night.


“The other team (Algeria) had a bit more luck on their side on the day, so that game didn’t dampen our spirits. We looking to go further in the tournament, and the furthest you can go is into the finals of this competition.”


But Bafana haven’t managed to beat Senegal in five meetings since 2002. The two sides have drawn three times, while the West African giants have managed to beat their southern rivals twice. Their last meeting at the Nations Cup was at Ghana 2008, when the two teams played to a 1-1 draw.


Some of the Senegalese journalists tried to remind Mashaba of their poor record against their team, but the coach was firm in his stance that they were going to win the match tonight.


In fact, he even tried to put some of the pressure on Senegal, by saying they would be desperate to win to qualify for the quarters with a match to spare.


“History is something good to reflect on. But we are in a different time and a different era. We will definitely make sure that we win this game tomorrow night,” Mashaba said.


The reaction to the loss against Algeria back home wasn’t great, and although the team is essentially still in a building phase, the South African public is expecting a good showing from the national team.


Meanwhile, all of Bafana’s players – except injured defender Rivaldo Coetzee – trained last night and have been declared fit to play after a few players were down this week with a stomach bug. Bafana also welcome back suspended defender Eric Mathoho and midfielder Reneilwe Letsholonyane after they missed the first match because of suspension.


“Mathoho and Yeye (are) going to be a big boost for us,” said midfielder Dean Furman, who was again at the coach and captain’s press conference last night.


“Obviously they weren’t available for the first match, but just their experience and know-how helped us going into the first match. Now they can play and it’s a big boost for us. It leaves the coach with a good headache.” - The Star






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Agent fuels De Gea speculation

David De Gea’s Manchester United future was thrown into doubt last night as his agent failed to rule out a move to Real Madrid in the summer.


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David De Gea’s Manchester United future was thrown into doubt last night as his agent failed to rule out a move to Real Madrid in the summer.


De Gea has 18 months left on his contract and has yet to agree new terms to stay at Old Trafford as he takes stock of his future with Real watching developments.


His agent Jorge Mendes, who also represents Cristiano Ronaldo, was asked by Spanish media if he could see the 24-year-old moving to Madrid.


‘David is amazing, he’s brilliant,’ the Portuguese agent told Marca. ‘He’s a Man United player and has a contract there. You have to respect that but things change every five minutes.’


Despite the signing of former Barcelona keeper Victor Valdes, United boss Louis van Gaal has insisted that De Gea will extend his current deal at Old Trafford.


Van Gaal, whose side face Cambridge United in the FA Cup tonight, yesterday dismissed criticism of his tactics and claimed that United’s traditional 4-4-2 formation makes him nervous.


After discussing the merits of a back three over a back four, he insisted he would ignore critics who want him to ditch his favoured 3-5-2 line-up.


In a variation on Sir Alex Ferguson’s famous quote about ‘squeaky bum time’, Van Gaal said: ‘I know that with 4-4-2 the stats are giving the positive results, but when you analyse the game I have twitched my a*** on the bench because we were out of balance — I don’t like it.’ – Daily Mail






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Van Gaal wary of Cambridge

For just the second time in Manchester United's 137-year history, the team plays at Cambridge.


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London – For just the second time in Manchester United's 137-year history, the team plays at Cambridge on Friday.


It's the latest trip into the unknown for Louis van Gaal, whose side overcame Yeovil in the third round of the FA Cup earlier this month but was humiliated by MK Dons in the League Cup in August.


FA Cup fourth-round opponent Cambridge is 76 places in the football pyramid below United, which is fourth in the Premier League.


“It's always tough to play against teams that, in the mind of the players, are weaker,” Van Gaal said Thursday. “In our minds you are believing that we are playing against a weaker opponent but that's not like that. It's another opponent with another playing style with other players and we have to beat them.”


The Dutch coach has been doing his homework on the fourth-tier side, which United last played over two legs in the League Cup in the 1991-92 season.


“Cambridge play very direct, with long balls,” Van Gaal said. “They have five or six players above 1 meter 90 centimetres (6-foot-3) so for us it's difficult to defend and that's why you have to prepare yourself very good. It's not so easy to beat Cambridge United.”


One face will be familiar with United fans: academy graduate Luke Chadwick. But the midfielder left Old Trafford in 2004 and never played with any of its current players.


“It's the first time I've been involved in a game against them, really looking forward to it,” said Chadwick, who made 39


appearances for United and won the 2001 Premier League.


“It's a great club here at Cambridge and we deserve this draw against a massive club ... we'll have the whole world watching on Friday night and they'll be able to show them how good they are.”


The game kicks off a weekend of FA Cup matches. – Sapa-AP






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Wenger laments missing out on Di Maria

Arsene Wenger revealed he missed out on bringing Angel di Maria to Arsenal nine years ago due to employment red tape.


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Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger wants work permits for foreign footballers to be scrapped.


The Frenchman, who revealed he missed out on bringing Angel di Maria to the club nine years ago due to employment red tape, says the UK’s football authorities should open its borders to all overseas players, not just those who qualify for the necessary paperwork.


Arsenal are poised to sign Villarreal’s Gabriel Paulista, who has a £15million release clause. But the transfer is reliant on the Brazilian obtaining a work permit, which will not be a foregone conclusion given the central defender has not played international football.


Rules state that only players who have played 75 per cent of matches for a nation inside FIFA’s top 70 within the past two years are eligible for work permits. This is to safeguard the progress of academy players into first teams. Arsenal say they will appeal if Paulista cannot join them this month.


Next season new rules will see players who cost £10m and over automatically granted a work permit. But Wenger says all work permit regulations should be abandoned, claiming it would help produce more accomplished youngsters.


‘The target of the Premier League, is to be the best league in the world,’ said Wenger. ‘So you have to open it completely.


‘We identified Di Maria when he was 17. We wanted him to come here, but he goes to Portugal, from Portugal he goes to Spain. Why? Because he could not get a work permit here. That means you can only get him to England once he is worth a huge amount of money.’


On the impact abolishing work permit rules would have on academies, Wenger said: ‘We live in a world where artificial protection is negative. If you want to be the best league in the world then you have to accept you have to produce the best players in the world.


‘So the question is, how can you produce the best players?


‘There’s two ways to approach the solution of the academies. You close completely the borders and you play only with English players. What will that do? That will kill the attractiveness of the Premier League and I think that’s not the best way to develop the best players.


‘One thing is for sure: if you put a young player with top level players he has more chance to develop. If you put him with average players he has more chances to remain average. We have to accept that. It’s the same if you have children. You put them in the top class and if they are talented they develop better than if you put them in an average class.


‘At the moment the whole speech is “let’s put them in an average class”. That doesn’t work for the development. So we have to say maybe “let’s put them in the top class and see how we can help them reach that level”. The politically correct speech at the moment is the opposite “let’s protect them and not expose them to world-class competition”.


‘I don’t really understand the logic of the new rule next season,’ added Wenger. ‘What does it mean if he comes into the country anyway just with a huge amount of money. That is the only difference. And who do you pay this huge amount of money to? A club like Real Madrid. They don’t need the money.’


Meanwhile, more doubt has been cast over goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny’s future at the Emirates, with Arsenal keeping tabs on Fiorentina’s Norberto Neto, who is also a target for Liverpool. – Daily Mail






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Mashaba drops Keet to the bench

Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba has made two changes to the starting XI against Senegal in their second match of the Africa Cup of Nations.


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Johannesburg – Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba has made two changes to the starting XI against Senegal in their second match of the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) tournament in Mongomo, Equatorial Guinea, on Friday.


Jackson Mabokgwane starts in goals in place of Darren Keet, who played in the 3-1 loss against Algeria in the opening match.


The back four consists of Anele Ngcongca at right-back, Thabo Matlaba at left-back and the central defence pairing of Eric Mathoho and Thulani Hlatshwayo.


Mathoho returns after a one-match suspension following two yellow cards in the qualifying stages of the tournament. He takes the place of Rivaldo Coetzee, stretchered off with a knee injury in the match against Algeria.


Mathoho and Mabokgwane will be playing in their first Afcon tournament.


The midfield remains unchanged with Dean Furman, Andile Jali, Oupa Manyisa and Thuso Phala, who scored South Africa's only goal in the opening match. Furman will once again captain the side.


Tokelo Rantie and Sibusiso Vilakazi also retain their places upfront.


South Africa: Jackson Mabokgwane (goalkeeper), Anele Ngcongca, Thabo Matlaba, Thulani Hlatshwayo, Eric Mathoho, Dean Furman (captain), Andile Jali, Oupa Manyisa, Thuso Phala, Sibusiso Vilakazi, Tokelo Rantie


Substitutes: Darren Keet, Brilliant Khuzwayo, Ayanda Gcaba, Thamsanqa Sangweni, Themba Zwane, Reneilwe Letsholonyane, Mandla Masango, Bongani Zungu, Bernard Parker, Siyabonga Nhlapho, Bongani Ndulula – Sapa






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Liverpool will challenge next season

Liverpool will be back challenging for the Premier League title next season after slipping off the pace this time round, manager Brendan Rodgers said.


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London - Liverpool will be back challenging for the Premier League title next season after slipping off the pace this time round, manager Brendan Rodgers said on Thursday.


The Northern Irishman took Liverpool to the verge of their first English title since 1990 last year before they faltered badly with the prize in sight, missing out to Manchester City.


Now they find themselves in eighth-place, 17 points behind leaders Chelsea, and struggling to secure the top-four finish which would at least provide Champions League qualification.


The sale of forward Luis Suarez to Barcelona and Daniel Sturridge's ongoing injury problems hit Liverpool hard while some of Rodgers' close-season signings have made slow starts.


Yet Liverpool are unbeaten in all competitions since the start of December and there have been signs that Rodgers' seemingly unshakeable confidence is rubbing off on his side.


“This season was always going to be difficult,” Rodgers told a news conference ahead of Saturday's home FA Cup tie against Championship (second tier) side Bolton Wanderers.


“With so many changes and everything that's happened, we weren't going to challenge for the league this year. That's reality.


“This season has been about getting into the top four, minimising the impact of so many new signings, giving them the time to develop, and then targeting the cup competitions.


“I believe the squad has Premier League-winning capabilities.”


For now, the focus is on the cups.


Liverpool are halfway through a League Cup semi-final against Chelsea, drawing 1-1 at Anfield in the first leg this week, and are also in the Europa League's last 32 having failed to qualify for the knockout rounds of the Champions League.


“The players can grow together, and if we can get success in a cup competition this year that will give us even greater stimulus to stick together and perform,” he said.


Sturridge is still not quite ready to return from the thigh problem that has ruled him out since September, but Mario Balotelli could feature against Bolton after shaking off a chest infection. Midfielder Joe Allen and full back Glen Johnson are also fit after knee and groin injuries.


“Joe Allen is back and has trained this week which has been great,” Rodgers said. “Glen has had a good week's training and will be available. Mario has trained as well.


“We will make some changes for the game but not too many. It's a game we want to win and we want to progress into the next round.” – Reuters






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Supersport deal was better - Nkhatha

Newly-acquired SuperSport United striker Kingston Nkhatha says his decision to leave Kaizer Chiefs was based on the fact that Chiefs did not offer him a suitable contract extension.


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Johannesburg – Newly-acquired SuperSport United striker Kingston Nkhatha says his decision to leave Kaizer Chiefs was based on the fact that Chiefs did not offer him a suitable contract extension.


Nkhatha’s contact at Chiefs was due to come to an end in July, but Chiefs’ proposed offer of just a single year’s extension did not compare with the three-year deal offered by SuperSport.


“It was just about securing my future first, before anything else,” Nkhatha said after he was officially unveiled as a SuperSport player in Johannesburg on Thursday afternoon.


“When someone comes with a three-year contract and someone comes with a one-year contract, obviously you’re going to choose the three-year deal.”


The Zimbabwean international caught Chiefs by surprise when he announced his departure from the current Premiership front-runners after two-and-a-half years at the club.


Nkhatha said his biggest concern was to ensure his future was secure.


“As a footballer, you need to know where you future lies,” he said.


“If Chiefs came with a proper contract where I can say, 'okay I’ve secured my future at Kaizer Chiefs', I would have stayed there.”


The former Black Leopards attacker denied leaving Chiefs because pressure from Amakhosi supporters, who constantly booed and jeered him, despite the team remaining unbeaten so far this season.


“The decision was not based on the ‘boo-boys’ – some will appreciate you and some won’t,” Nkhatha said.


“You can do something good today but someone will come and say, ‘no you didn’t do anything good’.”


He rubbished claims that he and Chiefs coach Stuart Baxter had drifted apart, thanking his former coach for his contribution and constant support during his time in Soweto.


“I think coach Stuart did everything good to me, he did everything to make me the way I am now,” Nkhatha said.


United announced their capture of Nkhatha earlier this month, stating that the player would join the Pretoria team at the end of his contract with Chiefs on July 1.


However, the two clubs successfully negotiated the player's early release, paving the way for the Zimbabwean striker to make his move to Matsatsantsa six months ahead of schedule.


He is now a fully-fledged SuperSport player and has begun training with his new team. – Sapa






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News sport : Evan Turner's game-winning 3 puts bitter end to bad day for Blazers

After losing LaMarcus Aldridge to left thumb surgery before the game and Nicolas Batum to a sprained right wrist during the game, the Portland Trail Blazers really could have used a win over the lottery-bound Boston Celtics to at least salvage something positive from what had been a pretty crummy Thursday.


Man, this really wasn't the Blazers' day.


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Holding onto a two-point lead after pressed-into-starting power forward Thomas Robinson split a pair of free throws on the prior possession, the Blazers needed one last stop to escape. And for a second there, it looked like they had it. Portland guard Wesley Matthews darted from the corner to swipe at Boston big man Jared Sullinger's dribble, knocking the ball loose in the paint and sending Sullinger diving to the floor to retrieve it. In the ensuing scramble, the former Ohio State standout wound up seated and facing the corner from which Matthews had come ... and where Sullinger's fellow former Buckeye, Evan Turner, was standing unmarked.



Spoken with the confidence of a man who rocks an "E.T." piece.


Sullinger kicked out the pass, Turner hoisted the 3 just over the outstretched arms of the hard-charging Matthews' flying closeout, and the ball splashed through the net. It might not have been exactly the play that second-year Celtics coach Brad Stevens drew up in the huddle, but it still gave Boston a one-point lead with 1.9 seconds left on the clock.


With Aldridge and Batum out of commission, everyone in the world knew where Portland would look for an answer on its last possession, and that included the Celtics; Damian Lillard couldn't even get a shot off before the final buzzer sounded, sealing a 90-89 Celtics win.


Turner finished with 10 points on 4-for-9 shooting, eight assists, six rebounds, one steal and four turnovers in 31 minutes in the win, Boston's first on the road against a Western Conference opponent in nearly two years. Sullinger added 17 points on 8-for-15 shooting, nine boards (four on the offensive glass), one steal and that one big assist in his 28 minutes of work. Avery Bradley led the way with 18 points on 8-for-16 shooting to go with four rebounds and four assists as Boston won for just the second time in its last seven games.


As for the Blazers ...



Blazers head coach Terry Stotts pleads with the universe (and referee Mark Lindsay) to relent. (Steve Dykes-USA TODAY Sports)

Well, on one hand, you can certainly understand a bit of an emotional letdown from a team that just learned its top scorer and rebounder will be out of the lineup for at least a month and a half. Portland often looked out of sorts on Thursday, shooting a season-low 37.1 percent from the field as a team as Lillard (who needed 23 shots to score his team-high 21 points) and Batum (scoreless on 0-for-6 shooting before he exited, in a disappointing regression after what looked to be a breakout game on Wednesday) were unable to fill the offensive void left by Aldridge's absence.


Still, Portland led by six with 4:44 left in the fourth quarter. Even shorthanded in the frontcourt on the second night of a back-to-back, that's a game that you really have to win, especially against a Celtics team that — chock full of well-meaning strivers though it is — is basically being stripped down for parts in the early stages of Danny Ainge's grand draft-pick-and-trade-exception-fueled rebuild. And especially given, as we noted earlier, the brutal stretch of scheduling the Blazers face over the expected duration of Aldridge's absence.


Yes, Portland closes out January against Eastern Conference competition, but that includes matchups with the very good Washington Wizards, the finding-their-way Cleveland Cavaliers, the top-five defense of the Milwaukee Bucks and the perpetually engulfed in flames Atlanta Hawks over the next week and a half. It only gets rougher in February, which features meetings with five teams currently in the Western Conference playoff bracket — the Phoenix Suns, Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets, Memphis Grizzlies and San Antonio Spurs — and the one team outside the top eight that can put the fear of God in the heart of its opponents, the getting-on-a-run Oklahoma City Thunder.


With a slate like that on the horizon, your leading scorer going under the knife, your do-everything wing both in a months-long funk and dealing with a balky wrist, and two of your top bigs still sidelined, you can't afford to give away games like Thursday's. And yet, the Blazers missed 11 of their last 13 field-goal attempts over the final six minutes of the game; Matthews and Robinson both missed free throws in the final 75 seconds that could have given Portland some cushion against a game-winning 3; and they couldn't finish off their final defensive possession.


"We needed one more play," Blazers coach Terry Stotts said after the game, according to Joe Freeman of the Oregonian. "And we didn't make it."


As a result, Portland falls to 31-13 and drops percentage points behind the 30-12 Grizzlies, who now ascend to the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference behind the rampaging Golden State Warriors. The Blazers are just a half-game ahead of the fourth-place Mavericks, and just 1 1/2 games ahead of the No. 5 Clippers and No. 6 Rockets. Life comes at you fast in the West. Dame and company better find a new normal even faster.


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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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