News sport : DeAndre Jordan follows up 3 straight blocks with a reverse alley-oop

Los Angeles Clippers is known as one of the NBA's surest highlight producers, a guy who will put up at least a few big-time dunks every month. It's part of his reputation now, to the point where each individual play doesn't really come as a surprise even as they wow crowds.


Sometimes, though, Jordan comes up with enough high-impact plays in a short period of time to remind us all that he can still be totally overwhelming. From the 1:00 to 0:21 marks of the second quarter, the big man had blocks on three straight shots and a reverse dunk on an alley-oop at the other end. Take a look at the full sequence here:



If you're scoring at home, that's a block of Ty Lawson, a block of Kenneth Faried on the rebound, a Blake Griffin dunk to break up our all-DeAndre-all-the-time show, a block of Wilson Chandler on the next Nuggets possession, and a reverse dunk off a lob from Griffin. Not too shabby.


Jordan didn't have the strongest night overall, to the point where this sequence involved two of his seven points and three of his four blocks (although he did add 12 rebounds and three steals over 35 minutes). The better news for the Clippers is that they went on to win 102-98 behind a terrific fourth quarter from Jamal Crawford.


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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 : Byron Scott really wants Lakers rookies to take care of their fake babies

Professional sports teams have evolved in many ways, from how teams manage player rest to the introduction of new strategies and tactics on the field of play. In one area, though, teams and athletes have stayed decidedly old-fashioned — the hazing and shaming of rookies in a public forum. Each individual team settles on its own method of embarrassment, but it's a safe bet that everyone will do something to demean rookies. Shame has never been so hilarious!


The Los Angeles Lakers have gotten in on the act this season, forcing rookies to push children's baby dolls around in strollers. Take a look at Tarik Black and Jordan Clarkson taking care of their fake offspring here:




In isolation, this hazing is not especially notable — plenty of teams will do similar things over the course of the season. What makes the Lakers different is that head coach Byron Scott, not a veteran player, seems to be the driving force behind the efforts. From Kurt Helin for ProBasketballTalk:


“Absolutely…” Scott confirmed when asked if it was his idea. “They are in charge of bringing them to every home game, making sure they are right by their locker, that the baby is not crying or anything like that, then after the game take them home. My only concern is the will go in the family room, there are so many kids there they might try to take their babies. So they have to watch their babies, then on game days on the road they have to wear baby backpacks.”

Scott has been criticized at various points this season for holding decidedly retrograde views of proper on-court strategy, and I suppose it's possible to view his considerable interest in fake child-rearing qualifies as more of the same. From another perspective, though, this is really weird. It would be one thing if Scott was just focused on making sure the players wore backpacks when they were supposed, but he seems very interested in proper childcare at all times. It's as if he was meant to be a high school health teacher grading at-risk youth on how they took care of their bag-of-flour babies.


So stay alert, Clarkson and Black. You never know when Byron Scott will show up at your house in the middle of the night to ensure that your fake baby is tucked in. They are the Lakers' future, after all.


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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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Bokila helps DRC push through

The Democratic Republic of Congo squeezed into the Afcon quarters by the slimmest of margins.


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Ebibeyin, Equatorial Guinea - Democratic Republic of Congo squeezed into the African Nations Cup quarter-finals on Monday by the slimmest of margins as Jeremy Bokila scored a second-half goal against Tunisia in Bata to ensure their progress despite failing to win a match.


The 1-1 draw meant Tunisia finished top in Group B with five points with the Congolese second after drawing all three of their matches.


They just shaded Cape Verde, who also drew all three of their games, on the number of goals scored - two to one.


Bokila's equaliser proved the difference as he revived Congolese hopes with a side footed shot in the second half after Ahmed Akaichi put Tunisia ahead in the 31st minute.


Tunisia are now scheduled to meet hosts Equatorial Guinea in Ebibeyin while DRC will take on neighbours Congo in Bata in Saturday's quarter-finals.


But organisers were considering moving the game to a bigger venue, the Confederation of African Football said.


Cape Verde and Zambia were both eliminated after their goalless draw in Ebibeyin as a thunderous tropical downpour put pay to a decent spectacle.


“Zambia and us were the best teams in the group. For Congo there is happiness. One goal makes all the difference, one miss makes all the difference. Football is often cruel and it is now our turn to feel it,” said Cape Verde coach Rui Aguas.


For the first time in the tournament there was a near empty stadium as around only 1 000 spectators watched in Bata as Tunisia made sure of top place.


They had needed only draw but could have won easily had they taken several good chances after Akaichi's headed goal.


Youssef Chikhaoui and Wahbi Khazri were both guilty of bad misses before Bokila handed Congo's 'Leopards' their redemption.


At the last Nations Cup in South Africa two years ago, DRC were ironically eliminated after drawing all three matches.


There were tearful scenes in Ebibeyin as Cape Verde realised how close they had been to yet another fairytale performance. They reached the last eight at their maiden appearance in 2013.


Security concerns over the host team playing in the 5 000-seater stadium mean CAF is considering moving Saturday's match between Equatorial Guinea and Tunisia.


“The schedule stays as it is for the moment but there is nothing in the regulations that stops us from moving it. We do have some concerns,” said CAF spokesman Junior Binyam.


Reuters






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News sport : Doug Baldwin, Seahawks enjoy underdog role, even if it's invented


PHOENIX Since late in the 2012 season, it’s unlikely any NFL team has had more kind words written and said about them as the Seattle Seahawks.


I’d defy anyone to find anything that truly disrespected them. They were a deserving Super Bowl champion last season and have a possible dynasty forming. Everyone knows that. But if anything has been said as a slight to the Seahawks, it’s probably a good bet they’ve heard it and remembered it.


Receiver Doug Baldwin’s rant outside the locker room after the NFC championship game gives a partial window into what motivates the Seahawks. Baldwin talked (passionately) about how he, the receivers and the team had been written off, especially when the team was 6-4 and in danger of missing the playoffs. He talked about how everyone wrote the Seahawks off when they were trailing the Packers 16-0 at halftime, and how could he even know such a thing?


On Monday, as the Seahawks prepared for the Super Bowl, he talked about how everyone said Seattle would miss receivers Golden Tate and Percy Harvin. He was calmer, but he obviously likes the role as underdog, even if it has been a long time since the Seahawks have really been true underdogs.


“We enjoy that," Baldwin said. "It adds some motivation, it adds some flair to it. We embrace it."


There’s nothing wrong with Baldwin or anyone else finding motivation through those means. Athletes have been using perceived slights as motivation for a long time. Michael Jordan practically made an art form out of it, even when it was universally accepted that he was the greatest athlete on the planet.


Baldwin wore a Seahawks hoodie during Monday’s Super Bowl media availability, but said underneath he had a shirt that said “Pededstrians With Attitude,” a nod to Cris Carter's criticism of the Seahawks’ less-than-famous receivers. Carter said that more than a year ago.


"Sometimes you have to defend your group," Baldwin said. "It's not necessarily trying to shout at other people, it's to let other people know there's solidarity in our group."


It's not all about the perceived slights, really. Baldwin said it's about the Seahawks playing together for each other.


"We harness some of that against-the-world mentality, but at the end of the day I'm not playing for the world," Baldwin said. "I'm playing for the teammates I have."


That gets to the heart of the Seahawks' motivation. They're a pretty close group. That is at least part of their success. It was tested when they were 6-4.


"We just reconnected and showed a real brotherhood," Seahawks safety Kam Chancellor said. "It’s a real brotherhood on our team. We’re really close, we definitely love one another, we play for one another. We just had to reconnect and reestablish, say it one more time and really commit to it."


The questions about the Seahawks' ability to make the playoffs were legitimate when they were 6-4. The Seahawks needed to finish very strong to have a shot to defend their title. They haven't lost since. But Baldwin said the questions about the team when they were on the verge of falling out of the playoff race didn't key the winning streak.


"It didn't factor in that much," Baldwin said, breaking into a slight grin. "It was just something to point out at the end of the day."


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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 : John Paxson calls Jeff Van Gundy's criticism of the Chicago Bulls 'pretty pathetic'

Nestled deep in the broadcast of Friday evening’s Dallas Mavericks/Chicago Bulls game was a Jeff Van Gundy rant. The ABC/ESPN color analyst’s rants are nothing new, oftentimes he likes to deviate from calling the action on hand in order to take on the most notable sports talk radio riff of the day, and the presence of Tom Thibodeau’s Chicago Bulls on the schedule allowed for this:



In case you can’t listen to the clip, Mike McGraw at the Arlington Heights Daily Herald has some of the quotes:



“He has done such a good job here," Van Gundy said during the broadcast. "First two years had the best record in the league. Unfortunately, these last three playoffs have been disrupted by injury. But he came to the Bulls at a time where mediocrity reigned. They had struggled for a long time, they were basically a .500 team. Along with the emergence of some players, he's taken it to elite status.




“I think right now, it's almost criminal … what he's having to endure with some of the fringe media – attacking his job status, attacking his personality. This isn't new to Chicago Bulls basketball, all the way back to Phil Jackson. The team has publicly supported their coach while privately, often times, undermining that same person. You saw it with Vinny Del Negro, Scott Skiles. Think about it, they ran out Phil Jackson out after winning all those championships.




“I think it's wrong. It's wrong for the town, wrong for the team and it certainly has not been fair to Tom Thibodeau."




Van Gundy went on to spread his criticism to the Chicago media.




“Listen, I read every Chicago story and there is no doubt that the Bulls organization has the media, with a few exceptions, in their hip pocket," he said. "And for whatever reason, they have taken their sights on Thibodeau when all he's done is deliver greatness here in his five years."



On Sunday, Bulls vice president of basketball operations John Paxson fired back:



"Tom Thibodeau isn't being undermined at all," said John Paxson, executive vice president of basketball operations. "What's being undermined is the entire Bulls organization by Van Gundy, who has an agenda against our organization for whatever reason and has for years. I guess he thinks he's trying to protect his friend, but he's doing just the opposite. It's pretty pathetic when you think about it, and truth be told he owes Jerry Reinsdorf an apology for his disparaging remarks."



OK, then.


To start, as Van Gundy mentioned in the clip, Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau was Van Gundy’s lead assistant when Jeff coached in New York and Houston. You could call any defense of Tom Thibodeau from Van Gundy a conflict of interest were it not for the unmitigated fact that Tom Thibodeau is a brilliant basketball coach.


In referring to “fringe media” during the broadcast, Van Gundy was making a clear comment on a widely distributed report from a another web site run by a former Associated Press and ESPN writer that claimed that Thibodeau’s job could be in jeopardy if the Bulls failed to emerge from the funk that preceded their game last Thursday against the San Antonio Spurs. Fighting injury and a weird strain of apathy, the Bulls had lost six of eight prior to downing San Antonio and Dallas on two impressive back-to-back nights.


In sportswriting circles, that report was met with a collective eye-roll. For many NBA fans, those that hound the rumor sites, it was widely clicked on – whispers about Tom Thibodeau’s frustration with the Chicago front office and concerns by the same FO over Thibodeau’s potentially-wearying style of coaching have abounded for years, so the report seemed plausible enough to many. Throw in the 2-6 swoon and a tough upcoming schedule, and it all made sense to some.


To Van Gundy, apparently, it was a sign that the Chicago front office was leaking information to the reporter that put the piece together, while confusing things (on air) by criticizing local media for being in the front office’s back pocket while discussing a column put together by a national scribe that doesn’t work out of Chicago. This is why McGraw, in his column discussing Van Gundy’s riffs, wondered aloud if JVG was talking about him.


He wasn’t, and neither of the two other Bulls newspaper beat writers put pen to paper during the Bulls’ swoon encouraging to encourage dissent or take the front office’s side in any column. It was just that one “fringe media” member that did, taking in clicks all along the way.


Tom Thibodeau’s game has holes, holes we’ve discussed many times (longtime readers know my Chicago allegiances as a fan) at Ball Don’t Lie. He overplays injured players routinely, either working them for too long in a contest that has already been decided, or rushing them back to the court when they should be on the sideline. Sunday marked the return of Luol Deng to the United Center as a member of the Miami Heat, and we’re a year and a half removed from the time Tom Thibodeau completely sold Deng out as he lay in a darkened hospital room.


The front office, which needlessly fired assistant coach nonpareil Ron Adams and just-as routinely endorses the team’s go-back-out-there-slugger medical staff is not without its faults as well. Don’t think Tom Thibodeau doesn’t break out into a sweat every time that he reads a box score that features former Bull Kyle Korver shooting 4-8 from behind the three-point line, a mark that actually brings his three-point percentage down.


For John Paxson to claim that Van Gundy harbors some decades-old agenda against Chicago is ridiculous, leaving a very smart basketball man looking like a whiny kid on a message board. I’m a Bulls fan (check) that sometimes has issues when Van Gundy strays from describing the action on court (check), I’m the best candidate to be sensitive to these sorts of things, and yet I’ve never thought that JVG had it out for the Bulls. Before and during Thibodeau’s time with the franchise.


Of course, we can’t blame Jeff Van Gundy for hitting up that click bait. Even San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich dove in on the subject last week. From Steve Aschburner at NBA.com:



"Well, whoever asked me that question before the game -- about [the Bulls] not listening to Thibs and Thibs has lost 'em and that kind of [expletive] -- you got your answer," Popovich said, unprompted. "As I told you before the game, that's baloney. Nothing could be further from the truth.



Even Coach Pop. Sigh.


Mislabeling, mis-clicking, misattributing, overreacting and doing anything but talking about the actual game? The NBA, stuck in the dead of winter, clearly has cabin fever.


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






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News sport : The Warriors made a 7-foot-7 Manute Bol bobblehead

As we've seen time and time again over the years, making a bobblehead doll to honor an athlete (or commissioner, or cable talk show host, or whomever) can be a tricky business. Sometimes the finished product more closely resembles someone else. Sometimes very important details are missing. Despite all the hard work that goes into recreating the honoree's likeness, it can be difficult to accurately and fully encapsulate the scope of an individual's influence and accomplishments in a small, inherently caricature-esque collectible statue.


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Perhaps that's why, when the Golden State Warriors decided to honor the late, great and wonderfully unique Manute Bol, they chose to build their bobblehead to full life-size scale:



Yep, that's Warriors center Andrew Bogut — all 7 feet of him — standing next to a no-kidding 7-foot-7-inch functional bobblehead doll of the South Sudanese shot-swatter. We've seen life-size bobbleheads before, but this is the first one I can recall where the actual subject was almost literally larger than life.


The Warriors will honor Bol, who spent parts of three seasons in Golden State and died in June of 2010 at age 47 from kidney failure and complications related to skin disease, with a bobblehead giveaway at Tuesday night's matchup with the Chicago Bulls, with the first 10,000 fans at Oracle Arena taking home a much-more-reasonable-to-bring-on-the-BART 10-inch version of the big Bol bobbler. While the Bay Area faithful won't be taking home the Full Manute — which, when accounting for the pedestal, actually stands 8-foot-4 — they will get a chance to get up close and personal with the skyscraping sculpture:


To celebrate Manute Bol Bobblehead Night, the team will also have a life-size 7’7” Manute Bol Bobblehead on display in Section 112 of the main concourse at Oracle Arena. Fans will be encouraged to take photos with the Bobblehead and share on social media with the hashtag #ManuteBobblehead to help raise money for the Warriors Community Foundation. For every shared image of the life-size Bobblehead, Kingsford Capital Management will donate $1 to the Warriors Community Foundation through the Hoops For Kids program, up to $10,000. The Hoops For Kids program is committed to helping youth in the Bay Area live, learn and play.

Bol, one of the NBA's most notable early floor-spacing big men, joined the Warriors for the 1988-89 season after three years with the Washington Bullets, who drafted him out of the University of Bridgeport in the second round of the 1985 NBA draft. He came to Golden State in exchange for Dave Feitl and a future second-round pick that would eventually become Doug Roth, a pair of big men who'd combine to block fewer shots in their NBA careers than Bol did in his first 18 games in a Warriors uniform.


Bol averaged just 22.1 minutes per game for Don Nelson's Dubs during the '88-'89 campaign, making only four starts in 80 appearances, but the reedy pivot with the aircraft-carrier wingspan still led the league in both total blocks (345) and blocks per game (4.3) for the second time in his four-year career. He also shot 91 3-pointers and made 20 of them; this was a Don Nelson team, after all — for a Chris Mullin- and Mitch Richmond-led squad that made it to the Western Conference semifinals.


He played just two full seasons in Golden State before being shipped to the Philadelphia 76ers for a first-round draft pick that would later turn into Chris Gatling, and after nine NBA seasons, he returned to the Bay for a brief stint as a 32-year-old veteran during the 1994-95 season. He played just 81 total minutes over the space of five games, but he had one last great night in the sun, scoring nine points on perfect 3-for-3 shooting from downtown with six rebounds and two blocks in 29 minutes of work in a mid-November loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves. One week later, he played his last NBA game, and was waived the following February.


Some might remember him more for his time in D.C. or lining up alongside Charles Barkley in the City of Brotherly Love — or, perhaps better still, for his activism and humanitarian work in his native Sudan — but despite playing just 160 total regular-season games for the Warriors, Bol still ranks fourth in franchise history in blocked shots. With the Warriors in the midst of an all-time great season featuring seemingly nightly magic, it's not like fans need more reasons to turn out and turn up to watch the hometown team, but kudos to the Dubs for offering one anyway.


And if you're interested in seeing how the Manute bobblehead was designed and how the more portable versions were made, here's a Warriors TV report from China:



Hat-tip to Lang Whitaker at All Ball.


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Rivaldo back for do-or-die encounter

Rivaldo Coetzee is set to make his return to the Bafana starting line-up for the do-or-die Group C match against Ghana.


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Johannesburg - Rivaldo Coetzee is set to make his return to the Bafana Bafana starting line-up for Tuesday’s do-or-die Group C match against Ghana.


The 18-year-old defender was substituted in the 29th minute of South Africa’s first 2015 Africa Cup of Nations match against Algeria with a knee injury, and he didn’t feature in the match against Senegal. But team doctor Thulani Ngwenya said on Sunday the Kakamas-born centre back “is clinically fit to play 90 minutes of football”, and a call will be made this morning following a fitness test.


If Coetzee comes through the test unscathed, he will partner Eric Mathoho in the centre of the Bafana defence after Wits hard man Thulani Hlatshwayo was on Sunday ruled out because of concussion after he collided with a Senegalese player in the previous match.


The big Ayanda Gcaba did well when he came on for Hlatshwayo, but it seems like coach Mashaba is keen on reuniting Mathoho and Coetzee, who were excellent together in the qualifiers.


And Mashaba will be hoping that the duo can keep another man returning from illness quiet when they take on the Black Stars at the Estadio de Mongomo.


Asamoah Gyan made his return to the field with a sensational last-minute winner against Algeria after suffering from a “mild” bout of malaria.


The striker, who played a full 90 minutes against the Desert Foxes, savoured the goal and dedicated to his teammates who helped him to recover.


“It’s a great feeling to score a goal after my comeback from illness. I think personally I’m very happy with this goal,” Gyan said.


“I would like to say thank you for the players for their support. I had a tough week, and I was very weak. They did an incredible job by helping me get back on the field and it paid off.


“The goal was very important to the team.”


Gyan, who missed a penalty at the 2010 World Cup against Uruguay that would have steered Ghana into the semi-finals of the tournament in South Africa, says he is not quite back to full fitness after spending almost a week in bed.


“I won’t say I’m 100percent fit. But thanks to the doctor, he really cared for me and he did what he could to get me on the field,” he said.


But the striker will be at the forefront of Ghana’s attacks as they go in search of a quarter-final spot of this Afcon.


He wasn’t at his best during the Algeria clash, but he showed his class and power to score a goal that has thrown Group C wide open.


“We are expecting a tough game. South Africa are a tough side. They have quite a young team, they are building a team, and they did so well in the qualifiers,” Gyan said.


“We do respect them, South Africa are a football nation and we are looking forward to a really tough game.


“I just wish all the teams luck in the competition. Everyone wants to qualify, and everyone is going to work really hard to try and win their respective matches on Tuesday.”


The Star






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News sport : NASCAR says teams can't flare sideskirts in 2015

Sprint Cup Series cars won't have flared sideskirts in 2015.


During NASCAR's "State of the Sport" presentation on Monday, the sanctioning body said that teams that manipulate the sideskirts on cars during pit stops would be asked to undo the changes. Last season, teams had figured out that flaring out the sideskirts on the cars towards the rear tires created more downforce, almost like a parachute effect.


"As many of you know we deliberately decided against any changes near the end of last season, so in 2015, teams manipulating the fenders or flares during a race will be asked to come back down pit road, and we will use any means possible to police that; particularly, though, our new pit road officiating system," NASCAR Vice President of Racing Development Steve O'Donnell said. "Again, we'll look at that through video and any means possible during the race season."


Pit stops will be officiated with a new video officiating system instead of by officials watching each pit stop just feet from the cars. Eight officials will get video from 45 cameras.


From the Sporting News:



The official can then rewind the video, if needed, to make the final call and radio any violations to race control, which will be heard by fans and teams scanning the NASCAR channel. Once the pit stop has been ruled on, video of the next pit stop in the queue will go to the first official available — with pit stops that have potential violations viewed first.




When there are more than eight pit stops going on at one time, some of the stops would not be officiated in real time. Instead, officials would review a video of the stop. NASCAR says that, at most, 14-15 cars typically pit at one time.



NASCAR hopes for better pit road officiating accuracy with the new system.


CEO Brian France said that NASCAR will not change the Chase for 2015. (Cue the jokes that it's not due to be changed until either 2016 or 2017, as it's been changed every 2.75 years) O'Donnell said that the sanctioning body hopes to have the guidelines of 2016 rules package to teams by the All-Star race in May.


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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 : The beer-guzzling legend of Wade Boggs keeps growing


(Getty Images)

The legend of Wade Boggs continues to grow — and we're not talking about his skills with a baseball bat.


Boggs, the Hall of Famer who collected 3,010 hits in his day, is also famous for his beer-guzzling ways. A couple weeks ago, "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" used Boggs' most famous beer story as a plot point. Boggs had supposedly drank 64 beers on a cross-country flight when he was playing for the Boston Red Sox.


But "It's Always Sunny" actor Charlie Day claimed in a "Tonight Show" interview, that Boggs told him an even bigger number — that he actually downed 107 beers in a day once. It seems extreme and Boggs still hasn't admitted to that, so we're still not sure. But there's another story about Boggs' beer-drinking prowess making the rounds now that at least adds credence to the idea.


For that, we turn to David Laurila's Sunday notes column at Fangraphs. He talked to ex-big league pitcher Brian Rose, who shared the following story about playing for the Tampa Bay Rays in 2001 when Boggs was the hitting coach there:



Rose soon learned that Boggs could put away cold ones like nobody else.




“I was sitting next to him on a plane and a flight attendant came by and gave him a case of beer,” said Rose. “He slid it under the seat and I was like, ‘What’s up with that? We only have an hour flight.’ He said, ‘That’s mine.’




“The whole flight, we were just shooting the [expletive], and he went one beer after the other. I said to him, ‘I’m impressed with the way you hit, but I’m more impressed right now.’ He goes, ‘Yeah, beer doesn’t affect me. I don’t get drunk unless I’ve had at least a case and a half.’ I don’t think he even went to the bathroom.”



Well then!


If you've ever seen Wade Boggs with a case of beer on an plane, feel free to contact me at the address below, because I would love to hear your story ... and hear the empty-can count.


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News sport : Penn State's James Franklin will not settle for your 'B' grade

Oversharing is a rampant problem on social media and Penn State defensive back Bryant Harper learned the consequences of that Monday.


Harper tweeted out that he received a "B" on his first anatomy exam and he was proud of the grade because he didn’t actually study for the test.


Unfortunately for Harper, coach James Franklin is an avid @HarperJR21 follower and decided to chime in on his player’s boasting.



Franklin was probably kidding (or was he?), but it’s a good lesson to always think about what you tweet even if it seems like a good thing.


Harper quickly blamed the lack of studying on a scheduling issue.



He should have hastagged it “#collegeadvisors #amirite.”


Sadly it’s now dammed if you do, dammed if you don’t for Harper. If he says he didn’t study, he gets extra study hall hours. If he says he did study and still got a B, he gets extra study hall hours.


Best just to delete your Twitter account now and hang your head in shame.


For more Penn State news, visit BlueandWhiteIllustrated.com.


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News sport : Kobe Bryant to have surgery on torn right rotator cuff, 'probably' out for season


Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers did indeed wait until Monday to make their final determination on how to respond to the torn right rotator cuff he suffered during last Wednesday's loss to the New Orleans Pelicans. As it turned out, though, the decision they came to is the one most of us expected; all that remains now is to learn whether his absence will be as long as we expect, too.


Here's Monday's news, as first tweeted by Mark Medina of the Los Angeles Daily News and subsequently confirmed by the Lakers themselves in a press release:


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Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant, who injured his right shoulder in last Wednesday night's game against the Pelicans in New Orleans, was examined this morning by Dr. Neal ElAttrache of the Kerlan Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic. Dr. ElAttrache confirmed an earlier diagnosis of a torn rotator cuff, and advised Bryant to have surgery to repair the shoulder. Bryant has agreed, and surgery has been scheduled for Wednesday morning. A timeline estimate for Bryant's return will be issued following the surgery.


The team statement still leaves some wiggle room for the rage-against-the-dying-of-the-light possibility that Bryant, 36, will suit up again for the Lakers during the 2014-15 campaign, and has not suffered a season-ending injury for the third straight season. But sources told Yahoo Sports NBA columnist Adrian Wojnarowski last week that doctors' opinions shared with Bryant referred to the procedure he needs as "season-ending," and Lakers head coach Byron Scott doesn't seem to be holding out much hope for a return before mid-April:



As our own Kelly Dwyer reminded last Thursday, a late-season shutdown for Bryant was always in the cards, but this certainly wasn't the way it had been drawn up. But while Scott had recently taken to giving his veteran top gun more rest, he did so only after some unsightly, fatigue-impacted shooting and a heavy early-season minutes-and-shots workload that seemed at least in part intended to get Bean past Michael Jordan on the all-time scoring list. There's a case to be made that Scott's decision to keep running Bryant out there, especially after being Kobe had previously informed his coach that his shoulder was bothering him, represents an abdication of duty, as suggested by ESPN Los Angeles' Baxter Holmes.


Whether you view Bryant's latest serious injury as a regrettable organizational failure to properly protect its primary talent, the latest sad but inevitable piece of evidence that not even the greatest performers in league history can ward off the ravages of time and nearly two decades of minutes forever, both or something else entirely, the fact remains that we're not going to see Kobe Bryant play basketball any more for a little while, and possibly not until next fall. (It's considered exceptionally unlikely that this will represent the end for Kobe, due in no small part to the fact that he's owed $25 million next season.) The Mamba might have had a chuckle at this latest setback, but the grim confirmation of his diagnosis certainly doesn't leave much for the rest of us to smile about.


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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 : Michigan RB Justice Hayes to transfer for fifth year

Michigan’s Justice Hayes will head elsewhere for his final season of college football.


Hayes, a running back, announced Monday that he will graduate from Michigan in April and pursue an opportunity as a graduate transfer. Hayes said that new Wolverines coach Jim Harbaugh invited him back for his fifth year with the program, but he decided it was in his best interests to leave Ann Arbor.





“The four years I have spent at this institution have brought some great memories that I will cherish forever,” Hayes wrote on Instagram. “The fact that I will be graduating from the University of Michigan in April will be meritorious. I have earned team captain on numerous occasions, won respect from coaches and players, and most importantly played my heart out every Saturday. I truly appreciate the offer from Coach Harbaugh to allow me to return for my 5th year, but I have decided that I will choose another college to play football as a graduate student.


“I'm not an emotional person, but a few days back I cried because I knew it was time for me to move on. There will be people out there that disagree with this tough decision I made, but they won't be the ones that cut me checks in the future. I just want to continue to get closer to God, take care of my family, and be happy.”


The 5-foot-10, 194-pound Hayes ran for 213 yards on 48 carries in 2014 – both career highs – as a backup for the 5-7 Wolverines. He also caught 11 passes for 65 yards on the season.


Previously, Hayes gained 89 yards and scored one touchdown on 20 carries combined in 2012 and 2013 following a redshirt season in 2011. He also caught six passes for 40 yards in 2013.


Despite Hayes’ departure, Michigan still has some solid depth at running back in 2015. De’Veon Smith (519 yards) and Derrick Smith (471 yards), both juniors, will return. Additionally, USC transfer Ty Isaac, a redshirt sophomore, will be eligible to play while redshirt junior Drake Johnson (361 yards) rehabs from a torn ACL suffered in the season finale against Ohio State.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : The NBA cancels two games, and improves Sacramento's lottery odds

The NBA and the forces of Mother Nature may have just banded together to help Sacramento’s NBA draft status.


As expected, the league canceled Monday night’s Brooklyn Nets/Portland Trail Blazers and New York Knicks/Sacramento Kings games due to the blizzard that is due to wreak havoc on the East Coast. The makeup dates will take place later in the season, but as Pro Basketball Talk’s Dan Feldman noticed, the night off for the Kings on Monday comes with a nasty early-March aftereffect.


The Kings will make up the Knicks game on March 3, two days after taking on the Trail Blazers in Sacramento on the other coast of North America. From there, the team will dart across the country playing road games in San Antonio, Orlando, Miami, Orlando, Atlanta, Charlotte, Philadelphia and Washington – eight games in 11 days total, all on the road. After the final game of the road trip on March 14, the squad will then fly all the way back to its much-missed Sacramento home to take on the East-leading Atlanta Hawks on March 16th.


That is a rough, rough half-month of basketball. All for a team that is currently 16-27, well out of the playoff picture, working under a coach in Tyrone Corbin that all assume to be a walking lame duck.


All of this, however, goes a long way toward ensuring that the Kings will get to keep their lottery pick in this year’s draft.


When the Kings traded for J.J. Hickson in 2011, the team sent a conditional first-round pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers and Omri Casspi in return. That pick was then sent to the Chicago Bulls in the ill-fated Luol Deng deal last season. The pick is protected through the top ten picks in the draft this year and next, and if the Kings continue to play poorly and stick in the top ten after the lottery (considering the strength out West, there is a good chance of that) in 2017 the pick will then revert to a pair of second-round picks in 2017.


For the Kings, who are barely playing rookie Nik Stauskas so far this year, to miss out on yet another lottery pick would be a killer. Missing the playoffs only to have to ship a first-round pick to Chicago just for a guy that played 35 terrible games for you in 2011-12 would be quite the downer. This is possibly why the team fired Michael Malone, who had coached Sacramento to an 11-13 record even with center DeMarcus Cousins out for nine of those contests, earlier this year. Corbin has gone 5-14 at the helm in Sacramento.


The Kings currently sit at ninth overall in the lottery odds, with the tenth-place Detroit Pistons improving by the day. Between the coaching move, the nor’easter, and the upcoming road trip, they may have cinched their lottery fate. All it took were those elements, and a lost year, to make it happen. Congrats.


(The Portland Trail Blazers, meanwhile, will have to play the Pelicans in Portland on April 4, fly all the way out to Brooklyn on April 6, and then back to Portland to play Minnesota on April 8. All during a playoff race. Brutal.)


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






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‘Lampard, Terry turned my career around’

Didier Drogba has paid tribute to the inspirational way Frank Lampard and John Terry helped turn his career around.


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London - Didier Drogba has paid tribute to the inspirational way Chelsea team mates Frank Lampard and John Terry helped turn his career around after suffering some difficult times in his early days at Stamford Bridge.


The powerful Ivorian striker, signed in a big-money deal from Olympique de Marseille 11 years ago, was frequently criticised by reporters for the theatrical way he would go to ground but he said Lampard and Terry made him clean up his act.


“I'm very proud because I managed to push things and also that I learned from my mistakes,” Drogba told Reuters in an interview, his relationship with the media turning full circle on Sunday night when he was honoured by the Football Writers' Association for his outstanding contribution to the game.


“I tried to learn the culture in order to know them (the media) better, to change. I needed to change the way they were looking at me because it was not the real Didier so I was really sad.


“But I'm really happy because now they know who I am. They know I'm passionate and when I do things I give all my heart.


“Being around players like Frank and John and to see the way Frank was dealing with the press, always clean, a gentleman, I think it helps. You have to take it as an example and for me he was a big example.”


Drogba scored 157 goals in 342 appearances in his first spell at Chelsea, scooping up silverware along the way.


He left in a blaze of glory by scoring the equaliser in normal time and then the penalty shootout winner when the Londoners landed their maiden Champions League title in 2012 against Bayern Munich at the German club's Allianz Arena.


After short spells in China and Turkey, Drogba made an emotional return when he signed a one-year contract with Chelsea at the start of the season.


While he was returning, his great friend Lampard was leaving, the club's all-time record goalscorer signing a permanent deal with New York City before going out on loan to Manchester City.


The former England midfielder will be back at Stamford Bridge on Saturday when Chelsea, who have a five-point lead over the Premier League champions, take on City in a title showdown.


“He is going to come back as a legend, the man who helped the club win so many trophies in the last 11 years,” said Drogba who had an almost telepathic on-the-field understanding with Lampard.


“I expect the reception will be fantastic for him. He was involved in more than half of the goals I scored...so I owe him a lot.”


Drogba turns 37 in March but he is not yet ready to hang up his boots and is hoping to be offered a new contract by Chelsea at the end of the season.


“I will certainly be playing next season,” said the Ivorian who is also an ambassador for Turkish Airlines.


“I want to compete, I want to play in the Premier League because it is the best league in the world.”


Of more immediate concern to Drogba, though, is that Chelsea bounce back quickly from their shock 4-2 home defeat by third tier Bradford City in the FA Cup on Saturday.


Next up for the Londoners is the second leg of their League Cup semi-final with Liverpool on Tuesday and the striker has Wembley firmly in his thoughts.


Drogba has a remarkable record at the famous old northwest London venue, having scored eight goals in eight appearances there.


“All I can say is I've been lucky to score every time I have been there which makes it a very special stadium for me,” he said with a grin.


Reuters






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News sport : Glen 'Big Baby' Davis gives unfortunate Phoenix Suns fan a lunar eclipse

During a recent Los Angeles Clippers game, Celtics play-by-play announcer Mike Gorman asked color commentator Brian Scalabrine how much he thought former Boston teammate Glen Davis weighed.


"At least 300 pounds," Scal said, and neither man behind the mic batted an eyelash at the thought.


The Clippers currently list Davis at a trim 289 pounds, the heftiest of any player on an NBA roster today — including those with as much as six inches of height on him. Any weigh you slice it, Davis is a big boy.


And while he's nicknamed Big Baby, Davis is the last player you'd want falling into your lap, particularly if you're a dimunitive female fan who ponied up big bucks to sit front row for Sunday's Phoenix Suns game. Yet, Davis did just that, settling his rather considerable backside directly on her ... well ... see for yourself.



As far as stadium snacks go, surely she would have preferred popcorn.


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(h/t r/NBA)


Ben Rohrbach is a contributor for Ball Don't Lie and Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at rohrbach_ben@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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