Ivanovic heads Chelsea into cup final

Chelsea reached the League Cup final after Ivanovic's towering extra-time header secured a win over Liverpool.


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London - Chelsea reached the League Cup final after Branislav Ivanovic's towering extra-time header secured a 1-0 victory over Liverpool in a rip-roaring semi-final second leg at an electric Stamford Bridge on Tuesday.


The Serbian defender powered a header past Liverpool keeper Simon Mignolet four minutes into the extra period to secure a 2-1 aggregate win for the four-times winners days after their humiliating FA Cup exit to third-tier Bradford City.


Both sides had good chances in normal time and were grateful to their keepers - Thibaut Courtois and Mignolet - for keeping the scores level in a blood-and-thunder encounter with plenty of controversy.


Chelsea striker Diego Costa was typically in the thick of the action and twice appeared to stamp on Liverpool players, but should also have been awarded a penalty when he was felled by Slovak defender Martin Skrtel in the first half.


Chelsea will face Tottenham Hotspur or Sheffield United, who play the second leg of their last-four clash on Wednesday with the London side leading 1-0, in the final at Wembley on March 1.


“This is a new Liverpool team (from earlier in the season) and a very difficult opponent. So I'm even happier because we beat a very good team over two legs,” Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho told Sky Sports.


This was a very different Chelsea side to the one that was beaten 4-2 by Bradford in the FA Cup at Stamford Bridge on Saturday, with manager Jose Mourinho making nine changes.


The first half was played at full throttle with both teams looking to seize the early initiative, but the visitors had the better chances with Chelsea keeper Courtois producing excellent saves to deny Alberto Moreno and Philippe Coutinho.


While Chelsea struggled to create opportunities, they did have loud appeals for a penalty waved away when Costa, who was lucky to be on the pitch after stamping on Emre Can's ankle earlier in the match, was felled by a clumsy tackle from Skrtel.


Tempers began to flare after the break with Brazilian-born Spain striker Costa involved in another stamping incident, but as the match wore Chelsea began to craft the better openings.


Eden Hazard beat four men and drove a shot just wide, and Mignolet superbly denied Costa twice with his feet, first from a deflected shot and then when the striker was through on goal.


Ivanovic ensured Chelsea would not have to rely on the away goals rule, which would only have come into play after extra time, to progress while Liverpool's best chance in extra time fell to Jordan Henderson, who headed wide.


For Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers, the difference between the teams was Chelsea keeper Courtois.


“We were better in every aspect of our game but we just couldn't get the big goals. Sometimes you have a barrier in your way and tonight and last week it was Courtois,” he said.


Reuters






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Orlando Pirates eye cup glory

Pirates coach Eric Tinkler says the team's objective in the second half of the season is to defend their Nedbank Cup title.


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Johannesburg - Orlando Pirates coach Eric Tinkler says the team's objective in the second half of the season is to defend their Nedbank Cup title.


“I am more than happy with everything and I cannot wait to unleash my players when the league starts,” Tinkler said.


“Playing good football and winning the Nedbank Cup will definitely be welcomed by the supporters hence we are going for the kill this time around.”


Pirates are set to open their cup title defence against Second Division outfit, Tornado FC at the Orlando Stadium on February 18.


Tinkler, who was made interim coach two months ago after the departure of Vladimir Vermezovic, said he had spent valuable time with the players during the mid-season break.


“I must praise the spirit and discipline that the players has shown since I took over and the break really gave me a chance to install my philosophies.”


With reports linking skipper Oupa Manyisa with Mamelodi Sundowns, Tinkler said it would be a pity to lose such a pivotal player.


“He is a massive influence in the team. He makes the team tick and it would be sad to see him go.


“But I am not the right person to talk about whether he stays or he goes. My duty is to prepare the team and not comment who is coming and leaving.”


While there has been no news of new signings, Tinkler was pleased with the players he had at his disposal.


“Chiefs are the favourites to win the league after a good run in the first round but we have an obligation of fighting until the last league match.”


“We also have the Confederations Cup and the Nedbank Cup to fight for and that is what we are going to do. Whichever player comes will add quality into the side but so far I am more than happy with the players we have at Pirates.”


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News sport : Derrick Rose's tough OT winner salvages a rough game vs. Warriors

Chicago Bulls point guard Derrick Rose had a sloppy night on Tuesday vs. the NBA-best Golden State Warriors at Oracle Arena. Before his final shot of the game, Rose had gone 12-of-32 from the field for 28 points to go along with a career-high 11 turnovers against just one assist. While Rose was not without his usual number of highlights, the overall impression of his game was not a positive one.


I'm pretty sure most Bulls fans don't care a whole lot, though, because Rose's last jumper ended up deciding the game. With only a few seconds left in overtime and the score tied 111-111, Rose drained a very difficult jumper with Klay Thompson draped all over him. Take a look:



Thompson (30 points and 10 boards) missed a bank-shot runner at the buzzer for the Bulls to finish with a hard-fought 113-111 victory. The Warriors' loss breaks a streak of 19-straight wins at home — they hadn't lost since November 11 vs. the San Antonio Spurs. The best three-point shooting team in the NBA also finished the game with 13 consecutive misses from deep, which would seem to explain the loss by itself.


Despite all that, the Warriors seemed in position to win the game in the final moments of regulation. After a miss from Joakim Noah, Stephen Curry held the ball in the backcourt up 105-104 with only 18 seconds on the clock. For reasons that remain unclear, he attempted to pass out of the trap when an intentional foul seemed on the way. The Bulls got a steal, and Kirk Hinrich gave them the lead:



That go-ahead basket gave Rose his only assist of the game. A third-chance tip from Draymond Green on the next possession sent everyone to the extra period:



Curry's mistake was a shocker from the current MVP favorite, who finished with 21 points (9-of-23 shooting) and nine assists. He also had one of the most creative and confounding passes you'll ever see to set up David Lee for an easy bucket:



Yet highlights like that one came too rarely in the second half for Golden State. When Andrew Bogut became a very late scratch with the flu just prior to tipoff, the Warriors were forced to face the Bulls' stacked frontcourt with few interior options. Lee was stellar offensively (24 points, nine rebounds, six assists, no turnovers) in 30 minutes off the bench, but the team clearly missed Bogut's interior presence. Pau Gasol (18 points on 7-of-12 FG, 16 rebounds, four blocks) and Joakim Noah (18 points on 7-of-12 FG, 15 boards, six assists) were both stellar and likely should have seen the ball more than they did over the course of the night. It's notable that they were able to stay close without Bogut, but this game reinforced that they need him to beat the NBA's best big men.


It was an impressive win for the Bulls, who have beaten the Warriors, Spurs, and Mavericks since Rose expressed frustration with the team's performance last week. It's hard to say they've turned a corner — they lost to the struggling Miami Heat on Sunday — but beating the class of the league without Jimmy Butler suggests they are figuring some things out.


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News sport : Capital gains: Xavier earns coveted road win at Georgetown

The Xavier men's basketball team met Speaker of the House and Xavier alum John Boehner on Tuesday and hours later ended its five-game road losing streak at No. 21 Georgetown.


The Musketeers, who hadn't won a true road game since Dec. 13 at Missouri, were in control throughout and held what was a hot Georgetown team to one field goal during a span of more than 11 minutes in the first half of a 66-53 triumph.


It's certainly the kind of win Xavier ought to be able to build on, but these Musketeers have proven incapable of seizing any momentum all season. While they seem to be in every game and have dropped a couple heartbreakers in overtime, they stumble just when it appears they're gaining confidence.


It's the Big East and every game is a challenge, but there aren't many opportunities left for the Musketeers to claim boast-worthy road wins. So it was important for them to capture this one. Mylkes Davis scored 19 points and Matt Stainbrook added 12 to lead Xavier.


If there was one piece of encouraging detail to this one beyond the fact that Xavier won, it would be how well it played defensively. Getting stops has been a season-long problem for the Musketeers. To get them against a team with versatility and plenty of weapons like Georgetown on the road could be a step forward.


But the bottom line for Xavier at this point is consistency. Can it follow this up by going on the road for a second consecutive game Saturday at Seton Hal and give itself a chance to win. The Musketeers could use another impressive road win to bolster their resume and they must play well when they return home.



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News sport : Orioles acquire Travis Snider hoping he can fill outfield void


(Getty Images)

Having lost outfielders Nelson Cruz and Nick Markakis in free agency, the Orioles swung a trade with the Pirates on Tuesday to help fill that void.




For Snider it's a return to the division where he got his start in the big leagues. A first round draft pick of the Blue Jays in 2006, he played 242 games for Toronto before being traded to the Pirates during the 2012 season. Snider was the odd man out in Pittsburgh, with the team ready to hand the starting right field job to young stud Gregory Polanco.


The absence of Cruz, who signed with Seattle, and Markakis, who signed with Atlanta, looms large for Baltimore. Their hope is that Snider, who's turning 27 next week, can play solid defence in both corner outfield spots and provide some power at the plate. He'll be in the mix for at-bats in left and right field alongside Alejandro de Aza, David Lough, Steve Pearce, and Delmon Young, with All-Star Adam Jones entrenched in center field. With a salary of $2.1 million for 2015 and another year of arbitration to come, it's a reasonable financial gamble for the Orioles. Plus they didn't have to deal a key piece or a promising prospect to get him.


Snider hit .264 with a .338 OBP in 140 games in 2014 but really stepped up in the second half, putting up a slash line of .288/.356/.524 after the All-Star break and helping the Pirates get into the NL wild-card game. If that's the kind of production the Orioles can get from Snider, they'll be thrilled. They're entering the 2015 season as the defending division champions for the first time since 1998 and they know it will be a challenge to hold onto the AL East crown.


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News sport : Old Man Paul Pierce blames 'computers' for less NBA trash talk

Paul and Kobe feel a draft. (Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports) At 37 years old, Washington Wizards wing Paul Pierce is one of the oldest and most experienced players in the NBA. He has seen several eras of the league over his career, from the end of Michael Jordan's dominance to the peak of the Kobe-Shaq Lakers to his own Celtics' period of contention and beyond. It's safe to say that he's learned a lot over his 17 seasons and can supply the wisdom to prove it.


Unfortunately, like many veterans and retired greats, The Truth's perspective is more than a little biased when it comes to cultural changes that he perceives to have taken place since he came of basketball age. For instance, take the issue of trash talk. Pierce believes that players of today talk less smack than they did during his first years in the league, back when Gary Payton was the Mouth of the South Pacific Northwest and players presumably challenged each other's manhood for 48 continuous minutes every night. Never fear, though, because he has figured out what is to blame — those new-fangled computers and video games (via PBT):



We're pretty sure Pierce then left the interview area to play dominoes in the park with teammate Andre Miller.


The future Hall of Famer has spoken out about issues with the current era before, most recently when he said that he wouldn't even have been drafted if he had entered the NBA as his college-aged self in today's scouting climate. This claim was nonsense, because Pierce left Kansas in 1998 as a very skilled scorer with clear NBA-level athleticism. As our Kelly Dwyer said at the time, he came off as a cranky old man, not someone who had thought particularly hard about the criteria GMs use to assess draft prospects. If Pierce was right that front-office types take too many chances on high-potential projects, then he certainly would go higher than his spot of 10th overall if only because he had already fulfilled so much of his promise when he entered the league.


This claim regarding trash talk is more of the same. Even if we accept the claim that trash talk is not especially common in today's league — arguable, if also somewhat convincing — it makes no sense to blame video games, because NBA players have been avid gamers since several years before Pierce's rookie season. Yes, they were playing much less realistic versions of the games found on today's systems, but that is irrelevant to the discussion. And, as anyone who has played one of these games knows, trash talk is pretty much essential to the experience. It might even be more important than beating your opponent.


Yet we should not single out Pierce for his errors, because we see this general line of thinking every time a player who experienced his prime in another era privileges his time over all others. It happens when Charles Barkley complains that the NBA-best Golden State Warriors shoot too many jumpers, or when Gary Payton declares that today's NBA is just altogether awful. These are not reasonable arguments about basketball — they are attempts to remind everyone that these one-time superstars were really terrific at basketball.


They were amazing, of course, and we should respect and honor them for their accomplishments. (Pierce, to his credit, is still contributing for one of the East's few genuinely impressive teams.) But that doesn't have to mean we have to agree with them. They're just as capable of being wrong as weaklings like me who haven't played since ninth grade.


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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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Reflect on Afcon lessons - Mbalula

Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula says Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba and his players can be proud of their Afcon showing.


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Johannesburg - Bafana Bafana's departure from the Africa Cup of Nations should not be an opportunity for sadness, but one of reflection, Minister of Sport and Recreation Fikile Mbalula said on Tuesday.


“The journey to Afcon is filled with memories of great individual and collective prowess,” he said in a statement.


“Like in any journey one takes, you gain or lose, you make honest reflections, build on and consolidate for the future.


South Africa were sent crashing out of the Afcon tournament after relinquishing a one-goal lead for a third match in a row, against Ghana in Mongomo on Tuesday night, losing 2-1.


Mandla Masango had sent Bafana Bafana into the lead after 17 minutes with a strike from the edge of the area in Equatorial Guinea, but John Boye's equaliser on 73 minutes was all it took to condemn the South Africans to the bottom of Group C.


Mbalula said the tournament was a learning experience for the team.


“Winning Afcon was never an end goal for us, we saw it as a journey and we expected to see a fearless and courageous team.”


“Our boys demonstrated such and this was proven on the... record our team and coach Shakes Mashaba had in their qualifier matches to Equatorial Guinea.”


He said that Mashaba's appointment to head the team was the best decision that the South African Football Association (Safa) had made.


“We need a cool-headed coach like him who is not moved by populism, but by vision and strategy.”


Mbalula said he was satisfied with the national team's performance and that the country should “exercise patience, criticise with aim to build not to destroy and continue showing the team our support”.


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News sport : Two former Vanderbilt players convicted of rape, two still await trial

Cory Batey testifies in his own defense during the his trial Monday, Jan. 26, 2015, in Nashville, Tenn. Former players Batey and Brandon Vandenburg are standing trial on five counts of aggravated rape and two counts of aggravated sexual battery. (AP Photo/Larry McCormack, Pool) A jury has convicted two former Vanderbilt football players of raping a fellow student.


Brandon Vandenburg and Cory Batey were found guilty of aggravated rape and aggravated sexual battery. The victim was a 21-year-old neuroscience and economics major at the time of the June 2013 attack.


Both men, who are 21— Batey turned 21 on Tuesday — face several years in prison when they are sentenced on March 6.


The jury, which took just three hours to deliberate, heard two weeks of testimony from several witness, including police, former and current Vanderbilt students and the victim, who said she couldn’t remember the attack. The only thing she could remember was drinking with Vandenburg and waking up in a strange dorm room.


However, cell phone photos taken by the perpetrators and surveillance video from the dormitory told the story. Closed-circuit video showed the players carrying an unconscious woman into an elevator and down a hallway. It also showed players taking pictures of the unconscious woman in compromising positions before dragging her into the dorm room.


Players took cell phone photos of the passed out woman and sent then to their friends. Those images were enough for the jury to convict despite defense lawyers claiming that both players were too drunk to know what they were doing and saying that a college culture of binge drinking and promiscuous sex was to blame.


The victim was in the courtroom at the time the verdicts were read and cried as each was announced.


During the trial, Vandenburg's lawyer maintained his client didn’t participate in the rape, but was complicit in taking photos and sending them to friends, including a pair in California. However, witnesses testified that Vandenburg, who was the victim’s boyfriend, handed out condoms to the other assailants and encouraged them to have sex with her.


Batey’s lawyer claimed his client should be declared not guilty because the images did not explicitly show him assaulting the woman, though he was present in the images.


Following the verdict, the university released a statement standing by its decision to dismiss the players form the school.


"We will also continue our comprehensive ongoing efforts to raise awareness of the importance of every Vanderbilt student intervening when another student is at risk or in distress," the statement read.


Jaborian "Tip" McKenzie and Brandon Banks, two players who also were involved in the incident, are awaiting trial for their roles in the assault. No trial date has been set. McKenzie testified during this trial he did not touch the woman, but did take pictures.


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Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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News sport : LaVine, Antetokounmpo headline 2015 Sprite Slam Dunk field

The four-man field for NBA All-Star Saturday's marquee event has been set. As announced on NBA TV Tuesday night, the Sprite Slam Dunk will feature Minnesota Timberwolves rookie guard Zach LaVine, Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo, Orlando Magic guard Victor Oladipo, and Brooklyn Nets big man Mason Plumlee. Yahoo's own Adrian Wojnarowski reported last Wednesday that this group would participate in the event, which will cap the Valentine's Day festivities at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.


None of the four have ever competed in an NBA dunk contest, so we will see a first-time champion. Below, check out dunk highlight clips of all four participants, along with some brief analysis of their chances at grabbing the title.


Zach LaVine



The 19-year-old LaVine is the clear favorite, having wowed on-lookers in his predraft workouts and Summer League. While LaVine has not had quite so many opportunities to fly in his young NBA career, his elite athleticism is always obvious.


Giannis Antetokounmpo



Antetokounmpo is known more for his bizarre feats of long-range dribbling than his high-degree-of-difficulty dunks, but it's safe to say that those atypical skills could allow him to pull off something we've never seen before. If the dunk contest is a spectacle, then the Greek Freak is a no-brainer participant.


Victor Oladipo



The second-year guard has been a notable dunker since his days as an Indiana Hoosier and recently threw down a 360 to close out a Magic win. He is the kind of player who might not have the best dunk of competition but could end up as the most consistent, which is often enough to win.


Mason Plumlee



It's safe to say that the 6-10 Plumlee is in the field because he plays for the host Nets, not because he is known as one of the NBA's premier aerial artists. Nevertheless, big men often do well in dunk contests by exploiting their height to perform feats that smaller players cannot.


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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 : Chris Matthews' dad missed his big play in the NFC championship game


PHOENIX – Chris Matthews became an unexpected hero of the Seattle Seahawks’ crazy comeback win in the NFC championship game.


It was so unexpected that his dad missed it while working his job as a police officer.


Matthews hadn’t touched the ball in the NFL until recovering an onside kick in the final minutes of the NFC title game against the Green Bay Packers. The Seahawks scored after Matthews’ recovery to take the lead, and eventually won in overtime.


The rookie receiver didn’t log a catch or fumble recovery in the regular season, but his first NFL touch was a big one. So big that his police-officer father got a bit emotional.


“My dad is kind of a serious dude,” Matthews said. “You won’t catch him too many times smiling or having a good laugh. When he does, it’s special.”


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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 : Royals make bobblehead of Mike Moustakas' amazing ALCS catch


(AP)

The Kansas City Royals had a handful of memorable postseason moments on their way to the 2014 World Series, but one of the absolute best was third baseman Mike Moustakas tumbling over a rail to make a catch in Game 3 of the American League Championship Series against the Baltimore Orioles.


You've probably seen the highlight a dozen times at this point, but now Moustakas' amazing catch is getting the bobblehead treatment. The Royals are giving away this beauty on June 20:



(@Royals)

How could a Royals fan NOT want this? The team has also captured Salvador Perez and Lorenzo Cain at their postseason best for bobbleheads. Check out Perez's game-winning hit from the AL wild-card game and one of Cain's many phenomenal playoff catches in bobblehead form:




Mark your calendars, Kansas City fans.


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News sport : Was Matt Barnes' $25k fine culled from an curse-fest with Suns owner Robert Sarver?

Partway through the second quarter of his team’s game against the Phoenix Suns on Sunday, Los Angeles Clippers swingman Matt Barnes directed some inappropriate language at a fan that was sitting courtside on the baseline. For Barnes, who had a rough 1-9 shooting night in Los Angeles’ impressive 20-point win, the outburst was well within his repertoire. We’re not judging nor shaming Barnes when we say that microphones tend to catch him using rude words more than just about any other player.


Most of those flights of fancy, however, go unnoticed. For whatever reason, though, the NBA fined Barnes $25,000 on Tuesday for this efficient, three-word take down:



That would seem to be the end of it, right? An NBA player, noted for his throwback (to put it one way) style, is caught lobbing some R-rated language by the league, and is hit with a fine.


This is Matt Barnes, though. And this is where it gets interesting.


In a Twitter rant on Tuesday, Barnes fingered Phoenix Suns owner as the fan who provoked him into, shock horror, cursing during a professional basketball game.


Via The Sporting News, scope these out:








(Don’t ask Matt Barnes, NBA player by night and Costco worker by day, for a second sample when shopping at Costco.)


Almost immediately upon entering the NBA late in the 2003-04 season, Sarver was criticized for engaging in conduct that would seem both beneath an NBA owner, and immature behavior beneath someone that was, perhaps, half his age. He wore foam fingers, made chicken noises at Gregg Popovich when Coach Pop rested his San Antonio Spurs starters, and was part of a group that wanted to extend the 2011 NBA lockout for as long as possible.


Curiously, Matt Barnes once worked for Sarver.


Matt was a member of the 2007-08 Phoenix Suns, the team’s hoped-for Kobe Bryant-stopper, and he started 40 games that season. Offered a two-year deal for the first time in his NBA career the next summer, Barnes left Phoenix to join an Orlando Magic team that would make the NBA Finals in his first year with the squad. Barnes, who has been a member of 10 NBA teams (including the 76ers and Clippers two different times), and didn’t have an antagonistic relationship with Sarver that we recall.


The NBA does fine its players if they’re heard cursing or seen making what they deem are inappropriate gestures – we’re not trying to insinuate that Sarver’s obvious “snitch” (to use Barnes’ word) job was the only reason he took in a fine. Still, if Barnes is correct and Sarver was the first to use language, shouldn’t the NBA be going both ways on this?


When the NBA fines its owners, front office types, or coaches, they make the fine known to the press and public. If Sarver was punished in the same way that Matt Barnes was, we’d have heard about it.


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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 : Tony Stewart says last two years are fueling desire in 2015

Tony Stewart reiterated that he's not done being successful in the Sprint Cup Series.


At the end of the season, a porous season by his standards independent of missing three races in August, Stewart said he wasn't done winning. During Stewart-Haas Racing's portion of the Sprint Cup Series media tour on Tuesday, Stewart said the past two years of his career have made his desire to be successful stronger.


“It’s probably made my desire more stronger than it’s ever been,” Stewart said. “I’m not happy about the last two years of my life by any means. It’s given me more drive and desire to go back and get back to the old form that our fans and our sponsors are used to seeing us in.



I’m looking forward to it. This is probably the most prepared I’ve been in a while for a season to start.”


In 2013, Stewart suffered a broken leg in a sprint car race in Iowa in August. The fracture sidelined him for the remainder of the season.


He was back in his Cup Series car in time for the Daytona 500, but struggled, accumulating just three top fives and six top-10 finishes in the first 21 races of the season. Then, while racing in a sprint car race in upstate New York, Stewart struck and killed Kevin Ward Jr., who had gotten out of his car to confront Stewart after hitting a wall as the two raced together. Stewart, who was never charged in the incident, missed three races after the accident and has talked about the impact it's left on him.


Stewart said Tuesday that he was "going back to being me" again after the past two seasons and no, thoughts of retirement didn't cross his mind when Jeff Gordon announced he'd be retiring after the 2015 season.


"It didn't make me think anything about my career, it made me think about Jeff's career when he made his announcement," Stewart said via USA Today. "As much as I always thought in my mind I would be so excited when Jeff Gordon retired, the thought has been the polar opposite. I'm having a hard time coming to terms with after this year, he's not going to be in the No. 24 car anymore."


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News sport : Charlotte, Brooklyn and Detroit are all fighting for the Worst Playoff Seed Ever

For whatever reason, the “contenders” that are “fightin’” for the final playoff spots in the Eastern Conference’s pathetic playoff bracket want us to notice them. Be it by trade discussions, terribly unfortunate injuries, or coaching intrigue, the below-.500 Brooklyn Nets, Charlotte Hornets and Detroit Pistons have wormed their way into our browser windows.


Those jerks. Why can’t they just go away so that we can go back to swooning over the Hawks and Warriors?


The Hornets currently own the prize of the eighth and final playoff spot out in the Conference, a game and a half in back of a Miami Heat team that figures to improve as health (hopefully) settles in. The team earned its position by winning eight of nine in impressive fashion earlier in January, but the last two contests included a 39-point defeat to the Cleveland Cavaliers that somehow felt worse than the score would indicate, and a close 76-71 win over the New York Knicks that I hoped none of you stayed home to watch on Saturday night.


As you likely know, star guard and fringe All-Star candidate Kemba Walker is out for an as-yet-undetermined amount of time as he undergoes surgery to repair a meniscus tear. Walker’s play was the only thing keeping Charlotte out of the bottom ranking in offensive efficiency this season, and though replacement Brian Roberts is an adequate enough player to sop up minutes, as we learned last season (when Roberts replaced the injured Jrue Holiday in New Orleans) he’s just not the sort of guy you circle the wagons with.


Worse, Al Jefferson’s groin injury has made him an inconsistent player of late, nobody knows when Marvin Williams will return from a recent concussion, and even the much-improved Bismack Biyombo is out for an undisclosed amount of time with a bum knee. Lance Stephenson is finally healthy, but he’s still working with a Player Efficiency Rating that is just under 10 (that is to say, “not good.”). That’s incredibly hard to do for a guard with a high usage rate that likes to rebound.


The trade options at reserve point guard are underwhelming, if capable, which leaves the Hornets in a rather perilous position. This capped-out team was created to make the playoffs, and by and large every significant player on this team has either underperformed, been injured, or combined some unholy mixture of the two.


This is probably why team owner Michael Jordan might be trying to trade for both of those elements, in the form of Brooklyn’s Joe Johnson.


A deal involving Stephenson, Williams and Gerald Henderson would work, cap wise, and the ridiculous amount of money the Nets are slated to pay Johnson next year ($24.9 million in the final year of his deal) is just about what the Hornets would be just a bit more than the $22 million the Hornets are already slated to pay the triptych they’d trade away (assuming Henderson picks up his player option at $6 million).


Still, Joe Johnson at age 33 with over 40,000 career regular season and postseason minutes under his belt? Seems like a Michael Jordan-type move, and those are rarely good.


The voice on the other end of that particular transaction line would be that of Brooklyn general manager Billy King, who has made a career out of a series of Michael Jordan-type moves (usually worse) and yet still somehow manages to have a career.


King’s Nets are a half-game out of the Eastern bracket, looking dispirited and sluggish along the way, with everyone in the arena sated with the knowledge that King is attempting to deal any number of his highly-paid players in an attempt to save face.


King’s tenure is legendarily-bad at this point. He dealt for Deron Williams just in time to watch Williams’ career decline, giving up two lottery picks and a damn good big man in Derrick Favors away in return. He used another pick, which turned into Damian Lillard, for the right to overpay Gerald Wallace. Because Wallace made so much damn money, he was able to be parlayed into a deal for a pair of future Basketball Hall of Famers in Kevin Garnet (whose career has fallen off a cliff, due to his age) and Paul Pierce (who played well for half a season before leaving as a free agent). In that move, the Nets gave up several first-round draft picks (in 2014, 2016, 2018) along with handing Boston the right to swap picks with Brooklyn in 2017.


This year? In exchange for the final three years and $66 million on Joe Johnson’s deal, King gave the Atlanta Hawks the chance to swap out picks. Brooklyn could miss the playoffs with a payroll that vaults into the $100 million mark after luxury taxes, and only end up with the 29th pick in the draft while the Hawks sneak into the lottery. Or the 30th pick, as the streaking Hawks have lost just twice since Thanksgiving and are currently a half-game removed from the Golden State Warriors for the NBA’s best record. And the Hawks still have to play the Nets three more times this year!


King’s solution? Focus on the coach!


From Marc Stein and Ohm Youngmisuk at ESPN:



The Brooklyn Nets, increasingly worried about a recent lack of competitiveness, have launched an in-season evaluation of various facets of the team, including new coach Lionel Hollins, according to league sources.




[…]




Nets ownership, sources said, is monitoring the situation closely, with Brooklyn having just fallen out of the East's top eight after a 2-10 slide that coincides with the franchise being up for sale.



Hollins is in the first year of a four-year, $20 million deal with a team option for the last season. If he is fired midseason, his replacement will be the fifth coach to work for King since the franchise moved to Brooklyn just two and a half years ago.


The current Nets and former Memphis Grizzlies coach, understandably, is chirpy. Read what he said on Tuesday when asked about his image as someone who is averse to modern statistical analysis:



“I’m going to take a breath,” Hollins said after a long pause, “and say it’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard because every coach uses stats.




“Now, do I understand some of the stats that are out there that are new? No. But I can learn them.”




[…]




“As I used to say in Memphis, you can tell me that this lineup is better without Zach [Randolph], but Zach is going to be in the game the last two minutes of the game,” Hollins said. “I don’t care what the stats say. He’s the guy that I trust is going to give me the best chance to win.”



(Yeah, Lionel? Absolutely no statistical measure coming from anyone inside or outside the Grizzlies organization rated Zach Randolph as someone you would want off the floor, or that any go-to lineup would want Randolph on the bench. This is why people get frustrated with Lionel Hollins. He’s a good coach, but he also creates straw man arguments and false narratives that have no footing in reality.)


The Nets basically wiped away any chance they would have at a comeback season when the team more or less announced that their “top” players were available. The intention to sell for the right price doesn’t help, nor does the roster makeup – there are simply too many slow and substandard players, often dotted with injuries, roaming around.


The Pistons, some two games in back of Charlotte, recently had none of these worries. Not only was it assumed that Detroit (who won 12 of 15 entering last weekend) would work its way back into the playoff bracket, but the team actually looked like it had a foundation to build on. Unlike Charlotte and Brooklyn, Andre Drummond remains a potential franchise guy, Greg Monroe has been brilliant this season, and guard Brandon Jennings enjoyed a white hot month of January.


Jennings, sadly, went down with what could be a career-altering Achilles tear on Saturday. Achilles tears often occur when a player is in his 30s or on his figurative last legs, so for the 25-year old point man to go down in a heap on Saturday evening is incredibly unfortunate in ways that leave us fearful for the next five years Jennings has until he hits age 30.


Replacement D.J. Augustin is a solid enough replacement, but though the Pistons were rumored to be after guard Pablo Prigioni in a potential deal with New York, coach and personnel boss Stan Van Gundy swears that he’s not going to deal away his future just to try to obtain a Jennings approximate that may not exist in reality.


From Vince Ellis at the Detroit Free Press, on Tuesday:



Despite trade speculation, Van Gundy dismissed the idea of dealing anything of value just to add a third point guard.




"We want to give ourselves every chance, so we want to get some help, but we won't mortgage anything in terms of the future," Van Gundy said. "We're not going to go out and give away assets, picks or anything like that. No, we're not gonna do that."



As well they shouldn’t.


The Pistons weren’t ever going to be happy in not making the playoffs, but an immediate return to the postseason for Detroit wasn’t exactly expected either. The previous administration had salted the soil so badly in Detroit that the team was more or less forced to waive Josh Smith, just 17 months after he was a coveted free agent, for no compensation. For Van Gundy, the guy that didn’t even press to keep Greg Monroe around last summer, this was always going to be a long rebuild.


The Pistons could pull this off, though.


The team lost in Milwaukee on the night of Jennings’ injury and in Toronto the night after, but Augustin dropped a career-high 35 points in the second loss. Individual success shouldn’t act as some warming sign, but a Pistons’ win against a very good Toronto team in Toronto was always going to be a hard sell even with Brandon Jennings shooting the lights out.


At current rates, 35 wins will grab the eighth seed. The Hornets and Nets, working through injury and storm and stress, don’t figure to keep performing at current rates, however. A sub-.500 record, going 18-19 from here on out, will be enough to leave the Pistons with the eighth seed. This is a team that started the season 5-23, mind you, before losing two starters due to release and then injury, and they could still save their season by winning less than half of their games from here until the end of 2014-15.


That’s how awful the East is.


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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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1Cwj3FP

News sport : Rob Manfred walks back his idea about banning defensive shifts


Good news, rational-thinking baseball fans — it doesn't sound like your new supreme overlord, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred, has any plans to ban defensive shifts tomorrow, by opening day or anytime soon, actually.


Manfred, on his first day as commish, dropped the much-sneered-at idea that eliminating defensive shifts could bolster offense about the league. Many people didn't care for this, because it's essentially dumbing down the game, telling teams not to prepare the best game plans defensively. The Stew is among those who mocked the ban-the-shift idea.


So we're happy to report that Manfred has back-pedaled a little in a new interview with Fox Sports' Ken Rosenthal. In the clip above (a teaser for a full-length sit-down airing Tuesday night on Fox Sports 1), Manfred makes the shift ban sound more like a worst-case scenario than an eminent rule change. He says:



"You never know whether people are going to adjust, maybe a lot of hitters went home this winter and they figured out how to go the other way against the shift and it's going to self correct and we're not going to need to make a change. But we look at these things. We think it's smart to pay attention. We think it's important to think about possible solutions, even if it turns out we don't have a problem."



Self-adjusting was one of the main arguments against any radical rule change against the shift, so it's encouraging to hear that Manfred isn't sitting at his fancy new desk, saying "We need more offense" over and over again, Marshawn Lynch style.


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Mike Oz is an editor for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1yLJJRz