Mali and Guinea face ultimate lottery

Lots will be drawn to separate Mali and Guinea after they ended dead level in African Nations Cup Group D.


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Equatorial Guinea - Lots will be drawn to separate Mali and Guinea after they ended dead level in African Nations Cup Group D on Wednesday.


Mali captain Seydou Keita had a penalty saved at Estadio de Mongomo as the teams played out a third successive 1-1 draw and finished level on points, goal difference and goals scored in second place in the standings behind Ivory Coast.


The draw will be held in Malabo on Thursday, the Confederation of African Football said.


Ivory Coast finished top with a 1-0 win over Cameroon in Malabo which eliminated the losers.


Kevin Constant's 15th-minute penalty put Guinea ahead at halftime but Modibo Maiga equalised for Mali shortly after the break.


Two penalties were awarded inside two minutes by referee Said Kordi of Tunisia early in the game.


He waved play on for the first one before suddenly changing his mind and penalising Salif Coulibaly, who replays showed to have handled the ball with his arm out in a defensive position.


Constant took the kick and with a cheeky chip put Guinea ahead but just a minute later Modibo Maiga's strongly-hit cross was handled by Issiaga Sylla at the other end of the field and this time the referee had no hesitation.


But veteran Keita, in his seventh Nations Cup, hit a weak spot that Naby Yattara saved.


Maiga spared the captain's blushes with a headed goal two minutes into the second half as he was unmarked at back post to convert a cross from Abdoulaye Diaby.


Twice before the Nations Cup finals have turned to the cruel lottery to determine the fate of teams level after the first round.


The Ivorians lost out to Algeria at the 1988 finals in Morocco after both sides finished on three points.


But had the same scenario played out under modern rules, Algeria would have gone through as their three points came from a win, draw and loss in the era when just two points were awarded for a victory. The Ivorians drew all three group games in 1988.


Congo advanced to the semi-finals in 1972 after they were level with Morocco on points and goal difference after the first round when just eight teams competed at the finals.


But they had scored five goals to Morocco's three at a time when the number of goals scored was not considered a tie breaker.


Congo went on to win the tournament.


Reuters






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Ivory Coast advance to Afcon quarters

Max Gradel finally broke the string of draws in Group D and sent the Ivory Coast into the quarter-finals of Afcon.


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Max Gradel finally broke the string of draws in Group D and sent the Ivory Coast into the quarter-finals of the African Cup of Nations with the only goal in a 1-0 victory over Cameroon on Wednesday.


Gradel collected a pass from Siaka Tiene that went through the legs of Cameroon forward Edgar Salli. He then ran toward the middle of the field before unleashing a hard shot that flew past a diving Fabrice Ondoa.


It was Ivory Coast's first victory in the group after a pair of 1-1 draws. All the other matches in the group, including Wednesday's game between Mali and Guinea in Mongomo, also finished 1-1.


The result gives the Ivorians first place in the group and a quarter-final match against Algeria on Sunday in Malabo. But second place will be decided by luck on Thursday with Mali and Guinea drawing lots to see who plays Ghana in Sunday's early match.


The Ivory Coast was playing its second straight match without Gervinho, the Roma forward who was given a straight red card in the opening game against Guinea and then handed a two-match suspension.


But Gradel has been getting things done up front among a team that includes Yaya Toure, Wilfried Bony and Salomon Kalou. The Saint-Etienne midfielder has scored two goals in two matches. On Saturday, he came on as a substitute and scored an 87th-minute equalizer in the 1-1 draw with Mali.


Cameroon again played an up-tempo game, but rarely threatened the Ivory Coast goal. One of the best chances of the first half for the Cameroonians came when Salli shot over the bar in the final seconds. More chances came in the second half as the Ivorians sat back, but there was no finishing touch.


Sapa-AP






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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring the need to let Bradley Beal bomb away

A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


C: Truth About It. Good stuff from Adam Rubin on Bradley Beal, "a deadly 3-point specialist who does not shoot 3-pointers," and why it would behoove Flip Saunders to do what he can to push the Washington Wizards marksman into more long-distance attempts.


PF: Nuggets Ink. Brian Shaw really wasn't happy that Danilo Gallinari didn't get a shooting foul call that would've sent him to the free-throw line with a chance to tie things up in the closing seconds of the Denver Nuggets' Monday night loss to the Los Angeles Clippers.


SF: VICE Sports. Patrick Redford looks at the latest Forbes valuations, looks at situations like the one in the works in Milwaukee, and comes to a conclusion: "If NBA teams are worth billions, it's farcical that cities should be held ransom by owners. No citizens are obligated to help the rich get richer."


SG: RealGM. Jonathan Tjarks on why the Los Angeles Lakers' decision to give Kobe Bryant a $48.5 million contract extension last year made an awful lot of sense even if age and injury meant he was never going to come close to producing at that level on the court: "In a business where rain makers can choose where they want to work, it’s never a bad idea to cultivate a reputation as a place that takes care of its employees."


PG: Forum Blue and Gold. J.M. Poulard on the uncomfortable eventuality that Lakers fans find themselves facing in the aftermath of Kobe's latest injury and, in all likelihood, eventual comeback: "I’m not sure whether I or anyone else for that matter is prepared for a world where a healthy but older version of Kobe is no longer the Purple and Gold’s best player."


6th: But the Game is On. Stephen Curry has turned in an MVP-caliber first half for the remarkable Golden State Warriors, but Mark Travis wonders if the magnitude of Curry's ascending star at the point guard position has perhaps somewhat unfairly obscured the continual brilliance of Chris Paul.


7th: San Francisco Chronicle. Ron Kroichick with a good look at the work that's gone into developing Curry's yo-yo handle, the metronomic backbeat behind the soaring solos he authors with his shooting. As former Warriors and current Charlotte Hornets assistant Stephen Silas says, "“He knows he’s not going to lose the ball, no matter what he does with it.”


8th: Vantage Sports and The Triangle. Ian Levy and Kirk Goldsberry offer statistical and shot-chart-based looks at how Andrew Wiggins' offensive game has evolved as his rookie season has worn on, how and where the Minnesota Timberwolves wunderkind has improved, and where he still needs some work.


9th: San Antonio Express-News. The great Mike Monroe looks back at the 1975 ABA All-Star Game, an event that featured Willie Nelson singing a capella and the MVP receiving a horse. (There is a sad ending.)


10th: Wall Street Journal. Ben Cohen looks at how Vine has changed the experience of watching, and re-watching, NBA games.


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News sport : Tony Stewart purchases sprint car series

Tony Stewart may not be in a sprint car for a long time, but the three-time Sprint Cup champion now has his own sprint car series.


The All Star Circuit of Champions Sprint Car Series announced Wednesday that Stewart had purchased the series.


“My passion for sprint car racing is well known, and the All Star Circuit of Champions Sprint Car Series has been a pillar of the sport for a long time,” Stewart said in a statement. “Racing is my business, and I look forward to building on the All Star Series’ already impressive legacy by taking it to a new level of success and sustainability.”


Stewart's reluctance to get in a car anytime soon stems from two accidents in the past two years. In August of 2013, Stewart broke his leg in a sprint car accident. In August 2014, while racing in upstate New York the night before the Sprint Cup Series race at Watkins Glen, Stewart struck and killed Kevin Ward, who had gotten out of his car to confront Stewart after hitting the wall when the two were racing together. After an investigation into the accident, Stewart was not charged by a grand jury.


On Tuesday, Stewart said the past two years have made his desire to succeed in the Sprint Cup Series even stronger.


He owns Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio, a dirt track where the Camping World Truck Series has raced the past two seasons. His Tony Stewart Racing also fields cars for World of Outlaws Series champions Donny Schatz and Steve Kinser.


The ASCC has 50 race dates in 2015.


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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 : Teammates on Grizzlies' D-League affiliate brawl on bench during timeout

Sure, longtime theoretical opponents Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao chatting at Tuesday's Miami Heat-Milwaukee Bucks game is a pretty big deal, I guess. But if you really want to see a fight, you should've been watching the D-League contest between the Iowa Energy and the Rio Grande Valley Vipers. That's where the real scrapping went down — between two members of the same team.


[Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball]


Here's a from-the-opposing-sideline view of Jarnell Stokes and Kalin Lucas — teammates on the Energy, the Memphis Grizzlies' D-League affiliate — going after one another on the bench during a timeout on Tuesday night:



And here's a closer look, which offers a better indication of just how heated things got than a vantage point that had me focusing more on the late-reacting officials and the meandering mascot:



It remains unclear what exactly sparked the altercation. One thing that is clear: both men were ejected from the game. One that seems clear: it probably was something a bit more serious than a Pitt the Elder/Lord Palmerston type of disagreement if it led Lucas — a 6-foot, 195-pound point guard — to decide it was a good idea to throw hands with the 6-foot-8, 260-plus-pound Stokes. (And considering the Grizzlies spent a second-round pick on Stokes this summer with an eye toward a potential frontcourt role in the future, while giving Lucas — who isn't under contract with the Grizz — just the merest look-see after spending the bulk of the last four years overseas and in the D-League, this might not have been the wisest career move for the Michigan State product.)


The game was delayed while some blood was cleaned up on the bench — the broadcast's announcers said it might have been Lucas who got cut, which, again, makes some sense given the size differential — and the Energy is reportedly "working with the [D-League] to investigate the incident," so we might get more details on this in the days to come. Energy owner Jed Kaplan told the Des Moines Register on Wednesday that "any suspensions or disciplinary action would be determined by either the NBA or the D-League."


Despite losing both Lucas (who had 18 points, five rebounds and five assists at the time of the fight) and Stokes (who'd added 16 points, eight boards and a pair of steals), Iowa went on to win 124-120 behind 30 points from former Louisville star Russ Smith. Nobody punched him.


Hat-tip to The Big Lead.


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News sport : J.R. Smith thinks he's successful as a Cav because 'there's no going out' in Cleveland

The flashy New York Knicks dealing noted nightlife enthusiast J.R. Smith into the dreary Cleveland winter is a script idea so hacky that it would have been laughed off of the table two decades ago. Starting with the unfortunate move that sent Knicks legend Walt Frazier to Cleveland in 1977, the idea gained silver screen immortality when the ‘Major League’ franchise gave credibility to the trope that Cleveland was the major league city that no athlete wanted to work in.


J.R. Smith actual life, it turns out, is a living and breathing B-movie idea. Traded from the Knicks to the Cavaliers on Jan. 7, he has indirectly aligned his nightlife-less existence in Cleveland with his solid start to a career as a Cavalier.


From an interview with NBA.com’s David Aldridge, who asked what Smith felt he needed to work on upon coming to Cleveland:



"Being more consistent. Consistency has been something that...I wouldn't say lacked, but it's just been stints where I get hot, and then you go cold for two, three games, whatever the case may be. Just staying consistent, and that involves staying in the gym. So for me, I got my brother here with me, so we're in the gym every night, playing one-on-one, or whatever the case may be, as well as me getting my rest. I think this is the best situation for me, 'cause there's nothing but basketball. There's nothing you expect but basketball. There's nothing, there's no going out, there's no late nights. There's video games, basketball and basketball. So it's a great thing, 'cause I go back to where I came from. When I grew up, I never, I wasn't allowed to go out."



(Knicks fans? They would say that Smith lacked consistency.)


Upon first click, one would rightfully deduce that Smith was producing more of the same in Cleveland. He shot just a tick over 40 percent with the Knicks this season, same as last season, and he’s just a tick below 40 percent in Cleveland after 11 games. His per game numbers are up, but only because of a minutes increase – per-minute, Smith’s scoring marks with the Cavs are right in line with what he brought in New York this year, the year before, and the year before that.


Take away his bookend games with the Cavs, his ohfer five debut and 2-11 clank-fest from Cleveland’s win over Detroit on Tuesday, and Smith is shooting 43 percent from the floor with his new team. And, as our Dan Devine noted in a great piece on Tuesday, Smith is rightfully being encouraged to act as a volume scorer as a starter with Cleveland, and until Tuesday’s 1-6 showing against the Pistons, he’s responded with a killer touch from the outside. His most recent performance dropped his percentage down to 37 percent from long range, about average, but that’s not going to stop the man.


As Dr. Devine pointed out, Smith is pulling off some historic stuff from behind the arc – after 11 games as a Cavalier he’s already 59th on Cleveland’s all-time three-point attempts list . He did that in three weeks!


Aldridge, after noticing Smith’s quotes about the lack of nightlife in Cleveland, attempted to get J.R. to open up a bit more as to what he got from enjoying the City That Never Sleeps:



Me: Did you find that exploring that life, because you could, wasn't all it was cracked up to be? I can spend whatever I want, and at the end of the day, it really doesn't mean anything?




JRS: Especially from the standpoint of making me better. I always made myself better by staying in the gym. When you replace that with stuff off the court, then you're taking away from what made you who you are, or what got you to a certain point. It was kind of pulling me down in a sense, of not getting enough rest, not doing things you're supposed to be doing, things you're used to doing. So when you start missing those shots you're supposed to make, especially wide-open shots, it was like, alright, what's going on, what's going on? Instead of looking at what it is, you're reverting to that even more, instead of going back to the basics. So I think that's the greatest part about being here.



Smith deftly slid away from that one, but one can’t ignore Smith’s history. His miserable showings in the 2012 and 2013 playoffs were blamed on excessive late night jaunts in New York and Miami, with no less than Rihanna calling the guy out via social media.


Taking things even deeper, Grantland’s Jason Concepcion did a bit of research and found that Smith’s shooting percentage dropped from 42 percent overall to 39 percent on Sunday, with the presumption that Smith was still hurting from a Saturday night out even mid-afternoon on Sunday.


Spurred on by those findings, Harrison Chase at Harvard Sports Analysis Collective, in a great piece you should really all go read, decided to create a “Party Score” to see where Smith ranked amongst all Sunday players dating back to 1974 (when Prohibition was lifted, or when Basketball-Reference.com started charting all NBA stats).


Here’s his description of how he came to his findings:



“ … using these stats, I tested the null hypothesis of same shooting percentage against the alternative hypothesis of different shooting percentage and calculated a z score for each player. I then multiplied that number by -1 (so that a highly significant partier would have a high number) and then made that number a player’s ‘Party Score.’”



Unhappy with Smith’s middling ranking amongst all Sunday players, Chase decided to only use players that had worked in and shot in a significant series of Sunday games. Here’s where Smith came out:



(Courtesy HarvardSportsAnalysis.org)

J.R. Smith, the NBA’s second-biggest partier over the last 41 years!


Right?


Eh.


Reggie Miller also ranks highly on that list, and he spent his Saturday nights in Indianapolis, where they don’t let you sneak spiced rum into the booth at Steak and Shake past 10:30 (I’ve tried).


Rasheed Wallace ranks highly on that list, he was once caught in a truck with Damon Stoudamire that was full of marijuana and (seriously) Mike’s Hard Lemonade bottles. Tim Duncan, crusher of several Diet Dr. Pepper cans, ranks just behind Rasheed, though.


Patrick Ewing makes an appearance, as he did frequently at Atlanta’s Gold Club late some evenings, but so does Avery Johnson. That is to say, “ordained minister, Avery Johnson.”


This isn’t to dismiss Chase’s findings (which, again, you really should read), he did great work here, but we can see what’s clear. From December onward Sunday games are mostly either playoff games, or nationally televised games. Yes, the NBA averages plenty of nondescript regular season contests on Sundays, but once the April-through-June contests are tossed in the mix and the ABC games start to pile up following the Super Bowl, things tilt toward scads of games played between two very good basketball teams.


Smith, who played on many very good teams in Denver, and a few good teams in New York, was going up against some of the best that the NBA had to offer on his Sunday appearances. And because of his proximity to both Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony in Denver, and his time spent with the Knicks, he was scheduled for quite a few nationally televised contests on Sunday that perhaps his team didn’t deserve, as the NBA trolled for ratings.


J.R. Smith admits to loving the nightlife, and he’s at least currently hoping that Cleveland’s supposed lack of nightlife (which we all know is bogus, you can get into as much trouble in Cleveland as in any other big town) influences him to regain the gym-led muscle memory that made him a consistent contributor prior to his time in New York.


Of course, J.R. Smith has never been a consistent contributor, at any stop. He’s even shot 6-27 in his last two games with the Cavaliers. He’s always run hot and cold, and that’s just fine – because the hot gets so hot. The Cavs will take him, and possibly win it all with him, warts and all.


Most importantly? The idea that players don’t want to go to Cleveland remains hack. Those days are over.


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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 : Paul George revisits leg injury: 'The second I saw my bone ... I lost it'

Paul George keeps walking down the comeback trail. (Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports) The horrific right leg injury that Paul George suffered during a pre-FIBA World Cup Team USA exhibition on Aug. 1 seemed to change so much — the way NBA players and observers viewed international competitions; the short- and long-term outlook for the Indiana Pacers, the franchise with whom George became an All-Star and that has staked its future on the belief that he will be a maximum-salary-worthy, MVP-caliber cornerstone through at least the end of this decade; etc.


Most importantly, though, it seemed to change the career prospects of a 24-year-old who went from somewhat-surprising top-10 draft pick to the outskirts of the MVP debate in less than four years, only to see that ascent violently halted during thanks to some bad luck and bad basket-stanchion placement while hustling during a scrimmage. Now, nearly six months after the traumatic incident that altered the path of his career and his life, George relives his injury in a video series produced by Bleacher Report. While the series itself will focus on his recovery — it's called "Paul George's Road Back," after all — first things have to come first, and for George and his parents, Paul Sr. and Paulette, that means talking his way through the hopeful moments before the break, the horrifying realization of what had transpired, and the work to pick up the pieces in the aftermath:



(If you found that to be a pretty brutal watch, you're not alone.)


It's easy to forget, so many months after the fact, but it all started with George doing precisely the sort of thing that has made him such a valuable NBA player — seeing an opportunity to make a defensive play and moving as quickly as he can to do so, in this case by hunting a chasedown block on a fast-break by James Harden.


"I missed. I didn't get the ball. But then I came down, and it was just awkward," George says in the video. "I didn't really feel nothing then, but I just knew I couldn't put my foot down. I couldn't help myself from standing. I tried to grab onto the mat to help myself, like, 'Why can't I stand right now?' I looked down to look at my legs, and I saw my bone. And the second I saw my bone, I just ... I lost it.


George's parents open up about the terror they instantly felt — "I was thinking in my mind, 'I hope his career is not over,'" said Paulette George — and, though George himself is a bit more circumspect, he's clear about how difficult the moment was for him as he laid there under the basket at the Thomas and Mack Center.


"That was a tough point, right there," he said. "Everything just slowed down. Like, I could hear every individual in the arena talking."


We're still talking about Paul George, albeit not as much as we were before the injury; there's a bit of out-of-sight-out-of-mind to it, a tendency to prefer focusing on the players producing remarkable moments on the court in the here and now to those who are doing the grueling work of making their way back to the floor away from public consumption. But while the path back consists of countless tedious steps that eventually lead to landmark moments like the ability to once again take jump shots or dunk, George seems — or, at least, publicly presents himself as seeming, since all such single-focus pseudo-documentary projects are to some degree a player marketing tool — to have learned to bear the burden of his comeback, and to be wearing it lightly.


He laughs about the fact that he will need the rod surgically implanted in his leg to repair his shattered tibia and fibula forever ("Yeah, it's a part of me now, an extra bone"). He warmly revisits the well-wishes, visits and gifts he received from those saddened by his injury. He reiterates the optimism that he espoused in his first public comments after the injury, hitting the same notes six months down the line as he did two weeks removed from the break.


And yet, you can't help but wonder if one element of that optimism — perhaps the most important one — is perhaps a bit naive. Can George really ever return mentally to the place he was before that night in Vegas?


"I felt I was immortal. I felt I was invincible. I've made so many plays where guys go down, and I walked up clean from it. So I did feel that nothing bad could ever happen to me on the court," George says in the video. "And to this day, I don't even want to think about ... once I'm healed, that'll be the last that I think about being hurt again."


For the sake of his family, his friends, all of us who love to watch him play — and, most of all, for George himself — let's hope that's true.


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News sport : Oregon DL Sam Kamp won't return for fifth season

Oregon defensive lineman Sam Kamp won’t return to the field for his fifth season in 2015.


The 6-foot-4, 290-pound Kamp recently finished his redshirt junior season with the Ducks and had one more season of eligibility remaining, but he announced Tuesday night that he’s moving on. He also confirmed the decision in a text message to The Oregonian.


“I'm incredibly blessed to have made so many amazing memories playing for this team. I'm so grateful to God, to my loving family and close friends, to my coaches, trainers and support staff who together are better than any other program in the nation, and especially to my teammates who I've spent a seriously ridiculous amount of hours grinding with,” Kamp wrote on his Instagram account.


“This season has been a once in a lifetime experience and even though we didn't finish with a win, it was an unforgettable finish to my athletic career. I'll graduate this spring as a proud University of Oregon double major and I can't wait to find out what opportunities I can take advantage of in the future!"



Kamp was a regular contributor on the second unit of the Ducks’ defense in 2014 as he registered 20 tackles, three tackles for loss and one sack while appearing in all 15 of the team’s games.


In 2013, Kamp played in 10 games and had nine tackles and in 2012 Kamp played in eight games and notches five tackles.


Kamp, a native of Mesa, Ariz., was a three-star recruit in Oregon’s 2011 class.


For more Oregon news, visit DuckSportsAuthority.com.


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News sport : Phil Mickelson may have Super Bowl tickets to give away at Phoenix Open

Hey, if you're going to the Waste Management Phoenix Open this week, it might be a good idea to pop on a Callaway Golf hat. Why? You might score Super Bowl tickets from Phil Mickelson.


Of course, we don't know if Mickelson will be trotting around Seahawks-Patriots tickets, but the last time the Super Bowl was in nearby Glendale, Ariz., in 2008 the same weekend as the annual stop at TPC Scottsdale, he made a spectator's day.


Mickelson had landed two tickets to Super Bowl XLII where the Patriots' opponent was the New York Giants. According to the New York Times, Mickelson, who eventually lost in a playoff to J.B. Holmes, decided early on Sunday that he couldn't make it to the game. He commissioned caddie Jim Mackay to find someone who deserved the seats.


Mackay found young Drew Fockler and his dad John on the third tee, with Drew donning Callaway Golf apparel. After getting an enthusiastic response about football from the two, Mackay handed over the tickets. A thank-you note came back to Mickelson from the family.


Who's to say Mickelson has seats again this year, telling the Times he'll wait until his children are older to attend the NFL's championship game again. However, if we had to guess, the man who hands out Benjamins and autographs to people he hits with errant tee shots might have a surprise pair or two for some lucky fans.




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News sport : Who would pay to see Super Bowl Media Day? (Podcast)


Welcome to the latest Shutdown Corner podcast! On today's trying-not-to-get-fined Super Bowl week episode, we have:


• Rob Gronkowski sings! (1:00 mark)


• A look at Marshawn Lynch's Media Day performance. Does it matter that he didn't say a word? (3:54 mark)


• The ridiculousness of Media Day. Why does it exist? Why do people dress up in costumes? Why would anyone pay to watch this? (11:30 mark)


All this and more as part of the special Shutdown Corner Podcast's Super Bowl week episodes. Listen up, and while you're listening ...


Subscribe via iTunes right here.


Non-iTunes subscription link here.


Leave us a nice review here.


The Shutdown Corner podcast is the product of Kevin Kaduk (@KevinKaduk), Frank Schwab (@YahooSchwab) and Jay Busbee (@JayBusbee). New episodes every Tuesday and Friday, with bonus episodes when you least expect it. Enjoy!


____

Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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Man City want Yaya, Bony back

Man City want Yaya Toure and Wilfried Bony for the title clash at Chelsea - but the Ivorians are in Equatorial Guinea.


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Malabo - Manchester City are sweating on the availability of Yaya Toure and Wilfried Bony for Saturday’s title clash at Chelsea - but whether the two Ivorians can play may come down to the drawing of lots.


Ivory Coast face Cameroon on Wednesday night knowing a win will guarantee them a place in the quarter-finals of the Africa Cup of Nations, and keep the City stars in Equatorial Guinea for at least another week.


If they lose, Toure and Bony will head home on Thursday, and could be ready to face Premier League leaders Chelsea.


However, things get more complicated if they draw.


Despite a star-studded line-up, the Elephants have drawn both of their first two games 1-1. And, remarkably, both the other games in the group, which also features Cameroon, Mali and Guinea, have also ended with the same scoreline.


That means going into the final round of fixtures, all four teams are level on points, head-to-head, goal difference and goals scored. Should that remain the same after tonight’s games, lots would be drawn to determine which two sides go through to the quarter-finals, and which two are eliminated.


Even if one game ends with a positive result, were the other to be a draw there would still need to be lot drawing to decide who goes through, and who goes out, of the teams that finished level.


And, just to complicate matters further, two wins by the same score would see a toss of the coin to see who finishes first and second in the group. City boss Manuel Pellegrini will hope Cameroon can show more cutting edge than in their first two games, freeing his stars to return to Manchester without relying on luck.


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News sport : Fantasy golf power rankings: Waste Management Phoenix Open

The largest and rowdiest crowd in golf convenes upon TPC Scottsdale on Thursday for the Waste Management Phoenix Open. In addition to a lot of fans, almost every major American golf star is in the Phoenix area this week, including Bubba Watson, Jordan Spieth, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.


TPC Scottsdale has been renovated by original architect Tom Weiskopf, playing a little tougher with new challenges and changes. However, winning in Phoenix means going deep, so we're recommending players this week who know how to shoot low numbers.


Here are our top five picks:



  1. Bubba Watson -- Watson faded down the stretch to a T-2 finish here last year and has three top-10 WMPO finishes overall in eight career starts. Looked solid enough at Kapalua.

  2. Jordan Spieth -- Spieth's never played at TPC Scottsdale, so this is a bit of a risk. However, Spieth ended 2015 with two consecutive wins against big-name, albeit small, fields.

  3. Phil Mickelson -- Mickelson is the all-time money leader in this event and was a winner here in 2013, nearly shooting 59 en route to tying a tournament record at TPC Scottsdale. Modest finish at Humana (T-24) was a good indicator.

  4. Brendan Steele -- Steele was one of many runners-up last week at Humana, which only further strengthens our tip this week. Steele has been inside the top six in his last three WMPO starts. He likes the place.

  5. Hunter Mahan -- Mahan won here in 2010 and has been a decent moneymaker in this event since. He'd be great in a one-and-done league this week if you're not using Steele for some reason.




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







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News sport : This NBC NASCAR commercial is fantastic (Video)

If you're a regular reader of From the Marbles, you know we're not too big on hyperbole. And we promise we're being hyperbolic when we wonder if this is the best NASCAR television commercial of our (shortish) lifetime.


It's certainly up there with the GPS one.


Yeah, we're admittedly biased because of our love for Nick Offerman and Parks and Recreation, but watch it right now. We think you'll agree with us.



According to NBC's NASCAR Twitter feed, the ad will air during the Super Bowl. NBC picks up 2015 NASCAR broadcasts starting with the summer Daytona race.


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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 : Special delivery elicits different quote from Marshawn Lynch

It turns out that the way to a different Marshawn Lynch media day quote is through his stomach.


Minutes after he uttered "I'm just here so I won't get fined" close to 30 times, the reclusive Seattle Seahawks running back had another reaction when approached by USA Today reporter Josh Peter.


Peter's secret? He came bearing a special lemon cake baked in Sacramento by Lynch's maternal grandfather Leron Lynch.


"Oh yeah, that's the magic cake," Lynch said. "Thank you."


OK, so the cake didn't spark a long address or interview from Lynch. But the delivery did give us a more personal look at a player that most casual fans only know as a media-averse man of few words.


As USA Today details, Leron Lynch was the central male role model in Marshawn's life, watching him become a star player in high school and forbidding him a serious girlfriend so he'd stay focused on the sport. Leron said it's Marshawn's focus and aversion to the media that won't leave him surprised if his grandson decides to walk away from the game after Sunday's Super Bowl against the New England Patriots.


"I know he'll quit," Leron Lynch told the paper from his kitchen as he baked the cake. "If everybody keeps standing in his face like that and makes him talk, he'll walk away. He loves to play the game, but he'll walk away. I know he will.


"I don't even know why people would want to interview him. If he doesn't talk, he's just going to give you one word. So who would want to interview somebody that's not going to talk. So I don't know why people don't just back off. … The more they want him to talk, the less he's going to want to talk."


Still, Leron has devised a way to have his grandson avoid the heavy fines the NFL threatens Lynch with.


"They're going to ask you questions, so tell them about Papa," Leron said. "Tell them about Papa's cake, that's all."


As someone who needs a good dessert recipe for Sunday, we're listening.



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Kevin Kaduk is a writer for Yahoo Sports .. Have a tip? Email him at kevinkaduk@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Kurt Warner still wonders whether Patriots bent rules in Super Bowl against Rams




It's been 13 years since the New England Patriots beat the St. Louis Rams 20-17 in Super Bowl XXXVI. Even today, the stunning-at-the-time upset continues to rankle members of the heavily favored Rams. On Tuesday, former Rams quarterback Kurt Warner allowed that, yeah, maybe the whole deflate-gate business has provided fresh fuel to some long-held suspicions.


"I don't want to believe that there was anything outside of his team beat our team," Warner said, per the New York Daily News. "That's what I want to believe. Yeah, there's a sliver of a doubt … Was there any advantage they gained in any game? Not just our Super Bowl game, but maybe a game before that to get to the Super Bowl. All those things enter your mind. It's not because I'm bitter. It's not because I say they cheated, because I have no idea."


Warner noted that quarterback Tom Brady and head coach Bill Belichick are clearly all-time talents, but that this latest scandal continues to taint their legacy. "It adds a sliver of doubt, which I think is unfair to everybody," he said. "It's unfair to them and their legacy. It's unfair to me and my legacy. I don't want to have to wonder, 'Well, did they beat me fair and square or was there something extra?' That's the unfortunate part that I don't think you'll ever get over, because you know something was done outside the rules. I have no idea how it helped them. I don't know if it gave them an advantage on one play that turned into an interception or touchdown. Or gave them no advantage. I don't know."


Warner's former teammate Marshall Faulk didn't hem at all when he spoke on the issue two years ago, saying he would "never be over being cheated out of the Super Bowl."


The Patriots have consistently denied any institutional wrongdoing in the deflate-gate matter, with attention now focusing on a "rogue ball-boy" who may have deflated the balls of his own volition. Patriots owner Robert Kraft has professed the team's innocence and demanded an apology from the NFL should an investigation exonerate the team.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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