United look no better than opening day

Can you say there was much difference in performance between the draw at Cambridge and the opening-day loss at Swansea?


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London - Louis van Gaal has played the role of the professor all season and sometimes he can make us feel like students in the classroom. But, a week on from a goalless draw in Cambridge, one of the great educational centres of the world, he still has a lot learn about his team.


There were no signs of enjoyment or self-expression in that game and it looks like the players are weary of Van Gaal’s experimenting.


United enjoyed a good unbeaten stretch but there were never any dominant displays in that run. They ground out results and often looked laboured.


Can you really say there was much of a difference in the level of performance between the 0-0 last week and the opening-day defeat by Swansea?


It’s no secret Van Gaal wants to play with a back three but it’s so obviously flawed that even the fans feel compelled to tell him so. When he changed things at QPR, it looked like the penny had dropped. They stuck with a back four against Cambridge but with little success.


It will be interesting to see if he reverts to a 3-5-2 on Saturday because United are facing a team who love playing against a back three. Leicester’s best performances of the season have come against sides that play three at the back.


They tore United apart in that stunning 5-3 win and produced a fine comeback from 2-0 down to draw at Liverpool. Wide men such as Jeff Schlupp and Riyad Mahrez are the perfect players to bomb forward and expose gaps left by defenders playing in a three. Mahrez will be missing on Saturday - he is with Algeria at the Africa Cup of Nations - but Schlupp can cause United problems.


I played in a back three many times and if you are the widest defender you feel vulnerable.


It’s a system that places disproportionate demands on the wing backs to cover more ground than anyone else. If they don’t drop back, the widest defender has to move across to cover the space. That leaves huge gaps for the opposition to fly into, as our graphic (right) shows.


When you’re out of possession it drags your team shape all over the place and, unless your wing backs drop deep, it leaves you short of defenders in the box. United have struggled to get it right, QPR abandoned it after a few games and Liverpool only seem to be coming to grips with it now.


Nigel Pearson has used the system in the past, so he knows just how to exploit it, but United have had enough time to make it work. They have a squad capable of competing in four competitions, but are in only two. They have played 10 games fewer than Chelsea and Liverpool, nine less than Arsenal and eight fewer than Man City.


That means more time on the training pitch but Van Gaal overcomplicates things. He clearly feels he knows best, but does he? A lot of United players have been used in multiple positions, which makes it harder to know their role.


Wayne Rooney has played up front, off the front and in midfield, Angel di Maria has played in midfield, off the front and as a striker and Daley Blind has been used all over the place. Then there are the defenders who have had to plug all sorts of gaps. However, things can change.


At this stage last season, Liverpool had only three points more than United do now. And, with the advantage of playing only once a week, Brendan Rodgers’ side came into their own in the second half of the campaign - they were absolutely flying. United can follow suit.


Van Gaal arrived at United saying he could win the title this season. He is a long way from achieving that but if he can finally settle on a preferred system that suits these players then things will improve. It’s time for him to stop experimenting and find the right formula to make United great again.


Daily Mail






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News sport : Lydia Ko on the verge of becoming youngest No. 1 in golf history

Lydia Ko finished the 2014 LPGA season with a win, and if she bookends it on Saturday with a victory to start 2015, she'll become the No. 1 player in the world.


The 17-year-old Kiwi made five consecutive birdies on the back nine and nine altogether on Friday at Golden Ocala G&EC to take a one-shot lead over Ha Na Jang heading into the final round of the inaugural Coates Golf Championship in Ocala, Fla. The third-round 65 ties the low round of the week with Amy Yang.


Ko came out guns blazing on Friday, making four birdies on her opening nine. However, a pair of short par misses on the 10th and 11th holes set her four back of Jang. It also spurred her on to the birdie streak that gave her the outright lead.


“It kind of got me fired up," Ko said. "I kind of jammed my putter in my bag, and I said, `OK, you’ve got to start working again.’”


If Ko wins on Saturday and earns her sixth LPGA Tour title (fourth as a professional), she will take over the top spot in the Rolex Rankings from Inbee Park. Even if Ko doesn't win, she could take over No. 1 if she finishes alone in second place and Park, who is 11 shots back of Ko's lead, finishes no better than a three-way tie for third place.


The accomplishment would be another in a string of mind-blowing efforts from Ko. At 15, she became the youngest player to win on the LPGA Tour, taking the Canadian Women's Open. She defended that title a year later. Ko closed the 2014 LPGA season by winning the CME Group Tour Championship and its $500,000 first-place prize, as well the inaugural Race to the CME Globe and its $1,000,000 payoff. Taking over the top spot in the world seems a natural progression.


After her Friday 65, Ko took care to at least publicly temper expectations of a Saturday coronation.


“There are so many great players, one to four shots, you just never know what's going to happen,” she said. “I'm just going to concentrate on my game, just stay really positive, and if somebody else shoots a much better score than I do, I can't really do much about it. Just going to focus, and, hopefully, I'll go out and shoot a good score tomorrow.”




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







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What Bafana really need

Safa must appoint a technical director to assist Shakes in the development of the next Bafana generation, says Rodney Reiners.


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Cape Town - The South African national football squad return home from Equatorial Guineaon Saturday after crashing out of the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon).


After a 3-1 loss to Algeria, a 1-1 draw with Senegal and a 2-1 defeat to Ghana, Bafana Bafana finished bottom of Group C. While they showed promise at times, it was evident the national team is still quite a way behind the best sides on the continent.


The experience is sure to have been a chastening exercise for Bafana and head coach Shakes Mashaba. There was way too much over-confidence and boasting ahead of their participation and far too little respect for their opponents. It’s a typical South African attitude - and, perhaps, after being humbled at Afcon, there will now be a greater understanding of the tons of work still to do, and an awareness of Bafana’s true position in the African football hierarchy.


The performance post-mortem will reflect that Mashaba’s men did extremely well in attack. They created much and were energetic and effervescent in and around the penalty area. The commitment, desire and pride in the jersey, so prevalent since the appointment of Mashaba as coach, were also again evident.


But the negative column is the one that needs to be focused on. The team’s defensive frailties, which includes the tardy closing and pressing of opponents, the aerial vulnerability and the general organisation, cohesion and tactical discipline in this regard, will require some serious thought by Mashaba.


And a good idea would be for the SA Football Association (Safa) to appoint a technical director to assist the coach in the development and nurturing of the next Bafana generation. It was clear throughout the tournament that Mashaba was tactically limited.


Together with this, of course, Bafana were the masters of their own disaster, in that they were always unable to finish off their opponents when they had them on the ropes.


They took the lead in each of the three games and then surrendered their advantage. In fact, in the opening match against Algeria, the No 1-ranked team in Africa, Bafana had a chance to go 2-0 up, but missed a penalty. And the failure to make opportunities count proved to be another downfall of the team at Afcon.


“We gave it away.... we scored, but then couldn’t consolidate,” said Mashaba. “We need to go back to the basics, knowing when to do things, how to do things, and where to do them. You need that ability to kill a game…


“Also, when you’re one goal up, you have to buy time… Yet we were just giving the ball back to opponents, and they came at us and that’s where the problem is.”


Bafana captain Dean Furman also alluded to the team’s defensive woes and tactical deficiencies. “In all three games, we dropped a little too deep, inviting pressure on ourselves. And against these top teams, with top strikers, and you will get punished… that’s exactly what happened to us.


“We have to work on our game of staying solid, while still allowing the team to play an exciting, expanding game of football. There are many positives to take, but those are the key areas to work on to make this team a success.


“We came to the tournament with high hopes, But I suppose we let ourselves down. We have a lot of positives to talk about, but we have to look at where we went wrong. There are many areas where we still need to improve. Overall, though, the experience was important, we have to learn from where we went wrong and, hopefully next time around, we will be a lot stronger.


“I am proud to have been in this team, with some exciting youngsters with great talent, and that’s something we displayed in the three games.”


Former Cape Town Spurs legend Boebie Solomons, now the coach of national First Division side Cape Town All Stars, watched closely on television, and has a few thoughts on Bafana’s performance.


Solomons, who has also coached Santos, Wits, Black Leopards and Polokwane City, is a keen student of the game, with a deep insight into the tactical developments in the sport.


“Look, to be honest, I didn’t think we would get too far in the tournament,” said Solomons.


“It was a young squad and I think the aim was to prepare the team for the future. It was all about grooming these young players, exposing them to the experience, so I wasn’t too surprise that they never made the next stage.


“While I think Bafana played well in patches, the fact that they encountered a higher quality of opponent was too much for them at this stage. They will be better for the experience.


“I think the defensive problems started right at the back with the goalkeeper. You must always remember that is why a goalkeeper is the team’s number one.


“At that level, if you don’t have experience in that position, it results in errors. A good goalkeeper marshals the defence, communicates, and is there to guide and settle the defence.


“That did not happen for Bafana.


“Also, in central defence, a team needs a leader, someone who commands and acts as a general. He rallies those around him in defensive situations. This was another shortcoming in the Bafana squad.”


Opinion, criticism and advice will continue to stream in in the aftermath of Bafana’s Afcon capitulation - and there is much that needs attention.


It is now up to Safa, Mashaba and the technical director - if football’s governing body ever makes a decision on this much-needed position - to take into consideration the Afcon weaknesses, think carefully, and plot the way forward.


Weekend Argus






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Guinea seek to continue fairytale run

Hosts Equatorial Guinea hope to continue their fairytale run at Afcon as they take on Tunisia in the quarter-finals.


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Bata - Hosts Equatorial Guinea bid to continue their fairytale run at the African Nations Cup as they take on Tunisia in Saturday's quarter-final with a passionate support expected to rally behind them.


Having upset neighbours Gabon in the group phase in their last game in a snatch and grab win, they have hopes of a similar success against a side who have had an impressive qualifying campaign and finished top of their opening round group.


Coach Esteban Becker said, on the eve of the match, victory would be “monstrous” for the small country but they were confident of achieving it.


The match at the Estadio de Bata, which will host next weekend's final, is preceded by a derby between Congo and the Democratic Republic of Congo.


The proximity of the two countries, separated by the Congo River, should ensure a spicy edge to the match, heightened by the fact Congo coach Claude Le Roy was in charge of DR Congo at the last finals two years ago.


“I know all their players because I worked with them for a long time but then they know me and my ways too, so I'm not sure there is any advantage,” said Le Roy, who took over in Brazzaville just over a year ago.


Reuters






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'I can't say if de Gea will stay'

Louis van Gaal admits Real Madrid target David De Gea could leave Manchester United.


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London - Louis van Gaal has admitted Real Madrid target David De Gea could leave Manchester United - but the Old Trafford boss will fight to keep him.


Earlier this month, Van Gaal said the talented goalkeeper would soon extend his contract. But ahead of Saturday’s visit of Leicester City, he admitted for the first time that may not be the case.


“In football, everything is possible,” Van Gaal said, when asked if he was concerned the European champions could pounce. “We want to keep him.”


Madrid-born De Gea, who has been in fine form for United, has 17 months left on his contract.


If the 24-year-old, signed for £18.9million from Atletico Madrid in 2011, does not sign a new deal Real could land him for nothing at the end of next season - something United fans, and no doubt the club’s board, are desperate to avoid.


Last week, De Gea’s agent Jorge Mendes said: ‘He’s a United player and has a contract there. You have to respect that but things change every five minutes.’


Van Gaal has been dealt another blow with the news that holding midfielder Michael Carrick will be out for a month with a calf injury.The 33-year-old, who has also played at centre half this season, is the latest in a long line of injury victims. ‘I think it will take more than four weeks,’ said Van Gaal. “It’s not a minor injury. A muscle rupture, I think.”


Despite the loss of Carrick and Darren Fletcher, who is set to join West Ham, Van Gaal will not strengthen his squad in this transfer window.


“We won’t be signing anyone,’ he said. ‘I’ve read every day that we are interested in players but I’m not interested in players.”


One man who could be following Fletcher out of the club is Brazilian midfielder Anderson.


He is in talks with Internacional, in his homeland, and Van Gaal admitted a move was “possible”. It would end a miserable time at Old Trafford for Anderson, who moved from Porto in 2007.


One new arrival was announced yesterday, as right back Sadiq El Fitouri joined from Salford City. The 20-year-old, previously on Manchester City’s books, was handed a chance by Paul Scholes and Phil Neville, who own stakes in the Evo-Stik Northern Premier League club.


They recommended El Fitouri to United and, after impressing in training, club officials saw enough to offer him an 18-month deal.


Leicester’s last win at Old Trafford was in 1998 and United will look on Saturday to improve a miserable record that has seen them score only 36 times in the Premier League this season.


Van Gaal acknowledged it was an issue. “I don’t think we are not attractive enough,” he said.


“But we have to score more goals.”


Meanwhile, United are increasingly confident they will land Southampton right back Nathaniel Clyne - but not until the end of the season.


Daily Mail






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News sport : Chris Weidman injured, title defense versus Vitor Belfort at UFC 184 is off

The way things are going, the middleweight title fight between Chris Weidman and Vitor Belfort may never occur.


For the third time, a planned bout between the men has been postponed. Weidman suffered a rib injury in training and the UFC announced on Friday that he will be unable to defend his belt against the Brazilian slugger in the main event of UFC 184 on Feb. 28 at Staples Center in Los Angeles.


UFC women's bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports) The new main event will feature women's bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey against No. 1 contender Cat Zingano. The UFC moved the debut of former boxing champion Holly Holm into the co-main event spot against Raquel Pennington.


It's quite a blow to the card, because a Holm-Pennington bout has nowhere near the kind of buzz that the Weidman-Belfort match did.


This is the third time one or the other of the men has pulled out of the bout. They were first supposed to fight at UFC 173 at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas on May 24, 2014. But Belfort had problems with a drug test and withdrew his request for a license from the Nevada Athletic Commission.


When Belfort's issues with the commission were settled in the summer, the UFC announced he would challenge Weidman for the belt in the main event of UFC 181 on Dec. 6 in Las Vegas. But Weidman injured a hand, forcing the postponement of the bout until Feb. 28.


Now, Weidman is out and the timetable for his return is uncertain.


The card is far less attractive without Weidman-Belfort and will test Rousey's drawing power in her hometown.






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News sport : Early Heisman odds list four Ohio State players among top 13

The 2015 college football season might be 216 days away from kickoff, but it’s never too early to start placing some early bets on the Heisman winner.


Bovada released its early Heisman rankings and four — yes, four — players from Ohio State are among the top 13 players on the list.


Running back Ezekiel Elliott is the early player to beat with 6/1 odds, and quarterbacking teammates Cardale Jones, J.T. Barrett and Braxton Miller come in with 14/1, 16/1 and 18/1 odds respectively.


It’s interesting that the folks in Vegas are banking on Jones as the starter and Miller to likely be the odd man out. It’s a good thing Miller's not transferring…


Elliott is just ahead of Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott and LSU running back Leonard Fournette, who are both 7/1. TCU quarterback Trevone Boykin (15/2) and USC quarterback Cody Kessler, Georgia running back Nick Chubb and UCLA running back Paul Perkins each are at 12/1 to round out the top five in terms of odds.


It’s easy to like Elliott because of how well he played in the second half of his first season as starter and because he should be totally healthy in 2015. Elliott played the entire 2014 season with a broken wrist that needed surgery this offseason.


Prescott had trouble with turnovers in 2014 and Fournette didn’t have very good quarterback play to help open up the running game. Boykin and Chubb, who are both coming off tremendous seasons, could be the other two in the top five to give Elliott a run for his money.


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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 : Brady Hoke no longer a candidate at Central Michigan

FILE - In this Oct. 4, 2014, file photo, Michigan head coach Brady Hoke looks on before an NCAA college football game against Rutgers in Piscataway, N.J. A person with knowledge of the situation says embattled Michigan football coach Brady Hoke and interim athletic director Jim Hackett are set to meet on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2014. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the school has not made any announcement about the meeting.(AP Photo/Rich Schultz, File) Those hoping to see Brady Hoke roaming a college sideline during the 2015 season might be out of luck.


Hoke was in talks with Central Michigan about its head coaching vacancy, but is no longer considered a candidate because, as Mark Snyder of the Detroit Free Press put it, it was not a fit between the two sides.”


Central Michigan found itself unexpectedly looking for a head coach after Dan Enos left to become the offensive coordinator at Arkansas on Jan. 22.


Hoke spent the past four seasons as the head coach at Michigan before being fired on Dec. 2.


Hoke would have been a catch for the Chippewas because of his background and success in the Mid-American Conference. Hoke was a Western Michigan and Toledo assistant in 1984-88 and Ball State's coach in 2003-08. He led Ball State to a 12-1 season in 2008.


Hoke will try his hand at broadcasting next week when he works with CBS Sports Network on National Signing Day.


For more Central Michigan news, visit ChippewaCountry.com.


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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 : Bret Bielema would have been the Miami Dolphins coach if they had drafted Russell Wilson

Following the 2011 college football season, Bret Bielema almost left Wisconsin to become the head coach of the Miami Dolphins.


According to a story ESPN.com’s Elizabeth Merrill, Bielema was working out his plans for the Dolphins when he asserted that the team should draft Russell Wilson in the second round.


The idea of selecting a 5-10 quarterback in the second round, which is where Bielema thinks they need to, does not go over well. They think he's crazy.

"One hundred percent," Bielema says.

"They all looked at me like, 'You can't say that. That's the difference between college and pro. He's undersized. He can't throw.' I was like, 'OK, all right,' and I honestly, that day, kind of pulled myself out of it."

Bielema stayed one more season with the Badgers before leaving for Arkansas. Wilson was drafted in the third round by Seattle and has led the Seahawks to one Super Bowl title and one yet to be determined.


Just imagine if Miami had listened to Bielema, hired him and taken Wilson in the second round instead of Ryan Tannehill with the No. 8 overall pick? That move would have affected the fortunes of two NFL teams and two college teams all because Bielema believe in Wilson’s talent.


But the real question is, what do we all think about Bielema in the NFL?


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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 : The 10-man rotation, starring Tony Parker's troubling play

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: Gothic Ginobili. Tony Parker hasn't looked very much like himself this season. What gives, and is this a "give it a minute, it'll be fine" kind of thing, or a "maybe TP's on the decline" kind of thing? Aaron McGuire investigates.


PF: Nylon Calculus. An exhaustive, statistical-context-heavy and very good review of Kevin Garnett's career as he nears its end.


SF: NBA.com/Stats. How much are this year's Atlanta Hawks like last year's San Antonio Spurs?


SG: FOX Sports. How much are this year's Golden State Warriors like the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls? (For more on the West-leading Dubs, check out this cool feature from Ken Berger at CBSSports.com).


PG: ESPN.com. Interesting stuff from Tom Haberstroh on the decline of home-court advantage in the NBA over the past couple of seasons.


6th: Mavs Outsider Report. Bobby Karalla offers a really good overview of the myriad small issues that have ailed the Dallas Mavericks of late, leading Rick Carlisle's club to drop four straight to sink to seventh in the West.


7th: Bucksketball. Jeremy Schmidt considers the development of Brandon Knight, who didn't make the Eastern Conference All-Star team, but who has come far enough for some fans to think that he might just be the long-term solution at the point for the Milwaukee Bucks.


8th: DraftExpress. A SportVU-based look at how Duke phenom center Jahlil Okafor's work on the block and in the paint on both ends compares to that of some of his NBA counterparts.


9th: Wall Street Journal. Chris Herring with a fun investigation of the "knuckleball-like unpredictability" of New York Knicks center Cole Aldrich's hook shot.


10th: Sole Collector. NBA players discuss why they would or would not wear another player's signature sneakers.


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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 : The Chicago Bulls are at the crossroads

Nobody’s winning, here.


The Chicago Bulls lost again on Thursday, two nights after they’d won again. This is the Jekyll and Hyde nature of a team caught in the midst of both a crisis of conscience and a crisis of confidence. The team fell to the lowly and tanking Los Angeles Lakers, working without Kobe Bryant, 48 hours after downing the mighty Golden State Warriors on GSW’s home floor. That win was far from encouraging, though, and it came on the heels of a loss to Miami that followed two impressive wins over San Antonio and Dallas.


The Spurs and Mavericks conquests almost felt like gifts, in a way, handed to Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau by the two most-esteemed members of his coaching brethren: Gregg Popovich and Rick Carlisle. Thibodeau’s work in Chicago has long been both praised and questioned in equal amounts for good reasons, but his employment status was never in question until the days before those two wins over Texas teams.


Popovich and ABC/ESPN analyst Jeff Van Gundy spoke up on Thibodeau’s behalf last week, leading to an angry Bulls vice president in John Paxson firing back in local papers, calling Van Gundy “pathetic” and demanding an apology in ways that were just as pathetic. Following another report in the Chicago Tribune that summarized league sources as declaring the relationship between Thibodeau and the front office to be “beyond repair,” Gar Forman then responded to those allegations with a prepared statement without actually throwing a sentence of support Thibodeau’s way.


Meanwhile, Chicago can’t guard anyone, they needed desperate shots toward the end of the Golden State and Los Angeles game just to make things competitive, Derrick Rose is shooting 36 percent over his last four games (while averaging over six turnovers a contest), and the rampaging Cleveland Cavaliers are just 2.5 games in back of the Bulls in the Central Division.


The season is slipping away, even if the team does topple Phoenix on Friday and Houston and New Orleans in the games after. They’ll probably lose to Orlando next Sunday just to drag things down again.


Taking sides in this situation is pointless, as the coaching staff, front office, ownership group and cast of players are all to blame for this frustratingly bloated amount of wasted potential.


If the front office is upset with Tom Thibodeau because he works players too many minutes, and practices too often, then their concerns are valid. For years Thibodeau has been rightly criticized for limiting his rotations, working with intractable rules regarding court time that he only strays from due to injury and/or foul trouble.


I used the phrase “and/or” there because Tom Thibodeau plays injured players. Constantly. And he shames players who don’t suit up – witness his sloughing off of Luol Deng’s spinal tap as “flu-like symptoms” in 2013, or his exasperation at learning that Mike Dunleavy Jr. (who was and still might be weeks away from returning) would be out of a Bulls game earlier this month.


Thibodeau defenders should and will point to his team’s sterling record with a fully-healthy starting lineup. They will point out that a 30-18 record is no small feat, considering the injuries and cadre of new faces (including, if we’re honest, Derrick Rose) while pointing out that the Chicago Bulls have 34 games to go as of this writing, and the ability to unleash Tom Thibodeau on an opponent’s head coach in a seven game series this spring. They’re right to do that, and also wrong to tell you that Chicago’s head coach doesn’t deserve some of the blame, ‘ere.


Tom Thibodeau has at his disposal the biggest basketball brain in the NBA. He is also, as is the case with most geniuses, flawed. There are things about his approach that he has to change if he wants to work as a head coach in June for the first time in his career.


The front office has enabled Tom Thibodeau’s lack of touch with minutes for years prior to 2014-15, but Jeff Van Gundy is correct in pointing out that they have undermined him in several ways. Declining to re-sign super-assistant Ron Adams merely because Adams was open about Chicago’s awful spate of personnel moves in the months following Derrick Rose’s 2012 ACL tear was a needless move. Companies aren’t required to keep personnel around if that actual person can’t stop complaining about the company, but losing a talent like Adams (and upsetting your top-flight coach) merely because of insecurity speaks volumes about the front office and ownership’s own approach.


When you ride with Tom Thibodeau, though, you have to know what you’re getting into. No other coach is going to come in this summer and save things for Chicago. Name any well-regarded assistant or well-heeled NBA lifer that could be brought in to keep the dream alive – none of these potential hires are going to be any better at coaching the Chicago Bulls than a happy and sated Tom Thibodeau.


This bountiful roster is also eating its own. At some point the focus has to come back to the players. If Tom Thibodeau’s unending pressure means that the coach has lost his players, well, then it’s on the players to get found again, ‘kay?


At the risk of delving into sportswriter’ese, this squad is too precious. Pau Gasol is too nice, so nobody is calling out his horrific defense. Derrick Rose has been through too much so nobody is challenging his just-as-terrible defense and miserable shot selection. Joakim Noah, despite stellar recent stats, is still not himself on either end due to injury, so he’s tempered his own voice. Kirk Hinrich is too respected for Thibodeau to note that he stops the ball offensively and can’t be trusted to hit open jumpers. The team routinely declines to dive into offensive sets with alacrity, and this is carrying over to the defensive end.


Flush with options, the squad walks through offensive sets early in ballgames, and it continually puts its defense behind the eight-ball due to Rose’s initial poor perimeter D, and Gasol’s inability to check anything save for those two blocks per game he gets. Taj Gibson, never much of a rebounder despite his status as a defense-first big man, has seen his own usefulness on the defensive end dip a bit. And for the bulk of January, with the exception of his 35-point (in 49 minutes, Thibs) outburst on Thursday, Jimmy Butler has looked unsure of how to get back to those 20-some points per game he’s now charged with averaging.


The players are afraid of stepping on each others’ respective toes, and as a result all the would-be killer attributes (Gasol’s low post wizardry, Noah’s still-brilliant passing, Butler’s throwback post-up game, Rose’s sustained ability to drive into the paint) are lost as the Bulls act hesitant offensive in ways that carry over to the defensive end. Tom Thibodeau ran a top-five offense in 2011-12 with Rose and Luol Deng combining to miss 39 games and C.J. Watson (36 percent from the floor) and John Lucas (just under 40 percent) firing away, and yet the Bulls are only ranked 10th this year despite a multitude of gifts.


This team has championship potential. When healthy, it has a deep and versatile roster that should be able to navigate the obstacles that a (potential) seven and a half month season creates. As Gasol declines, as he should do after playing a significant amount of early season minutes, Noah should ascend. Rose will grow confidence in his drive to match the undeserved confidence he has in his long jumper. The heightened focus that a seven-game playoff series provides should play right into the team’s hands.


They’ll need to play bigger than the sum of their parts, though, for this to happen. So far in 2014-15, Tom Thibodeau hasn’t been the coach to work up this compelling equation.


Before parting ways with Thibodeau, however, Chicago’s front office and players should take a deep breath and ponder if such an available coach even exists.


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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 : Arian Foster says he took $40,000 to $50,000 at Tennessee, then tweets he didn't

Houston Texans' Arian Foster wears street cloths before an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals, Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, in Houston. (AP Photo/Patric Schneider) Former Tennessee running back Arian Foster put the Vols and the NCAA back into the spotlight on Thursday when he told The Dan LeBatard Show he received between $40,000 and $50,000 throughout his career at Tennessee.


This wasn’t the first time Foster, now a running back with the Houston Texans, had claimed he was paid in college. Back in 2013, Foster told Sports Illustrated he had been “getting money on the side” while in school, but he did not specify how much.


“You have people help you out here and there,” Foster told The Dan LeBatard Show. “Boosters and alumni and ex-players, they all know how it is, man. It's hard living check to check when you don't have enough money to go out to the movies or any kind of leisure activity. And you're not allowed to get a job. Especially when I was in college, they were a lot more stringent on those rules, so at any given chance I got the opportunity, I took a free handout. Absolutely.”


Foster also claimed he met his wife, Romina, through an agent. He said the agent was trying to sign both students as Romina was singing in a girl’s group. Foster said the agent took the two out on a boat in Chattanooga to “wine and dine us. It was definitely illegal by NCAA standards.” Foster did not end up signing with that agent.


However, on Friday, one of Foster’s former teammates, linebacker Ryan Karl, linked to Foster’s interview on his Facebook page and called out his former teammate.


“So Arian Foster I gotta call you out here,” Karl wrote. “You’re my boy, but you did not get $40-50k from boosters while at UT. Shoot, you were as broke as me in college driving a crap car living in a crap apartment - like us all. Also, these claims of being wined and dined by agents is a big stretch too. You are a baller now but at the time, you were a risky pick with who ended up being a free agent. Quit trying to grab attention while throwing your school under the bus.”


Not surprisingly, Foster even started to backpedal on his comment, claiming on Twitter that he never received the amount of money he claimed.



Whether Foster was joking or not, it is important to note that Foster has stuck with his story since 2013, even if he’s not being entirely truthful about the amount.


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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 : Kings' DeMarcus Cousins to replace injured Kobe on West All-Star team

DeMarcus Cousins lets loose a primal scream. (Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports) Well, this is turning out to be quite a day for DeMarcus Cousins.


After being considered one of the most significant omissions from the list of coach-selected reserves for the upcoming 2014-15 NBA All-Star Game, the NBA announced Friday that Commissioner Adam Silver has added the Sacramento Kings big man to the Western Conference squad to take the place of Kobe Bryant. The Los Angeles Lakers guard was voted to the West's starting lineup by NBA fans, but who will miss the game after undergoing season-ending surgery to repair his torn right rotator cuff.


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This is the second straight season in which Silver has had to appoint an injury replacement for Bryant on the Western team. Last year, he tabbed New Orleans Pelicans forward Anthony Davis, who was having a monster sophomore season on his way to emerging as a potential MVP candidate, over several other worthy candidates ... including, of course, Cousins. Boogie didn't much appreciate that selection; we're guessing he's much more on-board this time around, as he joins Chicago Bulls guard Jimmy Butler, Atlanta Hawks point guard Jeff Teague and Golden State Warriors shooting guard Klay Thompson as first-time All-Stars this season.


We probably can't say the same for Damian Lillard, however.


Like Cousins, the Portland Trail Blazers point guard was left off the Western squad by both fans and coaches despite averaging 21.8 points, 6.2 assists and 4.6 rebounds per game — only six players are putting up at least 21 and 6, and the other five are All-Stars — and leading the league in fourth-quarter scoring for a 32-14 club with the league's No. 11 offense and No. 4 defense.


Unlike Boogie, though, Dame hasn't yet received a special reprieve from the commissioner. For the time being, then — despite all the numbers and records listed above, and despite Lillard ranking as the NBA's third-best player thus far this season by ESPN.com's Wins Above Replacement Player metric and fourth by Basketall-Reference.com's Value Over Replacement Player — he's in line to enter a very exclusive club.


Only three healthy players* have averaged 21 and 6 with a Player Efficiency Rating of at least 21 (Dame's currently at 21.8) without earning an available** All-Star berth — Tiny Archibald in 1971-72, Michael Adams in 1990-91 and Stephon Marbury in 2004-05. Lillard would be the fourth.


* Magic Johnson and Russell Westbrook missed large chunks of time with knee injuries in 1981 and 2014, respectively.


** Gary Payton and Grant Hill didn't get an All-Star Game during the 1998-99 season due to the lockout pushing the start of the season back to February.


That is, of course, not the kind of history that any player wants to make, and Lillard was justifiably displeased at his omission when he spoke with reporters on Friday morning, according to Joe Freeman of the Oregonian:


What was your initial reaction?

"I was surprised. I said it before: I thought I did all I could do individually. I thought my team has been successful. It wasn't something I could control. Everything that I could control to give myself my best shot, I did. It played out how it played out."

Will you use this as motivation?

"I'm definitely going to take it personal. I said I'd be pissed off about it. And I am. I just felt disrespected. Because I play the game the right way, I play unselfishly, I play for my team to win games and I produce at a high level. I think what I bring to the game as a person, my makeup mentally, how I am toward my teammates, how I am toward the media, how I am toward fans; I think what an All-Star represents in this league, and what you would want people to look at as an All-Star, I think I make up all those things. For me to be having the type of season that I'm having, which is better than any one that I've had before, and my team to be third in the Western Conference, I just see it as disrespect. I'm not one of those guys that's going to say, 'Oh, I should be in over this guy or that guy.' I'm not a hater. I've got respect for each guy that made the roster. And I think they deserve to (make the team). But at the same time, I feel really disrespected, and that's just honestly how I feel."

(An angry Lillard adds an extra bit of spice to what was already a super enticing Friday night matchup between the Blazers and the streaking Atlanta Hawks, winners of 17 straight.)


Lillard's feelings are certainly understandable, but I find it difficult to fault Silver too much for selecting Cousins, who's also having a remarkable season.


Boogie ranks sixth in the NBA in scoring (23.8 points per game), third in rebounding (12.3 rebounds per game) and sixth in PER (25.2, comfortably above Lillard's mark) to go with significantly improved defensive work. Sacramento has outscored opponents by 6.4 points per 100 possessions with Cousins on the floor, according to NBA.com's stat tool, and has been outscored by a staggering 12.8 points-per-100 with Boogie on the bench. In other words, Cousins' presence is the difference between the Kings playing like one of the five best teams in the NBA and being far and away the worst team in the league.


Lillard's been brilliant, and you can make reasonable arguments for selecting him over Oklahoma City Thunder star Russell Westbrook, who has missed 14 games, or Chris Paul of the Los Angeles Clippers, although he's been pretty damn good, too. (The real issue here is that the coaches decided to bring reigning MVP Kevin Durant to New York, which on one hand is difficult to justify because he's missed 25 games due to injury, but on the other hand is not because he's Kevin Durant.) But while Lillard comes away as a hard-luck loser, that shouldn't take any of the luster away from Cousins' selection. It's a watershed moment in an at-times tumultuous career, and he's earned it.


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SuperSport spending more than ever

SuperSport United's transfers over the last two seasons have shown a change in approach and type of players they recruit.


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Johannesburg - SuperSport United's transfer dealings over the last two seasons have shown a change in approach and type of players they recruit.


In the past, Matsatsantsa were credited with providing the breakthrough to Premiership superstars such as Teko Modise, Siboniso Gaxa, Katlego Mphela, Elias Pelembe, Katlego Mashego, George Maluleka, Daine Klate and Anthony Laffor.


In other words, they were known for signing burgeoning youngsters before they became household names.


The club then cashed in by selling some of those players to Premiership bigwigs Mamelodi Sundowns, Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates.


Today's Matsatsantsa though had different take to the transfer market, with the club targeting already accomplished players.


United's director of football Stan Matthews said the club was among the best in the country and should be challenging for top honours every season.


“SuperSport is an ambitious club that wants to compete for silverware every season. Over the years we have lost many great players and we felt that it was important to consolidate and bring in players who have leadership abilities that some of the younger players don't have,” Matthews said.


“What we have tried to do is invest in a few marquee players who bring experience to the team, and surround them with youngsters. The average age of our squad is 23. We are still a club that believes in development, but at the same time we need to balance that with our ambitions.”


Over the past 18 months the Pretoria club have signed familiar and well-known names like Thuso Phala, Michael Morton, Dino Ndlovu, David Mathebula, Bennett Chenene, Dove Wome and Clayton Daniels.


Most recently, United audaciously snatched striker Kingston Nkhatha from Chiefs.


Matsatsantsa caught the powerhouse club napping and, in a stunning move, signed the Zimbabwean striker to a pre-contract, with months remaining on his deal.


With Amakhosi vexed, United would go on to successfully negotiate an immediate transfer for the bulky forward.


In the January transfer window, United also looked to the overseas market signing New Zealand international striker Jeremy Brockie from Wellington Phoenix.


They have also brought back winger Klate, initially on loan, from Pirates for a second spell at SuperSport.


The tradition of developing promising talent, however, was not lost to the club. They still had exciting youngsters in Ronwen Williams, Thato Mokeke, Jino Moeketsi, Thabo Moloi and Morne Nel on their books.


United enjoyed their most successful era as a club while nurturing talent rather than buying ready-made players.


It remained to be seen whether or not the shift in policy would bear the same fruit as it did when they won three consecutive Premiership titles between 2008 and 2010.


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News sport : Dante Fowler Jr. thanks Florida fans in newspaper ad (Photo)

Dante Fowler Jr. opted to forgo his final season of eligibility at Florida and pursue a professional career in the NFL. In order to thank the Florida fans for their support during his time with the program, Fowler took out an advertisement in the Gainesville Sun on Friday.



“Thank you Gator Nation for all the support and love the past three years,” the ad read. “We’ve got the best fans in the and. I’ll forever bleed Orange & Blue.”


Fowler, a defensive end, was one of Florida’s leaders on defense in 2014 as he registered 60 tackles, 15 tackles for loss and 8.5 sacks.


Overall in his career, Fowler had 140 tackles, 33.5 tackles for loss, 14.5 sacks, two fumble recoveries and five forced fumbles.


The 6-foot-3, 261-pound Fowler is projected by many to be a first round pick in May’s draft.


For more Florida news, visit InsideTheGators.com.


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