News sport : Joe Kelly boldly predicts he'll win AL Cy Young in 2015

Confidence is a key to success in all of life's endeavors, but there's a different level of confidence that's required to be a successful pitcher in Major League Baseball.


Good news, Boston Red Sox fans, it appears that starter Joe Kelly has that confidence and then some.


The 26-year-old right-hander, who was acquired from the St. Louis Cardinals last season along with Allen Craig in exchange for John Lackey, went on record at the Red Sox' Winter Weekend event on Friday proclaiming that he'll not only stick in Boston's starting rotation, but will rise to the top of the American League pitching heap in 2015 and win the Cy Young award.


Yes, that Joe Kelly. He of 17 major league appearances in 2014 with an acceptable 4.20 ERA. He of the career 111 ERA+ in three seasons, which is fine but certainly not indicative of future dominance. That's the guy we're talking about, and he wasn't shy about reiterating his confidence to all members of the Boston media.


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From WEEI.com:


But there it was. Kelly, unannounced, strolling over to our WEEI broadcast setup during the Red Sox' Winter Weekend at Foxwoods, grabbing one of the headsets and then letting out the words, "I want your listeners to know, I’m going to win the Cy Young this year. Just letting everyone know so when I win it you heard it here first."

After the radio interview, Kelly went upstairs to the media room and reiterated his stance to the assembled group of writers.

"Yeah, I'm going to win this year," the pitcher said when asked about his Cy Young prediction. "That's what I told the radio guys. They didn't believe me -- [stinks] to be them."

If the BBWAA votes based on confidence this season, Kelly will be a tough guy to leave off the ballot. If they go by performance, which is something we always encourage, then Kelly's going to have an uphill climb in several directions to join the ranks of Felix Hernandez and Corey Kluber as the AL's best. Then again, the same easily could have been said about Kluber at this time last season, and he ended up making the leap from mid-rotation starter to Cy Young winner.


Kluber, by the way, is two years older than Kelly, so we obviously can't rule out a breakthrough season.


It's not an impossible scenario, but, if we're being completely honest, it's a highly unlikely scenario. With that said, If these bold claims help keep Kelly focused and motivated, that would obviously be a plus for Boston. But really, all the Red Sox are looking for is steady improvement and a reason to believe Kelly is one of the best five options available. If he achieves that in 2015, he'll have done his job.


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Mark Townsend is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at bigleaguestew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Cowboys star Dez Bryant addresses free agency: 'It’s Cowboys forever'

Earlier this season, Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Dez Bryant warned the organization not to test his loyalty, but now that his free agency has finally arrived, he's making it clear where he's pledging his allegiance.


After skipping last weekend's Pro Bowl due to a groin injury, Bryant played in a charity basketball game in Arizona on Saturday — throwing down a dunk and missing another — and NBC 5 Sports reporter Pat Doney appropriately asked the First Team All-Pro wideout about his current status as a free agent.



“Regardless, I’m a Cowboy,” Bryant said. “But it is what it is. It’s business. I am a free agent. I’m very confident that something is going to happen, something is going to get done, and have these Cowboys fans excited for a long time.




“I’m a Cowboy at heart. It’s Cowboys forever.”



Of course, plenty of players have made similar statements in the past, and it doesn't always translate into a guy re-signing with the team that drafted him, but the Dallas faithful have to be pleased with his change in tone. It'll be up to Cowboys owner Jerry Jones to pony up an average annual salary in the range of Detroit Lions wide receiver Calvin Johnson's $16.2 million salary, and Dallas would be crazy to let him walk.


After all, few wide receivers are capable of making a play on the ball the way he did against the Green Bay Packers before the officiating crew overturned a controversial catch that might have meant the difference between Bryant playing in Saturday's charity basketball game or the Super Bowl on Sunday.


(h/t Dallas Morning News)






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News sport : Winning a Super Bowl MVP can make any player immortal


PHOENIX A year ago on Super Bowl Sunday, linebacker Malcolm Smith's life changed.


He ensured that for the rest of his days, his name will be extended to include "Super Bowl MVP."


Super Bowl MVP Malcolm Smith is back at the Super Bowl with his Seattle Seahawks. His interception return for a touchdown against the Denver Broncos last year sealed his MVP award. He's part of the club now.


Smith didn't seem to enjoy answering questions about the Super Bowl MVP, and that's understandable. He probably hears about it all the time.


"Nothing has really changed," Smith said. "Still coming out doing the same stuff every day."


He said he hasn't even taken the trophy out of its trunk.


"When you're playing you don't spend time looking at your trophies, you're worried about the next thing," Smith said.


But there will be a time, probably when he is done playing, that Smith will realize how much that award is a part of his football legacy, and how he'll always be remembered for it. Smith started just five games for the Seahawks this season, but everyone who follows football closely knows his name. Some other player might have his life change in Super Bowl XLIX on Sunday, if he's lucky enough.


A Super Bowl MVP doesn't really change too much for players like Bart Starr, Peyton Manning, Emmitt Smith, Jerry Rice or Tom Brady. They would be legends with or without that award. But there's a recognizable list of players who were immortalized because of their one big Super Bowl.


Doug Williams. Mark Rypien. Larry Brown. Desmond Howard (though he had that whole Heisman Trophy thing too). Dexter Jackson. Santonio Holmes. These men had varying levels of NFL success, but their professional careers will be defined by one game.


Deion Branch had a good but not great NFL career. He never had a 1,000-yard season or more than six touchdowns in a season. But he was awesome in Super Bowl XXXIX. He had 11 catches for 133 yards in a win over the Eagles. He won the MVP. And he'll be known forever because of it.


Branch was doing multiple interviews on radio row this week at the Super Bowl promoting the restaurant chain TGI Friday's and its Super Bowl specials, and he admits that he might not have that opportunity if it wasn't for that Super Bowl MVP award. That made him a household name and opened up doors. When asked if it was a life-changing thing, Branch said, "Clearly, yes." And he sees being in that club, and even being asked about it to his day, as nothing but a positive.


"It's a great thing," said Branch, who last played in 2012. "It's always great to be known. And if I'm MVP evidently we won, and that's the most important thing to myself. It's an opportunity to be a part of a special game, and do it with my guys. The MVP is a bonus, and it's a great honor. To be alongside that list of guys is a blessing."


Branch has his MVP in a glass case in the man cave in his house. He didn't seem to mind talking about it, so many years after his big day. There's nothing wrong with being known for something special like a Super Bowl MVP, even if it's a bit overwhelming to think that people will remember him decades and decades from now because he's part of that exclusive club.


"That's the part that's crazy," Branch said. "I always sit back and think, 'That is wild.'"


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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 : Tom Brady is one win from ending the greatest QB ever debate


PHOENIX – All that is on the line for Super Bowl XLIX for New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is becoming practically an undisputed pick for greatest quarterback ever.


No big deal.


Some people will argue that Brady already holds that title, and they might be right. On Sunday he’ll become the second player in NFL history to appear in six Super Bowls, and the other is longtime backup defensive lineman Mike Lodish. No great player can match Brady’s six conference championships. Only nine players in NFL history have multiple MVPs, and he’s one of them. He's already in the top five all time in completions, yards, touchdowns and rating.


But all of that, with a fourth Super Bowl ring, and the debate should be done.


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“If he wins a fourth one, and he’s been here six times – nobody else has been here six times – those numbers speak for themselves,” Hall of Fame receiver and NFL Network analyst Michael Irvin said. “But when we start talking distance traveled, there’s not a man in sports, let alone a man in football, who has traveled a further distance than Tom Brady. He’s the greatest ever.”


I’ve often argued Peyton Manning is the greatest quarterback ever – his second act in Denver is absolutely unprecedented in NFL history – but it’s hard to argue it anymore if Brady gets his fourth title 13 years after his first one. Super Bowl rings are not the only measure of any player (if that’s the case, present to me why Brad Johnson is better than Dan Marino) but it’s obviously an important one. And Brady would be the ultimate winner at quarterback.


Joe Montana and Terry Bradshaw are the other quarterbacks with four Super Bowl wins, but their 4-0 records wouldn’t trump Brady’s potential 4-2. I don’t give extra credit for Montana or Bradshaw being undefeated. It’s not like Montana’s seven playoff losses are better because they happened before Super Bowl. Most right-minded people would agree it’s a bigger accomplishment to get to the Super Bowl and lose than lose before the Super Bowl. Just getting there is a great accomplishment. Winning four is unbelievable. But getting the fourth title – and not having his Super Bowl record drop to 3-3 after a 3-0 start – would be an enormous difference for many people in the discussion of his legacy.


Brady’s response to all the talk of his legacy this week wasn’t necessarily uncomfortable, but he clearly had no interest in shining any light on himself. The former sixth-round pick said his ranking on the list of greatest quarterbacks doesn't matter to him.


“It doesn’t. Truthfully, it has never been a motivating thing,” Brady said. “I never envisioned I’d have a chance to play in a sixth Super Bowl. I wasn’t born for this. I just tried to work hard to put myself in position, and I’ve been on a great team with a lot of great players over the years, with great coaching.


“I love playing. That’s where my motivation is.”


Brady isn’t done, either. He threw for 4,109 yards and had a 97.4 rating this season. He’s 37 but seems like he might have another crack or two at making it back to a Super Bowl. He's still one of the best players in the game, and the Patriots haven't shown any signs of slipping either.


But if Brady and the Patriots can win today, any further championships would just add to the top line of his NFL resume: greatest quarterback of all time.


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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 : Former TCU DE DeVonte' Fields commits to Louisville

DeVonte’ Fields is headed to the ACC.


Fields, the former TCU defensive end who was the AP Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year in 2012, announced on Twitter that he is committed to Louisville.



Fields played the 2014 season at Trinity Valley Community College in Austin, Texas, after getting kicked off the Horned Frogs last summer.


TCU initially suspended Fields in July after he was accused of assaulting and pointing a gun at his ex-girlfriend. As that investigation continued, the school released a statement in August saying that Fields was “separated from the university.”


Soon after the statement was released, Fields announced a transfer to FCS Stephen F. Austin on Aug. 6. However, two days later Stephen F. Austin announced that TCU declared that Fields did not “meet the requirements to attain the one-time transfer waiver,” which made Fields ineligible.


Fields then enrolled at Trinity Valley, where he registered 61 tackles and 6.5 sacks.


He’ll join a Louisville defense that was 24th in the country in scoring defense and 10th in rushing defense in 2014.


If Fields can regain his 2012 form – when he racked up 53 tackles, 18.5 tackles for loss and 10 sacks – he’ll provide a huge boost for a solid Cardinals defense.


For more Louisville news, visit CardinalSports.com.


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News sport : Report: NFL investigating Falcons for piping in artificial crowd noise




Apparently New England isn’t the only team being investigated by the NFL.

According to a report from ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the league is looking into whether the Atlanta Falcons were piping in artificial crowd noise at the Georgia Dome for the past two seasons while the opposing team was huddling and attempting to call its play.


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Additionally, Schefter is reporting that the Falcons and the team could face a fine and “quite possibly lose a draft choice.”


A Falcons spokesman acknowledged the investigation to Schefter.


“We were informed during the season that the league office is looking into crowd noise during our games,” the spokesman said. “We have cooperated fully with them, and we’re awaiting the outcome.”


The plan to use the artificial crowd noise “originated from the Falcons’ game operations department,” per Schefter, but with many teams around the league using silent snap counts, Schefter says it’s “difficult to discern how much of an advantage it gave the Falcons.”


The Falcons were 3-5 at home in each of the last two seasons.


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News sport : Reports: Seahawks offering Marshawn Lynch a monster contract




Beast Mode is going Money Mode. Reports indicate that the Seattle Seahawks are readying a contract that could keep Marshawn Lynch in neon green for his career.


NFL.com's Ian Rapoport is reporting that the Seahawks are readying a long-term deal that could pay Lynch as much as $10 million in 2015 alone. That would double his current scheduled salary for 2015, the final year of a four-year, $31 million deal.


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Lynch has been a key cog in the Seahawks' run to two consecutive Super Bowls, although concerns about age, chemistry and salary led many to speculate that the Seahawks would be severing ties with Lynch at the end of this year. The Seahawks have apparently decided that keeping Lynch in-house was a better option than the alternative.


Of course, predicting Lynch's next move is no easier than tackling him. As recently as two months ago, reports were surfacing that Lynch could retire at the end of this season, and he held out of training camp for more contract leverage to start the season. For now, there's one more game to play before anyone needs to make a decision.


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News sport : FAA declares a 30-mile 'no-drone zone' around Super Bowl


Imagine dive-bombing Tom Brady or Marshawn Lynch with your drone, getting a view of the Super Bowl no one has ever seen before. Then imagine yourself getting fined to the teeth, because that's exactly what will happen if you try to fly a drone over the Super Bowl this year.


The FAA has established a series of flight rules around University of Phoenix Stadium for Sunday's game, mandating that no general aviation aircraft are permitted within 10 miles of the stadium. (Commercial flights are acceptable.) A wider ring, from 10 to 30 miles, will allow general aviation aircraft with the appropriate flight plans.


[Watch the Super Bowl live on Yahoo Sports and NBC Sports - Sunday at 6 p.m. ET]


Drones, though? No chance. "All unmanned aircraft operations – also known as drones—are prohibited within the restricted areas," the FAA indicated. "These include model aircraft operations, model rocketry and Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS). Anyone who operates an unmanned aircraft in the restricted area could face civil penalties or criminal charges."


The law on drones remains murky; is it trespassing if you're flying one above a publicly viewable space? In this case, the answer is a resounding yes. And while the penalty probably won't be as harsh as whatever awaits the drone operator whose drone crashed at the White House, it'll be a headache nonetheless.


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Bilbao end its winless run

Aritz Aduriz scored twice in the second half to give Bilbao a 2-0 win at Levante on Sunday.


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Barcelona – Aritz Aduriz scored twice in the second half to give Athletic Bilbao a 2-0 victory at Levante on Sunday, ending its seven-round winless streak in the Spanish league.


Bilbao’s Iker Muniain hit the crossbar in the 11th minute, but Levante had the better share of scoring chances before halftime.


Aduriz struck his first goal three minutes after the restart when he controlled the ball with his chest before firing it past goalkeeper Diego Marino.


Bilbao goalkeeper Gorka Iraizoz protected the lead with back-to-back saves to deny Jordi Xumetra and Ruben Garcia before Aduriz chipped Marino in the 90th after Markel Susaeta played him through.


Levante remained bottom of the table and without a win in nine rounds.


Bilbao rose to 11th. Despite its struggles, the Basque club has also reached the Copa del Rey semi-finals.


“For us to win today was vital,” said Aduriz. “We hadn’t taken three points in a long time. We were fighting hard and playing well, just not getting the results. But we kept working hard and now we have the result to show it.”


Later, second-place Barcelona hosts a Villarreal side on an 18-game unbeaten streak as it tries to keep pace with leader Real Madrid.


Sevilla also welcomes Espanyol three days after Espanyol knocked it out of the Copa del Rey quarterfinals, while Getafe visits Almeria. – Sapa-AP






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Missed opportunity for City

There was nothing to celebrate for Manuel Pellegrini on Saturday after City’s 1-1 draw with Chelsea.


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London – Rarely does a visiting team leave Stamford Bridge with anything to show for their endeavour, but a 1-1 draw with Chelsea on Saturday was nothing to celebrate for Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini.


In a game billed as a title-decider between the Premier League’s two dominant sides, City fell behind after Loic Remy’s 41st-minute opener.


David Silva hit back four minutes later and the visiting side finished strongly and could have gone on to win the game.


The draw brought an end to Chelsea’s 10-match winning run at home in the Premier League, but maintained their five-point lead over City at the top of the table with 15 games remaining and 45 points to play for.


“You may say it is a good point at Stamford Bridge but for me it is not because we were better than Chelsea,” the Chilean told reporters.


“I thought that we deserved more than a point because we had clear chances. Our team tried to win from the first minute to the end.


“We wanted to close the gap. We tried to, but we couldn’t but we still have 45 points to play for.”


City clawed back a nine-point deficit last season to win their second Premier League title in three years, but against a formidable Chelsea, the current five-point gap may represent a bigger challenge.


While Saturday’s result was far from ideal, Pellegrini was confident his side could retain their title.


“It was a very important game but it was not a final,” he said. “We have time to recover these five points and if we play in the way we played today it will be easier.”


Chelsea mustered just three shots on Saturday, their lowest total in a Premier League game since the 2003-2004 season and commanded just 43 percent of possession as City were able to dictate much of the game away from home.


“I think both teams have a clear style of play,” Pellegrini added. “Jose Mourinho has a style for Chelsea and I have a style for my team.


“We had three good chances in the first half, they scored with their only chance in the 90 minutes – they did not even have a shot in the second half.” – Reuters






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Keeper attacked by fans in changing room

A goalkeeper was injured in a confrontation with fans who invaded his team’s changing room on Saturday.


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Rio de Janeiro – Fans of Brazilian club Flamengo invaded the changing room of an opposing team before a match in the Rio de Janeiro state championship on Saturday, injuring a player and reportedly stealing boots and other items.


Macae goalkeeper Ricardo Berna sustained a cut on his chin in the confrontation with Flamengo fans in Macae. He said dozens of fans entered his team’s changing room while players were getting ready for the game.


Police said fans got past security and sneaked in through a gate that was not closed properly.


Berna, who used to play for Flamengo rival Fluminense, said Macae only went ahead with the game “in respect to most of the fans who came out to the stadium.” He also called for “severe punishment to those responsible” for the invasion. – Sapa-AP






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African football at crossroads

African football is at a crossroads after farcical and violent scenes clouded Saturday’s quarter-finals.


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Bata, Equatorial Guinea – African football sits at yet another crossroad in its search for credibility after farcical and violent scenes in Saturday’s quarter-finals at its showpiece event.


A dubious refereeing decision, followed by a violent reaction from aggrieved Tunisian players, put a damper on an African Nations Cup tournament that has been hastily put together with much success in a matter of over just two months.


Equatorial Guinea stepped in just 64 days before kick off as emergency hosts to rescue the tournament and their national team, ranked 118th in the world, have since emerged as unlikely semi-finalists after two successive upset wins.


But soft penalties in both their victory over neighbours Gabon in the group phase and Saturday’s quarter-final triumph over Tunisia take the gloss of two upset results.


The penalty against Tunisia in Bata came in stoppage time and forced the match into extra time.


Although Javier Balboa then scored a stunning free kick winner to put the small central African through to the last four, joyous home celebrations were overshadowed by fighting between the two teams and then an attempt to attack the referee.


Several Tunisian players chased him down the tunnel, attempting to kick and punch him as Seechurn Rajindraprasd was hastily escorted off the field by a phalanx of riot-clad policemen.


The referee’s report will now prove crucial if there is to be any serious sanction but there was enough television evidence of the violent attacks on Saturday for the Confederation of African Football to come down hard on players.


Attacks on referees are all too commonplace in African football but few culprits are ever handed the kind of stiff bans that would severe as a deterrent to others.


Much of it is because of CAF’s failure to properly prosecute such attacks, insisting on relying on the referee’s report when often times the officials are unaware of who attacked them.


GLOSS OFF


The niggling nature of Saturday’s game, which included a spitting incident, takes away the gloss off near-heroic efforts by CAF and the hosts to offer an international standard of playing facilities in a country of sparse resources.


Oil-rich Equatorial Guinea, where ostentatious displays of wealth sit uncomfortably alongside poverty, stepped in rescue the Nations Cup after Morocco were stripped of the right to host it because they sought a postponement for fears over the Ebola virus.


Scepticism over Equatorial Guinea was heightened by coaches’ complaints over hotels and transport in the opening days of the tournament but then tempered by the realisation of a genuine desire on the part of the hosts to offer the best possibility facilities.


All those efforts, however, are now overshadowed by Saturday’s controversy. – Reuters






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I’m no angel but not guilty: Costa

Diego Costa denies deliberately stamping on Liverpool’s Emre Can but admits he’s no angel on the field.


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London – Chelsea striker Diego Costa has denied he deliberately stamped on Liverpool’s Emre Can but admitted to being no angel on the field.


The Brazilian-born Spain international missed Saturday’s top-of-the-table 1-1 draw with Manchester City after serving the first of a three-game ban for the incident during Tuesday’s League Cup semi-final, second leg victory at Stamford Bridge.


“As far as what happened on Tuesday, the main thing is when I get home I can go home and I can go to sleep knowing that I’ve not done anything wrong, because I never meant to do that and it was not on purpose,” he told British newspaper The Daily Telegraph.


“And you can clearly see that on the video. But it is a suspension. Obviously I feel sad because I’m not going to be able to help the team, to play. But I have accept it and respect it.


“I’m not saying I’m an angel. I’m no angel. You can see that. But every time I play I will play the same way because that’s the way I am. That’s what I need to do in order to support my family.


“That’s my bread and butter, also that’s what I need to do for this club and for the fans of this club, for the supporters and for all the people involved in this club.”


The 26-year-old has proved an instant hit since joining from Spanish champions Atletico Madrid last year, scoring 17 league goals to help Chelsea open up a five-point lead after 23 matches in the English Premier League.


He has, though, received heavy criticism for Tuesday’s actions, which followed accusations of diving on more than one occasion.


Costa was also involved in a spat with American goalkeeper Tim Howard in August after Everton boss Roberto Martinez accused him of taunting Seamus Coleman following a Chelsea goal.


Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has accused television pundits of tarnishing his striker’s reputation and has shunned talking to the media since the club failed to overturn the violent conduct suspension on Friday.


Costa, who will also miss fixtures at Aston Villa and home to Everton, defended his actions and said he would not change his competitive streak.


“On the pitch I transform myself, I really, really want to win,” said Costa, who is named after Argentine World Cup-winning great Diego Maradona.


“You have to see how many times have I injured someone. Never. I’ve never injured another colleague, another player on purpose. I’m not going to change the way I play because I got banned for a few games now.” – Reuters






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No national treble for SA this year

But Lungani Zama remains hopeful that the cricket gods will finally smile on the Proteas.


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Those hopeful sods who had one too many and dreamed that Bafana Bafana, the Proteas and the Springboks would all secure glory this year have had their balloons popped. There won’t be a national treble. Not this year, anyway.


Shakes Mashaba will be wondering where the love of 2014 has disappeared to. Just the other day, he was the saviour of diski, a working class hero restoring pride in the jersey, even in his dodgy checked blazers and loud shirts.


It’s no fun being a national coach. Always, there is a top chop who knows better, just waiting for a certain selection or substitution to go awry, so he can bleat his “Told you so” anthem.


And yet, barely a year ago, after the “bunch of winners” fiasco in the CHAN tournament, those same chops were praying for a coach they could identify with.


Mashaba’s mandate, lest we forget, was 2018. Sorry, his mandate is 2018. The sharp suits at Safa told us as much, long before he toppled Nigeria, the reigning African champions – for a few days more, anyway – and qualified for the Africa Cup of Nations where he and his team have become spectators.


The truth of the matter is that the national football team are a project still under construction. To use more familiar terms, Mashaba’s contract is for five years. As with most good contracts, the first two years weren’t expected to show much return. But Mashaba’s foundations came up in a hurry.


Subsequently, he raised expectations, and started getting a little ahead of himself, too. Instead of the Afcon tournament being a purely educational exercise, he had mild delusions of grandeur, suggesting that his green-horned side could go all the way.


Of course, his penthouse dreams were quickly crushed by the efficiency of streetwise opponents, who picked off his charges whenever they started self-doubting and retreating into their shells. Algeria, Senegal and Ghana all leaned heavily on their European-based stars, especially when things got tight.


Mashaba went the other way. He dispensed with some of his expensive and high-maintenance imported attacking weapons and opted to use more humble and homely means to try to negotiate his way through African traffic.


There’s nothing wrong with that. In fact, much of Bafana’s play suggested a promising future. Dean Furman continues to grow as a leader, but the side lacked a creative figure who could stamp his mark on the game and provide them with a touch of composure when they were at sixes and sevens.


These are lessons Bafana could learn only on the job. The argument that the side were too inexperienced was only going to be proved otherwise on this stage. Members like Erick Mathoho and Sibusiso Vilakazi will be better players for it, not least because they showed they could hold their own at this level.


So Bafana’s shot at glory was short-lived. The baton of national hope has been passed to the Proteas. Truth be told, they always looked like South Africa’s sincerest shot at being champions this year.


Unlike Bafana, they have experience. Plenty of it, too. They have match winners, with bat and ball. AB de Villiers’s men have a lot of bases covered. It is open to debate what the run buffet served up by the West Indies over the past month has done for their preparations, but you can play only what’s in front of you.


Russell Domingo insists it is no big deal that his side have not been placed too much under pressure this summer. They have been under pressure for 18 months, anyway, he points out.


Like Bra Shakes, the likeable Domingo has talked up his side’s chances of going all the way at the World Cup. Somehow, Domingo’s offering seems more hopeful. And so it should be.


The Cricket World Cup has never loved South Africans, any cynical and deeply wounded fan will tell you wearily, the memory of 1992, and 1999, and 2003 still too fresh in the mind. But maybe, just maybe, at the scene of the mugging of 1992, the cricket gods will finally smile on South African cricket.






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Afcon campaign wasn’t failure: Shakes

Coach Shakes Mashaba wants Bafana Bafana to learn from their early Afcon exit.


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As Bafana Bafana headed home after exiting the Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea, coach Shakes Mashaba is adamant the national team’s campaign was no failure.


Bafana finished bottom of their group with a single point after losing two matches, 3-1 and 2-1 to Algeria and Ghana respectively, and drawing 1-1 with Senegal.


Mashaba spoke to Safa.net.


Question: Coach, you have had time to sit and reflect on Bafana Bafana’s exit from Afcon 2015. What’s your overall assessment?


Answer: Yes, although we had some time to look back at our performance and reflect on the tournament, it was not enough. The process will continue when we get back home so we can map our way forward. People need to be reminded where we came from, where we are in a very short space of time and where we are going.


We also need to look at Safa’s Vision 2022. When we started, the first phase was to build a team, which I think we have managed to do. The second phase was to qualify the team for Afcon 2015, which we also managed by defeating Sudan and Congo and denying African champions Nigeria a chance to participate in the tournament. After qualifying, our hopes were high and we expected even more success from our team.


I understand why South Africans are disappointed. We are also very disappointed but we are not discouraged because we played the top countries on the continent with a wealth of experience. We still competed and I believe if we used all our scoring chances we would still have been in the tournament.


Q: If we look back, do you think the way we qualified gave us a false sense of belief?


A: It’s a 50/50 thing. After qualifying, partly we said we have arrived more so because we played against strong countries, but at the same time we knew it was going to be tough.


The good thing to have come out in the qualifiers is that we didn’t have a problem of scoring goals but they came from all angles.


Those are some of the positives to have to come out, but yes, negatives also can help shape us going forward.


Q: Did everything go according to plan with preparations?


A: We appreciate the contribution of everyone and there will always be opinions, especially after the fact. We did the best we could to put together a team at short notice but were stopped in our tracks by some injuries, loss of form, players not playing in their clubs and also those who did not heed the national team call-ups. Having said that, I need to compliment all the players for the good job they have done.


Q: Do you have regrets about the players you selected for the tournament?


A: No, not at all. If you look at our selection criteria, the main thing is current form. We had to register players on time and had to build the confidence of the squad, and yes, there is a possibility that by the time we were about to leave, one other player would have raised his hand. But still I don’t have any regrets about the team selection; the players have done well.


Q: Lack of experience from your young squad, did it play a role in the team exiting early?


A: Let me take you back to the Algeria game – 90percent of those players play in big teams but we exposed them. Had we scored the two goals and penalty, we would be talking a different story. We took so many shots at goal but did not convert them into goals.


At the back, the boys stood firm, the middle was solid, but we conceded some rather soft goals.


Q: Looking at the squad, were you disappointed at some players not coming to the party at this tournament?


A: I would say yes, but out of respect I will not mention their names. I have been speaking one on one with all the players.


Q: Some fans are saying if some players were there things would have been different – players like Thulani Serero, Itumeleng Khune, Tefu Mashamaite.


A: Having those players in the team would not have guaranteed us doing well in the tournament. Perhaps people would have loved to see those players in the squad but they were not here.


I don’t have any regrets, and I believe the squad we assembled is one of the best and they gave a good account of themselves.


Q: People say if some overseas-based players were there, things would have improved.


A: We have four overseas-based players in our squad – Andile Jali, Anele Ngcongca, Darren Keet and Dean Furman. Do we have to call all the overseas-based players and forget about our local-based players? We have to blend them into a unit. The latter is correct and that is what we did.


And those who were here from overseas command regular positions at their clubs. I would have been worried to call them from abroad and put them on the bench.


On the other hand, how long have we played in these tournaments with the overseas-based players and not getting the required or desired results?


It should not be a question that a player is based overseas, so he can walk into the team. People need to fight for positions and that is why this team achieved so much. No one is guaranteed a place. It is a fact that if you look at the other teams in the tournament who have overseas-based players, they are a notch ahead because of experience.


Q: You used different players in the three matches, especially the goalkeepers?


A: I did so in a bid to find the No1 goalkeeper in the country, which we don’t have at the moment. If we don’t give other ’keepers a chance, when are we going to know what we have?


Q: But some would say the goalkeepers are where the spine of the team starts?


A: I would like to agree with that. But we had three games and we needed to test the three goalkeepers – that is why if you look in the middle of the park, the centre of the spine, Furman and Jali, were always there. We didn’t want to rattle that. We made some changes on the wings and the strike force, while the defence was more often than not forced changes. All in all, what we were doing is about building a team.


Q: Before departure, you said Bafana is coming back with the trophy. Do you think you over promised as the head coach?


A: Most unfortunately as a leader you don’t play down your chances going around saying it is going to be tough. I would have killed my players. As a leader you have to be positive all the time even when you see this is a tough mission.


Q: Do you regard exiting the group stage as failure?


A: Actually no. We see this as a phase we must go through in order to achieve our goal. This setback has sharpened us for the future.


After all, people who forget their past will never be able to mould the way forward. – Safa.net






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