Jose and Frank are no longer best pals

In the tunnel at Stamford Bridge, it was easy to think back to the time when Jose Mourinho and Frank Lampard were best pals.


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London - In the tunnel at Stamford Bridge on Saturday, it was easy to reminisce and think back to the time when Jose Mourinho told Frank Lampard he had become the world’s greatest player.


The sad thing about these two, texting buddies when Mourinho was at Inter Milan and Real Madrid, is that they appear to have lost touch. Sometimes life moves on, too quickly in this case.


There was an uneasy handshake with Chelsea’s manager, some skin on skin as Lampard settled into the visitors’ technical area before the 1-1 draw, but it was not the same.


“I don’t want to try to say that there’s any issue at all,” admitted Lampard after his 13-minute appearance as a substitute for Manchester City.


“I got a text at Christmas, I texted him back. We spoke in the dressing room, “How’s the family?,” the usual.


“We are grown men, you know what I mean? We are at different football clubs. I’m sure we are big enough that none of this is going to get in the way of our relationship and how we are personally.


“We remain close. This is football, it’s sport and I haven’t spoken to him that much recently.


“I don’t think there’s room for bitterness and if there is then I’ll deal with that down the line.”


Lampard dealt with his return to Stamford Bridge in the way that anyone who has come across him during his professional career would expect him to: unruffled, polite, respectful and courteous.


There were a few dissenting voices at Stamford Bridge when he appeared as a 77th-minute substitute for the champions but his return home went as well could be expected.


In the end, after these title rivals went away with a point each, Lampard went into the Chelsea dressing room to share some memories of the three Barclays Premier League titles, four FA Cups and the Champions League that they won together in Chelsea’s golden era.


“It was lovely to get that reception at the end from the fans,” he added. “I really appreciate that and I’m a lucky boy.


“I was nervous in general, to come here and be part of the away team is a bit nerve-wracking.


“I went in the dressing room afterwards and saw all the people behind the scenes, loads of faces, it was brilliant.”


Lampard still has the drive and the desire to add another Premier League title before he leaves City at the end of the season to move to New York City.


This result, if not the performance, suited leaders Chelsea and Manuel Pellegrini’s team have their work cut out to retain the Premier League. Five points is a lot of ground to make up.


“Chelsea finished the first half of the season with 45 points, so it could be 90 or more,” admitted Pellegrini.


“Of course the more points we drop the more difficult it is. We have to close a gap of five points, so it’s important not to drop more points. But I’m sure all the teams will drop points.”


There is rarely any conviction or authority in Pellegrini’s voice, but he knows what it takes to win the title after his side saw off the challenge of Liverpool last season.


Lampard has been there before and although his loyalty to Chelsea remains rock-solid, there were signs on Saturday that there is some genuine affection for City.


He agreed with the reaction of City’s dressing room - they were convinced they should have won this game. Lampard’s assessment was about right.


“In terms of chances in the first half, City were the stronger team and possession-wise in the second half,” he said.


“The result is probably better for Chelsea in terms of the league. We were in the dressing room there feeling that we probably might have won the game.


“It kind of leaves a nice balance. You lose that game and some people would write you off. This keeps the league ticking over.


“The race is on and you are talking about the two best teams in the country.”


Daily Mail






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News sport : LSU celebrates former WR Odell Beckham with Times Square billboard

LSU isn’t wasting any time, especially with National Signing Day right around the corner, touting the professional accomplishments of one of its own.


So the school bought a billboard in Times Square recognizing former receiver Odell Beckham Jr., who was named the NFL’s Rookie of the Year this past weekend.




Beckham, who missed the start of the NFL season because of injury, finished with 91 catches for 1,305 yards and 12 touchdowns.


Beckham was a third-team All-American and a first and second-team All-SEC player at LSU in 2013 as both a receiver and kick returner. He finished his final collegiate season with 57 receptions for 1,117 yards and eight touchdowns.


For more LSU news, visit TigerBait.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 : A humorless Flip Saunders claims that Kevin Love never found his trolling video funny

Everybody seemed to love it. It wasn’t the most biting piece of satire we’ve ever seen, but for the typically benign offerings that NBA team promotional arms are usually forced into making in order not to offend, the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Kevin Love-less promo video in anticipation of his return to Minnesota as a Cleveland Cavalier was a cut above.


If you haven’t seen it, watch:



Yes, the return of Mike Miller – a former Timberwolf who spent just one disappointing season in Minnesota on a lottery-bound team, a current Cavalier that barely plays for Cleveland and (sadly) plays poorly when he does see time.


Kevin Love even thought the video was “hilarious,” and it and the (relatively mild) boos didn’t seem to trip the Cavalier forward as he worked his way to 14 points and 17 rebounds in his winning return to Minnesota.


Timberwolves coach and president Flip Saunders? He was a little haughtier, in his reaction. From Chris Haynes at Northeast Ohio Media Group:



"I didn't know about it," Saunders said. "I didn't approve of it. I think as an organization, we should be above that. We have to acknowledge that Kevin, when he was here, he was a great player for us. He was an All-Star, won an Olympic gold medal, did a lot of positive things.”



Oh, come off it Flip.


It was a joke. Everyone knew it was a joke last Thursday, two full days before Love came to town. The video wasn’t met to deny Love’s accomplishments as a member of the Timberwolves in the slightest, as anyone with a smartphone and Wikipedia know-how can look those up in an instant from inside the Target Center, as your team goes down by 16 points.


If anything, the video was meant to diffuse any potential rancor between Timberwolves fans and Love, falling in line with earlier (funny, silly, understanding) fan reaction to the trade that Love forced, sending the former All-Star to Cleveland last summer.


A trade that netted the Timberwolves Andrew Wiggins, who basically matched LeBron James (LeBron James on a very good night, mind you) play for play on Saturday. At age 20. The kid is a stud, and Minnesota’s future should be bright.


Undaunted, Saunders went on:



"Last year at this time, everyone was patting themselves on the back for helping him get selected as a starter in the All-Star Game. And for us to not to acknowledge that and go the other way, I think it was hypocritical. As I had to address some of the people and I just told them that as an organization, that's not the direction we want to go."



Flip, the same (well-respected, and rightfully so, in NBA circles) promotional crew that sent out those cool ‘Bruise Brothers’ LPs to NBA coaches and media in the hopes of voting Love onto the All-Star squad can be the same ones that put together a cheeky clip designed to help everyone forget that the Timberwolves owed the NBA’s worst record heading into Saturday night, a record that dipped to 8-39 following the loss to Love’s Cavaliers.


Saunders was told that Love found the video “hilarious,” but he remained undeterred:



"It doesn't matter if he thinks it's funny," Saunders said. "You have to decide what you want to do as an organization. Would San Antonio do that? No. They wouldn't do that. Our players didn't like it. They have to play against him too. They don't like it. It just doesn't set the right message and if you're here and then you leave, all of a sudden it's not.




"Was it funny? Maybe people thought it was funny. For me it wasn't. I had to deal with three and half, four hours the last two days having people calling me and talking about it while I'm trying to prepare for games. Maybe you think it's OK. That's up to you. You can look at it that way, but I don't look at it that way. As someone running an organization and has to go out and recruit players and to get those player. He may have thought it was funny, but I know deep down in his heart no one likes it. No one would like that. It's human nature."



Flip Saunders, you’re worried about not being able to recruit free agents because of that video?


Flip Saunders, I can pretty much guarantee you that just about any potential future Timberwolves All-Star found that video funny and didn’t see it as disrespectful to Love in the slightest. Jokes are funny because they rely on premises that are absurd, and the idea that Timberwolves fans should be gearing for a return game against Mike Miller (who has returned to Minnesota twice since being traded from the Timberwolves in 2009) instead of a standout like Kevin Love is the absurdity behind the joke.


Flip Saunders, you know what potential free agents might not like?


You going on record to call Kevin Love duplicitous, pointing out that even though Love said he thought the video was “hilarious” that “deep down in his heart” Love didn’t like it. That Love was lying. Or, worse, humorless.


Like you’re being, here.


You want to recruit players? Build a good team. Don’t waste money on Kevin Martin. Don’t send Philadelphia a draft pick for Thaddeus Young. Great players want to play with great players. Kevin Love didn’t force a trade to Cleveland because he’s best buds with LeBron James or because Cleveland is half a degree warmer than Minneapolis during the winter. He did it because he could win there, something he couldn’t do in Minnesota mostly because of the incompetent work of your predecessor, Flip.


The core in Minnesota is enviable. Wiggins is going to be a star. Zach LaVine (despite early struggles), Shabazz Muhammad (despite struggling last season) and Gorgui Dieng are all fantastic talents. Anthony Bennett could someday figure it out. Ricky Rubio, whom the Wolves were 2-2 with this season, returns on Monday evening. On top of that Minnesota will likely have the best odds at the top overall lottery pick in this year’s NBA draft.


Complaining about a funny video makes Flip Saunders look terribly out of touch. A promotional team is supposed to come up with content that doesn’t seem stale or safe, rendering a franchise worth hundreds of millions of dollars accessible and inviting to the eyes of the common fan. The Wolves’ promotional squad did their job here.


Now it’s Flip Saunders’ time to do his job, and get Minnesota back in the playoffs for the first time since 2004.


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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 : AJ Allmendinger won't run Sprint Unlimited

The Sprint Unlimited is going to be missing a Chase driver.


JTG-Daugherty won't field a car for AJ Allmendinger in the season-opening exhibition race on February 14. The reason? The dreaded s-word.


“It was nowhere on our radar until they changed the rules on it,’’ JTG-Daugherty co-owner Tad Geschickter told NBC Sports. “If we had won a pole during the season and knew we were in it, I’m sure we would have been well prepared for it. We appreciate being grandfathered in, but, obviously, have to manage our resources to deliver the best year-end points finish we can for our sponsors.’’


It's hard to blame the team's reasoning at all. There's a high chance (relative to other races) of a crash in the Daytona race, and is it worth risking an unsponsored car for a non-points race? If winning the race got the team into the 2015 Chase, the decision is much harder to make. But with no tangible benefit (quick, name the winner of last year's event), sitting it out is a prudent choice.


Allmendinger made the Chase in 2014 by winning at Watkins Glen. NASCAR changed the eligibility for the Unlimited in the middle of December. Instead of pole winners and previous Unlimited winners, the field now includes Chase drivers from the year before, pole winners who didn't make the Chase and drivers who have won the Daytona 500 pole but didn't qualify via the first two sets of criteria.


According to NASCAR, a minimum of 25 drivers will race in the event and without Brian Vickers, who will return in March after a heart procedure, the field was already down to 24. Without Allmendinger and Brian Scott, who won the pole at Talladega in May but didn't run the full season (and won't run the Unlimited, per NBC), the field is down to 22.


The drivers lined up to fill the field back up to 25 are Clint Bowyer, Paul Menard and Casey Mears. Drivers highest in 2014 points who didn't meet the eligibility requirements above are next in line to make the field full.


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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 : Oklahoma QB Trevor Knight reaches out to Katy Perry four months too late

Trevor Knight would like another chance with Katy Perry.


OK, make that a first chance.


Perry expressed affection for Knight, Oklahoma’s starting quarterback, during ESPN's "College GameDay" back in October, asking him to “call her.”



But Knight never did, claiming he didn’t have her number (and that he had a girlfriend).


However, all that changed Sunday night after Knight saw Perry put on a spectacular halftime show during Super Bowl XLIX.



Come on man, you don’t wait four months after Katy Perry hits on you on national television to then try to make amends. It’s too late, she’s moved on, she’s Super Bowl halftime show resurrector of Missy Elliot Katy Perry now.


The window is closed.


Still, good job, good effort by Knight trying to rekindle a romance that could have been, but never was. Maybe she’ll send him an autographed picture.


For more Oklahoma news, visit SoonerScoop.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 : The 10-man rotation, starring big play from the Cavaliers' bigs

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: Fear the Sword. David Zavac takes a look at how Timofey Mozgov, Kevin Love and Tristan Thompson have played defensively of late, and the impact that they've had on the overall improvements that have led the Cleveland Cavaliers to 10 straight wins.


PF: ESPN.com. Good stuff from Dave McMenamin on how, despite Love's depressed numbers and Andrew Wiggins' recent surge, the summertime swap of All-Star for No. 1 pick might still have worked out for the best for both the Cavs and Minnesota Timberwolves.


SF: NBA.com. David Aldridge's always-great Morning Tip goes deep on Danny Ferry, the still-absent architect of the league-leading Atlanta Hawks, the Memphis Grizzlies' rise to the No. 2 spot in the West, and much more.


SG: The Triangle. Danny Chau's protecting his heart from falling too deep in love with these soaring Hawks, because he's had it broken by a similarly starless squad before.


PG: Cowbell Kingdom. Rui Thomas puts on his hazmat suit and digs into the particulars of the Sacramento Kings' ugly eight-game losing streak.


6th: ESPN Insider ($). Tom Haberstroh on where Hassan Whiteside came from, the unprecedented production he's providing for the Miami Heat, and the chances of the young big man keeping this remarkable run rolling.


7th: The Players' Tribune. Blake Griffin on the work he's put into rebuilding his jumper over the last several years, and how all those hours have given him the confidence to take shots like this.


8th: Blog-a-Bull. Kevin Ferrigan with another cold cup of coffee out of Chicago: "[...] it's pretty likely that no one is putting up emptier stats than Pau Gasol is this season."


9th: San Antonio Express-News. Tom Orsborn with an interesting look at how Air Force Academy ties and a lack of "red flags" in Gregg Popovich's past put him on the path to running the San Antonio Spurs 21 years ago: “If [then-Spurs chairman Robert McDermott] had found out [Popovich] was perfect [as a cadet and as a coach], but a philanderer, it could have killed the deal."


10th: The Oklahoman. Anthony Slater breaks down the schedules ahead for the Oklahoma City Thunder, Phoenix Suns and New Orleans Pelicans as they vie for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.


More NBA coverage:





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News sport : Conspiracy theory about Seahawks' fateful call is just strange


You may remember that I dislike most conspiracy theories.


Why people waste their time coming up with this stuff, I don't know. But now we have one on the Seattle Seahawks' final play call in Super Bowl XLIX.


You know the situation: On second and goal at New England's 1-yard line, the Seahawks passed instead of handing off to Marshawn Lynch. Russell Wilson threw an interception. Game over. Patriots win.


It wasn't good enough to just let this rest with it being a questionable call at best and the most mind-numbing call in sports history at worst. There has to be another layer, like the coach wanting to give the glory to his quarterback rather than the controversial running back. Yeah, that's it!


So here goes: Pete Carroll wanted Wilson to be the hero. Not Lynch. Because ... well, who the heck knows. I guess because he's short with the media? Right. But TheNation.com's Dave Zirin wrote about it. NFL.com quoted an anonymous Seahawks player as saying, "That’s what it looked like," when it was presented to him, although that story acknowledged the quote was probably said out of frustration. But you can go on Twitter or Facebook and find many others who are buying in.


And let's double back to why I hate this kind of stuff: It makes zero sense. None. Not even in some far away universe would this conspiracy theory hold even the tiniest bit of logic.


A couple key points: Carroll doesn't make the call; it's offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell. Even if you're saying Bevell is part of the conspiracy to keep Lynch from scoring, it entirely ignores that he was given the ball on first down and was tackled a yard short of the goal line. The Seahawks didn't mind trying to make him the hero there. The Seahawks have made Lynch a star by giving him the ball. He has roughly 300 carries per season the last four years. Lynch is one of their best players, one of the biggest reasons they won a Super Bowl last year and two straight NFC championships. "Oh, but his media issues in Super Bowl week" ... nobody on the Seahawks cares. I didn't hear one Seahawk all week complain about Lynch. Carroll defended him. He said, basically, he doesn't want Lynch doing anything to hurt the team (like a penalty for grabbing his crotch after a touchdown) but everything else is up to him. There's no reason for anyone in Seattle to dislike him enough to keep him from scoring a game-winning touchdown. It's ridiculous to think otherwise.


"Oh but the NFL didn't want him winning MVP" ... stop it. The league wouldn't have been thrilled, probably, for the idea of Lynch's MVP press conference, but we're to believe that in the 30 seconds the Seahawks had to decide on a second-and-goal play that the NFL called on them to keep Lynch out of the end zone? Please.


it was just a bad call. They wanted to pass on second down to save one timeout for their last two downs. Carroll said they were going to run with Lynch on third and fourth down, and there's no reason not to believe him. Once the Seahawks didn't hurry in a second-down play, they couldn't have run with Lynch three times. There wasn't enough time. I'm not saying I agree with their train of thought, but that's what it was. It was not "Let's make sure Lynch doesn't score so we don't have to give him a bigger contract."


No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. No. No chance. That isn't real life.


The Seahawks, with a Super Bowl on the line and a half of a minute to figure out how to play the next three downs, weren't in deep contemplation about who they wanted to be the hero. If Lynch scored from the 1, everyone was a hero. Nobody on that side, especially the coaches, cared who actually scored. Did they screw up? Sure. But it wasn't some plot to get Wilson and not Lynch up on the MVP stage.


Please, let's stop this conspiracy theory now, because we're all in danger of losing too many brain cells contemplating something that has zero chance of being true.


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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 : Kevin Garnett says he's 'all in' with the Nets, but won't rule out a buyout

Kevin Garnett, who turns 39 in May, leads the NBA in defensive rebounding percentage. This is a remarkable standing regardless of age. Garnett, who has already led the NBA in defensive rebounding percentage twice in his career, is just nudging out the high-flying DeAndre Jordan for the league’s lead. When Garnett was drafted into the NBA in 1995, Jordan was just six years old.


This is what makes Garnett’s most recent game with the Brooklyn Nets, one that saw him sit out for the final 27:28 of game play, more a little curious. And sad. From Stefan Bondy at the New York Daily News:



With the game resting on a couple defensive possessions, KG was reduced to cheerleader, watching the Nets (18-28) give up three pivotal offensive rebounds in overtime and lose for the 12th time in their last 14 games.




“Just a coach’s decision,” Hollins said about benching Garnett.



Sigh.


Despite Garnett’s lofty standing in one advanced statistic, his 2014-15 box score numbers are hardly stellar. KG is averaging 6.8 points and, 6.9 rebounds a contest. He’s blocked just seven shots in 37 games. His 21 minutes per game is tied for the lowest mark of any starter in the NBA. In just nine and a half minutes of play against the Raptors on Friday, the Nets were somehow -16 with Garnett on the floor. Things are not going well.


This is why it’s been suggested that Garnett might be an apt candidate for a midseason buyout. Such a move would make him a free agent, able to glom onto any willing championship candidate for one last storybook ending in what is undoubtedly Garnett’s final season.


KG, however, seems to want nothing to do with the plan that seems so obvious and so compelling. From Alex Raskin at the Wall St. Journal:



As of right now, Garnett explained, he is “all in” with the Nets, who have lost four straight games and suffered through a winless January at home.




[…]




“I haven’t thought too much of my own personal [situation],” Garnett said. “When that road comes, I’ll cross it and I’ll deal with it. A lot of things with [my] family situation and things, it’s not just convenient to get up and move, to change things. It’s not as convenient as it once was when I was younger. I have a lot more responsibilities and things to take into account.”




Still, Garnett didn’t rule out the possibility of accepting a buyout. “I don’t know what management is going to do,” he said. “When my situation comes up, I’ll obviously give it some attention. Other than that, my attention is trying to get us on a winning streak, get us on a road where everybody’s playing together.”



The Nets, losers of 12 of their last 14, are stuck at 18-28. That mark leaves them a full game and a half out of the Eastern playoff bracket, all while working with a player payroll that vaults into the nine-figure mark once luxury taxes are factored in. The team’s front office tossed up the white flag earlier in the season by letting the league know that just about any of its players were available via trade, as the squad attempts to cut current and future payroll in anticipation of a possible selling of the franchise.


Garnett was not featured in those trade designs, however, because he is one of four NBA players with a no-trade clause. Kevin will make $12 million this season in the final year of his contract, and any buyout would provide minimal savings (if any) for Brooklyn. The move would be made to send Garnett to a team deserving of his past accomplishments and potential as a bit player and leader.


This isn’t the first time Garnett has had a no-trade clause. It was in place when he allowed the Celtics to deal him to Brooklyn for a franchise-killing score of draft picks in 2013. There wasn’t an official no-trade clause in place when Garnett put up MVP-level numbers for terribly-constructed Minnesota Timberwolves teams from 2004-07, but Garnett resisted asking for a trade away from Minnesota for years until finally relenting.


The man is loyal, and old; and though he’s already played on three teams, uprooting to go live in a hotel with a group of new teammates in a new city in a quick late-season turnaround might not appeal to him.


We do know that talking about it doesn’t appeal to him in the slightest:



Garnett has a month to change his mind, as the NBA’s cut-off date for playoff-legal free agent signings is at the outset of March. We’d like slough off Garnett wasting his final playing days with a miserable Brooklyn franchise (they are reported to be after Andray Blatche, because this team is way into long-term development and not quick fixes) as no big deal, but it really would be a basketball crime of the highest order if Garnett’s last days are spent on a Nets team that nobody likes watching, one that may miss out on overcoming even a Kemba Walker-less Charlotte Hornets team for the final playoff seed.


Imagine Garnett reunited with Rajon Rondo in Dallas, giving the Mavericks a lineup 40 percent filled with guys that absolutely refuse to shoot the ball. Or as insurance in Atlanta, closer to the South Carolina home that he grew up in. Any number of contenders would be able to find room in their rotation for KG, because though he is struggling in comparison to the 18 season that came prior to his move to Brooklyn, he can still move a locker room and clean the defensive glass.


Does he want to give him and make the sort of jump that seemed like an anathema to him for so many years? After 19 and a half seasons, he’s got just a few weeks to figure that out.


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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 : Adam Silver likes idea of increasing size of All-Star rosters

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver thinks adding more All-Star roster spots makes sense. (REUTERS/Mike Stone) Every year, NBA fans and coaches select the players who will represent the Eastern and Western Conferences in the midseason All-Star Game, and every year, some deserving player finds himself on the outside looking in. This time around, after NBA Commissioner Adam Silver chose Sacramento Kings center DeMarcus Cousins to serve as the injury replacement for Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant on the West's roster, it's Damian Lillard who's dealing with the disappointment of missing out on the midseason exhibition. (Evidently, he's dealing with it by deciding not to defend his title in the Skills Challenge.)


But while the Portland Trail Blazers point guard stands as the most prominent omission from the 2014 NBA All-Star Game, he's not the only player with a strong All-Star case to get the short end of the stick. Memphis Grizzlies point man Mike Conley, Atlanta Hawks sharpshooter Kyle Korver, Houston Rockets center Dwight Howard, Orlando Magic pivot Nikola Vucevic ... they all had solid resumes, but won't participate in the festivities, thanks in part to the nigh-impossible task of giving everyone the recognition they deserve with just 12 roster slots on each side.


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


Well, the commish has an idea for making that task a little easier — increase the number of roster slots. From Marc Stein of ESPN.com:


[...] Silver told ‎the "NBA Lockdown: Insiders" show Sunday night that he intends to broach the subject [of increasing the size of All-Star rosters] in the near future with new Players Association executive director Michele Roberts.

Asked to reflect on what he would remember most about his first year as commissioner, with Sunday marking exactly one since he replaced David Stern, Silver said: "That I had to decide between DeMarcus Cousins and Damian Lillard. I didn't like having to make that choice. I wish I had another slot for Damian because I think he's deserving of being an All-Star as well.‎ [...]

Asked specifically about expanding the rosters in the respective conferences to 13 or even 15 players, Silver said: ‎"I think that's something that will get very strong consideration. I think that's an issue that we'll end up discussing with the Players Association. It has a direct impact on many of the player's bonuses. There's preset bonuses in their contracts for making the All-Star team. I think counter-balancing that is the issue of playing time. [NBA executive vice president] Rod Thorn and I were having this discussion yesterday. We said we should move to [Kentucky coach John] Calipari's platoon system for All-Star to make sure that everyone gets [enough] playing time.

"In all seriousness, that's one of the concerns with a larger team. We want to make sure guys get minutes as well if they're All-Stars. I'm in favor of expanding it. I'm not sure if it's by one or two [roster spots], but it is something Michele Roberts and I will discuss."

Damian Lillard's on the outside looking in this year. (Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports) (Among, of course, the multitude of other things that Roberts would like to discuss with Silver in the days ahead.)


There have been a number of calls in recent years to increase the size of All-Star rosters, which have stayed flat at 12 players a side for decades, despite the addition of a slew of expansion franchises (the Miami Heat, Charlotte Hornets, Orlando Magic, Minnesota Timberwolves, Toronto Raptors, Vancouver-then-Memphis Grizzlies and Charlotte Bobcats) that made the NBA into a 30-team league and drastically increased the size of the league's player population, and despite the post-2011 lockout boost of in-season active rosters up to 13 players per team. As NBA.com's Steve Aschburner and ProBasketballTalk's Dan Feldman note, there are fewer All-Stars per NBA team than ever before; adding an extra couple of roster spots would bring the contemporary exhibition more in line with its predecessors and afford some additional opportunities with which to recognize the Lillards, Conleys and Korvers of the world.


There are those who'd rather not see the rosters increased, arguing that adding somewhere between two and six All-Star berths would unduly diminish the honor of selection. When you're talking about a game honoring the best of the best, exclusivity is kind of the point, after all. Plus, it's not like going from 12 to 13 is going to eliminate "snub" arguments forever; it just moves the goalposts a bit, changing the arguments from "Boogie or Dame?" to "Lillard or Conley?" That last spot will always be a matter of some debate, no matter how big the roster is — and considering how much people seem to enjoy arguing about snubs every year, and all the interest such arguments generate, maybe that's OK.


Then again, it doesn't really seem like very much is or should be sacred in a selection process that allows fans to hashtag their way to deciding 10 spots. If increasing the size of All-Star rosters means an always-the-bridesmaid player like Conley — who continues to improve as the metronome-steady leader of the ascendant Grizzlies and just happens to have the bad luck of playing at a time when Chris Paul, Stephen Curry and Russell Westbrook also roam the earth — gets a nod, then I have a hard time getting too mad about it. Some players might view a lack of meaningful All-Star minutes as a personal affront, but for others, those brief couple of minutes of floor time can make a world of difference in their standing in the game and the way they're perceived by fans. There's worse things in the world than that.


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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 : Report: Tennessee QB Nathan Peterman will transfer to Pitt

Oct 25, 2014; Knoxville, TN, USA; Tennessee Volunteers quarterback Nathan Peterman (12) warms up before the game against the Alabama Crimson Tide at Neyland Stadium. (Randy Sartin-USA TODAY Sports) Pitt will reportedly add an SEC transfer to its quarterback depth chart.


According to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, former Tennessee quarterback Nathan Peterman will join the Panthers as a graduate transfer and begin taking classes in May.


Peterman spent the past three seasons with the Vols and already graduated from the school. Since he redshirted as a true freshman in 2012, Peterman will have two seasons of eligibility to play for the Panthers and is able to play immediately.


Peterman, who will reunite with former Tennessee offensive coordinator Jim Chaney (who now holds that position at Pitt), took his official visit to Pitt over the weekend and spent time with new head coach Pat Narduzzi.


The 6-foot-2, 220-pound Peterman played in 11 games over the past two seasons, starting twice. Overall he completed 20-of-43 passes for 94 yards and threw two interceptions for Tennessee.


According to the Tribune-Review, Peterman is currently taking graduate courses at Tennessee this semester, so he “won’t be eligible to participate in Pitt’s spring drills that start in March.”


Peterman will look to compete for the starting role with Chad Voytik, who also just finished his redshirt sophomore season and has two more seasons of eligibility remaining. Voytik threw for 2,233 yards, 16 touchdowns and seven interceptions while completing 61.3 percent of his passes in his first year as starter. He also ran for 466 yards and three scores on the season.


The Panthers went 6-7 in 2014.


For more Pittsburgh news, visit Panther-lair.com.


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Bony steps into Drogba's big boots

Wilfried Bony was the main man as Ivory Coast beat Algeria to set up an Afcon semi-final clash with the DRC.


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Malabo - Wilfried Bony was the main man on Sunday as Ivory Coast beat Algeria 3-1 in the African Nations Cup to set up a semi-final clash with Democratic Republic of Congo.


Ivory Coast are contesting their first international competition without former talisman Didier Drogba since the 2002 Nations Cup.


There were signs that they missed the Chelsea striker, who retired from international duty after last year's World Cup, during the group stage as they stuttered to draws against Guinea and Mali.


“If Drogba is not here it's not because of us but because of him,” coach Herve Renard told reporters. “However if you lose Drogba and find Bony you're doing pretty well.”


Against Algeria, Bony demonstrated that after flattering to deceive for the national side he is finally ready to take up Drogba's mantle.


The new Manchester City signing scored two fine headers, from a Max Gradel cross and a Yaya Toure free kick, ensuring the Ivorians progressed to the semi-finals.


“Bony was the top scorer in England in 2014,” Renard added. “When you say that, you understand everything.


“Things are much easier when you have players of his and Gervinho's quality.”


Gervinho, who scored a late third for Ivory Coast, also acknowledged that Bony's form was helping the team forget Drogba.


“We can't think about Drogba anymore,” he said. “Bony is a different style of player he's a player who brings us another dimension.


“He has a personality that works well with Ivory Coast he works hard for us and it suits us.”


Ivory Coast have reached the last four for the fourth time in Six Nations Cups and take on DR Congo in Bata on Wednesday. DR Congo advanced with a dramatic 4-2 victory over local rivals Congo on Saturday.


Reuters






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News sport : Michigan AD Jim Hackett says there will be night game at Michigan Stadium in 2015

Oct 11, 2014; Ann Arbor, MI, USA; Overall view of Michigan Stadium prior to the game against the Penn State Nittany Lions. (Andrew Weber-USA TODAY Sports) There will be another night game at Michigan Stadium in 2015.


According to MLive.com, interim athletic director Jim Hackett said Sunday that the Wolverines will host “at least one” night game in year one under Jim Harbaugh. Michigan State and Ohio State are both possibilities, Hackett said, but not both.


Hackett said he hopes an announcement can come soon.


"I've got to go through the tracks with the regents and the president," Hackett said. "I don't know (if it'll be just one or not). The issue here ... they're fantastic, and you have to face this going down the road when they get to new TV contracts. There's more prime time (opportunities) in the future."


Though he brought night games to Ann Arbor, former athletic director Dave Brandon was always against night games against rivals Michigan State and Ohio State, but Hackett seems to be a lot more flexible with scheduling options.


“I’m making a whole new scheduling engine,” Hackett said. “(I’d probably rule out) one of the two. But I’m not going to tell you (right now).”


Michigan hosted its first Big Ten night game last season when the Wolverines knocked off Penn State 18-13 on Oct. 4. Previously, the Wolverines played two other night games at Michigan Stadium against Notre Dame – one in 2011 and one in 2013.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


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News sport : Report: Auburn plans to install college football's largest scoreboard

Nov 30, 2013; Auburn, AL, USA; General view of Jordan Hare Stadium. (John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports) It appears that Texas A&M won’t have college football’s biggest scoreboard for long.


According to AL.com, the Auburn Board of Trustees will meet on Friday to discuss the addition of a “200-foot wide scoreboard” in the south end zone of Jordan-Hare Stadium. The project is reported to cost “an estimated $13.9 million.”


“If what we are intending to do is approved, it’ll be the biggest video board in college football,” Auburn athletic director Jay Jacobs told AL.com.


The video board installed at Texas A&M’s Kyle Field last summer is 47-feet tall, 163-feet wide and 7,661 square feet in all. Jacobs says Auburn’s will be bigger.



Jacobs said the video board above the south end zone will measure roughly 200-feet wide and 55- to 57-feet tall, which would surpass Texas A&M's recently-installed board that measures 7,661 square feet. Exact dimensions for Auburn's video board were not included in documents provided to Auburn's trustees.



If approved, the new scoreboard would be ready in time for the 2015 season.


“That’s what our fans deserve and what our football team deserves,” Jacobs said.


Additionally, Jacobs said the athletic department is looking to upgrade Jordan-Hare Stadium as a whole and is “seeking approval to engage an architect and construction manager for the project.”


Per AL.com, documents provided to Auburn's trustees say the upgrades would include “options to enhance amenities, improve locker rooms and consider additional premium seating,” but would not include expansion or additional seating. Jordan-Hare Stadium currently seats 87,451.


Other improvements being explored include “widening the concourse and upgrading restrooms.”


“The timing is right," Jacobs said. "We're one of the few schools to play in front of a sold-out crowd in every game, home and away. Some schools, because of their demand, they've increased stadium sizes and sometimes that's not, in retrospect, the best thing to do. ... For us, we're great with the size of our stadium right now. We just need to continue to have the best game-day experience in the nation.”


Construction could reportedly begin as soon as December with completion set for the 2017 season. It could also be pushed back until December 2016 or December 2017.


The school’s trustees must give approval during their Friday meeting before work on the project can begin.


For more Auburn news, visit AuburnSports.com.


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







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News sport : Marshawn Lynch on not getting ball: 'Football is a team sport'




The world seems to think Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch should have gotten the ball at the 1-yard line.

But Lynch supposedly was OK with the call.


Although he doesn't typically talk to the media, essentially stiff-arming most of the media access before Super Bowl XLIX, Lynch reportedly signed off on Darrell Bevell's much-maligned pass play (via NFL Network's Aditi Kinkhabwala) that was intercepted by New England Patriots cornerback Malcolm Butler.



In Week 7 of the 2013 season, Lynch appeared to flip the bird at the sideline — perhaps aimed at Bevell — when the Seahawks called for a 3rd-and-1 pass, bypassing Lynch at the goal line, that ended up in the hands of tight end Kellen Davis.


So at least Lynch didn't outwardly pan Bevell's call this time, and his words via Kinkhabwala appeared to bail out his coach, even thought Lynch reportedly pushed his way — albeit it appearing playful — past cameras after the game was not handled all that well.


Still, Russell Wilson and Pete Carroll both took credit for the play and the execution of it.


But the rest of the football-watching world might need some convincing.


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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Nationwide offers explanation for reasoning behind Super Bowl ad




Even amid a Super Bowl night when serious subject matter ruled, Nationwide's ad promoting awareness of potentially fatal child accidents stood out. Using a classic bait-and-switch style that had as its punch line the death of a child, the Nationwide ad drew immediate criticism, with many questioning both the subject matter and the decision to use such a serious matter as fodder for an advertisement.


Late Sunday night, Nationwide issued a formal statement:


"Preventable injuries around the home are the leading cause of childhood deaths in America. Most people don't know that. Nationwide ran an ad during the Super Bowl that started a fierce conversation. The sole purpose of this message was to start a conversation, not sell insurance. We want to build awareness of an issue that is near and dear to all of us-the safety and well being of our children. We knew the ad would spur a variety of reactions. In fact, thousands of people visited MakeSafeHappen.com, a new website to help educate parents and caregivers with information and resources in an effort to make their homes safer and avoid a potential injury or death. Nationwide has been working with experts for more than 60 years to make homes safer. While some did not care for the ad, we hope it served to begin a dialogue to make safe happen for children everywhere."


The ad did indeed begin a dialogue, though perhaps not what Nationwide intended. It ranked near the bottom of USA Today's Ad Meter, and drew heavy negative criticism on social media. However, given the fact that the Super Bowl achieved the highest rating of any Super Bowl, and could be on track for the most viewers ever, the ad certainly achieved its intended goals of "awareness."


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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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