News sport : Left Shark 'commits' to play at Boise State

Left Shark knows the blue turf at Boise State's stadium is not water, right?


Coach Bryan Harsin posted that the shark, famous for it's uncoordinated dance moves during Katy Perry's halftime performance at Super Bowl XLIX, had committed Tuesday, one day before National Signing Day.



No word on Left Shark's Rivals rank, but we're going to guess it's somewhat like a baseball player had has severe water/land performance splits. We're also assuming that since Left Shark is a shark, the NCAA's social media commitment guidelines don't apply to it. Coaches can't mention a recruit by name on Twitter until the letter of intent is officially signed.


There's also no word on if the commitment will change Perry's college football allegiance. She's an Ole Miss fan (one of her managers went there) and was in attendance at the Alabama-Ole Miss game in Oxford in 2014.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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2018 World Cup stadium behind schedule

The 2018 World Cup stadium in Rostov is seven months behind schedule and faces a “tight deadline” to be ready in time.


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Moscow - The 2018 World Cup stadium in the southern Russian city of Rostov is seven months behind schedule and faces a “tight deadline” to be ready in time.


The regional construction ministry says in a statement that the completion date for the 45 000-seat stadium has slipped from May 2017 to that December.


The ministry did not say what had gone wrong, but “given the tight deadline to build the stadium,” workers had been put on double shifts.


Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, who chairs the World Cup organizing committee, has previously said he considers Rostov's riverside arena to be among the most difficult of Russia's 12 stadiums to build, and costs could rise.


Sapa-AP






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Tunisia federation fined $50k

Tunisia's FA has been fined $50 000 and a referee has been suspended after a controversial Afcon quarter-final match.


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Bata - Tunisia's football federation has been fined $50 000 and threatened with a ban, while a referee has been sent home and suspended for six months in the fallout from the team's chaotic African Cup of Nations quarter-final loss to host Equatorial Guinea.


The Confederation of African Football announced its decisions after disciplinary meetings on Monday and Tuesday about the on-field clashes involving players, coaches and officials at Saturday's game.


CAF said Mauritian referee Rajindraparsad Seechurn had been suspended for “poor refereeing” after his decision to award Equatorial Guinea a contentious penalty in the last minute of normal time sparked the trouble.


Tunisia players were guilty of insulting and trying to assault the referee after the game. CAF said the country's national federation president even went onto the field to confront Seechurn.


Sapa-AP






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Why Redknapp quit QPR

Harry Redknapp resigned as manager of struggling QPR, saying he could no longer give the job 100 percent.


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London - Harry Redknapp resigned as manager of struggling Queens Park Rangers on Tuesday with the 67-year-old citing knee problems as his reason for stepping down.


The Premier League's oldest manager, Redknapp said impending surgery meant he could no longer give the job 100 percent.


Former QPR and England striker Les Ferdinand and Chris Ramsey are to take temporary charge.


Redknapp, who has enjoyed a colourful managerial career at West Ham United, Portsmouth, Southampton and Tottenham Hotspur, took over at QPR in November 2012.


After relegation, the London-born former West Ham player took QPR back up in his first full season in charge but they have toiled this season, losing all 11 away league matches - a Premier League record.


Redknapp's hopes of strengthening his squad were dashed by a quiet transfer window and whoever takes charge will have the job of steering QPR out of the relegation zone.


They are second from bottom with 19 points from 23 games.


“Sadly I need immediate surgery on my knee which is going to stop me from doing my job in the coming weeks,” Redknapp said.


“It means I won't be able to be out on the training pitch every day and if I can't give 100 percent I feel it's better for someone else to take over the reins.”


Bookmakers William Hill, who were caught cold by a sudden rush of bets on Redknapp resigning, have made former Tottenham Hotspur boss Tim Sherwood odds-on favourite to become QPR's next permanent manager.


Glenn Hoddle, who is part of Redknapp's coaching staff, is second favourite.


Redknapp was under pressure earlier in the season as results went against him but he always said he had a close relationship with club chairman Tony Fernandes.


“I would like to take this opportunity to thank Harry for everything he has done for QPR during his time in charge,” Fernandes said in a statement.


“We part on good terms and I would personally like to wish him all the best for the future.”


Although Redknapp's resume is not packed with silverware - an FA Cup triumph with Portsmouth being his only major honour - he has been one of the country's most respected coaches and was a contender for the England manager's job while in charge at Tottenham.


He was credited for turning Gareth Bale into a marauding forward at Spurs and taking the club into the Champions League for the first time in 2010-11.


During his time at Tottenham he was cleared of tax evasion charges dating back to his time in charge at Portsmouth.


Reuters






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News sport : Report: James Shields decision to come by end of the week


(USA TODAY Sports)

With spring training fast approaching, it appears the last big-name free agent left on the market is nearing a decision.


Right-hander James Shields is reportedly weighing multiple offers and will sign somewhere by the end of the week according to Jon Morosi of Fox Sports.


Where exactly he might land and how much he'll get is still far from certain. Shields has been linked with over a dozen teams at one point or another this offseason and his price tag has dropped over the last few weeks.


Most recently it's the San Diego Padres, via Morosi, and St. Louis Cardinals, from USA Today's Bob Nightengale, that have had their name attached with the 33-year-old starting pitcher.


[Yahoo Sports Fantasy Baseball: Sign up and join a league today!]


There's also a question to whether or not one of baseball's biggest spenders is in the race. Morosi indicates there's a thought around the league that the New York Yankees are one of the teams in pursuit of Shields. However, Joel Sherman of the New York Post writes that they're not interested.


The talk that there was a contract offer out there that would have paid Shields $110 million over five years has been widely forgotten and may have been more fiction than fact. Now the expectation is that he'll ultimately end up with a four-year deal worth between $70-$80 million.


So there's still quite a bit of mystery surrounding Shields' situation. All we really know, or think we know, is that one major league team will have added a strong starter pitcher and improved their rotation by the time this week comes to a close.


More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:





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Israel Fehr is a writer for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter.






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News sport : Anderson Silva, Nick Diaz both fail UFC 183 drug screens

LAS VEGAS -- In a stunninng development, both fighters who competed in the main event of UFC 183, Anderson Silva and Nick Diaz, failed their drug tests.


Silva, the legendary ex-UFC middleweight champion who is widely regarded as the greatest mixed martial arts fighter in history, tested positive for the anabolic steroid drostanolone. For the third time in his career, Diaz had elevated levels of marijuana metabolites in his system.


Even more stunning news about Silva is that the drostanolone was discovered as part of an out-of-competition test given by the Nevada Athletic Commission on Jan. 9. But the Salt Lake City-based Sports Medicine Research & Testing Laboratory did not return the result to the commisison until Tuesday.


Commission chairman Francisco Aguilar could not explain why he did not receive the test result sooner. He referred questions to Dr. Daniel Eichner of SMARTL, but Eichner could not be reached.


Silva was making his return to MMA competition Saturday after suffering a gruesome broken leg in a title fight against Chris Weidman on Dec. 28, 2013. He won a unanimous decision over Diaz in the non-title main event of UFC 183 at the MGM Grand by scores of 50-45, 50-45 and 49-46.


The UFC issued a statement but made no other comment:



On February 3, 2015, the UFC organization was notified by the Nevada State Athletic Commission that Anderson Silva tested positive for Drostanolone metabolites on his Jan. 9 out of competition drug test. UFC’s understanding is that further testing will be conducted by the Commission to confirm these preliminary results. Anderson Silva has been an amazing champion and a true ambassador of the sport of mixed martial arts and the UFC, in Brazil as well as around the world. UFC is disappointed to learn of these initial results. The UFC has a strict, consistent policy against the use of any illegal and/or performance enhancing drugs, stimulants or masking agents by its athletes.



Silva will face a disciplinary hearing. On Feb. 17, the Nevada commission will move to temporarily suspend his license pending a full hearing. First offenses in Nevada generally receive a nine-month suspension.


Diaz tested above Nevada's 150 ng/ML allowable limit for marijuana metabolites, meaning he'll face discipline as a third-time offender. Diaz previously tested positive for marijuana after a Pride card in Las Vegas on Feb. 24, 2007, and after UFC 143 on Feb. 4, 2012.


The level of marijuana in Diaz's system is not yet available. Quest Diagnostics, which analyzed Diaz's sample, only noted that it was above the 150 ng/ML cutoff.


Ed Soares, Silva's manager, did not return a call from Yahoo Sports. UFC president Dana White declined comment and pointed to the UFC's statement.






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Van Gaal’s men labour against Cambridge

Manchester United reached the fifth round of the FA Cup after defeating a stubborn Cambridge United.


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London - Manchester United reached the FA Cup fifth round and avoided any further embarrassment against stubborn fourth-tier side Cambridge United with a 3-0 replay win at Old Trafford on Tuesday that did little to excite their fans.


After drawing 0-0 at Cambridge, who were promoted from the minor leagues last season, United eventually made their superiority tell with goals from Juan Mata, Marcos Rojo and James Wilson, although it was a largely laboured display.


Louis van Gaal's side, who almost fell behind in the first minute when Cambridge striker Tom Elliott hit the post, will next play third-tier Preston North End, who beat cup specialists Sheffield United 3-1 away in their fourth round replay.


Second-tier Fulham flirted with an upset against Premier League visitors Sunderland after taking a first-half lead, but were eventually beaten 3-1 after conceding three times in the last half-hour at Craven Cottage.


Cambridge, the lowest ranked team to reach the fourth round, were already big winners having guaranteed themselves a bumper payday of about one million pounds from gate receipts and TV money - a huge sum for a team at their level.


The Cambridge chairman said their mighty windfall would be spent on building new toilets at their run-down Abbey Stadium. Any hopes they had of producing one of the biggest shocks in cup history, however, were flushed down the pan.


They had a great chance to stun their illustrious opponents after one minute when Elliott raced on to a poor ball from Daley Blind, but his curling effort struck the post and Cambridge's resistance quickly wilted.


United midfielder Marouane Fellaini headed an Angel Di Maria cross back towards Mata who poked it in off the bar after 25 minutes and Rojo scored his first for the club when he headed in a deft cross from Robin van Persie just past the half-hour.


Substitute James Wilson fired in left-footed from the edge of the box to round off the win after 74 minutes in an efficient display where again the result trumped the performance.


“We have done what we had to,” Van Gaal told the BBC.


“Tonight, I don't think we played a very good match. But it is always difficult against a defensive team. We could have done better but I am pleased with the result.”


Sunderland fell behind to a close-range Hugo Rodallega goal for Fulham after 28 minutes but a Marcus Bettinelli own goal, Ricky Alvarez strike and Jordi Gomez penalty put them through.


Reuters






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News sport : Brian Shaw, half-jokingly, wonders if his Denver Nuggets are trying to lose

The Denver Nuggets rose to greet their Tuesday with some of the best NBA news of all – a game against the lowly Philadelphia 76ers was scheduled for that night!


That good cheer will probably turn into dread once the Nuggies finish up their performance against the Sixers, as scores of reporters will no doubt ask the players about the most recent comments made by head coach Brian Shaw about the team’s sluggish play. Shaw has been on his team, and rightfully so, all season for poor defensive play and an overall sense of apathy, but he saved his harshest comments for a post (90 minute) practice and (30 minute) meeting with his players following their embarrassing 22-point Saturday night home loss to an injured Charlotte Hornets team.


The first sentence in this block quote is from Nick Groke of the Denver Post, but you get the feeling the sentiment is something Shaw would sign off on. If not on the record. From the Post:



Shaw said he suspects his players may be trying to lose.




"It just looks like you almost have to try to lose as bad, and in the way we've been losing," he said. "At that point, something gives. The decision-makers at some point are going to make a decision. And everybody is going to have to live with it. Then it's out of our control.




[…]




“I can't make the ball go in on the floor. I can't slide over and take a charge, or slide my feet and keep somebody out of the paint. I can't do it," Shaw said.



No, Shaw cannot do that. And it’s become increasingly apparent that the Nuggets have no interest and possibly no ability to do as much consistently, either.


This is a lost roster, and by extension a lost franchise, without direction. At least when Nuggets players rebelled and boycotted a last-second practice called by then-coach Dan Issel midway through the 2000-01 season, the team had assets worth working with. This time around, the team seems to only boast Team USA darling Kenneth Faried (the subject of much of Shaw’s ire) and project rookie big man Jusuf Nurkic.


Nurkic has been fantastic this year, but referring to him as a “project” isn’t a swipe at his game – he is still just 20-years old and has a lot to learn on both ends in ways that don’t involve highlight blocks or dunks. The same goes for Faried, the darling of last year’s Team USA run, as even his offense has taken a step back this season.


That’s it.


JaVale McGee? He’s owed $23.25 million combined this year and next, and he barely plays.


Arron Afflalo? The guy that was supposed to put Denver over the top and back into the playoffs has taken a major step back on both ends.


Danilo Gallinari and Wilson Chandler? The two (active, at least) centerpieces of the 2011 Carmelo Anthony deal are injured and ineffective. In Gallinari’s case, he’s confused.


Ty Lawson? At times limping, at times struggling, at times in trouble with the law to a frightening and dangerous degree.


Timofey Mozgov? The former starting center was dealt to Cleveland for a draft pick, and he might jump center in the NBA Finals this year.


Beyond that, the Nuggets are a wasteland. The team was built to contend for a playoff berth following the exodus that saw coach George Karl and general manager Masai Ujiri flee the franchise after being awarded recognition for being the best at what they did the previous season, and that plan has backfired terribly. Denver entered the season nearly paying luxury tax money for a team that has now lost nine of ten, working some eight games out of the Western playoff bracket.


And with Lawson set to make over $25.6 million over the two seasons following this and McGee ($12 million) and Gallinari (nearly $11.6 million) due eight-figure salaries next year, who is going to line up to take Denver’s mismatched roster out of Colorado?


Worst, it’s not entirely clear if Shaw is just as much to blame. No, this was never going to be a loaded roster, and George Karl’s 57-win turn with the team in 2012-13 had as much to do with mostly pristine health to Danilo, Lawson and others as anything, but he’s failed to create something. Even if we do make excuses for this being an ill-fitting collection of players, the Nuggets routinely take games off.


Shaw, via his comments above and throughout this season, clearly has noticed. How much of that is on him, though?


Denver, unfortunately, has seen plenty of bad basketball over the last quarter-century. At the Nuggies’ worst, though, the team was often entertaining. Even the squad that revolted against Dan Issel in 2001 – with George McCloud whipping assists around and Nick Van Exel playing all Nick Van Exel-y – was fun to watch on its way to a competitive 40-42 record. Those teams were fun, even in defeat.


You can’t say the same thing about this Nuggets squad. Even if the team’s head coach has plenty to say about his team.


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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 : Josh Gordon's indefinite suspension leaves Browns in the lurch




With the news that Josh Gordon will be suspended indefinitely, the Cleveland Browns have yet another serious personnel issue on their hands.

Here's the official NFL release on Gordon:


“Josh Gordon of the Cleveland Browns has been suspended without pay for at least one year for violating the NFL Policy and Program for Substances of Abuse. Gordon’s suspension begins immediately."


Key words: "at least," That means Gordon must comply with league rules and guidelines for reinstatement, likely meet with commissioner Roger Goodell to convince the league he's making the proper progress in their eyes — something he clearly hasn't done to date.


And here's what Browns GM Ray Farmer had to say:


“As we have conveyed, we are disappointed to once again be at this point with Josh. Throughout his career we have tried to assist him in getting support like we would with any member of our organization. Unfortunately our efforts have not resonated with him. It is evident that Josh needs to make some substantial strides to live up to the positive culture we are trying to build this football team upon.


"Our hope is that this suspension affords Josh the opportunity to gain some clarity in determining what he wants to accomplish moving forward and if he wants a career in the Nation Football League. We will have no further comment on Josh as he will not be permitted in our facility for the duration of his suspension.”


At this point, you have to figure the Browns have written Gordon off completely.


Not so for Johnny Manziel, who is in treatment now but could be back with the team prior to training camp. That's good news, and it appears Manziel is trying to tackle his personal problem head on. But can the Browns feel good about that right now and assume he'll be accountable?


You almost have to think that the team now must make a big push to keep Brian Hoyer, who is a pending free agent. If the Browns choose not to place the franchise tag on Hoyer, he'll have other suitors; there are at least half a dozen teams who could view him as an upgrade — short term or long — over their current starter. Pure speculation here, but teams that could make strong pushes to sign Hoyer might include the Houston Texans and Buffalo Bills.


The Browns have two first-round picks (courtesy of the Sammy Watkins trade), plus additional selections in the fourth and sixth rounds, so they are well-stocked to bolster their roster. That's the good news. But here's the rub: Can they realistically draft a quarterback in Round 1? Not likely — and this is the wrong year to be seeking QB help in the draft after Jameis Winston and Marcus Mariota, with what appears to be horrible depth.


Well, what about receiver? It appears to be another stocked class, maybe not quite as terrific as last year's group, but strong nonetheless. But Farmer's public comments about the value of the receiver position and his recent drafting history (not selecting a single receiver in a banner group in 2014) appear to suggest that the Browns going wideout with either the No. 12 or 19 overall pick is far from a sure thing.


Gordon has left the team in a horrible spot. Manziel is a question mark at best at this point. The Browns, who showed some promise in Mike Pettine first season (albeit an up and down one), appear to have taken two big steps backward.


So when do they bounce back? It has been a long rebound since the glory days.


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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 : A Russian women's team is paying Diana Taurasi not to play in the WNBA this year

Even for the most hardened of NBA obsessives, the ones eagerly looking forward to Tuesday’s Boston/New York contest on League Pass, the WNBA is a bit of an unknown frontier. It’s something to ignore in the summer, sadly, after burnout hits following too many autumn, winter and spring months of watching all things orange and leathery in both the NBA and NCAA men’s basketball season.


For those sorts of non-followers, a big name can help, and accessible attributes (you watched her play an NCAA final in college, she averages over 20 points per game) aid in the faraway fandom. Who knows, by the time the summer draws to a close and the WNBA Finals tip off, you may even take in a game or two to catch up on how that big name is doing?


Well, perhaps the WNBA’s biggest name appears to be sitting out the 2015 WNBA season – as you will not see Diana Taurasi play with the Phoenix Mercury this season. Not because of a torn ACL or other threatening injury, but because it is in that player’s best interests to not work for the relative low wages the league pays its stars in comparison with other international women’s leagues, and the Russian squad that is paying Taurasi to play for them in the winter, and rest in the summer.


Kate Fagan at ESPN broke the news on Tuesday:



For the 2014 WNBA season, the 33-year-old made just under the league maximum of $107,000. But she makes 15 times that -- approximately $1.5 million -- playing overseas. And now she'll make even more, as [UMMC Ekaterinburg] is essentially compensating Taurasi her WNBA salary, and then some, to not play in the WNBA at all.




Taurasi says she has every intention of returning for the 2016 WNBA season and also intends to play in the 2016 Olympics in Brazil. But this summer, for the first time in her career, the California native will actually have an offseason.




"It was the perfect mix of timing and making sure I was in control of my career," Taurasi, whom many consider the best women's basketball player in the world, told espnW Tuesday. "Since 2004, when I started professional basketball, it has been a cycle -- a cycle that I have enjoyed so much. With my team in Russia, a conversation began about making sure I'm at an elite level for a long time with them. I put everything on the table and weighed all my options and made the best decision.”



This is an understandable move for Taurasi, who between overseas commitments, WNBA play (she’s won three titles) and her Team USA brilliance (three gold medals at the Olympics, two gold medals and one bronze at the World Championships), has never had an actual offseason. We’ve gone on quite a bit about how players like Kobe Bryant and LeBron James have been pushed to the brink by the combination of early-career responsibilities, deep runs into the playoffs and Team USA work, but at least they’ve had some offseasons in order to recuperate.


For Taurasi, at age 33, to use her offseason basically slumming just to stay on the fringes of the North American sporting scene? It makes absolute no sense for the future Basketball Hall of Famer.


In a statement, the Mercury pointed out that they were “obviously disappointed” that Taurasi wouldn’t return to pair with Brittney Griner and defend the team’s 2014 WNBA title, but they also “respect her decision.”


So should anyone. Because according to Kate Fagan, the league’s finances are a mess. Not so much in terms of television revenue and gate receipts, but in how teams choose to dole out what they’ve taken in.


The WNBA has enjoyed some franchise stability over the last half-decade, and the league’s television contract with ABC/ESPN lasts until 2022. The Mercury’s 2014 may have only made a blip on the national radar even with the emergence of the brilliant Griner working alongside a legend in Taurasi, but this is still a sustainable league.


According to Fagan, however, far too many WNBA players make the sort of max money that Taurasi makes. It’s understandable that teams would want to max out as many players as they could, especially when even the max players are working for a fraction of what someone like Skip Bayless makes to prattle on TV for a few hours each morning. It feels good to spread the wealth around, even if it is absurd that someone like Taurasi is making the same amount as a fringe All-Star.


For the health of the league, however, it might be best to develop an established star system. Apparently 42 players make right around the $100,000 mark that Taurasi makes a little more than, and that’s in a 144-player league.


Things get even weirder in the coach’s box. From Fagan:



In the WNBA, most coaches make more than double the salary of their star player. Numerous coaches in the league are making in the range of $250,000 -- some as much as $300,000. Think about that for a second. That's the equivalent of the Cleveland Cavaliers paying coach David Blatt something like $40-50 million, while LeBron James makes $20 million. (Most NBA coaches make about a quarter of what their star players make.)



It’s important to try to lure name brand coaches into the pro ranks and away from the more potentially lucrative NCAA women’s basketball system, and it’s also important encourage legends to stick on the sidelines and away from retirement, as the Indiana Fever did with the fantastic Lin Dunn before she called it quits in 2014.


The marks are off. One would assume that plenty of WNBA players would decline to take part in the season if their nearly-six figure salaries were cut, preferring to act as Taurasi currently is (at a far lower rate, but still better than the WNBA’s offer), but not many would. And certainly stars would think twice taking in an offseason if the max money seemed more apt for, say, the WNBA’s version of Kevin Durant as opposed to the WNBA’s version of Joe Johnson.


This is all very unfortunate.


The WNBA should be proud to be where it is in 2015. It has dodged massive franchise and league restructuring, and needless and outright misogyny from some of the world’s most prominent sportswriters and otherwise-indifferent fans that seem to want to go out of their way to routinely poke fun at something that they would otherwise ignore had the gender of the participants been different.


When men play sports that men don’t care about it, most men remain indifferent about that sport. When women play a sport that men don’t care about, too many of these “men” seem to take great delight in telling strangers just how awful they think the sport is. Just check the comments under this column for proof.


I’m hardly a major WNBA fan – after a long and wearying NBA season, I need a break from my TV in the summer. With that in place, some of the most thrilling games I’ve ever covered as a writer or witnessed as a paying fan in person were WNBA games, and that’s coming in the same house that saw LeBron and company take on the home crowd for massive stakes just a few weeks before in the face of a volume that wasn’t nearly as loud. Seriously, go to a WNBA game.


The league cannot afford to lose its stars as they understandably and rightfully take some time off to rest their bodies. The WNBA has long been aware of the discrepancy between its paychecks and the ones international teams pay their players during the WNBA “offseason,” and it’s more than unfortunate that it takes the loss of a star like Diana Taurasi to set the wheels of change in motion.


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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 : Auburn will plant two new 35-foot oaks at Toomer's Corner on Feb. 14

Oak trees are coming back to Toomer’s Corner.


Auburn announced that two new 35-foot oak trees would be planted on Feb. 14 to replace the original oaks that had to be removed after they were poisoned during Auburn’s 2010 championship season.


The university will celebrate the new trees, which are being planted nearly two years after being removed, with an early morning ceremony that is open to the public. In the past two years, Auburn fans, who use toilet paper to cover the trees after Auburn wins, had to resort to rolling polls with wires that were a placeholder until new trees could be planted.


Auburn has asked that fans not roll the new trees until the 2016 season to allow the plants acclimate to their new environment.


The planting of the two trees marks the first phase in a renovation process for the iconic corner at the intersection of College Street and Magnolia Avenue. The project also will include the expansion of Samford Park plaza. The second phase of the renovation will begin following the Tigers’ spring game in April. That will include the addition of 30 15-foot-tall trees grown from acorns from the original oaks.


For more Auburn news, visit AuburnSports.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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West Ham facing KO from FA Cup

West Ham could be kicked out of the FA Cup if found guilty of illegally playing Diafra Sakho in their fourth-round win.


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London - West Ham could be kicked out of the FA Cup if found guilty by Fifa of illegally playing Senegal striker Diafra Sakho in their fourth-round win at Bristol City last month.


Fifa have opened disciplinary proceedings against the London club after Senegal complained that Sakho should not have played.


The 25-year-old, who scored the only goal in a 1-0 West Ham win, withdrew from the Senegal squad for the Africa Cup of Nations with a back injury and Fifa rules say a player cannot appear for a club if he was meant to be on international duty.


West Ham deny any wrongdoing and want the case dismissed. Sanctions by Fifa could involve expulsion from the FA Cup, a ban on the player or a fine.


West Ham maintain Sakho did not team up with Senegal because his back problem meant he could not fly.


Co-chairman David Sullivan told Sportsmail last week: “A top back surgeon said Sakho can’t fly and he still can’t fly. He went by car to Bristol.


“We are sure any Fifa hearing will vindicate us. The player missed four games as a result of injuries incurred while playing for Senegal. We have done nothing untoward.”


Manager Sam Allardyce, who left Sakho out of the Premier League trip to Liverpool on Saturday, said: “I’m not worried that he will face a ban. We have stuck by every rule and regulation in the book.”


Daily Mail






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News sport : Oklahoma’s Cody Thomas quits baseball to focus on spring QB competition

Dec 6, 2014; Norman, OK, USA; Oklahoma Sooners quarterback Cody Thomas (14) warms up prior to action against the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Gaylord Family - Oklahoma Memorial Stadium. (Mark D. Smith-USA TODAY Sports) Oklahoma quarterback Cody Thomas won’t play baseball this year so he can concentrate on the competing for the starting quarterback job during spring practice.


Thomas, who made his declaration on Twitter, started three games for the Sooners in place of regular starter Trevor Knight who was out with injury.


"I have decided not to play baseball this spring so I can focus on football," Thomas wrote on Twitter. "I want to thank Coach (Pete) Hughes and the University of Oklahoma baseball program for making this opportunity possible. This has been a tough decision and I am thankful for all the support."


Thomas played in seven games last year and completed 45.5 percent of his passes for 342 yards, two touchdowns and four interceptions.


Thomas’ decision comes on the heels of coach Bob Stoops declaring the quarterbacking job open following a rough outing by Knight in the Russell Athletic Bowl against Clemson. In that game, Knight completed 17 of 37 passes for 103 yards and three interceptions. The Sooners lost 40-6.


Thomas appeared in 14 baseball games last season as a true freshman and had a .083 batting average with one run scored, one walk and two strikeouts. He had one hit in 12 at-bats.


The Sooners will have four players competing for the starting quarterback role this spring, including redshirt freshman Justice Hansen and junior Baker Mayfield, who missed last season after transferring from Texas Tech. Mayfield started his Tech career as a walk-on, but was the team’s starter through the first half of the 2013 season.


For more Oklahoma news, visit SoonerScoop.com.


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News sport : Falcons' Arthur Blank on crowd noise: 'What we've done ... is wrong'




Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank introduced new head coach Dan Quinn, fresh off the plane from Phoenix, on Tuesday. And after the requisite excited-to-be-here's from Quinn, talk turned to the ongoing investigation of the Falcons regarding allegations of faked crowd noise at the Georgia Dome.


Blank was unequivocal, saying he was "angry and embarrassed" that the NFL is looking into whether Atlanta piped in crowd noise to impact play during Falcons home games over the last two seasons. He acknowledged wrongdoing, telling the AP "I think what we've done in 2013 and 2014 was wrong."


The NFL is expected to issue the results of its investigation in the next few weeks. "We cooperated fully" with the investigation, Blank said. "We certainly support the integrity of the league, the integrity of fair competition and the integrity of the shield," he said. "We are not happy about it."


It's worth noting that if in fact the Falcons did pipe in crowd noise to impact or distract opposing teams, that's a far more serious offense than any deflated footballs could possibly be, since crowd noise has a measurable effect on a team's ability to do its job. The Falcons are facing a fine, loss of draft pick, or both.


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News sport : Phil Jackson on the triangle in NYC: 'So far, my experiment has fallen flat on its face'

'I've made a huge mistake.' (Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports) Phil Jackson entered this season believing that the New York Knicks, the team he was hired last March to overhaul, were "going to be a playoff team." They, um, aren't, having rolled up the third-worst record in the NBA, ahead of only the 8-40 Minnesota Timberwolves and 10-39 Philadelphia 76ers.


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It's been a mostly miserable few months, from the "not ready for showtime" season opener through a trio of dismal losing streaks — seven in early November, 10 from late November through early December, a franchise-record 16 from mid-December through mid-January — that had the Knicks flirting with the worst kind of history, left the Madison Square Garden faithful seeking the protection of anonymity. All that's left now for Knickerbocker backers is to look forward to a lottery in which New York actually owns its own first-round draft pick, to write free-agent fan fiction two years in advance, and kinda-sorta wish the team would take it easy with all this recent winning.


So no, things haven't gone quite as the Zen Master drew them up, and he admitted it in no uncertain terms during a lengthy recent interview with Harvey Araton of The New York Times:


[...] it didn’t take long after Jackson sat down for a recent interview over lunch to admit that his debut as an N.B.A. executive has been sobering, stressful and, during early morning reflections, doubt-inducing.

“Like nothing I’ve seen before,” he said of the Knicks’ first 41 games, of which they lost 36, a half-season of hell. “So far, my experiment has fallen flat on its face.” [...]

[...] And yes, Jackson said, he also knows that reconstruction could be as tricky as installing the triangle, and the trust he has — from [Knicks owner James] Dolan and long-suffering Knicks fans — may not last long.

That is why he offered his mea culpa for this season at a news conference last month and perhaps why, a second time, he referred to his work to date “as an experiment that certainly hasn’t worked.”

While Araton's lunch with Jackson took place before the Knicks won five of their last seven heading into Tuesday's matchup with the Boston Celtics, you'd suspect that improving from 5-36 to 10-38 doesn't alter his outlook too much.


At issue, though, is the nature of Jackson's "experiment." Is it more about bringing the Knicks back to the title-contending status of his days as a Knicks player in the late 1960s and '70s, or about proving that the triangle offense — the system he deployed en route to 11 NBA championships as the coach of the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers, and the system he brought protege Derek Fisher in to install as the Knicks' bench boss — can still produce a winner?


The answer, as Araton writes, is something of a mixed bag, which can complicate things:


By last spring, James L. Dolan, the executive chairman of Madison Square Garden, had offered Jackson a reported $60 million over five years, autonomy in running the Knicks as team president and — for the sake of his legacy beyond wins and losses — the opportunity to plant the triangle in the heart of another premier N.B.A. market.

“It was part of my thinking,” he said of — once and for all — popularizing the system he learned from its innovator, Tex Winter, when both were assistant coaches in Chicago. “There are some principles of the offense that I did feel were being overrun, or disregarded.” [...]

But as to skepticism about whether he can make the triangle work in a league in which no one else plays it, Jackson said: “I’m not daunted by the number of people who have commented that this way of playing is arcane, that the game has moved on. The game has moved on.”

He also believes that the game, stylistically, moves in mysterious ways.

“I think it’s still debatable about how basketball is going to be played, what’s going to win out,” he said, leaving no doubt of his disdain for the point guard dominating concept of “screen-and-roll, break down, pass, and two or three players standing in spots, not participating in the offense.”

But while Jackson might not like the Rocketsization of contemporary NBA basketball, he says he understands the value of adjusting to account for the changing times, telling Araton that Fisher is free to tinker with the system and "to do the innovation with today's type [of] player." That's important, because while the Knicks' predictable defensive failures — they allowed 108.9 points per 100 possessions through the first 41 games, 29th among 30 NBA teams — were a major contributing factor to all that early-season misery, it was New York's persistent struggle to get acclimated to the triangle that earned all the attention.


Carmelo Anthony and the Knicks have struggled in their transition to the triangle. (Anthony Gruppuso-USA TODAY Sports ) The drumbeat started in September, with Jackson emphasizing the importance of Anthony — whom he'd just signed to a five-year, $124.1 million contract to be the foundation on which the Knicks' rebuild would rest — finding his place in the offense through cutting, passing and continually committing to keeping both ball and body moving. It continued during preseason, with Anthony saying the triangle's installation was slow in coming and J.R. Smith saying the team could take months to get in rhythm with it.


As the Knicks' offensive struggles became readily apparent a couple of weeks into the season, even NBA Commissioner Adam Silver remarked on the team's clearly labored attempts to think their way through their possessions rather than flowing, reading and reacting. After he and teammate Iman Shumpert were traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers in an early January three-way swap, Smith echoed those eye-test concerns, calling the triangle "almost too much thinking."


To be fair, Smith also later told NBA.com's David Aldridge that he was disappointed that he didn't make things work:


I wanted to be one of the players that understood it, that got it. The two greatest players in the world at my position played in it, and thrived in it, got all the accolades and championships and whatever else came with it. I wanted to be a part of that significant group.

But while J.R. didn't exactly invite comparisons to Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant during his time in the triangle, he did lay bare a key issue with the Knicks' simultaneous pushes to install a new (well, new-old) offensive system and overhaul their roster. With so few Knicks clearly earmarked as part of Jackson's long-range vision — only Anthony and Jose Calderon have guaranteed contracts stretching past the end of next season, and Jackson's reportedly very eager to move the final two years of the Spanish point guard's deal — it can be difficult to get full buy-in to a long-term project from vets who feel like management's already thinking about who'll be replacing them in the near future.


“Everybody in the building was pretty much walking on eggshells so it was kind of hard to prosper in that way, especially when you are not accustomed to it,’’ Smith told Kevin Kernan of the New York Post.


Perhaps it's not surprising, then, that the Knicks' recent uptick in fortunes has come thanks in large part to contributions from players who might be more accustomed to handling the sort of uncertainty that comes with not knowing if you're going to have an NBA job tomorrow.


Behind contributions from the likes of rookie D-League call-up Langston Galloway and well-traveled frontcourt short-timers Lou Amundson and Lance Thomas — along with, of course, Anthony's return from the knee injury that's still expected to require surgical repair and a soft run of competition — the Knicks have looked significantly better, more capably running the triangle while sprinkling in more spread-pick-and-roll play, and working more determinedly on the defensive end. They've outscored their opponents by just under three points per 100 possessions over the last seven games, a top-10 mark in the league during that span, largely by moving the ball better and doing a significantly better job of preventing opponents from jacking 3s with impunity, as Joe Flynn notes at Knicks blog Posting and Toasting.


But just because the Knicks have looked more like an actual NBA team with several lightly regarded players working hard, that doesn't mean that higher-profile talent will necessarily flock to the World's Most Famous Arena to try to tailor their games to New York's style. More from Araton:


[...] the feeling on the N.B.A. grapevine is that force-feeding the triangle to players who struggled to grasp its numerous options and who didn’t have enough job security to be invested in the process was akin to demanding that one-and-done college players take advanced calculus.

As much as Jackson has argued that the triangle is just an organizational means of executing basic basketball, providing a foundation of order to empower the players, he conceded that leaguewide perceptions of the system as too complex could create a compromised reality in relation to free agent recruiting.

“Of course it’s a concern of mine, the perception that it’s too difficult to learn or too difficult for today’s players to embrace,” he said. “But I think anyone that believes he’s a total basketball player is going to want to do it. [...] We’re not going to punch all the right buttons in the process of doing this. But we’re looking for multiple talents, drive, intelligence, guys that will play defense. We hope to develop a team, and there are a lot of agents out there looking to find a good spot for their players.”

Jackson's job come this summer will be to land one of those "total basketball players" at the top of the 2015 NBA draft, and then to make judicious use of the roughly $30 million in salary cap space New York's likely to have to spend on "multiple talents." For what it's worth, Jackson demurred on the idea of going big-game hunting this summer — he "called that thinking part of a quick-fix mentality that had been the Knicks’ undoing in most of the years since their last championship team [...] in 1973," according to Araton.


If he misses in the draft and throws good money after bad on the open market, then we'll see more of the same sad story at MSG; if he can stick to the blueprint and hit a home run with a rookie, fortunes might change for the better. For now, yes, Jackson's experiment is an unquestioned failure. It could only take a couple of well-chosen elements, though, to catalyze a drastic change.


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