The Coutinho and Sterling show

Philippe Coutinho struck a stoppage-time winner for Liverpool as they beat Bolton in the FA Cup fourth round replay.


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Bolton - Philippe Coutinho struck a stoppage-time winner for Liverpool as they beat Bolton 2-1 in the FA Cup fourth round replay on Wednesday.


Last season's Premier League runners-up were on the verge of exiting the competition after Eidur Gudjohnsen converted a second-half penalty in the 59th minute.


However, Raheem Sterling struck in the 86th and within minutes the Brazilian settled the match with a strike from outside the box, in the week that saw him pen a new long-term deal with the Anfield club.


“It was always going to be a tough game. Going 1-0 behind away from home put us on the back foot. You have to keep your patience and keep the width in the game, especially against 10 men,” said Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers.


The game marked captain Steven Gerrard's 700th appearance for the Merseysiders and it was the visitors that dominated in a first half which saw Sterling strike the outside of the post shortly before the interval.


Yet it was the hosts that took the lead courtesy of Gudjohnsen's spot kick after Martin Skrtel was penalised for a challenge on youngster Zach Clough.


Bolton were reduced to 10 men minutes later when Neil Danns was shown a second yellow for a late challenge on Joe Allen in the 66th.


Liverpool pressed for an equaliser but were foiled by a stubborn Bolton defense, which came within minutes of dumping Rodgers' side out of the competition.


Following Danns' dismissal, Rodgers moved Emre Can forward from centre back into a central midfield role. That moved paid dividends. The German youngster picked out Sterling with a lofted pass that the England international netted on the volley.


With extra time looming, Coutinho curled a right-footed shot beyond goalkeeper Andy Lonergan to see off a spirited performance from Neil Lennon's side.


“I was thinking when it went 1-0 and hit the woodwork so many times that it's not our day but the boys stuck in really well and got the goals that we deserved and won the game,” said Liverpool's opening scorer Sterling.


Liverpool will now face Crystal Palace in the fifth round at Selhurst Park.


Sapa-AP






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News sport : 2 Heat players briefly forget how inbounding works late in loss to Wolves

Sometimes, in the midst of a hard-fought, tightly contested battle, you can lose sight of things. Details slip past you. Things you get right 99 times out of 100 somehow go awry. It happens to all of us, at one time or another.


Unfortunately for Norris Cole and Hassan Whiteside, it happened on Wednesday night. To both of them. At the same time. At the worst possible time.



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With the Miami Heat trailing the Minnesota Timberwolves 102-101 after a midrange jumper by Wolves guard Kevin Martin with 41 seconds remaining, the Heat had the ball and a chance to regain the lead on the ensuing possession. Or, they would have, had Miami's point guard and emerging beast of a center managed to successfully complete the inbounds. They couldn't.


Cole picked the ball up on the baseline and then, while standing out of bounds, handed the ball to Whiteside, who was inbounds. Then, when Whiteside handed the ball back to Cole to bring it up the court, Cole directed his big man back out of bounds so that he could properly inbound the ball in the time-honored, center-to-point-guard fashion. Whiteside stepped out and obliged. And then, of course, referee Violet Palmer promptly blew her whistle and took the ball away from Cole and Whiteside, because, as it turns out, you're not allowed to inbound the ball twice. That second one's actually just you committing a turnover. Whoops!


The Wolves didn't properly thank the Heat for their gracious, Lamar Odom-evoking gift, failing to get a bucket on their ensuing freebie possession when Martin missed a potential 3-point dagger. But Miami came up short on two clean looks at a winner, with Mario Chalmers missing a running floater with six seconds left and, after a Whiteside offensive rebound, Cole clanging a 3-pointer with just under two seconds on the clock. Gorgui Dieng came down with the board, and that was all she wrote, as the Timberwolves held on for a 102-101 win, just the fifth home win of the season for Flip Saunders' club, to improve Minnesota's NBA-worst record to 9-40.


Martin led five Wolves in double-figures with 30 points on 11-for-23 shooting to go with three rebounds, three assists and two steals, as Minnesota shot 51.4 percent from the floor as a team and just seemed energized by the Target Center return of point guard Ricky Rubio, who chipped in eight points and nine assists — including one eye-popping no-look feed for some two-handed Anthony Bennett thunder, in just his second game back from a high-ankle sprain that was more severe than the team initially thought.


Dieng's monster fourth quarter (seven of his 13 points, six of his nine rebounds) helped spark the rally that brought Minnesota back from a seven-point deficit after three quarters and put them in striking distance late. And despite another unreal performance from Whiteside — a career-high 24 points, 20 rebounds (nine on the offensive glass), three steals, two blocks and a 12-for-13 mark from the floor that included makes on his first 11 shots — and an 18-point outing from Luol Deng, Miami couldn't hold off the Wolves' charge, losing for the fourth time in five games and the third time in four games since losing Dwyane Wade to another hamstring injury.


Things have been bad for the Heat, who now stand at 21-28, just a half-game up on the Brooklyn Nets for the East's No. 8 seed, and they got worse on Wednesday night — especially at the end, in what Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel called "practically theater of the absurd at the finish":


"It doesn't matter who we play," center Chris Bosh said, "they crawl into right back into the game with no resistance. It's like we're not learning anything." [...]

"I'm not really sure," Cole said when asked what happened. "They didn't score off it." [...]

"Our execution in the fourth quarter left a lot to be desired," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra understated.

Yeah, I think that's safe to say.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : The Hawks' whole starting five is January's Eastern Conference Player of the Month

Add one more bit of January history for the Atlanta Hawks: The NBA announced Wednesday evening that the entire Atlanta starting five — center Al Horford, power forward Paul Millsap, small forward DeMarre Carroll, shooting guard Kyle Korver and point guard Jeff Teague — has been named the Eastern Conference Player(s) of the Month for January, during which the Hawks went undefeated en route to becoming the first team ever to go 17-0 in a calendar month.


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They look pretty stoked about it — especially Carroll:



If you didn't know the NBA could do that, you're not alone; it was a new one on me, too. But there was precedent for multiple teammates sharing Player of the Month honors — LeBron James and Dwyane Wade did with the Miami Heat in December 2010; the Dallas Mavericks trio of Dirk Nowitzki, Steve Nash and Michael Finley got a three-way split of the Western nod in November 2002; and Boston Celtics stars Paul Pierce and Antoine Walker shared the award in December 2001 — so the league saw fit to offer the collective atta-boy.


Or, more to the point, the Hawks themselves saw fit to suggest said atta-boy, and the folks who make the decisions on such matters seemed to agree that it was a good call, according to Steve Kyler of Basketball Insiders:




And while that might not make Atlanta's reserve corps feel especially sunny, it does seem like a pretty sweet honor for an Atlanta starting lineup that absolutely bulldozed the league during the opening month of 2015.


The Hawks' starting five outscored the opposition by 72 total points over the span of 207 shared minutes in January, which works out to a whopping 19.3 points per 100 possessions, according to NBA.com's stat tool. The starters both scored (114 points-per-100) and defended (94.7 allowed per-100) at rates that would lead the league over the course of the full season, shooting a blistering 54 percent from the field and 43.5 percent from 3-point land as a unit while holding their opponents to comparatively dismal marks of 43.3 percent and 25.6 percent, respectively; the former would be the third-best full-season mark in the NBA, while the latter would lead the league by a country mile.


And in keeping with the team's many-hands-make-light-work ethos of sharing both the ball and the burden of being a star performer on a nightly basis, no one Hawk seemed to stand head and shoulders above his compatriots in that month-long march to the top of the Eastern Conference. All five averaged double-figures, led by Millsap's 18.3 points in 33 minutes per night with Carroll's 12.3 points bringing up the rear.


Each offered strong supplemental contributions, too — do Millsap's eight boards, 2.8 assists, 1.4 steals and 40.8 percent 3-point shooting outweigh Horford's 7.8 boards, 4.3 dimes, 1.4 blocks and 58.8 percent mark from the floor? Does Teague's sterling 3.7-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio as the straw that stirs the Hawks' drink outpace Korver's blistering 56.7 percent long-distance marksmanship, on 6.1 attempts per night, as the sword of Damocles hanging over opponents' necks on every Atlanta possession? And what about Carroll's consistently stout perimeter defense and gap-filling offensive performance, shooting nearly 53 percent from the floor and 42 percent from 3-point land despite virtually never ranking as a primary option on a given trip?


How do you divide up credit for so total a team performance? You can't. Or, perhaps more accurately, whether you can or you can't, as it turns out, you don't have to.


That might be sour news for some of the other deserving options in the East — say, LeBron (29.9 points, 6.3 rebounds, 6.3 assists in 36.3 minutes per game for the now-on-a-roll Cleveland Cavaliers), mid-month Player of the Week honoree Kemba Walker (23.6 points, 4.1 assists, 3.9 rebounds per game to help the Charlotte Hornets fight back into the playoff chase) or Brandon Jennings (20.9 points and 7.2 assists in 29 minutes per game for the resurgent Detroit Pistons).


But James, Walker and Jennings all missed at least four January games due to injury, while every member of the Hawks suited up at least 14 times on the way to that perfect 17-0 mark, helping to alleviate any bad taste that the collective honor might leave and present a nice, wide opening for the NBA to tip its cap to the league's pre-eminent present-day practitioners of the beautiful game.


“We appreciate the recognition of our starters’ play during this past month. It is reflective of all the work our entire team and organization has put in,” Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer said in a team statement. “We place a strong emphasis on having the right approach every day and making daily improvement. Collectively, we know that we have a lot more work to do this season and look forward to continue growing as a team.”


And, lest we forget, Coach Bud deserves his fair share of the credit for the Hawks' rampage to 40-9, too. He received it Monday, when he was named the conference's Coach of the Month on Monday. Steve Kerr of the Golden State Warriors took home the honor in the West.


James Harden, who has been many things during his NBA career but remains just one man, was named the West's Player of the Month for January. The All-Star shooting guard averaged 25.8 points, 6.7 assists and 4.7 rebounds in 34.4 minutes per game on blistering 48/43/88 shooting splits while leading the Houston Rockets to an 11-6 mark for the month.


More NBA coverage:



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News sport : Yankees All-Star Betances: 'We welcome A-Rod with open arms'

Different doesn't even begin to describe what Spring Training will be like for the Yankees.



Gone is the calming, almost majestic, presence of future first-ballot Hall of Famers Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter. Heightened is the sense of panic for a team that has missed the playoffs despite sporting a payroll that tops $200 million annually. Returning, in theory, is the circus that is Alex Rodriguez.


With pitchers and catchers reporting in just over two weeks, things seem bleak enough right now that there's actually some internal excitement surrounding Rodriguez’s return. Even so, the disgraced slugger is far from the player, artificially enhanced or not, that he once was. He’s now dominating headlines rather than opposing pitchers.


“I don’t think [Rodriguez] is going to be a distraction,” Yankees reliever Dellin Betances said. “For us, we welcome him with open arms, we just want everybody to contribute and if everybody can contribute and get us back to the playoffs, that’s what matters to us this year.”



Despite reciting the company line and being a good teammate when it comes to Rodriguez, Betances has to know there will be a media frenzy surrounding the team because of the 39-year-old’s controversial reputation.


Regardless, the All-Star reliever kept his cool when asked about what it will be like to take the field with the maligned star.


“I’m looking forward to playing with [Rodriguez] again, he’s somebody who I got to play with a few years back,” said Betances, who was accepting the Thurman Munson Award as part of a charity event benefitting the AHRC New York City Foundation.


“He’s a great guy,” Betances continued “[There won’t be any issues] for me. I’m definitely looking forward to seeing him play and helping us win.”



Betances projects to be one of the bright spots on a team that, for the first time in 20 years, won't have a member of the famed "Core Four" its roster.



Now, while the past two seasons' failures have been overshadowed by Rivera and Jeter's retirement tours, the focus shifts to the hodgepodge of veterans that Brian Cashman has brought together. In fact, just three players, C.C. Sabathia, Mark Teixeira and Rodriguez, were on the Yankees roster when they won the World Series in 2009.


“[Spring training is] definitely going to be different, Betances said. “When you think about the Yankees, Derek Jeter is one of the names that comes up so it’s going to be weird not seeing him around. I think Brian McCann can be one of the guys who can step up and someone I look forward to seeing step up.”


And as far as a potential Jeter return, Betances put that rumor to bed – sort of.


“If I know Jeter, I don’t think he’ll [visit us in Spring Training], but you never know.”






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News sport : Former Ohio State RB Maurice Clarett released from probation

Maurice Clarett of the Ohio State Buckeyes looks on against the Purdue Boilermakers at Ross-Ade Stadium on November 9, 2002. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images) Nearly five years after being granted early release from prison, former Ohio State star running back Maurice Clarett was released from probation on Wednesday.


Clarett’s probation was scheduled to end in April but Franklin County (Ohio) Judge David W. Pais wanted to personally end Clarett’s probation before his final day in the position on Friday, so he ended Clarett’s term two months ahead of schedule.


Clarett, who helped the Buckeyes win the 2002 national championship, was convicted on robbery and weapons charges in 2006. He was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in prison, but was granted his release by Fais in April 2010. Fais then placed him on intensive probation for five years.


According to the Columbus Dispatch, Fais said that Clarett’s transformation is one of the “truly, truly wonderful success stories I’ve had as a judge” in his 26 years.


“I’m not rewarding Mr. Clarett,” Fais said. “Mr. Clarett is rewarding himself by what he accomplished.”


Since his release from prison, Clarett has become a motivational speaker and has shared his story at prisons and youth facilities. He also wrote an autobiography titled, My Life. My Story. My Redemption., and was featured in an ESPN 30 for 30 documentary.


Before his dismissal from Ohio State for receiving extra benefits, Clarett ran for 1,237 yards and 16 touchdowns as a true freshman in 2002. The Denver Broncos later selected him in the third round of the 2004 NFL Draft but he never played a down for the team.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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News sport : Byron Scott says Jason Kidd 'was kind of known for being an a—hole'

The 2003-04 New Jersey Nets, under head coach Byron Scott, were an odd team to watch. The squad was coming off of its second consecutive one-sided Finals last the season before – but hey, a Finals trip is a Finals trip, right? Out of nowhere the group was seemingly gifted a borderline All-Star center as Alonzo Mourning emerged from a kidney transplant scare to return from retirement as a free agent score for New Jersey, and star guard Jason Kidd was working in his prime.


The team seemed to sleep through the first part of the season, however, rarely playing with the same all-out style that marked its previous two Finals runs. With the Nets sitting at a disappointing 22-20, general manager Rod Thorn decided to pull the plug on coach Scott in spite of his success with the team in 2002 and 2003, hiring then-unheralded assistant coach Lawrence Frank as a replacement.


Rumors abounded that Kidd, who re-signed as a free agent the previous summer with New Jersey, was the driving force behind the move. Also, it should be noted that Jason Kidd was totally the driving force behind the move.


Kidd, after one year coaching the now Brooklyn Nets, is the head coach in Milwaukee now. Kidd is doing a fantastic job with the Bucks, who finished with the NBA’s worst record this season, as his team is on pace for 45 wins and a playoff berth. Scott, now coaching the Los Angeles Lakers after stopovers in New Orleans and Cleveland, is fighting to keep the Lakers away from the league’s worst record.


Some would say his team’s front office would like the Lakers to earn that worst record. Couple that with Kidd’s success and a trip to Milwaukee in the dead of winter, and you can see why Scott would be a little salty in talking about the man he used to coach.


From Bill Oram at the Orange County Register:



“He was kind of known for being an a—hole,” Scott said.




[…]




Kidd was reportedly at the middle of his firing in 2004, with the Associated Press reporting that Kidd had gone to management to demand a change on the bench.




Asked if that story was accurate, Scott said he was unsure.




“That’s all I’ve heard,” Scott said. “Now, did he actually go talk to Rod Thorn and all those guys? I don’t know. I never got that story. I always said, though, where there’s smoke there fire.




“I’m in a much better place and I’m sure he’s happy where he is, too.”



You can laugh all you want about the difference between working with the two-time defending Eastern champions in 2004 and dealing with an injured (Jordan Hill, following Kobe Bryant, Julius Randle, and Steve Nash, is the latest Laker to go down) and mostly-terrible Laker in 2015 as being “a much better place,” but it’s important to remember that coaching any Laker team while working out of Los Angeles (sorry, East Rutherford) has its charms.


Oram points out that Scott was jovial in talking about Kidd, and he (rightfully) praised the work that the new Bucks head coach has done in his first season in Milwaukee. With that in place:



Asked to characterize his relationship with Kidd, Scott said, “Cordial. And that’s about as good as it’s going to get, too.”



Scott truly did need to go in 2003-04. If you’ll recall, Frank went on a tear in his first few weeks with the team, winning the first 14 games he coached with the Nets before falling to a Minnesota Timberwolves squad that (and the kids may not understand this) was the best team in the NBA at the time. The Nets would go on to take the eventual champion Detroit Pistons to seven tough games in the Conference semifinals that year, once leading that series 3-2 before losing. Frank did well to turn the team’s fortunes around defensively, as those 2001-2005 Nets were constantly overrated as an offensive juggernaut by most mainstream media, and underrated as to how lights-out defensively they could be at their peak.


Byron did rebound well to latch onto a gig coaching Chris Paul and the New Orleans Hornets soon after, even winning the 2008 Coach of the Year award. His sideline work left most unimpressed, however, and his three seasons with the Cleveland Cavaliers from 2010-to-2013 were an unmitigated disaster. He’s been much-ridiculed, to say the absolute best of him, as a Laker coach so far.


Still, even when calling Jason Kidd a nasty name, Byron Scott kind of took the high road here. He was honest about the firing, he was honest about Kidd’s great work in Milwaukee, and he’s honest about how most of the NBA views Jason Kidd – the man that only came to Milwaukee when his attempted coup in hopes of taking over the Nets as coach/general manager failed. Jason Kidd is a very talented guy, and also a bit of a prickly pear.


Scott was a cable TV analyst for the Lakers last season during Kidd’s rookie turn, so Wednesday will mark his first time coaching against his former All-Star. And if this is Byron Scott’s version of “cordial,” then I’d hate to hear how he talks about his enemies.


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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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Ivory Coast sweep into Afcon final

Goals from Yaya Toure and Gervinho helped steer Ivory Coast into the Afcon final with a win over DRC.


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Bata - Goals from Yaya Toure and Gervinho helped steer Ivory Coast into the African Nations Cup final in a 3-1 win over Democratic Republic of Congo in the Estadio de Bata on Wednesday.


Toure blasted home a missile-like shot after 21 minutes to give the Ivorians the lead but a handball allowed Dieumerci Mbokani to equalise from the penalty spot three minutes later.


Gervinho had an effort cleared off the line in the 40th minute but the Ivorians won back the ball and caught the Congolese defence cold with Wilfried Bony setting up Gervinho to sweep home less than a minute later.


Defender Wilfried Kanon added a third midway through the second half with a rebound from a corner.


Ivory Coast will play in Sunday's final in Bata against Equatorial Guinea or Ghana who meet in the second semi-final in Malabo on Thursday.


Reuters






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News sport : Kwe Parker shows off his skills on D

Kwe Parker is usually the one dunking when his highlights hit YouTube, but this week the Wesleyan Christian (High Point, N.C.) junior shooting guard showed his skills on D.


Ranked No. 53 in the Rivals150 for the Class of 2016, Parker pulls off a tremendous block in a Vine posted by a fan.



Parker's team trailed by two when he blocked the shot, 33-35. Wesleyan Christian went on to win 55-51.


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News sport : Five-star CB Iman Marshall announces USC commitment in music video

Rivals five-star cornerback Iman Marshall wanted to add a unique and personal flair when announcing his college commitment.


In addition to his signing day ceremony, Marshall, Rivals’ No. 3 ranked prospect in the nation, collaborated with Bleacher Report to create a video and reveal his decision to stay home and attend USC.



The piece is a cool behind-the-scenes look at Marshall’s life at Long Beach Polytechnic High School.


“I’m here to stay, L.A. I love this city,” Marshall said. “Fight on, S.C.”


The 6-foot-1, 194-pound Marshall chose USC over other offers from UCLA, Michigan, Notre Dame, LSU and Florida State, among others.


He becomes the third five-star recruit to join USC’s top-ranked class on Wednesday, joining defensive end Rasheem Green and linebacker John Houston.


For more USC news, visit TrojanSports.com.


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News sport : LB Brian Bell, named in wrongful death lawsuit, will not sign with Florida State

(via Rivals) There was a name missing off Florida State’s signee list on Wednesday.


Brian Bell, a three-star linebacker out of Valdosta, Ga., had his scholarship offer revoked last week after Florida State decided it was in its best interest not pursue him. Bell was named last month in a $100 million wrongful death lawsuit that centers around Kendrick Johnson, a 17-year-old who was found dead inside a rolled-up mat in the Lowndes High gym in January 2013.


Johnson’s parents allege Bell, his brother and three other students were responsible for the death of their son.


The Lowndes County Sherriff's Department ruled Johnson’s death an accident, stating Johnson died of positional asphyxia after he got stuck in the mat while trying to retrieve his sneakers that were stored in the mat.


Bell was never charged with a crime or listed as a suspect during the investigation.


Lowndes High School coach Randy McPherson released a statement to the Valdosta Daily Times explaining the situation.


"Last Wednesday morning Coach Jimbo Fisher told me that the FSU Athletic Director and the President would not let him give Brian Bell a scholarship. We went to meet with the FSU President the next day. The next morning, Jimbo called me and told me that they still were not going to let him give Brian a scholarship."

Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher declined to comment about the situation, referring all questions to his administration.


Bell also had offers from Cincinnati, Clemson, Georgia Tech and Louisville. It is unknown whether the Bell family has been in contact with any of those other programs.


For more Florida State news, visit Warchant.com.


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News sport : N.J. 8th grader flies over opponent in impressive dunk

A 6-foot-4 eighth grader from New Jersey showed off his impressive ups again on Feb. 3.


In a video posted by NJ SportsScene, Scottie Lewis drives through the lane and flies right over an opponent for a one-handed jam.



Check out the kid at the score table, trying to capture it the shot on his phone.


Earlier this year Lewis pulled off a two-handed 360.



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News sport : Cordell Broadus, son of Snoop Dogg, commits to UCLA

Snoop Dogg's loyalties are now with UCLA instead of USC.


The rapper's son, Cordell Broadus, a four-star wide receiver from Las Vegas, made his college decision on Wednesday. While the Trojans were in the mix, Broadus picked UCLA, USC's cross-town rival.


"I just felt like that was the best place for me," Broadus said. "I have a great connection with the coaches and I want to play in front of my family out on the field and get a great degree."


Snoop's USC fandom has been well-documented, though it appeared to wane at the end of Lane Kiffin's tenure with the school. After Cordell announced his intentions to go to UCLA, Snoop appeared next to the podium wearing a UCLA jersey and said "we Bruins now."


Broadus went to Bishop Gorman High School. Bishop Gorman's coach in 2014, Tony Sanchez, is the new coach at UNLV.


"UCLA just presented the best platform for him that we thought as a family that was going to look out for him when his career was over with," Snoop said. "And that's what's important, to make sure he gets a degree and gets an education. Football is not going to be there forever, but life is, so you've got to make sure that you prepare for life.


Snoop also said he'd get rid of all his USC apparel. He had joked on the ESPN series chronicling Cordell's recruitment that he may still wear some USC drawers from time to time.


"I'm going to back him up 1,000 percent so I'm going to throw my USC drawers away," Snoop said. "I'm going UCLA 100,000 percent."


For more UCLA news, visit BruinSportsReport.com.


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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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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring how the Warriors built their brilliant defense

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: ESPN.com and ESPN Insider ($). A tremendous in-depth read from Ethan Sherwood Strauss on how the Golden State Warriors went from perennial defensive laughingstock to the league's stingiest club, a journey that has spanned several years and no fewer than 11 discrete steps ... which dovetails nicely with Tom Haberstroh's look at how the Warriors have been able to produce a No. 1 defense while also playing at the league's fastest pace, which no team in the modern NBA has ever done.


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PF: Salt City Hoops. Dan Clayton with a good look at how a strong late-January stretch by Enes Kanter has introduced even more doubt as to whether the Utah Jazz should view him as part of their future or prepare to let him walk in restricted free agency this summer.


SF: Hardwood Paroxysm. Ian Levy offers a reason to watch every single player in the NBA. An impressive commitment to finding something to believe in, no matter which game's on.


SG: SB Nation. Mike Prada's second annual Film Room All-Stars celebrates 13 players who might not get the same sort of pub as their glossier teammates and adversaries, but contribute pivotal play for their clubs on a night-in, night-out basis. A fun read chock full of praise for the guys who do the little things that aren't really so little.


PG: VICE Sports. Andrew Crawford on how Michael Beasley has found comfort and success in the Chinese Basketball Association, his chances of becoming "Marbury 2.0," and the surprising set of circumstances that has made his transition possible: "For a fairly conservative sports culture, China has been exceptionally welcoming to a certain kind of oddball."


6th: Wall Street Journal. A fun excerpt from Reggie Love's forthcoming book about how basketball changed his relationship with President Barack Obama, and how the Commander in Chief wound up coaching fourth-grade girls' basketball.


7th: The Triangle. Zach Lowe on why we shouldn't sleep on the Los Angeles Clippers as a Western Conference contender.


8th: Memphis Commercial Appeal ($). Really enjoyed this Geoff Calkins column on the Memphis Grizzlies' remarkable season, "an adventure wrapped in a magic-carpet ride inside a victory," and the beauty of "following a team that is worthy of your emotional investment."


9th: Eye on Basketball. Matt Moore with a good read on the "train wreck" in Denver, where Brian Shaw isn't sure if his players are even trying to win: "There are no sides to take in Denver, there are just failed expectations, a lost season, and a locker room that seems like a miserable place to be at this point."


10th: The Triangle. Jason Concepcion comes in praise of hero ball, efficiency be damned: "If I have to choose between a one-man show or the safest way to win, give me the show."


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News sport : The Houston Rockets can survive Dwight Howard's injury, but can Dwight?

How you look at Dwight Howard’s worrying absence from his Houston Rockets should fall in line with how you typically refer to that proverbial glass either half-full of water or half-empty with worthless, trachea-scratching air. There is a very good chance that the Rockets can weather Howard’s time on the shelf, and resume their impressive ascension into the West’s sturdy list of championship contenders.


There’s also a very good chance that the Dwight Howard that we knew and tolerated and sometimes loved will never suit up to play as he did in a peak that looks ever so far away right now.


First, the details:



These sorts of injections are usually administered to patients suffering from a lack of cartilage and the requisite bone-on-bone pain that follows. In years past, some NBA players have submitted to a desperate microfracture surgery in order to attempt to stimulate cartilage growth as a last-ditch solution. Those players often return from the surgery and extended absence able to play, but only as an approximation of what they once were.


Scores of patients that have taken in the same marrow treatment that Howard will undergo report a full return to action and activity, free of pain. Those patients aren’t expected to chase LaMarcus Aldridge and Serge Ibaka up and down the court, however, while attempting to dunk their way to 20 points a game on the other end. And, truly, that 2014-15 aspect of things should be the least of Houston’s concerns when it comes to Howard’s actual injury.


Howard’s actual team? They can survive this.


It’s important to note that the Rockets aren’t projecting that Howard will return in a month, but using that four-week term as a starting point is worth dissecting. Houston’s schedule is brutal on paper, with 11 of the team’s 13 games over the next month coming against current playoff teams, including five nationally televised contests starting on Wednesday night against the Chicago Bulls. The only two respites Houston has come against the intriguing (but league-worst) Minnesota Timberwolves, and a Brooklyn Nets team that is starting to show a little life. Relative to their own previously moribund existence, of course.


Again, there is absolutely no guarantee that Howard springs back to action following four weeks, but if the rest of the Western Conference playoff bracket continues to play at its current winning percentages, an 8-5 turn from the Rockets during this stretch only dips them down to sixth in the West. That’s down from third and a shot at home court advantage in the first round of the playoffs, but that’s hardly an invitation to Nervous Time.


That’s also presuming that the teams that would leap-frog the Rockets keep with their current play. The fourth-seeded Portland Trail Blazers have lost eight of 11, they barely beat Utah on Tuesday night, and there is always the chance that LaMarcus Aldridge may take some time off over the All-Star break to rest his painful left thumb injury. And while the fifth-ranked Los Angeles Clippers have turned it around of late, there remains the possibility that they could fall back to earth a bit.


Houston is not a good defensive rebounding team despite Howard’s presence, which makes the group’s fifth overall ranking in defensive efficiency all the more impressive. Current starting center Joey Dorsey is the group’s second-best defensive rebounder by percentage, but he only plays token minutes to start each half prior to giving way to Josh Smith and a smaller lineup. Interior scoring duties are ably handled by Donatas Motiejunas, and Smith can at least gobble up a good amount of caroms and block shots – even teams don’t fear him (or anyone else in this league, really) nearly as much as Dwight Howard’s looming presence.


The Rockets can handle this, even if Howard’s recovery time needs to be extended, and even while he takes a week or two to get back into NBA shape after sitting out what would be at the very least his 29th game of the season in total after that four-week stretch.


The killer here is what comes next. The idea that Dwight Howard can just get this out of the way, so to speak, over the All-Star break and well before the playoffs hit? It might not be that simple.


Dwight Howard has been banged around, fouled with two arms, and asked to play big minutes while dominating on both ends since for over a decade. He’s played nearly an NBA season’s worth of career playoff minutes. Dwight may have only just turned 29, but our entire view of how we scout players from the high school eligibility era is skewed. Centers of yore only had to play 30 or so games an NCAA season in their early 20s. Sometimes they weren’t even eligible as freshman. And the complex defensive responsibilities and defensive competition in the 1980s and even early 1990s wasn’t even close to what the modern NBA center is up against.


Howard had to battle Shaquille O’Neal and Yao Ming for 37 minutes a game before he could even legally buy a beer. It’s understandable to assume that Dwight Howard is just hitting his peak at a time when most NBA legends hit theirs at age 29, while possibly on his best team yet, but all signs point to a decline.


Not a steep one, mind you, as Howard has turned in a fantastic year with Houston when healthy, but this is worrying. The injury isn’t even to his left, and jumping, knee. There should be considerable and understandable concern that the treatments the Rockets have given Howard this season (the marrow injection, the plasma rich platelet therapy earlier this season) are just staving off the inevitable.


Whether that means an eventual microfracture operation or a slow descent featuring decreased minutes and increasing amounts of nights off is anyone’s guess. For all we know, glass half-full, Howard could respond to the marrow injection in the same way that most patients do, and bound back to his old self in a month and a half – leaving he and his Rockets a full regular season month left to prepare for what could be a two-month playoff slog.


The Rockets would happily settle from what they’ve seen from Dwight so far this season, even if he does seem a good arm’s length away from the type of contributions he provided in Orlando. Dwight’s that good, and his team is this great. Championship-level “great,” even, if everything goes perfectly.


Until Howard and the Rockets get a chance at that, however, they’ll have to circle the wagons behind the MVP-level play of James Harden, and hope for the best.


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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 : UCLA DC Jeff Ulbrich reportedly heading to the Atlanta Falcons

While UCLA is gaining some highly-regarded recruits on National Signing Day, it may also be losing its defensive coordinator.


According to Fox Sports, Jeff Ulbrich has been hired by the Atlanta Falcons and will be the team's linebackers coach. A former NFL LB himself, Ulbrich coached with new Falcons head coach Dan Quinn in Seattle before he came to UCLA.


Ulbrich, known for his backwards baseball hat on the sidelines, was UCLA's defensive coordinator for a season after he was the team's linebackers coach for two seasons.


In 2014, UCLA was No. 63 in total defense, giving up just under 400 yards per game. The Bruins allowed 5.17 yards per play and were No. 75 in scoring defense at just over 28 points per game.


As of early Wednesday afternoon, the Bruins had commitments from four four-star defensive recruits and five-star linebacker Keisean Lucier-South. And the total doesn't include four-star Georgia LB Roquan Smith, who committed to UCLA Wednesday morning but apparently hasn't signed his letter of intent.


According to UGASports.com, Smith said he entered as a slight lean to Georgia and chose the Bruins because it felt right at his signing ceremony and that his head was telling him to try some place new. There is no timetable on Smith's final decision.


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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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