News sport : Florida hires Texas DL coach Chris Rumph for same position

Nov 8, 2014; Austin, TX, USA; Texas Longhorns assistant head coach for defense Chris Rumph (right) and defensive end Cedric Reed (88) react against the West Virginia Mountaineers during the second half at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. Texas beat West Virginia 33-16. (Brendan Maloney-USA TODAY Sports) To replace departing defensive line coach Terrell Williams, who accepted a position with the Miami Dolphins, Florida head coach Jim McElwain announced the hire of Chris Rumph on Friday.


Rumph spent the 2014 season as the assistant head coach for defense and defensive line coach at the University of Texas. Before his lone season at Texas, Rumph was the defensive line coach at Alabama for three seasons under Nick Saban. That stint included one season on the Crimson Tide’s staff with McElwain, who served as Alabama’s offensive coordinator from 2008-11.


“Chris and I obviously have some experience working together from our days at Alabama,” McElwain said. “He joins a group of thinkers on our staff and is someone who will positively affect our players’ lives – both on and off the field.”


With Rumph on staff, Alabama’s defense was fifth nationally in total defense in 2013 and was best in the country in 2011 and 2012, when the Crimson Tide won back-to-back national championships.


Before joining Alabama’s staff, Rumph coached the defensive line at Clemson (2006-10), coached outside linebackers at Memphis (2003-05) and defensive backs at South Carolina State in 2002. He also had a five-year stint as head coach at Calhoun County High School in St. Matthews, S.C.


Florida’s defense ranked 15th nationally in total defense in 2014 as the Gators finished 7-5.


For more Florida news, visit InsideTheGators.com.


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News sport : Mike Weber's HS coach says Weber feels misled by Ohio State

The high school coach of four-star running back recruit Mike Weber said he and Weber feel like they were misguided by Ohio State.


Weber, an RB from Michigan, signed with the defending national champions on National Signing Day on Wednesday. The next day, the Chicago Bears announced that Ohio State RB coach Stan Drayton would become the team's RB coach. Drayton had been with the Buckeyes for four seasons.


When asked by Cleveland.com if Weber felt misled, Thomas Wilcher said "Yes. 100 percent. 100 percent."


Michigan was one of Weber's top choices. After the Bears announced Drayton's hire, he tweeted that he was "hurt as hell." That apparently was referring to Drayton's departure.


Wilcher told Cleveland.com that he hasn't heard from Ohio State coach Urban Meyer since Drayton's departure. Weber was the No. 1 recruit in the state of Michigan.


He also said he didn't know if knowledge of Drayton's departure would have changed Weber's decision to attend Ohio State.


"I don't know," Wilcher said. "I am quite sure it made a difference and it would have made a difference in his decision. It would have made a difference in what he wanted to do. But the most important thing is it would have been up to him and his parents. That would have played a big role in what was going on."


When on 105.1 FM in Detroit, Wilcher was more pointed towards Meyer. Via a transcript from Land-Grant Holy Land:



"I think Urban Meyer is going to have to step his game up [if he wants to come back here again]. He's going to have to come down here, we're going to have to talk. We're going to have to meet. Because he just came here to my school and got the number one athlete, got an All-American athlete out of my school, two years in a row; number one player in the state. I think that's big. I think that's real big for the university," Wilcher said.




"But the most important thing is you can not come up here, come up to the north, and walk out of here with your pockets full and no give us respect. That's the most important thing right now. You have to respect us. You can't just walk all over us. That's not going to happen again. I can tell you that right now."




"I talked to the recruiting coach already. I really haven't gotten my words together for Coach Urban Meyer. I'm really kind of hoping he calls me. That's what I'm really waiting for. This is a very tough situation. I can tell you right now, Mike Weber's not happy. I can tell you right now his family is not very happy. But they're teaching him morals and values and standards right now. Because Coach Drayton ,he's supposed to want to go get a higher job. That's just how it is. I'm not mad at Coach Drayton. I'm not mad at him at all, I'm mad at the protocol. That's what I'm mad about," he added.



And unfortunately, due to the nature of recruiting, waiting until after signing day to announce a coaching change isn't too uncommon (Yes, there is misdirection in recruiting. We hate to break the news to you). News of Florida DL coach Terrell Williams' departure didn't break until after NSD. Both scenarios are why kids shouldn't get too attached to coaches during the recruiting process.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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News sport : Chris Paul criticizes referee Lauren Holtkamp over technical foul




The Los Angeles Clippers had a frustrating night at the office on Thursday, finding themselves on the receiving end of a half-dozen highlight-reel plays as the Cleveland Cavaliers blitzed them, 105-94, in a game that wasn't nearly as close as the final score indicated. That frustration boiled over a handful of times at Quicken Loans Arena, with referees handing out five technical fouls — four in the third quarter alone, with three coming within the space of a minute — to Clippers players, including one given to Chris Paul at the 10:17 mark of the third by referee Lauren Holtkamp.


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The parade of technicals certainly didn't decide the game — L.A. didn't get closer than double-figures after the final minute of the opening quarter and were down by 25 early in the second half before the whistles started blowing in earnest. But Paul and his teammates were still a bit salty about the officiating after the game, and the All-Star point guard used some eyebrow-raising language in telling reporters he was none too happy about the way things went down, as first related by Bleacher Report's Kevin Ding:




Arash Markazi of ESPN Los Angeles has those remarks in context:


"I think we have to show better composure but at the same time some of [the technical fouls] were ridiculous," Chris Paul said. "The tech that I [got] right there was ridiculous. I don't care what nobody says, I don't care what she says; that's terrible. There's no way that can be a tech. We try to get the ball out fast every time down the court and when we did that she said, 'uh-uh.' I said, 'Why, uh-uh?' And she gave me a tech." [...]

"That's ridiculous," Paul said. "If that's the case, this might not be for her."

Holtkamp also gave DeAndre Jordan a technical foul with 9:30 left in the third quarter after screaming for a foul following a dunk.

"I guess she thought I was talking to her," Jordan said. "We talked about it. She said that she thought I was talking to her. She made a call and I talked to the other refs and they disagreed with it. Hopefully it will be rescinded. We'll see."


The close proximity between Paul referring to Holtkamp — a former Division II basketball player and D-League, NCAA and WNBA official who had worked short-term regular-season and Summer League assignments at the NBA level before being tabbed this season as only the third full-time female referee in league history — as "she" and musing that she might not be long for, or belong in, the NBA immediately gave some fans pause. The wording was ambiguous enough to leave room to wonder — was this CP3 questioning the lack of seasoning of an NBA-rookie ref, or was it something else, something worse?


ESPN.com's Ramona Shelburne said the sources close to Paul from whom she heard Thursday said it was the former. Markazi noted that no Clippers player or coach mentioned Holtkamp's gender in discussing their disagreements with her calls, both in this game and in one earlier this season. One wonders, though, whether Paul would've been so quick to suggest that a male first-year ref — like Holtkamp's fellow rookies Dedric Taylor and Justin VanDuyne — might not stick around very long under similar circumstances.


Paul's postgame comments would likely have drawn a fine from the league office even if he hadn't mentioned Holtkamp's gender; the NBA's disciplinarians have long been clear on the whole "you can't publicly blast our officials" thing. It remains to be seen, though, whether the potential for the public to interpret Paul's remark as gender-biased prompts Commissioner Adam Silver to respond any differently than he would any other instance of ref criticism.


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News sport : Western Michigan booster files defamation suit against message board posters

The wife of a Western Michigan booster has filed a defamation suit against three posters on a Western Michigan message board.


Bonnie A. Zeigler fled the lawsuit against the three users on the site CSNbbs.com.


From MLive.com:



The three men named in the lawsuit are Dan Burgardt of Schoolcraft, Randolph T. Foster, a WMU alumnus who lives in Colorado, and Bruce L. Bendix, a member of the Michigan High School Football Coaches Hall of Fame.




Bendix is a Kalamazoo native who played football at Western Michigan University in the 1970s before going on to coach at Kalamazoo College and Comstock and Otsego high schools, among other places. In 1999, he moved to the east side of the state where he continued coaching at various high schools and he recently resigned as Hemlock High School's head coach, MLive reported on Jan. 1.




Zeigler is seeking damages in excess of $25,000 against each defendant, as well as attorneys' fees and costs, for alleged defamation and false light, according to the lawsuit.




The lawsuit claims that Bendix, Burgardt and Foster each posted "false and defamatory statements" about Zeigler on the sports website CSNbbs.com while using the online pseudonyms "MajorHoople," "Chipdip2" and "DesertBronco," respectively.



Zeigler is the wife of Aaron Zeigler, the president of the Zeigler Auto Group in Michigan. According to MLive, she's been listed as a member of the group that gives over $10,000 each per year to WMU athletics.


All three posted retractions in this thread on the site. This is the user MajorHoople's retracted post, which was modified on November 10, per the timestamp on the post in the thread about Western Michigan coach P.J. Fleck.



I hereby retract any and all claims I have made on Bronco Stampede including but not limited to this thread that an unnamed member of the Ziegler family and Mr. PJ Fleck engaged in an adulterous extramarital affair, and that Ziegler Auto Group has withdrawn all of its funding from Western Michigan University as a result.



A law firm has communicated to me via csnbbs.com that these claims are false, defamatory, and legally actionable.

Since I had no first-hand knowledge of the alleged affair and withdrawal of funding, I should not have published them. I sincerely apologize to all affected or offended.

As far as practicable I am publishing and communicating this retraction in the same size type and the same manner as the original posts.

Fleck declined comment for MLive's story. According to Burgardt, he posted his comments as satire while Foster called his posts "message board nonsense."


Western Michigan went 8-5 in 2014 after a 1-11 season in 2013. Fleck received a six-year contract extension in December and became the MAC's highest-paid coach.


(H/T Deadspin)


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News sport : Woman sues message board posters for P.J. Fleck rumors

The wife of a Western Michigan booster has filed a defamation suit against three posters on a Western Michigan message board.


Bonnie A. Zeigler fled the lawsuit against the three users on the site CSNbbs.com.


From MLive.com:



The three men named in the lawsuit are Dan Burgardt of Schoolcraft, Randolph T. Foster, a WMU alumnus who lives in Colorado, and Bruce L. Bendix, a member of the Michigan High School Football Coaches Hall of Fame.




Bendix is a Kalamazoo native who played football at Western Michigan University in the 1970s before going on to coach at Kalamazoo College and Comstock and Otsego high schools, among other places. In 1999, he moved to the east side of the state where he continued coaching at various high schools and he recently resigned as Hemlock High School's head coach, MLive reported on Jan. 1.




Zeigler is seeking damages in excess of $25,000 against each defendant, as well as attorneys' fees and costs, for alleged defamation and false light, according to the lawsuit.




The lawsuit claims that Bendix, Burgardt and Foster each posted "false and defamatory statements" about Zeigler on the sports website CSNbbs.com while using the online pseudonyms "MajorHoople," "Chipdip2" and "DesertBronco," respectively.



Zeigler is the wife of Aaron Zeigler, the president of the Zeigler Auto Group in Michigan. According to MLive, she's been listed as a member of the group that gives over $10,000 each per year to WMU athletics.


All three posted retractions in this thread on the site. This is the user MajorHoople's retracted post, which was modified on November 10, per the timestamp on the post.



I hereby retract any and all claims I have made on Bronco Stampede including but not limited to this thread that an unnamed member of the Ziegler family and Mr. PJ Fleck engaged in an adulterous extramarital affair, and that Ziegler Auto Group has withdrawn all of its funding from Western Michigan University as a result.



A law firm has communicated to me via csnbbs.com that these claims are false, defamatory, and legally actionable.

Since I had no first-hand knowledge of the alleged affair and withdrawal of funding, I should not have published them. I sincerely apologize to all affected or offended.

As far as practicable I am publishing and communicating this retraction in the same size type and the same manner as the original posts.

Fleck declined comment for MLive's story. According to Burgardt, he posted his comments as satire while Foster called his posts "message board nonsense."


Western Michigan went 8-5 in 2014 after a 1-11 season in 2013. Fleck received a six-year contract extension in December and became the MAC's highest-paid coach.


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News sport : DeMarcus Cousins decries Kings' 'unacceptable' effort after another big loss

The Sacramento Kings got their doors blown off again on Thursday. This time, Sacramento got bullied by a Dallas Mavericks team playing its third game in four nights, on the second night of a road-back-to-back, after getting torched by Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors, and without stars Dirk Nowitzki (rest) and Rajon Rondo (broken face). No matter — despite getting off to a slow start and shooting just 42.7 percent from the floor as a team, Monta Ellis sparked a 25-8 blitz that effectively ended the Kings' evening by halftime.


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The Kings have now lost 10 of their last 11, including six straight defeats in the not-so-friendly confines of Sleep Train Arena. A season that showed such promise during the Kings' 9-5 start has come completely unglued, beginning with DeMarcus Cousins' bout with viral meningitis and continuing with the stunning firing of head coach Mike Malone, followed by a rosterwide regression under replacement Tyrone Corbin.


After a fifth straight loss by at least 10 points, All-Star center DeMarcus Cousins said he's "absolutely" as frustrated as he's been in his five-year career. He placed the blame squarely on himself and his teammates, saying the Kings need a substantial increase in their effort level to turn things around:



(Sacramento's News 10 has a longer video of Cousins' postgame session with reporters.)


It's coming down to playing hard, man. Get some pride, man. Just have some self-respect. Act like you care. That's what it's coming down to. Ain't nothing wrong with the team. It's the same team. Same team that was winning, it's the same guys in the locker room now. Ain't nothing changed but the attitudes with these guys in the room. Everybody in this room, that's the only thing that's changed: our attitudes. [...]

I mean, everybody in here has played basketball a long time. Everybody knows teams go on runs. Everybody knows, just as quick as they get a run, you can, too. Just keep playing. Keep playing hard. I mean, you see a team get on a run, stop the bleeding, and then try to create a run on your own. [...]

Like I said, we're the same team. The same team that everyone was praising at the beginning of the year, it's the same team. So yes, we can [turn things around]. It's just a matter of us changing our attitude.

Some might raise an eyebrow at Cousins, who finished with a team-high 23 points and 11 rebounds in the loss, calling for more commitment and harder play in the same week where he stood idly by as his man threw down an alley-oop dunk. But Boogie copped to his own occasional inconsistency in this regard — "My body language has been bad, as well. I need to straighten it out myself. I need to lead by example" — and sure seemed to try to do that on Thursday, hustling to chase down and swat away an Ellis layup late in the third quarter, even after the Mavs had already piled up a 24-point lead:



Continuing to plug away no matter the deficit was at the core of Cousins' critique, during which he said Sacramento's on-court actions need to speak louder than any in-the-locker-room words.


"We've had player-only meetings," Cousins said when asked if the Kings needed to have an internal pow-wow to right the ship. "Honestly, I don't think we would get anything out of it. It's something within each guy in this locker room. It's about, like I said, having self-respect, some type of pride, and taking your job serious.


"Come in every night ready to play, regardless of the circumstances. Just man up and play, man. Just play hard. If we play hard and get our brains beat in, I'm fine with that. But to just come out and lay down like we did tonight, it's unacceptable. I can't ... nah."


Cousins refused to peg for Sacramento's decline to Malone's ouster or place the blame at Corbin's feet — “We’re not going there,” he said and repeated when a reporter raised the issue. Whether the Kings were too hasty in dismissing Malone or not, Cousins knows that at this point, the question is moot. The answers have to come from the players in the locker room — veterans like Rudy Gay, Jason Thompson, Darren Collison and Ramon Sessions, and young guns like Ben McLemore and Nik Stauskas — and as Boogie sees it, they've got to come from a collective approach to finding a way out of the depths.


"We know if we start fighting one another, if we let our frustrations get the best of us, it's only going to make the situation worse," Cousins said. "We know that. So why buy into it? Why not catch it before it comes and try to change it? If we buy into it, it spreads throughout the team and you get nights like this."


With the Kings now sitting at 17-31, 9 1/2 games back of the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference, it's too late for Cousins and company to ignite the kind of turnaround that would put Sacramento back in the playoff conversation. But unless something sparks the Kings out of their doldrums, enervating losses and their attendant venting sessions figure to become much, much more common.


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News sport : San Jose State hires Al Borges as offensive coordinator

Former Michigan offensive coordinator Al Borges is now at San Jose State.


The Spartans made the hire official on Thursday. Borges will coach the team's quarterbacks in addition to being the offensive coordinator.


San Jose State also announced the hire of another former assistant, Dan Ferrigno. Ferrigno will be the tight ends coach and special teams coach.


Borges was Michigan's offensive coordinator under Brady Hoke until he was fired after the 2013 season. In his last season at Michigan, the Wolverines averaged over 30 points per game. However, the Wolverines had significant issues running the football. Michigan averaged just over 125 yards a game and was 102nd in the country.


He was replaced by Doug Nussmeier, who is now at Florida after Hoke was fired following the 2014 season.


The hires of Borges and Ferrigno mean that San Jose State has former Michigan assistants at all three coordinator position. Former Michigan defensive coordinator Greg Robinson is the Spartans' defensive coordinator. He was Michigan's defensive coordinator in 2009 and 2010.


No, SJS head coach Ron Caragher is not a former Michigan assistant. However, he's a former UCLA assistant and both Borges and Robinson have previously coached for the Bruins.


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News sport : Aaron Rodgers blames Buccaneers' bad field conditions for calf injury

Aaron Rodgers has to be happy that the Green Bay Packers will not be traveling to Tampa next season.


On his ESPN Milwaukee radio show (via ESPN.com), Rodgers says he suffered the calf injury that affected his play down the stretch was the result of playing on a crummy field against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 16.



"The calf was, in my opinion, due to the poor surface in Tampa," Rodgers said. "Tampa is where I hurt my shoulder as well back in 2008, and I think that there needs to be looked at some more uniformity as far as the field conditions."



The calf severely limited Rodgers from the Week 17 win over the Detroit Lions through the Packers' NFC championship loss against the Seattle Seahawks. He said that Tampa's field conditions are similar to some other poor surfaces around the NFL, even with some very good ones as well.



"I think there's a couple of surfaces that are more likely to create injury than prevent injury," Rodgers said. "There's some incredible surfaces in the NFL. There's some ones that I think need to be looked at. Tampa is one of them because of the amount of play, I think, that happens there.


"When you put down so much sod and it's very uneven and soft, I think it can lead to more injuries. I've played there three times and been hurt there — in my opinion, directly related to the field — twice."



The NFLPA does an annual poll of its players who vote on the worst playing surfaces around the league, so it will be interesting to see where Raymond James Stadium comes in on their list.


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News sport : What Tiger was referencing when he mentioned glute activation at Torrey Pines

After walking wincingly off the course at Torrey Pines because of back pain on Thursday, Tiger Woods cited his glutes failing to activate as a reason for his pain on nearly every full swing.


"It's just my glutes are shutting off," Woods said in the parking lot after withdrawing from the first round of the Famers Insurance Open. "Then they don't activate and then, hence, it goes into my lower back."


"So I tried to activate my glutes as best I could in between, but it just they never stayed activated."


Unless you're incredibly familiar with anatomy and physiology, there's a good chance you saw or heard Woods' comments about his injury and wondered what the heck he was talking about. And you probably made a bad joke too.


The glutes are, essentially, your butt muscles. They're the strongest muscles in your body and your power center. They're especially important for athletes, because hip extension is a primary source of explosion in many sports, including golf.


In a basic sense, glute activation (and activation of any muscle in your body) is when your brain's nervous system sends electrical signals to your muscles to be to fire. The stronger the signal, the stronger the muscle contraction. If you're bench pressing, your brain sends signals to your chest, shoulders and triceps to push the bar away from your chest.


Less than a year ago, Woods had a lumbar microdiscectomy. The procedure removed a disc from his lower back.


"Studies have shown that when you have a prior injury or back pain, it shuts down glute activation," Bret Contreras, a Phoenix-area personal trainer and author, said.


Woods' round on Thursday was delayed over an hour because of fog. He said that as he warmed up for his original tee time he felt good, however, as he stood and waited during the delay, he started having issues with the muscles integral to his swing.


"When you swing a club, you have hip extension and rotation, it's not just pure rotation," Contreras said.


While we don't know Woods' specific issues with his posterior chain (and since we're not doctors, we won't try to guess), we do know that overcompensation in any part the body isn't a good thing. Especially in an area that's already been surgically repaired.


Like all elite athletes, professional golfers need to not only be strong for their sport but also able to use their muscles in an efficient and synchronized manner. Think of the body as a chain; one weak link can lead to problems. And if what's supposed to be one of the strongest links is being inhibited, it's a dangerous proposition as Woods showed on Thursday.


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‘Coutinho will be biggest star in England’

Brazil captain Neymar has tipped Liverpool forward Philippe Coutinho to become the biggest star in England.


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London - Brazil captain Neymar has tipped Liverpool forward Philippe Coutinho to become the biggest star in England after some eye-catching displays in the Premier League.


The fleet-footed Coutinho has played an important part in Liverpool's resurgence in recent weeks, with the Brazilian adding greater consistency to his burgeoning bag of tricks.


Barcelona forward Neymar played alongside Coutinho as they came up through the youth ranks of Brazilian football and is a big admirer.


“He can be the star player in England. This season I think everybody in England is seeing how talented he is - and I know he has a lot more to show,” Neymar was quoted as saying on the Liverpool website (www.liverpoolfc.com).


“When he has the ball at his feet, he can make things happen for himself and he can make things happen for other players. He is a very special player.”


Although few have doubted Coutinho's talent, his ability to regularly influence games was often called into question.


He now seems to be a more consistent threat, however, and scored a superb winner to help Liverpool beat second tier Bolton Wanderers in the FA Cup on Wednesday while creating both goals in their 2-0 win over West Ham United last weekend.


“He will play a big part in the future of the national team,” Neymar added.


“The national steam is very strong, but the way he is playing for Liverpool, I'm sure he will be a big part of Brazil going forward.”


Liverpool visit local rivals Everton on Saturday with captain Steven Gerrard set for his last Merseyside Derby appearance before quitting the club to join Major League Soccer's LA Galaxy at the end of the season.


Manager Brendan Rodgers said on Thursday that Everton fans would be glad to see the back of him and Gerrard is not expecting anything other than his usual antagonistic welcome at Goodison Park.


“I love the banter with Everton fans,” said the 34-year-old.


“It's what it's all about. It's about rivalries and big games of football.


“I'm up for all that. I don't mind it at all. Bring it on as far as I'm concerned. I've got respect for all the Everton players and the Everton fans. I think they're a terrific football club, but once that whistle goes I want to beat them. That's a good problem for me.”


Reuters






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News sport : Five-star DE CeCe Jefferson still unsigned, tweets 'I'm a Gator'

Feb 4, 2015; Glen Saint Mary, FL, USA; CeCe Jefferson signs with the University of Florida at his home near Baker County High School as his parents Leo and Annette Jefferson look on. (Richard Dole-USA TODAY Sports) The saga of CeCe Jefferson continues.


Jefferson, a Rivals five-star defensive end who announced his commitment to Florida on National Signing Day, still has not sent his National Letter of Intent (NLI) to the Gators.


The reason for the holdup, according to a few Thursday night tweets from Jefferson, is the departure of Gators defensive line coach Terrell Williams, who left for a position with the Miami Dolphins.



Florida reportedly has Texas defensive line coach Chris Rumph lined up to replace Williams. Despite the uncertainly surrounding his position coach, Jefferson tweeted that he is still a Gator.




Jefferson’s father, Leo, told Rivals on Thursday that his son is not ready to sign the letter of intent. Though Leo has been vocal that he would prefer CeCe to choose another school, he told Rivals that he would be glad to sign his son’s NLI to Florida is that’s what he decides.


“If CeCe wants to go to Florida, we are on board,” Leo said.


Aside from the unfamiliarity with Rumph, Leo wasn’t impressed with CeCe’s in-home visit with new Florida head coach Jim McElwain.


From Rivals:



Leo said that the in-home visit with Gators coach Jim McElwain was rushed, they stayed for an hour and rushed out the door to see a 2016 prospect and only talked about the new dorms and the new facilities on the visit. The visit paled in comparison to the other in home visits, according to Leo.



Leo also wasn’t pleased with the lack of communication from the Florida coaches.


“The coaches at Florida wanted the letter signed by 8:30 (Thursday) morning so they could go on vacation,” Leo said. “(McElwain) was the only head coach of all the ones recruiting him that hasn’t called as of 1 p.m. (Thursday). Coaches from schools CeCe wasn’t listing as finalists have all called, but Florida has not called him.”


Additionally, Leo said he thinks CeCe should “go away from home to grow up and get away from the Gators fans in Baker County and his friends that might distract him.”


Jefferson (and all recruits who have yet to send their NLIs) has until April 1 to sign and send their NLI, so this could play out for quite some time. In addition to Florida, Jefferson’s other listed finalists were Alabama, Auburn and Ole Miss.


For more Florida news, visit InsideTheGators.com.


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Ghana call for action against hosts

Ghana called for stiff action against Equatorial Guinea after several Ghanaian supporters were attacked by home fans.


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Malabo - Ghana have called for stiff action against Nations Cup hosts Equatorial Guinea after several Ghanaian supporters were injured in attacks by home fans during Thursday's semi-final between the two countries.


“It's a pity that this dark cloud overshadows our success and we really need to see some stiff action taken by the Confederation of African Football (CAF),” said Kwesi Nyantakyi, president of the Ghana Football Association who is also a senior CAF executive.


At least five Ghanaian fans were slightly injured by stones, bottles and other objects thrown at them by home fans during the 3-0 loss for Equatorial Guinea in the semi-final.


There were also other injuries among officials, police and home supporters.


“This kind of behaviour is just unacceptable,” Nyantakyi told Reuters.


Some 500 Ghanaians flew from Accra on chartered planes to watch their team and were collared into a section on the side of the stadium, away from the rest of the 15 000-capacity crowd at the Nuevo Estadio de Malabo.


When their team went 3-0 up, the celebrating Ghanaians were pelted with a rain of missiles.


Ghanaian fans forced open a gate at the bottom of their section and spilt down onto the playing area, amassing behind one of the goals. This caused the match to be halted for over 30 minutes.


The Ghanaians were then held back at the stadium for several hours while home supporters went on the rampage outside the stadium, breaking street poles and upturning vendors' goods and placing concrete bolders on the road. The Ghanaians were eventually bused back to Malabo airport.


CAF will meet on Friday to discuss the incident which follows swiftly after violent scenes at the weekend saw players of Tunisia try to attack a referee after they were eliminated in the quarter-final.


Reuters






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Chiefs have no room for error - Masango

Mandla Masango believes Kaizer Chiefs have the goods to deal with the demands of the second half of the PSL season.


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Johannesburg - Kaizer Chiefs midfielder Mandla Masango believes Amakhosi have got what it takes to deal with the demands that come with the second round of the Absa Premiership title race, given the CAF Champions League and the Nedbank Cup fixtures which are all set to kick-off this month.


Amakhosi will welcome Botswana’s Township Rollers in the CAF Champions League qualifying rounds next week Saturday at FNB Stadium, after having locked horns with Bloemfontein Celtic in their PSL second meeting on Wednesday at Free State Stadium, two nights before the Champions League clash.


And while the Glamour Boys put in a fine show in the first round, with 14 wins and four draws in their 18 league encounters, Masango reckons that Amakhosi cannot afford to be complacent at this stage of the premiership race, as this might come back to haunt them at the end of the season.


“It’s good that we are sitting with a 15-point gap at the top of the log ahead of the defending champions (Mamelodi Sundowns),” Masango said. “But we cannot afford to repeat the mistake we made last season. We cannot make predictions and start to think we have already won while we still have the second round to play.


“More hard work and effort has to be put in if we are to see ourselves realising our main objective this season which is to win the championship.”


Masango, who proved to be one of the standout players in Ephraim ‘Shakes’ Mashaba’s squad following his cracker of a shot in the 17th minute which saw Ghana trail 1-0 in the first half of the Africa Cup of Nations clash, said the continental showpiece made him aware of the level of competitiveness and demands that come with competitions of this level.


And although Ghana managed to come back with two goals in the second half - ultimately qualifying for the last eight, Masango said his goal against Ghana was one of the special moments in his career, and a confidence-booster for the second round of the league season back here at home.


“Obviously such a performance helps going forward.


“With that said I cannot say that I have arrived yet - there’s still more work to be done.”


The Star






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News sport : Al Michaels says Twins faked crowd noise in 1987 World Series


(Getty Images)

Turns out football isn't the only sport that can stir up a controversy about the authenticity of a crowd's cry. Baseball's just comes almost three decades after the fact.


The Metrodome, home to the Minnesota Twins from 1982 to 2009, was widely regarded as the loudest park in the major leagues. So loud in fact, that legendary sports broadcaster Al Michaels is certain that the Twins faithful were getting some help.


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Here's Michaels' take via twincities.com, recalling his experience calling the 1987 World Series at the Dome:



"Minnesota's in the World Series against St. Louis, and it was ridiculously loud," Michaels said Wednesday during an interview on Pro Football Talk Live on NBC Sports Radio. "I'll never forget Scott Ostler was writing for the L.A. Times, and he described the (Metrodome) crowd as 54,223 Scandinavian James Browns.



"I'm going, wait a minute. This is a baseball game," Michaels told the host, NBC colleague Mike Florio. "Nobody is screaming like this when the fifth inning starts. ... To me, there was no question" that the crowd noise was not natural.


Michaels recalled how ABC's attempt to gauge the noise level resulted in a broken sound meter.


"The decibel level had gotten higher than a runway at Minneapolis-St. Paul airport," Michaels said.



The Twins won the World Series that year, beating the Cardinals in an epic seven-game thriller, and went on to win the title again in 1991. Over both appearances in the Fall Classic, Minnesota was a perfect 8-0 at home.


Of course, the organization and stadium operators have repeatedly rejected claims that there was anything nefarious going on to pump up the noise. The NFL's Minnesota Vikings, co-tenants with the Twins, were also suspected of foul play when it came to stadium sound.


The Metrodome may be no more but thanks to Michaels' latest assertion, its mythology continues to grow.


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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 : Chris Paul criticizes referee Lauren Holtkamp over technical foul




The Los Angeles Clippers had a frustrating night at the office on Thursday, finding themselves on the receiving end of a half-dozen highlight-reel plays as the Cleveland Cavaliers blitzed them, 105-94, in a game that wasn't nearly as close as the final score indicated. That frustration boiled over a handful of times at Quicken Loans Arena, with referees handing out five technical fouls — four in the third quarter alone, with three coming within the space of a minute — to Clippers players, including one given to Chris Paul at the 10:17 mark of the third by referee Lauren Holtkamp.


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The parade of technicals certainly didn't decide the game — L.A. didn't get closer than double-figures after the final minute of the opening quarter and were down by 25 early in the second half before the whistles started blowing in earnest. But Paul and his teammates were still a bit salty about the officiating after the game, and the All-Star point guard used some eyebrow-raising language in telling reporters he was none too happy about the way things went down, as first related by Bleacher Report's Kevin Ding:




Arash Markazi of ESPN Los Angeles has those remarks in context:


"I think we have to show better composure but at the same time some of [the technical fouls] were ridiculous," Chris Paul said. "The tech that I [got] right there was ridiculous. I don't care what nobody says, I don't care what she says; that's terrible. There's no way that can be a tech. We try to get the ball out fast every time down the court and when we did that she said, 'uh-uh.' I said, 'Why, uh-uh?' And she gave me a tech." [...]

"That's ridiculous," Paul said. "If that's the case, this might not be for her."

Holtkamp also gave DeAndre Jordan a technical foul with 9:30 left in the third quarter after screaming for a foul following a dunk.

"I guess she thought I was talking to her," Jordan said. "We talked about it. She said that she thought I was talking to her. She made a call and I talked to the other refs and they disagreed with it. Hopefully it will be rescinded. We'll see."


The close proximity between Paul referring to Holtkamp — a former Division II basketball player and D-League, NCAA and WNBA official who had worked short-term regular-season and Summer League assignments at the NBA level before being tabbed this season as only the third full-time female referee in league history — as "she" and musing that she might not be long for, or belong in, the NBA immediately gave some fans pause. The wording was ambiguous enough to leave room to wonder — was this CP3 questioning the lack of seasoning of an NBA-rookie ref, or was it something else, something worse?


ESPN.com's Ramona Shelburne said the sources close to Paul from whom she heard Thursday said it was the former. Markazi noted that no Clippers player or coach mentioned Holtkamp's gender in discussing their disagreements with her calls, both in this game and in one earlier this season. One wonders, though, whether Paul would've been so quick to suggest that a male first-year ref — like Holtkamp's fellow rookies Dedric Taylor and Justin VanDuyne — might not stick around very long under similar circumstances.


Paul's postgame comments would likely have drawn a fine from the league office even if he hadn't mentioned Holtkamp's gender; the NBA's disciplinarians have long been clear on the whole "you can't publicly blast our officials" thing. It remains to be seen, though, whether the potential for the public to interpret Paul's remark as gender-biased prompts Commissioner Adam Silver to respond any differently than he would any other instance of ref criticism.


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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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