News sport : Woods' ex-coach Haney: Tiger's not concerned with major record

The natural response, even if an overreaction, to Tiger Woods withdrawing from the Farmers Insurance Open on Thursday is to wonder about Woods' competitive future.


Add to the muscle flare up and back pain at Torrey Pines that he shot a career-worst 82 the week prior, there's plenty reason to doubt Woods' future ability to contend at any tournament, much less major championships.


What if Woods never wins another major? What if he never wins another PGA Tour event? He'd fall short of both Jack Nicklaus' 18-major mark and Sam Snead's 82 official PGA Tour wins. According to Woods' former coach Hank Haney, the 14-time major champion would be content with what he accomplished if he never pads his eye-popping resume.


On his SiriusXM radio show on Friday, Haney recalled a story from 2007 in which he was prodding Woods for his poor "work ethic."


"He said, 'If my career ended today, I'd be happy with what I've done,'" Haney said. "And I'm just telling you, that's what he told me. So I think he is fine with where he is. If his career ended today, I think he'd feel great about what he has done."


In his tell-all book, "The Big Miss", detailing his time with Woods, Haney recalls Woods' obsession with the Navy SEALs around this time. Haney believed Woods was seriously considering giving up the game to enter the military, like his father Earl.


Haney, who coached Woods from 2004 through May 2010, said he never believed Woods was driven to achieve by Nicklaus' major tally.


"This thing that the media has drum up that Tiger's No. 1 goal, the No. 1 driving factor in all of Tiger's life is to beat Jack's record," Haney said. "I'm just going to tell you that I was with him for six years, 110 days per year and I never got that feeling."


Haney further added that Woods probably would have won 19 majors had he never stopped working with Butch Harmon, as he did in 2003.


"He has been his own worst enemy if you look at all these swing changes he's gone through," Haney said. "If he never changed his swing from Butch Harmon, he probably would have already broke Jack Nicklaus' record. But he did change his swing, and even though he won a higher percentage of tournaments during the time I helped him, it still cost him time because he had to re-group a little bit. It took him a year to start winning again, so this is just time that he keeps wasting."


Now that Woods has played six full competitive rounds with the swing he is developing with consultant Chris Como, Haney, who labeled the partnership an "epic failure," sees a clear laundry list of priorities that Woods must address quickly.


"He's got to get this swing organized so it doesn't hurt his back," Haney said. "Then he's got to deal with the driver issue, then he's got to deal with the short-game issue. Lots of issues to deal with, not much time. Clock's ticking fast now."




Ryan Ballengee is a Yahoo Sports contributor. Find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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DRC, Equatorial Guinea clash will go ahead

Democratic Republic of Congo are shocked their Afcon third-place playoff with Equatorial Guinea is going ahead.


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Malabo - Democratic Republic of Congo are shocked Saturday's African Nations Cup third-place playoff with Equatorial Guinea is going ahead after the hosts' violence-hit semi-final, defender Gabriel Zakuani said on Friday.


Equatorial Guinea lost 3-0 to Ghana in a match in Malabo that was overshadowed by violence with missiles hurled onto the pitch and a police helicopter brought in to disperse fans.


“I'm shocked,” Zakuani said. “I didn't know what was happening fully. Only later when I saw what kind of objects were being thrown and the reported injuries I realised.


“I'm very surprised that the (third-place) game is going ahead, to be honest. The show's got to go on, but I'm surprised at the stance.


“I'm not alone in that view, quite a few of us were doubting the game would go ahead yesterday because of the trouble.


Responding to the violent events, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) fined Equatorial Guinea but will allow home supporters into the stadium for the playoff game.


“Player and fan safety is the main thing,” added Zakuani. “If they can guarantee that, then the game can go ahead, but I'm not sure how they can in such a short space of time.”


He revealed that Ghana's players had shared their experiences with him ahead of Saturday's match.


“Yannick Bolasie's team mate Kwesi Appiah was involved,” said Zakuani. “I spoke to him today and he was quite intimidated by the whole thing.


“It's a position you don't expect to find yourself in when you're just doing your work, working for your nation.”


However, Zakuani praised the home nation's overall organisation of the tournament and said the chaotic scenes in the semi-final were nothing new.


“The tournament had been a success up until then. These things are part of the African game,” he said.


“I've seen it before. I've seen things being thrown onto the pitch in Congo. I've seen helicopters in Libya. It didn't surprise me.


“However, for that to be live, with such a big audience, in a semi-final, that was a shame. It's not the image we want people to see of African football.


“It's improving so much, with players like (Manchester City's) Yaya Toure giving the game a good name. Things like that are a kick in the teeth.


“But I must admit, I wasn't overly shocked by what I saw.”


Reuters






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Van Gaal fights FA over refs

Louis van Gaal will contest the disrepute charge for criticising a referee after United’s FA Cup draw at Cambridge.


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London - Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal will contest the disrepute charge for criticising referee Chris Foy after his team’s FA Cup draw at Cambridge two weeks ago.


Van Gaal said it was ‘always the same’ with referees when bigger teams play against smaller clubs, leading the FA to charge him with implying bias on Foy’s part.


Now it has emerged the United manager will request a personal hearing with the governing body at which he will explain he was just trying to make a general point.


United take on West Ham away tomorrow and Van Gaal said yesterday: ‘I am not angry, I am very disappointed. I am now for nearly 30 years a trainer-coach or manager and I have never been charged. And still, up to now, I don’t think that I said something wrong.


“I said already in our press conference (before the game) the same phrases, because I know in advance everything is in favour of the underdog.


“I said it before the game and I said it after the game, only in the meaning of the general feeling of everybody, everybody for the underdog.


“So I cannot imagine the FA has charged me. But, OK, it’s like that. Of course I will contest it. I never said anything wrong. You can confirm, as the media, that I never say anything about the referee, in all the matches.”


Van Gaal refused to buy in to former United manager Sir Alex Ferguson’s theory that the FA used to pick on the club simply because of its standing in the game. But it is clear he is irritated.


United are, at least, in the next round of the FA Cup, having beaten Cambridge 3-0 in the replay at Old Trafford on Tuesday. That game featured an impressive cameo appearance from Spaniard Ander Herrera who has hardly played this season despite being bought for £29million in the summer.


Van Gaal said: “He’s a great guy, he’s a great professional also, so that’s not the problem. His problem is he has to compete with high-level players. Wayne Rooney is the captain so he has a privilege (of always playing) - I have explained that - so then the other places... in this system, for example, that we are playing now, the No 10... that’s Juan Mata, that’s Angel di Maria.


“That’s difficult to compete with, but he did already know that at the moment he signed. When you sign for a top club, he knows that he has to fight. But he is fighting.”


Di Maria, meanwhile, has continued to make himself available for selection despite the fact he and his family are living in a hotel following an attempted burglary at their home last weekend.


“He is worried about his wife and child, but I have spoken with him and he wanted to play against Cambridge United and I played him,” explained Van Gaal, who laid a wreath at Old Trafford yesterday as an act of remembrance for those who died in the Munich Air Disaster on February 6, 1958.


“I have decided in the past that I will never play a player in those circumstances, because of the total human-being principle. But with him, I had the feeling that I had to give him a chance to play. He played well. And of course, I have to decide again when we face West Ham.”


Daily Mail






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Grumpy Mourinho breaks his silence

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has broken his in a news conference in which he made regular digs at England's FA.


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London - Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has broken his 10-day silence in a tetchy news conference in which he made regular digs at England's Football Association for its treatment of him.


Mourinho hasn't spoken in public since last week, when he was fined 25,000 pounds ($38,000) for claiming there has been a media-driven campaign against his team and when his star striker, Diego Costa, was handed a three-match ban for stamping on an opponent.


An unhappy-looking Mourinho chose not to discuss the Costa incident Friday, saying jokingly “maybe I'm punished to reflect. Maybe they (the FA) can read my reflection and (that) I don't want.”


Mourinho said new signing Juan Cuadrado was available for Saturday's match at Aston Villa “unless the Premier League or the FA say there are some rules to stop him.”


In another gripe at the FA, Mourinho referred to an incident this season when he was pushed by Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger in the technical area during a game.


“You know, the only surprise I had in relation to that was to be punished when I was pushed by another manager,” Mourinho said.


“Apart from that I can expect everything.”


Mourinho labelled himself the “Happy One” when he made his return to Chelsea in the summer of 2013 for a second spell as manager. But his outlook has changed somewhat in recent months, despite his team having led the Premier League from the start of the season.


He has constructed a siege mentality around his squad, perceiving that it is being targeted by referees, authorities and the media.


Mourinho said he was only attending the pre-match news conference to avoid getting another fine.


“You know why I'm here,” the Portuguese coach said, “so you cannot expect that I'm super happy to be here.”


On his recent silence, he added: “If you want, you can make a silence very noisy. Depends what you want to do. You could make noise with my silence, because you know the reason for my silence.”


Chelsea holds a five-point lead heading to Villa Park, where central midfielder Cesc Fabregas is fit to play after a hamstring injury. Costa misses out as he serves the second game of his ban.


Mourinho is looking for a first win at Villa Park - one of only two Premier League grounds, along with Newcastle's St James' Park, where he is yet to triumph.


Asked the reason for the winless record, his answer summed up his current mood.


“Because,” he replied, “the opponents score more goals than us and sometimes the same number of goals as us.”


Sapa-AP






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News sport : GSP hopes Silva and Diaz drug test failures prompt 'more stringent' drug testing by UFC

If you were wondering about Georges St-Pierre’s thoughts on Anderson Silva's and Nick Diaz’s positive UFC 83 drug tests, you can stop.


As usual, St-Pierre took the high road when asked by Le Press de Montreal’s Kevin Dubé for his opinion of the situation.


“Like everyone else, I was surprised when I heard the news,” he said sarcastically, according to the interviewer.


St-Pierre went on to say it wasn’t his place to judge Silva, who tested positive for two steroids ahead of the bout, or Diaz, who tested positive for marijuana metabolites in his post-fight drug screening.


“I don’t wish them any ill will; it's terrible what happened to Anderson Silva – to his career, and also to him physically,” St-Pierre sympathized. “It’s not my intention to bash anyone, either.


St-Pierre has stated on more than one occasion that unless the UFC institutes a year-round WADA-sanctioned random drug-testing program he will not return to MMA. Although he is a vocal opponent of performance-enhancing drugs, the French-Canadian fighter said he won’t be a steroid whistle-blower. He says he will, however, continue to rally for a cleaner sport.


"I'm not a rat and I'll never go public and name names to reporters. My only hope is that we deal with this [PED] problem," St-Pierre said flatly. “I hope if one thing comes out of this, it's that testing will be done more stringently.”


“I really don't know [if this will prompt the UFC to increase out-of-competition drug testing]," St-Pierre said incredulously. "Maybe nothing will change. It depends on a lot of people."


One thing "Rush" does know is that, contrary to rumors stating otherwise, he still hasn’t made any plans to return to the cage in 2015.


"I think some journalists should re-check the credibility of their sources."






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News sport : Anthony Davis buries the Thunder with a game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer (Video)

If Atlanta’s win over Golden State has us all already looking forward to what could be a brilliant and unexpected 2015 NBA Finals, the home-and-home two-game series that the New Orleans Pelicans and Oklahoma City Thunder gave us this week should have us petitioning the NBA to force these two teams to play a seven-game series to play in for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference this spring.


The Pelicans entered Friday night just a game in back of the Phoenix Suns for the final spot out West, with the Thunder just a game in back of New Orleans in the same race, beaming from a road win over Pelicans while working without Kevin Durant on Wednesday evening. Russell Westbrook managed a career-high 45 points in that impressive road victory, and with Durant returning from a toe injury and the scene shifting to Oklahoma City for Friday night, one would think that the Thunder would have this contest well in hand.


After all, Russell Westbrook scored 48 points in this one, topping that career-high from Wednesday. Look at this:



Didn’t matter. Watch:



Yes, that’s New Orleans forward Anthony Davis nailing a three-pointer – his first three-pointer of the season, mind you – to shock the Thunder on their home floor. Oklahoma City had done well to come back to tie the game behind Durant’s late three-pointers (he finished with 27 points) and Westbrook’s clutch three free throws with 1.8 seconds remaining, but you can’t stop the MVP.


Yes, the MVP.


Anthony Davis is the NBA’s Most Valuable Player thus far. He might be working on a team that is currently out of the playoffs, but he’s also averaging ridiculous numbers for a Pelicans team that is sifting its way through the tough Western Conference on most nights, helping to lead NOLA despite a series of injury woes this season. The Pelicans are currently on pace for 45 wins.


Davis managed 41 points, 10 rebounds and two blocks in the win. Though this was just his first three-pointer of the season in nine attempts, and though he entered the night having missed 21 of 23 career looks from long-range, this shot can’t be considered much of a fluke. It might be a sign of things to come.


Anthony Davis, in his third season, has developed into a brilliant jump shooter – as this feature from Grantland’s Kirk Goldsberry details. This isn’t a case of some youngster becoming more confident in taking what the defense gives him; rather, Davis’s touch from the perimeter is a go-to staple of his rarely nationally-televised game. He’s not quite at Dirk Nowitzki-levels just yet, but he’s bettering studs like LaMarcus Aldridge percentage-wise, and the guy is just 21.


Double-clutching three-pointers at the buzzer, with the similarly sized Kevin Durant helping to change his shot, won’t become the norm as Davis’ career moves along. That doesn’t mean Anthony Davis doesn’t have the skills, fundamentals, and athletic gifts needed to do what you saw above on some nights.


He’s not a prospect anymore. In a season featuring an injured Kevin Durant and a sometimes-there LeBron James, Anthony Davis has moved to the front of the pack in the MVP race.


For those that have been paying attention, he was there well before nailing this winner on Friday night.


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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 : In a possible NBA Finals preview, Atlanta downs Golden State at home

If it felt like the first game of an NBA Finals, it’s because statistically this is about as obvious as NBA Finals previews pitched in the regular season tend to come. No two NBA teams in league history have met this late in the regular season with single-digit loss totals to their credit, as the West-leading Golden State Warriors and East-dominating Atlanta Hawks put on a Friday night show that deserved exposure that went far beyond the local viewers that were tuning in, and the League Pass-flaunting NBA obsessives that stayed home to tune in on what could have been a night out.


Atlanta downed Golden State by a 124-116 score that perfectly summed up the back and forth. The Warriors, working on the road, were game in their competitive spirit but unable to close the gap, while the Hawks paired precision and timely defense (despite those 116 points from GSW) on their way to an impressive win. The fact that both teams emerged from this contest still boasting single-digit losses on the season, in the first week of February no less, tells you all you need to know about the potency of these two squads.


Atlanta took advantage of a rather whistle-free first half to their benefit to keep up with a footloose but at times feckless Warriors group before halftime. The Hawks shot just 35 percent in the first quarter, but hung around by playing stellar defense on all manner of penetrating Warriors – Golden State was clearly not happy with the series of non-calls as their scorers worked their way to the hoop, but the refereeing crew was at least consistent in its approach. As a result, the Warriors didn’t shoot their first free throw until Klay Thompson was fouled on a drive with one-tenth of a second left to go in the first half.


It was a 23-10 run spread out over the final minutes of that first half and the first chunks of the second that allowed the Hawks to work their way to a 70-60 lead, a lead sprung with the starters doing battle in the third quarter. The Hawks’ bench depth, long-questioned and seemingly on edge with swingman Thabo Sefolosha out for a spell, then rose to the occasion to put Golden State away.


Brimming with confidence, working mostly off of broken plays or improvisational forays once Golden State’s league-leading defense helped chase the ball away from Atlanta’s typical scorers, unheralded Hawks reserves managed to score both inside and out with alacrity and gusto. Kent Bazemore, a former Warrior, initially led the charge and finished with 11 points on 3-3 three-point shooting. In the second half, reserve forward Mike Scott also nailed all three of his attempts from long range alongside a pair of other slithery makes and a 4-4 mark from the line to finish his night with 17 points. Second-year guard Dennis Schroeder, after struggling to run the show in the first half, turned things around as ATL went with a small lineup in the second half – ending the contest with nine points and seven assists.


Meanwhile, despite those 116 points, the Warriors just could not find a rhythm.


Shots from both long and short range spun in and out. Golden State didn’t revert to its early-season ways with a rash of turnovers, but Atlanta was able to pluck a series of embarrassing backcourt steals on the team’s way toward forcing 14 Golden State miscues. Warrior forward Draymond Green demolished his season high with 20 rebounds (with six assists) on the night, but he also needed 14 shots to score 12 points and was routinely caught lunging at pump fakes defensively.


The team’s MVP candidate, guard Stephen Curry, turned in a fantastic line with 26 points on 8-19 shooting with nine assists to just one turnover, adding two steals and two blocks along the way. He also missed seven of his first eight shots, hit one three-pointer on a lucky bounce and another on an unanticipated bank shot. The production was fine, but it just wasn’t his night.


It’s that sort of nitpicking that could possibly belie just how great a contest this was. Atlanta didn’t win handily at home, but they impressed with its mettle, defensive scheming, plus the unending depth and execution on both ends. Golden State will no doubt shake its head at all the chances gone wrong – the lack of communication prior to turnovers, the great looks that spun in and out – before moving on to the team’s next game on the team’s mini-road trip.


It wasn’t a classic nail-biter, but it was a performance worthy of two teams that entered the night on pace to win 69 (Golden State) and 68 (Atlanta) wins on the season. The two will match up again in Golden State in mid-March in their final regular season pairing of 2014-15, once again away from the national television cameras and glare of the klieg lights.


That’s just fine, as us League Pass-types will cherish our little secret. All we could ask for is seven more matchups between the two squads, come June.


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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 : Watch Cam Atkinson score wild pinball goal for Blue Jackets (Video)

The Columbus Blue Jackets routed the St. Louis Blues 7-1 Friday night. Twelve players recorded at least a point, including Cam Atkinson, who put home his 10th of the season after a wild sequence.


With Columbus holding a 1-0 lead late in the first period, Ryan Johansen sent the puck from the corner toward the front of Brian Elliott’s net. The puck then pinballed off Scott Hartnell, then Alex Pietrangelo’s stick, then Hartnell’s helmet, then off the top of the Blues’ net, and was finally batted out of the air by Atkinson:





Just how the Blue Jackets drew it up during their morning skate!


The wild goal was just the start of Elliott’s miserable night. He would be pulled midway through the second period after allowing four goals on 14 shots. Jake Allen wouldn't fare any better letting in the final three goals of the night in the final 31 minutes.


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Sean Leahy is the associate editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring what Phil Jackson does and does not know

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: Deadspin and VICE Sports. An argument that Phil Jackson's acknowledgement of at-this-juncture failure in his "experiment" of bringing the triangle offense to the New York Knicks shows the Zen Master doesn't really know what he's doing, paired with an argument that it shows he knows exactly what he's doing, even if it doesn't meaningfully mitigate the failure.


PF: Bloomberg View and Waiting for Next Year. Kavitha A. Davidson writes about why the problem with Chris Paul's comments about referee Lauren Holtkamp isn't "gendered pronouns," but rather "the burden [...] placed on [...] women [in sports] to prove themselves to the men under them — to prove that they're qualified, that they belong, that they're not outsiders," and Scott Sargent on Holtkamp displayed the "ability to control situations that led her to where she is today" in a number of ways not limited to making unpopular calls on Thursday night.


SF: Grantland. A good read from Kirk Goldsberry on how Anthony Davis has expanded his offensive game to become arguably the most effective 2-point scorer in the league.


SG: Triangle Offense. A fun, GIF-y look at how Jimmy Butler has vaulted from late first-round pick to strong defender to All-Star two-way force.


PG: Sports Illustrated. Lee Jenkins on Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, working to find his speaking voice and his shooting stroke, and making great headway on both accounts.


6th: 8 Points, 9 Seconds. Tim Donahue takes a really good look at Roy Hibbert's drift to the perimeter and tries to determine whether that's been a cause of the Indiana Pacers' scoring struggles or a symptom of them, and how Frank Vogel might be able to inject some life into his hamstrung and moribund offense.


7th: The Cauldron. If we all agree that the Golden State Warriors are the best in the West, then who's the second best team in the conference? Jared Dubin investigates.


8th: Bourbon Street Shots. The New Orleans Pelicans' chances of making a push for the No. 8 seed in the West would sure get a boost if Monty Williams' top three guards could start getting to the foul line, as Michael MacNamara sees it.


9th: Washington Post. Michael Lee on Patrick Ewing, a Hall of Fame player choosing the long-hours grind of being the associate head coach of the Charlotte Hornets, and continuing his 13-year pursuit of an NBA head coaching job.


10th: Pattern of Basketball. Jonathan Tjarks looks at a pair of former first-round pick who haven't gotten much of a chance to play in their first couple of NBA stops and wonders whether some enterprising team might find a "a Danny Green starter kit for 95% off" by taking a chance on them.


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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 : Court ruling: NCAA can't seal Todd McNair documents

A California appeals court judge ruled Friday that the NCAA cannot seal hundreds of emails and documents in the defamation case that former USC assistant Todd McNair has filed against the sanctioning body.


From the Los Angeles Times:



“We are not convinced by the NCAA’s contention that public disclosure of its documents will make future investigations more difficult for the NCAA to conduct,” the 16-page opinion said.




At an October hearing in front of a three-justice panel, the NCAA argued that unsealing the documents would hinder future investigations by the organization.




Laura Wytsma, representing the NCAA, told the justices at the hearing that the organization isn’t trying to obscure “wrongful conduct” by sealing the documents.




“The NCAA has been as transparent as it can be on this one,” Wytsma said.



The ruling from the NCAA's appeal dates back to 2012, when a judge called NCAA "malicious" in its investigation of McNair. When the documents are unsealed and released to the public, it could be the second time in a year that internal communications surrounding a high-profile investigation don't paint the NCAA in a flattering light after the information released in the Penn State case,


McNair sued the NCAA in 2011 after punishments against USC in the Reggie Bush case. USC suffered scholarship losses and a bowl ban while McNair was given a show-cause penalty for a year.


The NCAA said he knew about improper gifts that Bush had received while he was at USC and lied about his knowledge. He served as USC's running backs coach for six seasons under Pete Carroll. McNair was a running back in the NFL from 1989-1996.


McNair's contract was not renewed with USC after the 2010 season and filed the suit when his appeal of the penalties was denied.


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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 : Steroid that Anderson Silva tested for a 'potent performance enhancer'

The mixed martial arts world is still reeling from the news that the legendary Anderson Silva tested positive for two separate performance enhancing drugs in a random screen given to him on Jan. 9 by the Nevada Athletic Commission prior to his Jan. 31 appearance at UFC 183 in Las Vegas.


Silva's test wasn't returned to the commission from the Sports Medicine & Research Testing Laboratory, a World Anti-Doping Agency-accredited lab in Salt Lake City, until Feb. 3. Daniel Eichner, the lab's executive director, told Yahoo Sports on Wednesday that because there was no rush put on the test and all tests are done anonymously, Silva's sample didn't get returned more quickly.


That is critical because the failure to get it back in a timely manner allowed him to compete despite the presence of drostanolone and methyltestosterone in his system.


Many combat sports athletes have tested positive for drostanolone, but methyltestosterone is rarely seen. It is an oral steroid.


Travis Tygart, the CEO of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski) Yahoo Sports reached out to Travis Tygart, the chief executive officer of the United States Anti-Doping Agency, to understand methyltestosterone more fully and whether it is concerning that a random test that was given 22 days before his bout wasn't returned until three days after it.


"Methly-T is a classic performance enhancing drug, and is effective, fast acting and can build lean muscle mass quickly," Tygart said via e-mail. "It would certainly be a potent performance enhancer, particularly in a combat sport."


News of the positive test was greeted by shock by nearly everyone connected with MMA. There had been no whispers that Silva was a user and he'd actually been outspoken against PEDs. In an interview with MMA Junkie in October, he called for the elimination of steroids from MMA.



This is not bad for me; this is bad for the sport. People around the world love the UFC, but the kids love the UFC, and the families love UFC. It’s bad for the sport. I don’t think this is good because the sport can change the lives of the kids and the people in the world. When the guys test for the steroids, it’s bad because this is a problem. It’s bad not just for the UFC, but for the sport.



What is truly bad is that an athlete who was using performance enhancing drugs was able to fight with it because of the delay in reporting.


Bob Bennett, the executive director of the Nevada commission, said he'll ask SMRTL to put a priority on all tests it does in the future.


Tygart said labs do need time but that a priority request would be critical in a case such as Silva's.


"Laboratories absolutely need adequate time to conduct a thorough and complete analysis, but they can and do provide expedited analysis if the testing organization informs the lab of any impending competition deadline," Tygart said. "We do this before big events like Olympic Trials, World Championships etc., but you have to be in communication with the lab to let them know it is urgent, since the samples they receive do not have athlete names or competition dates, and they will not be aware a sample is urgent unless they are informed."


Silva has denied using PEDs. He'll be required to appear at a Feb. 17 hearing of the Nevada commission where it will look to impose a temporary suspension on him pending a full disciplinary hearing.






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News sport : MLB and FOX working on a deal to reduce streaming blackouts

Major League Baseball fans rejoice, broadcasts of your local team may soon be coming to your second screen.


MLB and television rights-holder Fox are reportedly working on a deal that could see 40 percent of all their streamed games be blackout free. As it currently stands, subscribers to MLB.TV, the league’s online game streaming service, don’t get to watch their local teams. That means, for instance, a Red Sox fan living in Boston can only watch the game on television. It has been an issue for years but is becoming even more contentious as streaming becomes more prevalent. The new agreement would reduce those local online blackouts. Maury Brown of Forbes has the details.



“According to sources, the economics of the deal between MLB and FOX are in place, but challenges remain.


Reportedly, MLB Advanced Media (MLBAM) is seeking to control all the streaming of the games, while FOX also wishes to be in on the action. MLBAM, the digital media company of Major League Baseball, would offer the games on MLB.TV, which would require users to authenticate through their pay-TV provider. In essence, if MLB.TV could package the in-market games with the out-of-market games, there would be no reason for users to get these games elsewhere, such as through online services from FOX Sports. According to sources, that remains the sticking point.”



Though there may end up being an additional cost, the move would be a major boon to fans. Many television viewers are cutting their cable altogether in favor of online streaming services like Netflix. The same goes for sports fans who are flocking to streaming services like MLB.TV. But currently even a fan paying for access to a television network broadcasting their home team’s games cannot watch on a streaming service. Streaming services like MLB.TV can be used on computers, mobile devices, and even gaming consoles like a PlayStation. Why do cable networks insist on the online blackouts? Simply because of the massive amounts of money spent to secure those television broadcast rights. In 2012, Fox paid a reported $4 billion for an eight-year rights deal with MLB.


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The new report about an agreement comes on the heels of a New York appeals court decision to reject MLB’s antitrust exemption in a similar case about broadcast territories. Deadspin reports that MLB made several attempts to have the case thrown out to protect the territorial broadcast rights.



“The fans suing MLB claim that the broadcast territories reduce competition because regional sports networks don't have to compete with each other to broadcast games in their local markets. They also argue that MLB has monopoly power over the rights to broadcast out-of-market games and it uses that power to limit out-of-market viewing to either Extra Innings or to MLB.tv. Without these restraints, the lawsuit says, regional sports networks would compete with each other to broadcast "out-of-market" games in other parts of the country, making games both more accessible and more affordable.”



If MLB and Fox can come to an agreement to limit the number of blackouts it would be a good PR move, and the first step in avoiding these messy lawsuits.


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Ian Denomme is an editor for Yahoo Sports. Email him at denomme@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter.






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News sport : Doug Baldwin's Super Bowl obscene touchdown celebration draws a fine


I'm not sure why one would celebrate one of the biggest moments of a professional career by pretending to poop out a football, but to each their own.


Seattle Seahawks receiver Doug Baldwin scored a touchdown in the Super Bowl to give his team what looked like a pretty good 24-14 lead over the New England Patriots, then he did a touchdown celebration that NBC cut away from quickly. Maybe Baldwin was actually pretending to defecate on the football instead of ... oh whatever, you get the point.



Baldwin paid for his art. He was fined $11,025 for an obscene gesture, the league minimum for an obscene gesture. Baldwin was given a 15-yard penalty for the celebration. The fine was officially announced by the NFL on Friday, via various media outlets.


Baldwin told the Everett Herald this week that he didn't regret his celebration.



"I was just out there having fun playing the game of football," Baldwin said. "There’s no explanation. You play this game for so long, you go out there and you have fun. I can get criticized for it, that’s fine, everybody has their opinion, but in the moment I was just having fun. My teammates know that."



Baldwin's fun cost him five figures, which probably didn't make his week after the Seahawks' Super Bowl loss any better.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Four players fined for brawl late in Super Bowl XLIX


The NFL is a bit lucky the fight at the end of Super Bowl XLIX was just kind of bad, and not a major focus of the postgame coverage.


The brawl when the New England Patriots took a knee at the end wasn't the way the league wanted one of its greatest games to end, but it didn't turn out like the BYU-Memphis battle at the end of their bowl game a couple months ago that made many headlines. The Super Bowl brawl settled down fairly quickly before it got totally out of control. It could even be joked about afterward, with Rob Gronkowski proudly saying he thought it was time to throw some haymakers.


But, there were still penalties to be paid.


Seattle Seahawks outside linebacker Bruce Irvin, who was ejected from the game, was fined $10,000, the largest of the four fines given out, according to Bob Condotta of the Seattle Times. Seahawks end Michael Bennett, Patriots tight end Michael Hoomanawanui and Gronkowski all got $8,268 fines, the standard amount for unnecessary roughness penalties.


The Seahawks' fines are just insult to injury after the loss, and the Patriots players might not even notice in their post-victory glow. But the NFL can feel fairly fortunate the relatively small fines will be the end of that story.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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







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