Downs can catch Chiefs - Pitso

Sundowns coach Pitso Mosimane believes his team can pull the rug from underneath Amakhosi’s feet like they did last season.


|||

A 15-point lead atop a league as competitive as the Absa Premiership should ordinarily be considered unassailable.


But Pitso Mosimane has always been the optimistic type. So while many a PSL coach has essentially conceded the title to runaway leaders Kaizer Chiefs, the Mamelodi Sundowns coach still harbours ambitions of seeing his side retaining their title.


And yesterday, sitting next to Stuart Baxter – the Chiefs coach – Mosimane gave no less than four compelling reasons why he believes his team can pull the rug from underneath Amakhosi’s feet like they did last season.


“In the past, I’ve seen Sundowns squander a 12 points lead,” he said “Bayern (Munich, the Bundesliga giants) once had a big lead but they lost a number of matches towards the end of the season and they only won the league by a small margin. Just the other day, I saw the same Bayern coming back from recess and getting just one point out of a possible six.


“In 2001, SuperSport were second from bottom in the league but they ended up second (after he took over from Bruce Grobellaar). Last season, Sundowns won the league after being behind by 11 points. I don’t know if it is possible top catch a team with a 15-point lead, you tell me,” he said to the media gathered at the PSL offices.


Declaring that the month-long break has ensured his team have loads of energy, Mosimane said “let’s burn it”, in reference to the restart which will see his team welcome Moroka Swallows at Lucas Moripe Stadium in the main attraction of tonight’s three fixtures.


That Chiefs are unbeaten from their 18 matches, while Sundowns have lost two of their 17, does not seem to perturb Mosimane one bit. Far from it, for the former Bafana Bafana coach has always maintained the championship is never won until it is mathematically impossible for the leaders to be usurped.


Baxter agrees, despite his never having been in charge of a side enjoying as big a lead as Chiefs do being overtaken.


“I think Manchester United once had 10 points on Manchester City (who went on to win the league). And I remember a German title being decided with about 10 points. But we are aware that if you’re on top, people will want to topple you. So we’re going to have to be very careful with our mental preparation the last degree.”


The Chiefs coach, though, was quick to point to the fact that the current situation is very dissimilar to last season’s where his team gave away what many had considered an unassailable lead to finish runners-up.


“This is a very different situation. Last season, Pitso’s team had games in hand. But this has nothing to do with history. It will be about how the other teams can put us under pressure by winning their matches. Once there’s pressure brought to bear on us, the key will be for us not to crack.”


Chiefs resume their campaign with a trip to tricky Bloemfontein Celtic tomorrow and Baxter admits the match is a potential banana skin.


“We know Celtic in Bloem is one of the toughest games in the league. There’s the crowd which is good for them and the pitch is poor and they always believe they can beat anyone. But while we do know it is a very difficult game, we’ve got results there before.”


Not that dropping points will be a train smash for the man who was also previously in charge of the country’s senior national side.


“I won’t cry in my milk if we drop a few points early on and I won’t shout we have won it if we win a couple of matches early on. What I will be most concerned about will be how the team performs overall.”


As it is, the Chiefs coach is enjoying the pressure that comes with being on top.


“I prefer the pressure that comes with leading from the front. It suits me and it suits how I work.” - The Star






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/16NWYpZ

Spurs must win at Anfield

2015 has been good to Tottenham Hotspur so far. They’ve defeated the league leaders, reached a cup final and won a thrilling derby.


|||

For Tottenham Hotspur, the achievements are starting to accumulate. This year, already, they have thumped the league leaders, reached a cup final, won a thrilling derby and climbed, however briefly, into the top four.


As they march into the serious half of the season, though, there is one thing that they are lacking: a famous away victory, a conquest of the home of one of their rivals. The best team they have won at was West Ham United, and that was on the season's opening day, almost six months ago.


Tonight, Mauricio Pochettino's team travel to Anfield, hoping to deliver just that. Of course, the Premier League table is important and a win tonight would, for 24 hours at least, send them into third place, seven points clear of Brendan Rodgers' improving side. While Manchester City seem to have ended the title race by themselves, the competition for the Champions League places is again looking like the most exciting of the season's final months.


But victory for Spurs at Liverpool would also make clear just how far - physically and mentally - Pochettino has taken this team. Spurs' results at the big teams were poor last season, including a 4-0 defeat at Anfield in March which seemed to sum up their lack of character, discipline and focus.


Pochettino has restored all of those things and more. Hugo Lloris, as important as any other player to their excellent form, believes they can show that tonight. “I think we are improving and we are in a good dynamic,” said the French goalkeeper, after Saturday's already-famous north London derby victory. “We need to keep the same mentality and instil the same discipline in this game [against Liverpool]. We also need to make a good recovery because the game will come quickly. But we will show the same desire and we have a good team spirit.”


It has not been easy for Spurs to reach this level. It took a pre-season full of exhausting double sessions, some difficult personnel decisions, and the early teething problems led to four avoidable home league defeats. But Lloris said that all that work is now being rewarded on the pitch.


“The season is very long and, of course, there are some dips along the way,” Lloris said. “But the key is to work hard every day. That has always been our mentality in the team. We always try to work hard and do what the manager expects. We try to do our best on the pitch. Some performances may not have been so good earlier in the season but in some ways they helped us to the improvements you see now.”


It is very clear now which players buy into the Pochettino regime and which do not. Those players who played on Saturday, and who will play again tonight, are those who are willing and able to run as far as their Argentinian coach needs.


“We all believe in his philosophy and the way he wants us to play,” Lloris said. “We take strength from him and the improvements we have shown. We take our confidence and ability to fight into every game.”


Lloris, like any player, wants to play every game and that extends to the Capital One Cup final, against Chelsea at Wembley on 1 March. His understudy, Michel Vorm, has played every game in the competition but Pochettino has a decision to make, not least with the final coming three days after the Europa League last 32 second leg at Fiorentina. It might look strange if Spurs were to play a cup final and the best goalkeeper in the Premier League was sat on the bench.


When asked whether he would like to play at Wembley, Lloris replied, “That is a very easy question to answer”, but he certainly remains focused on the Premier League and Europa League games before then.


“At the moment we are not thinking about it too much because we still have plenty of games to go before the final and we take things game by game,” he said.


“I will respect the manager's decision and abide by that, like all the players here do. That is the mentality of this squad. If you play or you don't play, you are still involved in the squad.”


ANFIELD AGONY SPURS' POOR RECORD AT LIVERPOOLTottenham head to Anfield tonight seeking to improve on a dreadful record, with just four league wins since 1912.


16 Mar 1985: Liv 0-1 Tott


Garth Crooks scored in front of the Kop for a first win at Anfield since the year the Titanic sank.


8 May 1993: Liv 6-2 Tott


Two goals apiece for Ian Rush and John Barnes as Spurs saw out the season with a whimper.


1 May 1999: Liv 3-2 Tott


Ledley King made his debut as the Worthington Cup winners led 2-0 at the interval before collapsing to defeat.


7 Oct 2007: Liv 2-2 Tott


Fernando Torres headed a late leveller to extend Martin Jol’s poor start to the season.


15 May 2011: Liv 0-2 Tott


Rafael van der Vaart and Luka Modric helped Spurs close in on Europa League spot.


30 Mar 2014: Liv 4-0 Tott


Luis Suarez led the way as Liverpool eased back to the top of the Premier League.


Liverpool TottenhamProbable Anfield teams


Referee P Dowd (Staffordshire) – The Independent






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/16NWY9A

City looking at Atletico’s Simeone

Machester City are continuing to monitor Atletico Madrid coach Diego Simeone amid growing concern over their faltering season.


|||

Machester City are continuing to monitor Atletico Madrid coach Diego Simeone amid growing concern over their faltering season.


The Barclays Premier League champions slipped seven points behind leaders Chelsea after Saturday’s 1-1 home draw with struggling Hull City.


Manuel Pellegrini’s side are now in danger of finishing the season empty-handed after going out of both domestic cup competitions in the early rounds.


Much will depend on how they fare in the Champions League having scraped through to the knockout stage.


On February 24 City face Barcelona for the second season in a row and another defeat for Pellegrini would raise serious questions over the Chilean’s future.


Simeone led Atletico to the Spanish title last season as well as the Champions League final, where they lost to rivals Real. His stock rose even higher after Atletico inflicted a 4-0 defeat on Carlo Ancelotti’s European champions in Saturday’s Madrid derby.


The 44-year-old Argentine is the likely target if City feel Pellegrini should go. Both Ancelotti and Bayern Munich’s Pep Guardiola are less likely to leave their clubs while Borussia Dortmund’s Jurgen Klopp is having a poor season.


City’s immediate task is to improve their results, starting at Stoke tomorrow. Pablo Zabaleta, the champions’ Argentina full back, admits his side must win at the Britannia Stadium or risk losing touch with Chelsea.


‘We are under pressure. We have to win every game,’ said Zabaleta. ‘Chelsea won and Southampton won, United are close behind us, while Spurs are in a great moment. ‘Every game is like a final, and we have Champions League coming up in the next few weeks. If we want to be trying to retain the title, we need to win the games.’


Pellegrini’s team will not find it easy — Stoke won at the Etihad in August — and Zabaleta admitted: ‘They play in a physical way, and are very strong at home.‘They have changed their style of play with Mark Hughes, but still have most of the players from a few years ago, and are a really good team. We have to be ready.’


Zabaleta admitted that playing away from the Etihad could help City rediscover their form. ‘It’s been very strange because this team have not been great at home, and that is something that has not happened before,’ he said.


‘We have always been strong at home, and this season if you look at the points we have lost at home, it is really hard to understand.’Much could depend on whether Sergio Aguero rediscovers his scoring spark and Zabaleta said: ‘We need Sergio to come back to his goalscoring best like in November-December.


‘But after being injured for a long time for some players it is difficult to come back to their best. I am sure as soon as Sergio scores one goal then he will again be one of the best strikers in the league.‘Also, defensively we are not doing great. We are conceding goals every game. Clean sheets are always important. There are defensive and offensive things we need to improve if we are to win something this season.’ – Daily Mail






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1zFyp9X

Fabregas set for Chelsea return

Chelsea playmaker Cesc Fabregas is likely to be back for the home game with Everton in the Premier League in midweek.


|||

London - Chelsea playmaker Cesc Fabregas is likely to be back for the home game with Everton in the Premier League in midweek after missing two matches with a hamstring problem.


“I think he plays on Wednesday because on Saturday it was a decision to protect him,” manager Jose Mourinho told the club website (www.chelseafc.com).


“We didn't want to risk two players at the same time. We risked Willian and to start two players with a risk is a big gamble,” added Mourinho in reference to the 2-1 victory over Aston Villa at the weekend.


Fabregas's expected return will present the manager with something of a dilemma because Brazilian Ramires has excelled as his midfield deputy after a season plagued by injury.


“The best Ramires is back and the best Ramires played against Liverpool, Manchester City and Aston Villa,” said Mourinho. “He is a different profile of player but a fantastic player for us.”


Ramires came on when Fabregas limped off midway through Chelsea's League Cup semi-final second leg victory over Liverpool at Stamford Bridge two weeks ago.


The Londoners sprinted seven points clear at the top of the league after defender Branislav Ivanovic grabbed the second-half winner with a ferocious shot at Villa.


“Every striker in the world would be proud to score that magnificent goal,” said Mourinho. “For a right back whose left foot is not his best it is an amazing goal.


“He is a great guy and what he is doing for us is unbelievable with the foot injury he had against Liverpool when he still played the rest of the game, and he also played against City and Villa.


“He is one of the best signings. He came immediately after I left Chelsea and after that he made a fantastic contribution for this club.”


Serbian international Ivanovic, who can also play in central defence, joined Chelsea from Lokomotiv Moscow in 2007, just after Mourinho's first spell at the club ended. – Reuters






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1IJcGUF

News sport : Jeremy Lamb, Perry Jones III take their pre-game handshake very seriously

Hold up a second, Jeremy Lamb — you couldn't offer Russell Westbrook a simple dap, but you can do this with Perry Jones III?



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


To be fair, it's not like either third-year pro has been called upon to do much else for Oklahoma City lately; Jones has pretty much left Scott Brooks' rotation when Kevin Durant's available, and Lamb's averaging all of five minutes per game over the last seven weeks. And if you're going to use your non-playing, non-practicing time for anything, it's hard to think of anything significantly better than choreographing elaborate handshakes/dance routines to do with your teammates behind Thunder sideline reporter Lesley McCaslin:



Now, this sort of high-octane chicanery might not be your particular brand of vodka. Perhaps you prefer the simple, strong, silent shake favored by Thunder bigs Steven Adams and Nick Collison:



Whichever side you come down on, though, I think we can all agree that Serge Ibaka has the right idea when it comes to celebrating Kevin Durant's patently absurd shotmaking:



Maybe Serge is just looking for someone to dance with. Go on and get over there, Jeremy and Perry. (You know, if you're not too busy.)


Hat-tip to Seth Rosenthal at SB Nation.


- - - - - - -


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!



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1vfhN3y

News sport : Oregon's Mark Helfrich receives five-year, $17.5 million contract extension

Dec 31, 2014; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Oregon Ducks coach Mark Helfrich at press conference at the L.A. Hotel Downtown in advance of the 2015 Rose Bowl. (Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports) A month after coach Mark Helfrich led Oregon to the inaugural College Football Playoff National Championship game, the school rewarded him with a five-year, $17.5 million contract extension. His new contract goes through the 2019-20 season.


"Mark has provided tremendous leadership of our football program and the values and character that he insists upon are in line with our mission as an institution," Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens said in a statement. "The success of our student-athletes on the field and in the classroom will continue with Mark's leadership and we are thrilled that he will stay at home in Oregon for a long time to come."


In two seasons, Helfrich, who was an offensive coordinator under Chip Kelly before Kelly left for the NFL, has led the Ducks to a 24-4 record, a Heisman Trophy and nearly its first-ever national title.


Helfrich will earn $3.15 million during the first year of the extension, which is a significant increase from the guaranteed salary of $1.8 million he earned under the previous deal. However, Helfrich did earn more than $400,000 in incentives, including $100,000 for winning the Pac-12 and $150,000 for appearing in the national championship, this past season.


Should Helfrich decide to leave before the end of the 2016 season, he’ll owe the Ducks a $3 million buyout. That buyout drops to $2 million in Year 3 and $1 million in Year 4.


- - - - - - -


Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1y2Bfka

Fifa hopefuls given the green light

Sepp Blatter and his three rivals for the Fifa presidency have passed the required integrity checks.


|||

London - A Fifa electoral committee on Monday approved incumbent Sepp Blatter and three rivals for an election for the presidency of football's global governing body to be held on May 29.


Blatter, who has been in the post since 1998, is opposed by Dutch federation president Michael van Praag, Jordanian Prince Ali bin Al Hussein, a Fifa vice-president, and Portuguese football great and former Ballon d'Or winner Luis Figo.


A Fifa statement said all four had passed “integrity checks” so they could be allowed into the election.


At the Fifa Congress the winner has to get the majority of the 205 Fifa members.


Blatter, who will be 79 by the time of the vote, is strong favourite to win a fifth term but faces a strong European-led opposition, largely over the controversial vote to give Qatar the 2022 World Cup and the subsequent fallout over the report into the bid.


However, the Swiss official - who revised his original pledge not to run for a fifth term - has had strong public backing from the African and Asian continental confederations.


His reign has notably been tarnished by accusations of corruption stemming from the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, the former being awarded to Russia.


The controversies have seriously eroded his support and tarnished his reputation in European strongholds like England, Germany and The Netherlands.


However, the success of last summer's World Cup in Brazil, despite earlier fears over the state of the organisation, has further boosted his status.


Figo, 42, and 67-year-old van Praag both announced their candidatures a fortnight ago while Prince Ali, 39, launched his campaign at the start of the year.


All three were successful in getting the minimum of five national associations to back their bids.


Two others who had been considering standing - former France international forward David Ginola and ex-Fifa executive official Jerome Champagne - both failed to get the necessary backing and were eliminated from the final reckoning last week.


AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://ift.tt/1zErY76

News sport : NFL Films founder Ed Sabol, Pro Football Hall of Famer, dies at age 98

It has often been said that much of the NFL's incredible popularity can be traced back to the majestic images of NFL Films, which was founded by Ed Sabol.


Sabol died on Monday at age 98, the NFL announced. He is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and for good reason.


Sabol's history with the NFL began in 1962 when he bid $5,000 to produce that season's championship game highlight film. Sabol was running the Blair Motion Picture Company, and his bid doubled the previous season's price. After a couple years shooting the NFL, Sabol convinced NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle the league needed its own motion picture company. With that, the NFL Films empire was born. In 1985 he turned over the presidency of NFL Films over to his son Steve, who passed away in 2012. Ed Sabol continued as the chairman of NFL Films until he retired in 1995. According to Sabol's Hall of Fame biography, NFL Films won 52 Emmy awards during his tenure.


The Sabols' vision for NFL Films, producing slow motion films from the sideline angle with dramatic music playing in the background, was revolutionary. It made the growing league seem larger than life, and helped build it into the most popular sports league in American history.


Sabol served in World War II, and after that was an overcoat salesman. He wanted to make films instead of selling overcoats. Sabol was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2011.


"I dreamed the impossible dream, and I'm living it right this minute," Sabol said during his induction speech.


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1Dynz7w

News sport : Alex Ovechkin finally gets his Honda, donates it to charity

Alex Ovechkin spent the entire 2015 NHL All-Star Fantasy Draft campaigning Team Foligno and Team Toews to make him the last pick, ensuring that he would win a brand new Honda. Things didn’t go as the Washington Capitals captain had planned and he was selected before the final two of Filip Forsberg and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who both ended up receiving cars.


After the Draft concluded, the real reason why Ovechkin wanted the car was revealed: he had planned to donate it to the American Special Hockey Association, which is the league that 10-year old Ann Schaab plays in, his sushi date from earlier this season.


Honda executives heard about the story and stepped in make Ovechkin's wish come true. And on Monday, he was at a Honda dealership in Falls Church, Virginia, along with Ann, to accept the car.


“The kids are happy…they are smiling, which is great,” Ovechkin said via the Falls Church News Press. “Their parents are happy as well, so it’s a great day for us.”


ASHA plans to raffle the car off, with funds benefiting programs run in 30 states by the organization, according to USA Today.


Ovechkin's relationship with Ann was what set the wheels in motion on this and the little girl couldn't have been more excited.



MORE FROM YAHOO HOCKEY:









from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1CbUyN3

News sport : Dominique Wilkins recalls the time Larry Bird told him he didn't 'belong in this league, Homes'

With his rampaging Atlanta Hawks in Boston on Wednesday to meet the rebuilding Boston Celtics, Hawk legend Dominique Wilkins thought it as good a time as any to share a few Hawks/Celtics anecdotes with the Boston Herald. Wilkins, who currently serves as the Hawks’ ambassador and television analyst, discussed in great length (if not great detail) about Celtic superstar Larry Bird’s initial rough treatment of Wilkins as a rookie during the 1982-83 season.


Bird was just in his fourth season by then, but Larry Legend was already about to turn 26, working on a Celtics team that had won an NBA championship a year and a half before. Wilkins, after being drafted by Utah and sent to Atlanta for John Drew, Freeman Williams and cash considerations, was attempting to turn around what had previously been a rather moribund Hawk franchise.


We’ll let ‘Nique, through the Herald, take it from here:



“One of the first times I ever played against him, I went out for the opening tip and I went to shake his hand. He just stood there and looked at me stone-faced with his hands behind his back,” Wilkins said recently.




“I was like, ‘Whoa.’ Then we were getting ready for the tip and he says to me, ‘You don’t belong in this league, Homes.’ I couldn’t believe it, but it happened so fast, I didn’t know what to think.




“Then they had the ball and I was on him and he said, ‘I don’t know why they got you guarding me, Homes. You can’t guard me.’ Then, whap, he hit a 3. Then he came down again and said, ‘They made a mistake putting you on me, Homes,’ and he took another 3.”




[…]




“Then a little while later, I came down on a break and he was backpedaling. I just went right after him. I jumped up and he tried to challenge, but I took that right through the rim. He fell and hit the basket support.




“He got up and said, ‘I like you, rookie. You’ve got(guts).’ I was happy for a second, and then he said, ‘But I’m still going for 40 on you tonight.’ ”




He then paused the story, stepped back and smiled.




“But I got him,” Wilkins said. “He only scored 39.”



Or 21, even.


That’s how many points Bird scored in his first meeting with Dominique – with Wilkins actually outpacing Bird in scoring 22 points in the Celtics’ blowout win. Bird scored “just” 30 in his next outing against Dominique, with 15 rebounds, and managed only 10 points on 3-18 shooting in his next time facing the rookie (with Wilkins also struggling, missing 14 of 21 shots on his way toward 17 points). Bird hit for 29 points, which I suppose is kind of like 39 points in the teams’ final regular season meeting.


Bird’s Celtics took on the Hawks in the playoffs and took the best-of three opening series, with Bird notching 26, 15, and 26 points in the three contests.


Now, Bird did score 48 and then 60 points on Dominique and the Hawks two seasons later, but the only time that magic “39” came out of the bag was in 1985, when Wilkins dropped as much on Larry.


Dominique’s tale makes for some fine apocryphal storytelling, and for once it’s nice to see someone amping up the accomplishments of the player they’re working against, rather than building up their own legacy via exaggeration.


(Hat tip: CBS Sports.)


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1y0Wgfb

News sport : Snoop Dogg's son, UCLA signee Cordell Broadus, gets huge tattoo of mother's face

UCLA signee Cordell Broadus’ father – rapper Snoop Dogg – may be the most famous person in his family, but Broadus, a four-star wide receiver, certainly appears to be a mama’s boy.


This brand new forearm tattoo of his mother Shante Broadus’ face is evidence of this.



Despite Snoop Dogg’s well-documented fandom for USC, Broadus committed to the Bruins over several other high-profile offers, including one from the Trojans. Snoop says he’s all-in for the Bruins now.


"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."


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1y0WdQt

News sport : Half-court buzzer beater seals win

A game between two rival Ohio high schools came down to the final second on Feb. 7: a half-court buzzer beater gave Willoughby-Eastlake South the 78-76 win over Mentor High School. Junior guard Jack Whitaker hit the shot.



Willoughby-Eastlake South improved to 16-1 with the win, setting the team up well for a top playoff seed.


“This is definitely No. 1,” Whitaker told the News-Herald, “It’s unbelievable. I can’t believe it happened. It’s still going through my head. It’s fantastic, really."


____


Have a highlight to share? Send it to Danielle!


Danielle Elliot is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact her at delliot@yahoo-inc.com or find her on Twitter.



And keep up with Danielle over on Facebook, too.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1M7iEhq

News sport : Recruits need to be educated about their signing day options

It’s time to have an honest conversation about recruiting.


In the past, oh, 15 years or so, recruiting has become big business. There are several websites devoted to it, 16-hour television coverage on National Signing Day and signing ceremonies that affect the normal school schedule.


But there’s also an underbelly.


This isn’t a new underbelly. There’s been deceitful and shady and downright dirty recruiting since teams started fighting each other for players. But this year, the underbelly has been thrust into the spotlight and has sparked an interesting debate about the limits of a national letter of intent.


At least four schools — and a few recruits that signed with those schools — have made national headlines because position coaches have left for other jobs after securing the signatures of high-level players who went to the school simply because they love that coach. Some players feel jilted, scorned and, in the case of Roquan Smith, have refused to sign with their first choice.


The quotes from the high school coaches have been scathing.


“How can these guys (college coaches) talk about the people and the relationships — and then you get these kids signed and then you bail on them at the first time you get the opportunity? Look at all these stories after signing day,” Macon County High School coach Larry Harold, who coach’s Smith, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.


“You can’t tell me that these head coaches aren’t telling these assistants that they know are leaving – don’t tell anybody until after signing day and then we’ll announce it. That’s deception and that’s dishonesty. And, most importantly, it’s not fair to the kids.”


In that article, Harold talks about the misnomer that players should choose a school and not a coach. He states that at a certain level, all schools are the same in terms of facilities and success and education, but that it’s the coaches and relationships that make the difference.


However, not everyone agrees with that. Former Alabama quarterback Greg McElroy said in an email interview with Yahoo Sports that he knew better than to make his college choice based on the personnel.


“When I was making my decision on which school to attend as a high school senior, I was given advice that was very helpful, ‘Don't choose the school for the coach or the football, choose it for you.’” McElroy said. “I always kept that in mind throughout recruiting. When I chose Bama, I chose it because it was the school that I felt like I would enjoy the most even if I hadn't played football.”


Coaches leave.


Whether voluntarily or forced out, coaches leave.


There are few programs in the country that have held an entire staff together for more than three years. Coaches have ambitions and it’s hard to fault them for looking for opportunities to advance their careers.


During the past week, there’s been discussion about changing the letter of intent, allowing recruits an escape clause should their position coach take another job. Even the Collegiate Commissioners Association, a group of the 32 Division I conference commissioners that govern the rules of the national letter of intent, have wrestled with whether to include a clause that would allow players to void their national letter of intent in the event of a coaching change. This is a rule some commissioners are trying to get added if college football creates an early signing period that would likely take place for a 72-hour span beginning on Dec. 16.


This, to me, is a tricky subject. You can’t punish the school for the actions of one coach. The only solution might be for the NCAA to require each team's staff to be set before signing day — no moves unless there’s an extreme circumstance — but it would be unlikely for schools to support such a measure.


The best solution to this problem is education. Players should know their rights when it comes to National Signing Day and the letter of intent. Because recruiting has become such a big business, signing on National Signing Day has become almost a mandated process. But National Signing Day for all its bells and whistles is simply the first day a player can sign with a program. A player actually has until April 1 to sign a national letter of intent with a school and even longer if he signs a financial aid agreement, which is much less constricting.


Sports Illustrated’s Andy Staples called the national letter of intent (NLI) “the worst contract in American sports” and it’s hard to fault his reasoning.


Though most players don’t realize it, they do not have to sign the NLI to receive a scholarship. They need only sign a financial aid agreement at their chosen school. The financial aid paperwork provides (almost) the same guarantee of a scholarship as the NLI, but unlike the NLI, it doesn’t strip the player of the only leverage he’ll have until he graduates from college.

Why is the NLI the worst contract in American sports? It requires players to sign away their right to be recruited by other schools. If they don’t enroll at the school with which they signed, they forfeit a year of eligibility. Not a redshirt year, but one of their four years to play. In return, the NLI guarantees the player nothing.

Of course, this wouldn’t work for every recruit. Staples column centers around Smith, the remaining top-rated (academically eligible) recruit left to sign. Smith has options. Several schools are actively recruiting him and are keeping a spot open for him in their recruiting class just in case.


However, if you’re a lower-level recruit with fewer options, well, you might not have as much freedom. You might have to sign a national letter of intent because the school could find another player just like you willing to sign. That’s for each recruit to decide with their family, coaches and whomever they trust in these matters.


But too often stories of recruits feeling betrayed or treated unfairly mar what should otherwise be a joyous step in a young athlete's life. Recruits need to know their options. They need to be educated. They need to know that they wield more power than they think. And it's incumbent upon parents and high school coaches to make sure their sons and athletes have as much information available before they make a life-changing decision.


- - - - - - -


Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1A6FnXO

News sport : Brett Favre announces he'll return to Lambeau Field for number retirement


It was time for Brett Favre to come back to Lambeau Field to be honored by the Green Bay Packers.


On his official site, Favre officially announced what everyone has assumed for a while: 2015 will be the year. He'll come back for his induction into the Packers Hall of Fame, and also so the team can retire his No. 4. which is long overdue.


Here's what Favre said on his site:



"It was a tremendous honor to play 16 years for the Green Bay Packers. Now to have my name placed among others such as Starr, Hornung, Kramer, Taylor, Lambeau, Nitschke, Lombardi, Davis, White and Hutson is a special honor that I share with all of my teammates and coaches, and that would not have been possible but for the foresight of Ron Wolf, the greatest GM In the history of the NFL.




"I'm truly looking forward to celebrating and sharing this special moment with all of the great fans of the Green Bay Packers."



The reunion has been put off for a while, because as you may remember, the Packers and Favre didn't have a very clean break. Favre wanted to come back a few months after retiring, the Packers had already committed to Aaron Rodgers (that turned out OK) and Favre ended up with the Minnesota Vikings after a year with the New York Jets. The Favre-Packers relationship was a bit rocky, which was unfortunate considering Favre was the centerpiece of reviving a franchise that was absolutely terrible for a couple decades before he arrived in 1992.


The only known appearance Favre has made in Green Bay since retiring in 2010 was at a fundraiser at his steakhouse before a Packers "Monday Night Football" game last December. Although his steakhouse is in the shadow of Lambeau Field, he didn't go to the stadium.


Favre will make what should be a very memorable appearance at Lambeau Field in 2015. Enough time has passed that any hard feelings should be forgotten. The Packers fans can salute one of the greatest players in the storied franchise's history. Finally.


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1vehciD

News sport : LeBron, Love, leadership and the Cavs' confusing coincidences

Kevin Love and LeBron James show everyone that everything's fine. (Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports) Sparked by the return of LeBron James after a midseason siesta, a pair of trades that infused new blood into their rotation, and some brilliant offensive basketball from Kyrie Irving, the Cleveland Cavaliers have caught fire, winning 13 of their last 14 games to vault from a game under .500 to a half-game out of the Central Division lead after Sunday's smackdown of the visiting Los Angeles Lakers. These are high times in Ohio, which is word to Oscar Robertson, and everything in Cleveland sure seems like it should be copacetic ... so what the hell's going on with LeBron James and Kevin Love?


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


Less than a week after attributing Love's first-half offensive struggles to a lack of confidence, which Love promptly denied, James again raised eyebrows. This time, the curiosity-piquer was the tweet James fired off on Saturday, after the Cavs' winning-streak-snapping Friday night loss to the Indiana Pacers, which saw Love score just five points on 2-for-8 shooting and admit that trying to find his place in the Cavs' offense has been "one of the toughest situations [he's] had to deal with" in his career:



If those word choices — "fit out" and "fit in" — seem familiar to you, then you probably remember reading this October ESPN.com piece by Dave McMenamin in which Love discussed the challenge of carving out his own niche in the Cavaliers' structure after the offseason trade that imported him from the Minnesota Timberwolves:


"I'm comfortable and just not trying to, I guess, fit in so much," Love said after the game. "I had a talk with the guys on the plane ride over (to Brazil) and also at different practices off the floor and they told me to fit out. Just be myself.

"I kind of laughed and smirked at that. Off the court, I never have any problems with that. But on the court, it's just us having so many weapons and being able to fit together out there on the floor ... You always say check your egos at the door but we also need to bring our egos with us because that's what makes us so great. We wouldn't be here without them."

Back to the present tense. Love looked like the All-NBA floor-stretching fire of old on Sunday, scoring a season-high 32 points on 11-for-18 shooting, including a blistering 7-for-8 mark from 3-point range, to go with 10 rebounds, three assists and just one turnover in 34 1/2 minutes of work. For what it's worth, three of those made triples came off LeBron assists, and two of Love's three dimes set up baskets by James, who finished with 22 points on 8-for-16 shooting, 10 rebounds, eight assists and a steal (albeit with six turnovers) in 30 minutes of floor time in the runaway 120-105 win.


"We wanted to keep going to him," James said after the game, according to Joe Vardon of the Northeast Ohio Media Group. "I drew up a few sets for him in timeout. He had the hot hand and I wanted to keep going to him."


"It's huge," Love said of LeBron looking his way, according to McMenamin. "Whether I'm running the floor and ducking in or he's calling a play for me to get it inside or out, he's one of the best in the league at setting guys up. So when I'm on the other end of that and it's a crisp pass coming from him, it's going to be a good look."


So, everything's cool, right?


After the game, James downplayed the post-Pacers tweet ... before playing it up again ... before later downplaying it again. This is confusing, so let's let Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal lay it out:


The use of “fit in” and “fit out,” plus the emphasis on both (all caps) seemed a bit too similar to be coincidental. Yet when he was asked about it while surrounded by the large media contingent, James denied he was aiming the tweet at any one specific person.

“It was more about people in general,” James said. “It was a general thought I had. Obviously whatever thought I have people try to encrypt it and Da Vinci code it and all that stuff. People are always trying to fit out instead of fit in and be part of something special. That’s what it’s all about.”

After the large pack of cameras and recorders dissipated, a few of the regular beat writers stuck around a few extra minutes. ESPN’s Dave McMenamin, who used the original “fit in/fit out” Love quote in an October story for ESPN, showed James the original quote. He smiled.

When we pressed him on it some more, James laughed and said, “It’s not a coincidence, man.”

I was shocked. McMenamin was shocked. No recorders were running, no cameras were live. It was just some guys standing around talking. The conversation continued for a few more minutes before James dressed and headed for the door. I stopped him just to be clear.

“When we’re standing around BSing like that, do you consider it on the record or off the record?” I asked. James responded: “Ain’t nothing off the record. I know everything that comes out of my mouth. If I say it, it’s on the record.” Then he pointed at McMenamin and walked out of the locker room.

OK, so LeBron was talking about Love in the "fit out/fit in" tweet, right? (Also, LeBron, people are most certainly not "always trying to fit out," because "fit out" is not a thing, even remotely.)


Well, no. At least, not according to what the four-time MVP tweeted Monday:




[winces, pinches bridge of nose, massages temples]


OK, so less than a week after suggesting his struggling power forward needs more confidence and emphasizing the importance of individual-for-team sacrifice to laughable degrees, LeBron denies subtweeting Love about being part of something special, then acknowledges that nothing he says or writes is coincidental, and then laughs off reports saying as much by the media members he directly spoke to about it? Um ... why? To what end?


If James is indeed so exacting and calculating in his decision-making and communication, then what's the point of all this? If, as both Lloyd and McMenamin suggest, there's nothing malicious behind James' comments, then what's the endgame here? Why take the time out during a hot stretch, and especially after arguably the struggling player's best game of the season, to fuel this particular fire?


Apparently, we aren't the only ones confused — Love's not too sure what's up with all this, either, according to Lloyd:


Love was the last one to speak after the game. I didn’t want to embarrass him or put him on the spot in front of everyone, so when the crowd dispersed I filled him in. He had no idea what I was talking about so I showed him James’ tweet and explained James’ “it’s not a coincidence” remark.

“I feel like I’ve done all the right things. I haven’t got upset or been down,” Love said. “There’s moments when I hope I would’ve played better but it’s a long, long season. I don’t know really what he’s talking about. I feel like I’ve sacrificed and I think everyone knows that. I’m not trying to downplay what he said, but I think I’ve done a pretty good job of trying to help this team.”

Well, evidently, "pretty good" isn't good enough. LeBron seems to be making it clear that anything less than total buy-in to his program — which seems to include not copping to it being hard to adjust to getting fewer touches and shots in places you're accustomed to getting them, something that Chris Bosh said this fall he believed would be a major hurdle for Love to leap in building Cleveland's new Big Three — is unacceptable, and that the time is now for all those who want to compete for championships to fall in line behind LeBron's leadership.


There's no doubting that James has infinitely more high-level experience than Love, Irving or anyone else on the Cleveland roster beyond former Miami running buddies Mike Miller and James Jones and victory-lapping wing Shawn Marion; LeBron's run his teams to five Finals trips, after all, while Love and Irving have yet to play a single postseason second. But in a season that's already seen LeBron decide to get passive and go into "chill mode," it's worth wondering whether his chosen method of leading in this particular instance — passive-aggressiveness followed by denial followed by admission followed by brushing it off — is the course of action most likely to build the sort of cohesion that seems to propel good teams to victory during the fighting-in-the-phone-booth seven-game slugfests that will stand between the Cavs and the O'Brien.


More NBA coverage:



- - - - - - -


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!



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1vehc2f