News sport : Brendan Gaughan to drive No. 62 starting at Atlanta

Brendan Gaughan will be the primary driver for the No. 62 Premium Motorsports car in 2015.


The team announced that Gaughan would take over as driver at Atlanta, the second race of the season. The No. 62 will be driven by Brian Scott in the Daytona 500. Both Scott and Gaughan drive for Richard Childress Racing in the Xfinity Series.


The No. 62 team was founded after buying the assets and points of the No. 36 from Tommy Baldwin Racing. TBR ran the No. 36, primarily with Reed Sorenson driving, as a teammate to the No. 7 car and Michael Annett in 2014. The No. 7 car will remain in 2015 and be driven by Alex Bowman, who came over from BK Racing. Annett will drive for HScott Motorsports in 2015.


Got all that? Good.


Premium, owned by Jay Robinson, a longtime owner in the Xfinity Series, will have two entries in the Daytona 500. Mike Wallace is attempting to qualify the No. 66 car.


Slugger Labbe, formerly Paul Menard's crew chief, will be Scott's crew chief in the Daytona 500. Gaughan's crew chief will be Zach McGowan.


Gaughan ran full-time in the Sprint Cup Series in 2004, when he drove the No. 77 car to four top 10 finishes and a 28th place finish in the points standings. Since then he has six starts in the Cup Series, all coming in 2010 or later. Last season, Gaughan won two races in the Xfinity Series and finished eighth in the points standings.


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







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News sport : Dwyane Wade won't play in the All-Star Game, opening a spot on the East roster

Dwyane Wade isn't giving the jersey back, NBA. Don't even think about it. (Steve Mitchell-USA TODAY Sports) Miami Heat shooting guard Dwyane Wade announced Tuesday that he will miss this weekend's 2015 NBA All-Star Game due to the pulled right hamstring that's kept him sidelined for the last two weeks.


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The 33-year-old Wade was voted to a reserve slot on the Eastern Conference All-Star team by NBA coaches late last month, marking the 11th All-Star berth of his illustrious career. But after missing Miami's last six games with the balky wheel — with absence No. 7 coming Wednesday, when the Heat renew acquaintances with LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers at Quicken Loans Arena — Wade decided it'd make more sense for him to wait to return to the court until after the All-Star break, affording him ample time to rest, rehabilitate and make an honest go of getting healthy enough to pair with Chris Bosh for a post-All-Star playoff push.


Miami sits at 22-29 after Monday's win over the New York Knicks, tied with the Charlotte Hornets for the seventh and eighth seeds in the East, a game up on the Brooklyn Nets and 2 1/2 games clear of the Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics. While the emergence of big man Hassan Whiteside has helped spark Erik Spoelstra's club, injuries and stagnant offense have made it difficult for the Heat to stay afloat amid the dregs of the lesser conference, and Wade knows he needs to be as healthy as possible for the stretch run, according to Tim Reynolds of the Associated Press:


"I felt like this was best," Wade said. "I wasn't going to play much either way. I think with the circumstances, I think the smartest thing to do is let someone else come in and really enjoy the All-Star experience. ... I think I owe it to the Heat fans to at least play in a Heat jersey first [rather] than go out there in the All-Star Game and play a couple minutes." [...]

"We're going to make to make sure we're playing our best basketball," Bosh said. "And hopefully this thing can come together." [...]

"It's going to be an interesting second half of the season for us, because we've got something to play for," Wade said. "We'll see how we respond."

With Wade bowing out of this weekend's festivities, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver must now make his third selection for an All-Star injury replacement, after tabbing DeMarcus Cousins to step in for Kobe Bryant and choosing Damian Lillard to take Blake Griffin's spot on the Western squad. His choice seems likely to come down to one of the following:


• Sharpshooter Kyle Korver, whose blistering 52.8 percent mark from 3-point land leads the NBA and helps open up so much opportunity for his teammates on the East-leading Atlanta Hawks;


• Brandon Knight, the leading scorer and assist man for the surprising 29-23 Milwaukee Bucks, and one of only 11 players averaging at least 17 points, five assists and four rebounds per game this season (the other 10 are all All-Stars);


• Kevin Love, who's got a better case than you might think despite all the static surrounding his spot with the Cleveland Cavaliers at the moment;


•Aand Orlando Magic center Nikola Vucevic, carrying the offensive load for a team in turmoil and joining All-Star Cousins as the only other player in the league averaging at least 19 points and 11 boards per night.


Which way Silver will lean remains unclear, but Wade knows who he'd pick if he had his druthers:



Wade wasn't the only veteran guard to share that opinion on Tuesday afternoon:



Silver could soon have another slot to fill. After aggravating the left knee on which he knows he'll need surgery during Monday's loss to the Heat, Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony said Tuesday that he was very sore, casting doubt as to whether he'll be able to suit up for the Knicks' Wednesday meeting with the Magic in Orlando or the All-Star Game itself:



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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!



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.






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News sport : What was the most shocking upset in NFL history? (Podcast)


Welcome to the latest Shutdown Corner podcast! On today's fists-flying episode, we have:


• A look back at the famed Buster Douglas upset of Mike Tyson, 25 years ago Tuesday (0:25 mark)


• What were the most shocking moments in NFL history, both on and off the field? (11:04 mark)


• Talk of gambling, both recreationally and professionally. You in? (20:04 mark)


• What would it take to get the NFL to sanction gambling? (27:27 mark)


All this and more as part of the Shutdown Corner Podcast. Listen via the player or via your preferred podcast downloader, and while you're listening ...


Subscribe via iTunes right here.


Non-iTunes subscription link here.


Leave us a nice review here.


The Shutdown Corner podcast is the product of Kevin Kaduk (@KevinKaduk), Frank Schwab (@YahooSchwab) and Jay Busbee (@JayBusbee). New episodes every week during the offseason, with bonus episodes when you least expect it. Enjoy!


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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Sundowns blitz sinks Swallows

Mamelodi Sundowns unleashed an avalanche of attack in the opening quarter on Moroka Swallows to cruise to a 4-1 at the Lucas Moripe Stadium.


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Pretoria – Defending Premiership champions Mamelodi Sundowns unleashed an avalanche of attack in the opening quarter on Moroka Swallows to cruise to a 4-1 at the Lucas Moripe Stadium on Tuesday evening.


Sundowns came out guns blazing in the first half in search of a positive start to the New Year after a lukewarm first-half of the season. The Brazilians had a blistering passage of play that yielded four goals.


They opened the scoring through a header in the box from captain Alje Schut in the 13th minute after an accurate free-kick delivered Teko Modise.


A minute later it was striker Cuthbert Malajila's turn to score after being the recipient of cross from Anthony Laffor on the edge of the box.


Malajila completed his brace In the 21st minute with an easy tap-in after a square pass from Siyanda Zwane.


Having played a key role in much of the goals, Modise grabbed a goal of his own when Swallows goalkeeper Greg Etafia misjudged the midfield maestro's free-kick that wobbled into the back of the net in the 24th minute.


With four goals to the good, Sundowns were in cruise-control and with Swallows yet to pose any threat to the defence.


The industrious Laffor nicked the ball from Swallows defender Luvhengo Mungomeni and drove a powerful shot over an unconvincing Etafia in the 40th minute.


With seconds to go before the end of the first-half Mzikayise Mashaba in attempting an acrobatic clearance in the box fouled Felix Obada.


Winger Luyolo Nomandela on-loan at Swallows, converted the penalty with aplomb against his parent club to make it 4-1 at the interval.


In the second half Sundowns showed a thirst for more goals with Modise looking for his brace with a curling shot outside the box in the 52nd minute.


The Dube Birds came to life in the second half after a disappointing first half.


Swallows midfielder Lantshene Phalane fed a through ball to running Nomandela on the right flank, but his cross found no recipient on the end of it as it eluded every header in the box.


Sundowns midfielder Bongani Zungu in the defensive midfield position thwarted a counter-attack from Obada with a well-timed tackle in a dangerous position.


The Soweto club launched another attack on the Sundowns defence but Schut held firm with a clearance inside the box.


Sundowns were able to hold on for their ninth victory of the season much thanks to a comprehensive showing in the opening half. – Sapa






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Tuks battle past Chippa United

The University of Pretoria claimed only their second home victory of the season, beating Chippa United 2-1 in a league clash.


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Pretoria – Atusaye Nyondo and Denver Mukamba netted either side of half-time as the University of Pretoria claimed only their second home victory of the season, beating Chippa United 2-1 in a league clash in Pretoria on Tuesday night.


Nyondo racked up his fifth Premiership goal of the season before Mukamba scored after half-time to hand Tuks three valuable points, taking them to eighth in the league standings after 18 games.


In their first game since the Premiership took a break in late December, both teams looked eager to get back into the swing of things, but it was Sammy Troughton's troops that came out on top, thanks to a composed performance from his strikers in particular, who looked hungry from the outset.


Taking charge of his first game since being hired in January, Ernst Middendorp had to watch on as his Chippa outfit fell to their eighth loss of the campaign, making a losing start to his tenure as Chilli Boys boss.


The hosts settled quicker and were in with the first of the early chances, with Mukamba trying his luck from distance twice in the space of six minutes.


Both, however, were straight at goalkeeper Mbongeni Mzimela.


Mzimela would have hoped for more of the same from the Tuks attackers, but with Geofrey Massa hitting the side-netting on 19


minutes and then threatening again soon after, it looked increasingly more unlikely that he would have a quiet night in goal.


His luck ran out 10 minutes before the break when a fierce long-range effort came flying in from Thabo Mosadi's thunderous left boot.


Mzimela parried the shot straight up into the air and struggled to get back to his feet, allowing Nyondo to swoop in and guide the ball over the line when it hardly needed a touch.


Tuks carried their lead into the half-time break and looked content to sit back and defend their advantage after the whistle for the second period.


Chippa, meanwhile, were hoping for better in front of goal, having managed just a single effort on goal in the entire first half, and a tame one at that.


An inspired half-time change from Middendorp saw Erick Chipeta come on for Siyabonga Zulu.


Chipeta, with his first touch of the ball, drew Chippa level after 53 minutes with a stunning header from Andile Mbenyane's free-kick.


Washington Arubi was beaten for pace and power as Chipeta scored his first ever goal for the Port Elizabeth outfit, giving Middendorp some welcome relief as he watched on nervously from the side.


But his joy was short-lived when, just four minutes later, Mukamba sent Tuks back in front with his first goal for the Pretoria team, where he is on loan from Wits.


Mukamba rounded-off expertly inside the box, clipping the inside of the post before the ball bulged Mzimela's net for a second time.


Middendorp made efforts late in the half to bolster his options in attack, but the former Bloemfontein Celtic tactician cut a frustrated figure on the side of the pitch, while his charges struggled to make any real impact in the dying minutes.


Mhlengi Cele somehow managed to bungle a shot with two minutes left on the clock, the ball refusing to go into the net after a goalmouth scramble with Arubi seemingly beaten and on the ground.


But that would be the last of the action as AmaTuks held on for dear life at the end, sealing the points in a game that only came to life in the dying embers.


For Tuks, a fifth game on the trot without defeat, which as eased the pressure after a poor start to the season which threatened to derail their entire season. – Sapa






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Van Gaal hits back at Allardyce

Riled Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal waved a sheaf of statistics at reporters to refute suggestions that his direct tactics were turning the team into “long ball United”.


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London - Riled Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal waved a sheaf of statistics at reporters on Tuesday to refute suggestions that his direct tactics were turning the team into “long ball United”.


West Ham United manager Sam Allardyce had spoken out about United's “thump it forward and see what happens” approach in grabbing a stoppage-time equaliser in a 1-1 draw at Upton Park on Sunday.


Although no stranger to the route one approach, Allardyce hit a nerve and stung the volatile Van Gaal into a spirited response ahead of Wednesday's home Premier League match against Burnley.


Producing four pages of evidence, he questioned Allardyce's reasoning and suggested reporters copy the sheets and “then maybe you can go to Big Sam and he will get a good interpretation.”


“We are playing ball possession play and after 70 minutes (at West Ham) we don't succeed in spite of many chances in the second half, then I changed my playing style,” the Dutchman said.


“And then, of course, with the quality of (Marouane) Fellaini, we played more forward balls. We scored, so I think it was a very good decision of the manager.


“But, when you see overall the long balls, and what is the percentage of that, then West Ham United have played 71 percent of the long balls to the forwards and we 49 (percent).”


Gangly midfielder Fellaini came on as a late substitute against West Ham, with the Belgium international playing a central role in winning the aerial battles and disrupting the defence.


Van Gaal had acknowledged at the time that the introduction of Fellaini had changed the team's style of play but said it was warranted in the circumstances.


“You have to see the data and you have to put the data in the right context,” he said on Tuesday.


“When you have 60 percent ball possession, do you think that you can do that with long balls? Yes, long balls, in the width, to switch the play. You have to look at the data and then you will see we did play long balls, but long balls wide, rather than to the striker.


“A ball to the forward striker is mainly called long-ball play. Because I expected this question, I have made an interpretation of the data for this game and then I have to say that it is not a good interpretation from Big Sam.” – Reuters






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Bumper TV rights deal for Premier League

Pay-TV group Sky has agreed to pay 4.2 billion pounds ($6.4 billion) to show 126 live English Premier League matches a season from 2016 to 2019.


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London - Pay-TV group Sky has agreed to pay 4.2 billion pounds ($6.4 billion) to show 126 live English Premier League matches a season from 2016 to 2019, smashing analysts' forecasts to beat fierce rival BT to the best games.


After one of the most high-profile broadcast auctions of recent times, the Premier League said that Sky had won five of the seven rights packages, including the most popular Sunday afternoon matches showing the likes of Manchester United and Arsenal.


With BT paying 960 million pounds to show 42 games a season, the two companies will shell out a combined 5.2 billion pounds over three years, well above the 4 billion pounds analysts had expected and a 68 percent rise on the current contract.


Premier League Chief Executive Richard Scudamore said he was surprised by how much the matches had fetched, but he noted that the game was the beneficiary of the two media giants using football to draw and retain customers on their platforms for TV and broadband internet.


“These are huge companies doing huge things in a market that has gone way beyond football,” Scudamore told a press conference.


Sky, which is 39 percent-owned by Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox, has built its business around offering exclusive programming such as premium sports and drama to customers who it seeks to tie in to combined telephony and broadband packages.


But it has faced a far greater challenge in recent years, since the deep-pocketed BT copied its business model by buying up broadcast rights to attract customers to its new superfast broadband platform.


The 169-year-old telecoms company had already ramped up the pressure on Sky by winning the right to show all the live European Champions League matches for three years from the 2015/16 season, forcing Sky to up its game in the English auction to retain its position as a leading sports broadcaster.


Scudamore said the League had received a broad interest in its rights but would not say who else had bid to show the games, which feature world-class players such as Diego Costa, Robin van Persie and Alexis Sanchez.


After three days of bidding, Sky won the right to show matches on Sunday afternoons and early Saturday games, while BT will show Saturday evening matches.


“We went into the Premier League auction with a clear objective and are pleased to have secured the rights that we wanted,” Sky Chief Executive Jeremy Darroch said in a statement.


“Our strong performance across the board gives us financial strength and flexibility. We have a clear plan to absorb the cost of the new Premier League deal while delivering our financial plans.” – Reuters






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News sport : Steve Mason sidelined 2-3 weeks with lower-body injury

The Philadelphia Flyers’ playoff hopes were already on thin ice. Sitting nine points behind the Boston Bruins for the final Eastern Conference wild card spot, destiny is not in their control.


On Sunday, those barely existent hopes took a blow when goaltender Steve Mason injured himself during a TV timeout. The prognosis? According to general manager Ron Hextall, he’ll be out 2-3 weeks with a “lower-body injury.”


Here’s how it happened:



It’s another tough break for Mason, who's now been injured three times in the last month and a half. He’s played well this season, given the defense in front of him. Currently, he's third in the NHL in even strength save percentage (.938) among goaltenders with at least 25 starts.


It’s now Ray Emery’s net for the time being and the Flyers have called up 2012 second-round pick Anthony Stolarz to backup.


Given the Flyers' position in the standings and Mason's value and injury history this season, shouldn't they just shut him down for the year?


From The 700 Level:


This isn’t the same situation when the Flyers last knew they probably weren’t going to make the playoffs back in 2013. Then, they played Mason, who had recently been acquired from the Columbus Blue Jackets, a ton down the stretch over Ilya Bryzgalov because they needed to see what they had in a guy who just received his desperately needed change of scenery.

They know what they have in Mason this time around. They have a bona fide No.1 goalie they can’t risk having more damage done to before next season when a fresh slate is on the table and a new journey toward the Stanley Cup Playoffs begins.

It's a good thought. And knowing the Flyers' history with goaltenders, maybe let Mason get a few extra months in the healing process. The goalie graveyard in Philadelphia is already quite full.


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News sport : Michigan LB Desmond Morgan says he's approved for fifth year

It appears that Michigan’s Desmond Morgan will be able to return for a fifth year.


Morgan, who missed the final 11 games of the 2014 season due to an arm injury, announced on social media that he’s been granted a medical redshirt that will allow of him to suit up for the Wolverines in 2015.




The 6-foot-1, 232-pound Morgan played in the team’s opener against Appalachian State and made six tackles, but did not see the field for the rest of the season. Morgan’s absence was a big loss, especially after he started a combined 31 games in his first three seasons with the program.

In those three seasons, Morgan registered a combined 223 tackles, 14 tackles for loss and 2.5 sacks.


Junior Joe Bolden stepped up with Morgan out and was second on the team with 102 tackles. With Morgan back in the mix, the Wolverines have some solid depth at linebacker for new defensive coordinator D.J. Durkin to work with.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.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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News sport : Everyone's making fun of James Dolan, and fans want him to sell the Knicks

Madison Square Garden chairman James Dolan sits, sinks and sulks. (Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports) Say, you know how but New York Knicks owner James Dolan decided to respond to a lifelong Knicks fan's angry email decrying the depressing state of his favorite team by referring to said fan as a (probably) miserable (probable) alcoholic, and to tell said fan to go root for the Brooklyn Nets "because the Knicks don't want you?" Well, you're not going to believe this, but lots of people didn't like it.


Yeah, as it turns out, while NBA Commissioner Adam Silver apparently thinks it's no big deal for an NBA owner to tell a justifiably aggrieved customer that he doesn't want his business and also that his family hates him, a great many other people seem to believe it was an unreasonably mean and stupid thing to do, another in a long line of weird, small and tone-deaf moves from one of the most reviled and least respected owners in professional sports. Shocking, right?


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Silver told Tim Bontemps of the New York Post on Monday that Dolan would receive no reprimand from the league office for his reply to 73-year-old Irving Bierman's email, calling Dolan "a consummate New Yorker" who simply responded to "an unkind email" with one of his own. (Yeah, you know us New Yorkers, always calling one another miserable alcoholics as we say, "Hey, I'm walkin' here!") There are those who disagree, and think Silver should have punished Dolan "for general stupidity," although Silver's predecessor isn't one of them; nor, for that matter, is Bierman, according to Jason Gay of the Wall Street Journal.


The commish struck a similar "much ado about nothing" tone during a visit to the Ed Sullivan Theater for Monday's episode of "The Late Show with David Letterman."





While Silver was on CBS, lauding Dolan's passion despite Letterman's pleas to fix the Knicks — which must have been tough for the Indiana native and longtime Pacers fan to make — Keith Olbermann was on ESPN, hammering "Little Jimmy Dolan" for his colossal mishandling of what should have been a pretty simple matter:



While commentators and pundits took their opportunities to use Dolan and the moribund Knicks for batting practice, Bierman — "a tough old Brooklyn guy," as his son Aaron puts it — offered a simple suggestion for how the owner should proceed.


“What he should do is sell the Knicks,” Bierman told Gay, “and buy a Little League team in Long Island.”


Well, funny you should mention selling, Mr. Bierman. You're not the only one thinking along those lines.


From the New York Jets fans who brought you the "Fire John Idzik" billboard and website comes — you guessed it! — Knicks4Sale.com, a site calling for Dolan to put the club on the block and walk away. From Mike Mazzeo of ESPN New York:


"[The email] was the 'Idzik news conference moment.' That's what we called it — when we decided that management and ownership had gone too far and it was time for the fans to do something," Jason Koeppel, a self-described die-hard fan of the Jets and Knicks from Teaneck, N.J., told ESPNNewYork.com via phone Monday night.

"This email that he had the nerve to send to one of his fans was the moment. We talked last night — the four of us — and just said, you know what, we've had enough and we've gotta do something."

"I've been a Knick fan my whole life, and the past 15 years — except for that one season where we won one playoff series — have just been a nightmare," Koeppel continued. "We've been patient, and the cost of going to games has just skyrocketed to the point of being completely out of control, so we don't attend as many games anymore, but we definitely watch on TV, and it's just one terrible season after the other.

"We're sick of having Dolan around. We're sick of his meddling. He's an embarrassment. And it's embarrassing to us to read the email that he sent to a fan, so we just felt like it was time to embarrass him."

Koeppel and company hope to do that by raising $20,000 to put toward a billboard on W. 30th Street and 7th Avenue — a two-minute walk from Madison Square Garden — that tells Dolan just how much fans would like him to disappear completely. That they've already received more than $1,000 in commitments shows just how disgruntled Knicks fans are with Dolan's leadership.


And yet, as was the case with the last fan-led movement aimed at embarrassing Dolan into taking ameliorative action in the midst of a miserable season — last March's Knicks Fan 4 Life Rally, a protest outside MSG that fell flat because it came two weeks after Dolan had hired Phil Jackson to run the show and promised to stop meddling (which, in fairness to Dolan, he's mostly seemed to since, even as Jackson's early returns have been dismal) — it doesn't seem especially likely to amount to very much.


Dolan's has absolutely no reason to sell a franchise valued at $2.5 billion — an estimate that may well be on the low side of things — for anything less than a double-Ballmer, especially considering, as Robert Silverman details for The Guardian, Dolan's other interests continue to print money, too:


Even after 15 years putting forth a howling dumpster fire of a team, they’ve been a massive financial success. Yes, Knicks fans have shown themselves to be endlessly loyal and patient, but the bulging bottom line isn’t a result of those that shell out an average of $129.38 per ticket, the highest in the league, and consistently sell out Madison Square Garden.

The real cash cow is Dolan’s in-house cable TV channel. Granted, with the current revenue-sharing plan, it’s exceedingly difficult for an NBA team to lose money to begin with, but their ownership of the MSG Network takes it to another level.

In the second quarter of FY2015, the majority of their operating income came from what the company called in their SEC filings “MSG Media”, that is “the Company’s regional sports networks, MSG Network and MSG+, collectively the ‘MSG Networks’.” There is revenue at stake in what they categorize as “MSG Sports,” but the media arm is so much more important.

Why? Because MSG is included in every basic cable package, which means that the millions of New Yorkers who couldn’t care less about the team are still fattening Dolan’s wallet every time they pay their cable bill. The Knicks can be awful and it doesn’t matter; they even have locked in, long-term agreements with Cablevision (owned by Dolan’s father) and Time Warner, such that a precipitous decline in ratings won’t really matter. The Knicks literally can’t lose ... financially.

The corporate money flowing into MSG on a nightly basis despite New York's miserable season, the regional cable network revenue filling Dolan's coffers, the laugh-it-off protection from the league office as yet another example of the Knicks "not being a model of intelligent management" ... it all congeals to create a toxic environment in which the Knicks continue to be awful, Dolan continues to behave awfully, and fans feel like their only recourse is to go out of their way to try to embarrass a billionaire son of a pioneering millionaire who was born on third and has never stopped believing he tripled.


Websites and billboards and commentaries and comedy are just about the only things anyone can lob Dolan's way, at this point. But let's be honest: if James Dolan isn't embarrassed about anything he's done with the Knicks thus far, how likely is it that he'll start getting embarrassed now?


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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 : Goodwill shopper unwittingly buys $20,000 Vince Lombardi jacket

Vince Lombardi Check your closet, friend ... if you've ever shopped at Goodwill, you might just have a famous artifact of clothing hanging there.


Sean McAvoy of Knoxville, Tenn. was shopping in an Asheville, N.C. Goodwill store when he came across a tattered old West Point jacket. He bought it for 58 cents, intending to sell it at his own vintage clothing store.


But McAvoy happened to be watching a documentary on the legendary coach Vince Lombardi, the man for whom the Super Bowl winners' trophy is named, and noticed that Lombardi was sporting a jacket just like the one he'd bought. His wife checked the jacket, and lo and behold, there was a nametag that read "Lombardi" within.


The jacket came from Lombardi's time at West Point, his final coaching stop before jumping to the NFL. As the auction listing notes: "Serving as assistant to veteran head coach Earl 'Colonel Red' Blaik, Lombardi inherited his mentor's focus on repetition and execution that formed the basis for the iconic leader's personal mantra: 'Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.'"


McAvoy first contacted the NFL Hall of Fame, which wanted him to donate the sweater. McAvoy decided to go the more profitable route, contacting Heritage Auctions in Dallas. An appraiser authenticated the sweater and set its value at $20,000, with an auction set to take place this weekend. You can view the bidding right here; if you're going to get in on the action, better save those pennies.


Bargain shoppers in New Jersey take note: Rex Ryan recently dumped off a load of no-longer-necessary Jets sweaters at a local Goodwill. You never know what else might be out there.


____

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News sport : Two H.S. basketball seasons cancelled due to brawl

The Indiana High School Athletic Association has cancelled the remainder of the boys' basketball seasons for two high schools that were involved in a massive brawl during a game on Saturday. The IHSAA released a statement explaining the decision on Tuesday.


The fight broke out in the first quarter of the game between Hammond and Griffith, when a Griffith player was fouled as he went up for a dunk. The foul sent him flying into the wall, head first. He collapsed and teammates and opponents at first rushed over to see if he was alright. Within seconds, they started shoving each other, and the benches cleared.



After meeting Tuesday, the IHSAA issued sanctions varying from sportsmanship education for the athletes to a post-season ban and a year-long probation for both teams.


Saturday's game has been ruled a double forfeit. All remaining regular season games are cancelled, at all levels, and both schools will have to pay a $500 fine for each away game left on its schedule – three for Griffith, two for Hammond.


Both teams are suspended from the state tournament. Hammond will still serve as the neutral site for a state sectional game, as scheduled, but will not collect any profits for doing so.


The coaches from each school will have to go to complete a course on proper teaching and modeling behavior, while the student athletes have to take courses on sportsmanship.


The brawl also results in a season-long probation next year.


Further penalties could result, as the police are currently reviewing tapes to attempt to identify any adults that joined the melee.


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News sport : Report: Boston College promotes Todd Fitch to OC, hires Brian White as WRs coach

Dec 27, 2014; Bronx, NY, USA; Boston College Eagles head coach Steve Addazio looks on against the Penn State Nittany Lions during the 2014 Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium. Penn State won 31-30 in overtime. (Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports) A few weeks after offensive coordinator Ryan Day left Boston College to join the staff of the Philadelphia Eagles, BC head coach Steve Addazio is reportedly promoting from within to fill the vacancy.


According to Sports Illustrated, wide receivers coach Todd Fitch has been promoted to offensive coordinator for the Eagles. Additionally, Addazio is bringing in former Florida assistant Brian White to coach the team’s wide receivers.


The 49-year-old Fitch arrived at Boston College with Addazio in 2013 and was the team’s passing game coordinator for the past two seasons. He has served as an offensive coordinator three other times in his career – at South Florida from 2010-12, at East Carolina in 2009 and 2010 and at UConn from 1996-98.


Additionally, Fitch had stints as an offensive assistant at Iowa State, South Carolina, Colorado State, Bowling Green and West Virginia in his nearly 20-year coaching career.


White joins Boston College’s staff after five seasons at Florida, where he coached tight ends (2009-10) and running backs (2011-13). Before his time at Florida, White had an eight-season run as Wisconsin’s offensive coordinator from 1999-2006. He also coached at Washington, Syracuse (offensive coordinator), UNLV, Nevada, Notre Dame and Fordham.


The Eagles finished 7-6 (4-4 ACC) in each of Addazio’s first two seasons with the program.


For more Boston College news, visit EagleAction.com.


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Mourinho lashes out at FA over RVP

Jose Mourinho, the Chelsea manager, has accused the Football Association of double standards having not taken action against Robin van Persie for an elbow on James Tomkins.


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Jose Mourinho, the Chelsea manager, has accused the Football Association of double standards having not taken action against Robin van Persie for an elbow on James Tomkins.


The Blues boss remains without main striker Diego Costa for the final game of his three-match suspension against Everton on Wednesday.


Costa was banned for stamping on Liverpool's Emre Can and has questioned why other players do not get the same treatment as his talisman.


Mourinho, who did not mention van Persie by name, raised the inconsistency of the governing body's decision on Tuesday after the Manchester United forward did not receive a violent conduct charge for what West Ham defender Tomkins described as a 'malicious' act.


Referee Mark Clattenburg awarded a free-kick at Upton Park but failed to dish out any further disciplinary action for the elbow to Tomkins' face in the 1-1 draw on Sunday.


Mourinho also highlighted other incidents including Manchester City's Yaya Toure against Norwich last season as well as his own player, Ramires, who was banned retrospectively for four games after an elbow on Sunderland's Sebastian Larsson.


Mourinho, who made an elbow gesture while he emphasised his point, said: “I need a little bit more time to forget why my player was suspended, to understand why some people are punished and others aren't.


“I need a little bit more time to process that. I was with lots of attention this weekend.


“The same people (the FA) who suspended my player didn't want to suspend a player this weekend, and a player could have been suspended this weekend and he wasn't.


“I'm still processing that information.


“Somebody who did this (makes the elbow gesture) in the face of somebody, and nothing happened. I know that if it was one of mine...


“Last season, the same thing happened when Ramires was suspended and a Man City player (Toure) kicked a player at Norwich who was on the floor and nothing happened. I'm used to it.”


Mourinho also refused to comment on the news that Leicester manager Nigel Pearson escaped punishment for his touchline scuffle with Crystal Palace's James McArthur where he grabbed the Scotsman by the throat.


Mourinho added: “I have only thoughts about myself, not about Nigel.”


Asked if he had done the same thing, he said: “No comment. You know...”


Chelsea lie seven points clear of Manchester City at the top of the table, but Mourinho is not getting carried away.


Mourinho said: “We are (in the driving seat). But seven points with 14 matches to go... if it was 14 points with seven matches to go, you are almost, almost, almost there.


“But seven points with 14 matches to go, there is a lot to play for. I'm just confident we can win tomorrow.


“We will go game after game, not think too far ahead. We will think about tomorrow, try and be good tomorrow, play well and try to win at home in front of our supporters. Hoping for a good reception after a good result.”


Mourinho said he did not believe former Chelsea striker Romelu Lukaku had a point to prove on his return to Stamford Bridge.


“No. I think he proves every weekend that he's a good player. Nobody has doubts at Chelsea that he's a good player. He has nothing to prove to us. We know he's a good player.


“We know (Andre) Schurrle is a good player. (Kevin) De Bruyne is a good player. (Juan) Mata is a good player. But that's football, that's life, that's the market. The players' wishes sometimes to be in clubs where they become clearly the first options... that's football, that's life.” – AFP






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What is Van Gaal doing to United?

Some statistics can be misleading, such as the one that says Manchester United have lost only once in their last 17 matches. To the casual football watcher, it’s a run of results that should hint at progress.


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Some statistics can be misleading, such as the one that says Manchester United have lost only once in their last 17 matches. To the casual football watcher, it’s a run of results that should hint at progress.


So, too, should their position in the Barclays Premier League. United are fourth, only five points behind champions Manchester City.


But things are not always as they seem and anybody who has paid any attention to United’s play this season will know that any progress under Louis van Gaal has been hewn from organisation and sheer stubbornness rather than the progressive, fluent football for which the club have always claimed to be known.


Last Friday — two days before the ill-deserved point taken from a game at West Ham on Sunday — Van Gaal poignantly referenced the spirit of Munich.‘We look for flair and pace and passion to play the game the United way,’ said Van Gaal, borrowing a line from a poem written to commemorate the 1958 disaster.


Suffice to say that after another stilted United performance at Upton Park, that search goes on.One qualified observer described Sunday’s United display as ‘joyless’. It seemed appropriate.


More worrying for Van Gaal, though, is the fact that the coterie of ex-players and United legends still close to matters at Old Trafford are beginning to whisper their concerns, too.


This is one of the things about United. It is similar to Liverpool in that once you have played there you never quite let go. Once a red, always a red. As such, those with their ear to the ground are worth listening to and the consensus is that Van Gaal’s team simply cannot continue to play like this if they wish to be afforded the patience and understanding the coach has admitted the team still need.


‘They are just so boring to watch,’ said one former player last week. That is a generalisation but occasionally it is hard to disagree.The saving graces for United right now are clear but their hold on them is not. The fact United are in the Champions League places and ahead of Liverpool is important.


They are fortunate to be fourth with the points tally that they have but, nevertheless, they do remain on course for achieving the principal objective given Van Gaal when he joined the club in the summer.Whether they continue to play this way and remain in the top four remains to be seen.


Comparisons have already been made with Van Gaal’s predecessor David Moyes but the up-to-date numbers are worth revealing — and they do not reflect well on this United team.


After 24 league games of a season that was ended by his dismissal last April, Moyes had taken four points fewer than Van Gaal. He had, however, won the same number of games — 12 — and his team had managed more shots on goal, on and off target, and forced more corners.This points to flaws in Van Gaal’s use of his players.


Moyes’s team were hardly heralded as one welded fast to United’s best traditions yet it would appear that they spent more time threatening the opposition goal than the team we are watching this time round.


On social media on Sunday Van Gaal’s United were being criticised heavily by their own supporters. Chief among the concerns were the manager’s continued belief in a three-man defence — though that seems to be wavering — his use of captain Wayne Rooney in midfield, the refusal to use Ander Herrera at all and the relatively lethargic recent performances of record signing Angel di Maria.


All of these would appear to be part of the problem. United have no real pace, so do not counter-attack consistently well, something that has always been part of the DNA at Old Trafford.


Equally, United do not keep possession for long spells in the right areas, and so fail to build pressure as well as they might.‘It’s not a question of playing with wingers or without or with three defenders or four defenders, it’s about the playing style,’ said Van Gaal on Friday. ‘Certainly, at the moment we could have done better in terms of ball possession.’


Criticism of United’s use of Marouane Fellaini as a target man for long passes late on Sunday seems unfair. It worked, and was also a tactic Van Gaal used successfully to turn round Holland’s World Cup last-16 game against Mexico in Fortaleza last summer.


Comparisons with his Dutch team are interesting, though. They were a pragmatic bunch, too. After the exhilaration of an opening victory against Spain in Brazil, Holland’s football was short on flair but that squad did not have the attacking talent that this United side possess and it is tempting to wonder what Ryan Giggs makes of it all.


Under Moyes, he grew exasperated at what he saw as a refusal to play on the front foot. Moyes’s perceived failure to use wide players well also frustrated the most famous winger Old Trafford has ever seen, yet Giggs is now assistant to a man who in certain areas again views the game differently.One of Giggs’s prime roles is to talk United’s players — and Van Gaal — through the strengths and weaknesses of the next opposition. Tomorrow the opponents are Burnley and during his preparation, Van Gaal’s assistant will have noticed one thing: Burnley are the only Premier League side to have played more long passes than United this season. – Daily Mail






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