News sport : NCAA Football Rules Committee to explore technology use, other rule changes

(Photo by G Fiume/Maryland Terrapins/Getty Images) The NCAA Football Rules Committee will look into a number of new rule proposals heading into the 2015 season.


According to a release from the NCAA, many of the potential changes look at the utilization of various technologies and how the technology would impact the game. Those technologies could include the use of tablets and computers by coaches, allowing players to wear helmets with cameras and “permitting wireless communication” from a coach to a player.


Currently, teams, other than medical personnel, are not permitted to use tablets “in the team bench area or coaching booths.”


A subcommittee has been formed to look into these ideas and will gather data before making any decisions about implementing these various forms of technology.


“The committee wants to incorporate the modern forms of technology and innovation that will advance the quality of instruction for the game,” said Troy Calhoun, head coach at the U.S. Air Force Academy and chair of the committee. “We would like to encourage some controlled experimentation to further our broader discussion within our membership.”


While those potential changes are subject to further discussion, the Rules Committee supports the following rule proposals:




  • Allowing an eight-person officiating system to be utilized. A center judge was used experimentally in several conferences during the past two seasons. The benefits of having the extra official included getting the ball spotted more efficiently and detecting holding and hands-to-the-face penalties.



  • The ineligible downfield rule was adjusted from three yards to one yard past the line of scrimmage. To be legal, a lineman who is more than one yard past the line of scrimmage must be engaged with a defensive player when a pass is released.



  • A 15-yard unsportsmanlike foul will be called on players who push or pull opponents off piles – for example, following fumbles.



  • If a helmet comes off a defensive player in the final minute of a half, there will be a 10-second runoff of the game clock and the play clock will be set at 40 seconds. Previously, the play clock was set to 25 seconds.



  • Officials will return to giving teams an initial sideline warning when their personnel move out of the designated team bench area.



  • Officials are to treat illegal equipment issues – such as jerseys tucked under the shoulder pads and writing on eye black – by making the player leave the field for one play. The player may remain in the game if his team takes a timeout to correct the equipment.



  • Allow instant replay review to see if a kicking team player blocked the receiving team before the ball goes 10 yards on onside-kick plays.



  • Teams must be provided at least 22 minutes prior to kickoff for pregame warm-ups. Teams may mutually agree to shorten this time period.



  • The calling of team timeouts by the head coach will be instant-replay reviewable at any time.



  • If the play clock runs to 25 seconds before the ball is ready for play, officials will reset the clock to 40 seconds. Previously, the play clock would be reset when it reached 20 seconds.



  • Based on research findings of the National Football League, non-standard/overbuilt facemasks will be prohibited.



  • The committee also discussed length-of-game issues in the sport, meeting with television partners in an effort to find ways to reduce dead time in the game. In the 2014 season, the average game in Football Bowl Subdivision was three hours and 19 minutes.



The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel will vote on these rule proposals via conference call on March 5.


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News sport : Browns owner says team didn't know about Johnny Manziel's personal life


Jimmy Haslam must not have access to the Internet.


That's really the only way to explain how the Cleveland Browns' owner could have not known about Johnny Manziel's off-field red flags when the team drafted him in the first round last year. Here's what Haslam said about Manziel during a press conference on Wednesday:



"I don't know how much of Johnny's personal life was known by everybody then," Haslam said, according ot the Akron Beacon-Journal.



Come on.


There's two ways to view that quote: Either Haslam is lying or the Browns are the worst organization in sports. For the sake of Cleveland fans, don't answer that.


Manziel's penchant for going out was a massive story when he was at Texas A&M and leading up to the draft as well. Here's a passage from ESPN.com's Wright Thompson's story on Manziel, from July 30, 2013. This was written by Thompson nine months before the Browns drafted Manziel, with references to Manziel's father Paul and Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin:



"Paul thinks Johnny drinks to deal with the stress. After his arrest, Johnny's parents and Sumlin mandated he visit an alcohol counselor; Johnny saw him six or seven weeks during the season."



Dr. Saturday wrote extensively about Manziel's life in the spotlight. Everyone did. The extent of Manziel's issues that caused him to check into a treatment facility might not have been clear, but if Haslam and the Browns' front office didn't know anything about Manziel's off-field life, they were the only ones in the football world who were unaware.


But that's practically inconsequential going forward. The Browns invested a first-round pick into Manziel just a year ago and want to make it work. And Haslam said he thinks it can work.



"It's way too early to give up on Johnny," Haslam said, according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer . "We certainly haven't given up on him. Everybody's been too harsh."



Haslam said he didn't know when Manziel would return to the team, but he supported his decision to go to rehab.


It would be enormous for the Browns franchise if Manziel can become a franchise quarterback. And the Browns franchise could use some good news.


The Browns have a lot of issues but one of the most pressing ones is the NFL investigation into Browns general manager Ray Farmer sending texts to the sideline during games. The messages were relayed to the coaches on the sideline, and that's not allowed by the NFL. The punishment could be as harsh as the loss of a draft pick.



"He said he feels he made a mistake in sending those texts," Haslam said, via the Plain Dealer. "But it does not affect his standing with the club. I don't think Ray intended to gain an unfair advantage."



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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 : Report: Rutgers to hire business consultant, program booster as recruiting coordinator

Rutgers football head coach Kyle Flood answers a question about the Scarlet Knights' recruiting class on national signing day, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015, in Piscataway, N.J. (AP Photo/Mel Evans) Well this is an interesting approach.


According to NJ.com’s Keith Sargeant, Rutgers head coach Kyle Flood “is on the verge” of hiring a business consultant with no football experience to be the Scarlet Knights’ recruiting coordinator.


The reported hire, Jeff Towers, is a “financial supporter of the football program” (AKA a booster) who described himself on LinkedIn as an “executive with 30 years of experience leading robust marketing, communications and fundraising programs in some of the largest nonprofit organizations in America.”


How does this qualify Towers to oversee recruiting for a Big Ten football program? I have no idea.


Here’s a bit more about Towers, per NJ.com:



Towers doesn't appear to have any football experience but, according to LinkedIn, he is said to have managed "his own consulting agency assisting nonprofit organizations in strategic planning, board development, marketing, communications and fundraising.'' The profile says he is principal of a New York nonprofit firm called Jeffrey Towers & Associates, which doesn't have a known website, and lists his previous employers as the American Red Cross, UNICEF and Public Interest Data, Inc.



In addition to Flood’s anticipated hire of Towers, University of Illinois director of player personnel Marcus Berry and volunteer assistant E.J. Barthel are also expected to join the football program, per Sargeant.


Before Berry’s lone season at Illinois, he spent four seasons at North Carolina in the same role.


Though he could not confirm the three hires, Flood did concede to NJ.com that “Towers, Berry and Barthel were among the candidates who interviewed for the positions.”


“Nothing will happen this week,” Flood said. “I have people I’m talking to, I have interviews I’m doing. We have a process that we’re going through.”


The position of recruiting coordinator opened recently as a result of the staff changes that followed offensive coordinator Ralph Friedgen’s decision to step down. The program’s former recruiting coordinator, Phil Galiano, was promoted to special teams coordinator and tight ends coach on Tuesday.


According to Rivals.com, Rutgers’ 2015 recruiting class finished 53rd in the nation and 11th out of 14 teams in the Big Ten.


For more Rutgers news, visit ScarletNation.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 : Louisiana-Lafayette defensive coordinator leaves for New Orleans Saints

The exodus of college defensive coaches to the NFL is continuing.


Louisiana-Lafayette announced Wednesday that defensive coordinator James Willis would be leaving the team to be an assistant coach with the New Orleans Saints. Willis has been with the team the past two seasons.


"I'm excited for James and his opportunity," Hudspeth said. "Obviously, as a player in the National Football League, he has to be excited to have the opportunity to go back and coach at the highest level. We appreciate the work that James did here at UL and wish him and his family the best in the future."


Willis will be a defensive assistant and help coach linebackers for the Saints.


ULL was No. 72 in the nation in 2014 in total defense. The Ragin' Cajuns gave up 26 points per game, which was 57th in the country.


Willis is a former NFL linebacker and played collegiately at Auburn. Louisiana-Lafayette has finished the past two seasons at 9-4 and has won the New Orleans Bowl in each.


On Tuesday, Oklahoma defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery joined the Green Bay Packers. Previously, Florida assistant Terrell Williams left for the Miami Dolphins and UCLA defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich is joining the Atlanta Falcons.


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Villa sack Lambert

Aston Villa have sacked manager Paul Lambert after the free-falling midlands club dropped into the relegation zone, the Premier League club said.


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London - Aston Villa have sacked manager Paul Lambert after the free-falling midlands club dropped into the relegation zone, the Premier League club said on Wednesday.


The final straw for the beleaguered boss was a 2-0 defeat at Hull City on Tuesday which left them third-bottom of the table, putting their unbroken stay in the Premier League in peril.


Villa's seventh loss in 10 games, a run in which they have collected three points and scored only two goals, prompted fans to unfurl a banner calling for Lambert to be sacked.


“Aston Villa Football Club has parted company this evening with manager Paul Lambert,” the club said in a statement.


“First-team coach Scott Marshall and goalkeeping coach Andy Marshall will continue to prepare the squad for Sunday's FA Cup tie with Leicester City at Villa Park.


“The club would also like to place on record its thanks to Paul and take this opportunity to wish him every success in the future.


“The club will announce a new manager in due course.”


Since back-to back wins against Crystal Palace and Leicester City at the start of December, confidence has drained away at Villa Park and the goals have dried up.


Villa's tally of 12 goals is the lowest, by far, of any side in the top four divisions of English soccer. – Reuters






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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring Kobe, Dirk and all good things coming to an end

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: The Classical. Andrew Tobolowsky on hating Kobe Bryant, loving Dirk Nowitzki how aging turns down the volume on our anger and the "time at the end of things when our enemies are at last as harmless as our friends."


PF: Daily Thunder. Royce Young considers how Steven Adams' broken right hand, which is expected to keep him out at least three weeks, might impact the Oklahoma City Thunder's lineup and rotations, Sam Presti's trade-deadline plans and the team's hopes of snagging a Western Conference playoff spot.


SF: SLAM. A fun read from Yaron Weitzman on what Marc Gasol has changed to become a fringe-MVP candidate for the bruising and deeper-than-ever Memphis Grizzlies, although Big Spain insists that things aren't really that different: "I’m really surprised that everyone is surprised at how well I’m playing."


SG: BBallBreakdown. A bit late on this, but I dug Jesse Blanchard's look at how Kawhi Leonard's increasing offensive role, while almost certainly a positive development for the San Antonio Spurs in the long run, has meant Gregg Popovich's club looks a bit more hamstrung and a bit less dynamic in defending its title than it did in winning it.


PG: The Triangle. Zach Lowe on a wave of young big men developing into intriguing pieces worth monitoring.


6th: SB Nation and Sports Illustrated. Paul Flannery comes to us from New Orleans, where he looks at Anthony Davis' rise to the MVP conversation through the eyes of his Pelicans teammates and coaches ("It’s like 'NBA 2K' and you just created the best player"). Rob Mahoney digs deep into the All-Star big man's development on both ends of the floor, looking at the hard and meticulous work the former No. 1 ovrall pick has done to become one of the game's most dominant and ascendant two-way players.


7th: The Brooklyn Game. Devin Kharpertian takes a fun look at the Brooklyn Nets' tendency toward firing floaters, with Jarrett Jack, Joe Johnson and Brook Lopez discussing how they developed the shot, why they use it and how they do so effectively against NBA defenders.


8th: ESPN.com. A really good read from Mike Wise on John Wall, who might not be quite on hometown hero Kevin Durant's level of megawatt stardom, but might just be exactly the right kind of leader to get the Washington Wizards where they want to go, and to get D.C. behind them, pushing them forward.


9th: The Triangle. Charles P. Pierce on catching consecutive games against Western monsters with the Atlanta Hawks, who "have played so well this season that they bring the future with them now everywhere they go".


10th: Rolling Stone. Good stuff from Michael Pina on Paul Millsap, who went from perennially underrated power forward in Utah to nightly matchup nightmare in Atlanta, and who now "has no major weaknesses, only good skills he's trying to make great."


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Pirates scrape past struggling Amazulu

Orlando Pirates broke AmaZulu hearts as they snatched a come-from-behind 2-1Premiership win at the Moses Mabhida Stadium.


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Durban – A 90th minute strike from Kermit Erasmus helped Orlando Pirates break AmaZulu hearts as they snatched a come-from-behind 2-1Premiership win at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban on Wednesday.


New Usuthu signing Mbulelo Mabizela had given basement club Usuthu the lead when he headed them ahead after 66 minutes.


But the home sides' joy was short-lived as Lehlohonolo Majoro levelled three minutes later, before the Buccaneers frontman teed up strike partner Erasmus to thump in the winner in the final minute of play.


The result helped the Buccaneers consolidate their fourth position on the table, while AmaZulu stayed rooted to the foot of the table, nine points behind second-bottom Platinum Stars.


Steve Barker handed debuts to goalkeeper Energy Murambadoro, defender Mabizela and striker Bongi Ntuli, but it was the same old story as the Durbanites struggled to assert themselves in front of the just over 10,000 fans in attendance.


The first-half as a midfield battle that saw little in terms of goalmouth action, apart from headed chances at either end. Both produced the same result too as Lennox Bacela first headed over an early corner from Oupa Manyisa.


At the other end, Marc van Heerden's delivery from a corner kick was also planted over, this time by Bongani Ndulula.


It was goalless at the break and after the restart there was a first real save for either goalkeeper when Bornwell Mwape's powerful shot from inside the area forced Brighton Mhlongo to make a sharp reaction save.


Usuthu then went in front just after the hour when his powerful header from a Van Heerden free-kick gave Mhlongo no chance.


But the lead was cancelled out in the 69th minute thanks to an exquisite Majoro lob over the stranded Murambadoro.


And with the game seemingly destined for a draw, Erasmus broke the hearts of the home fans to steal the three points. – Sapa






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Ajax frustrated by Polokwane

Ajax Cape Town were left frustrated after Polokwane City grabbed a late share of the spoils in a 1-1 draw at the Cape Town Stadium.


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Cape Town – Ajax Cape Town were left frustrated after Polokwane City grabbed a late share of the spoils in a 1-1 draw at the Cape Town Stadium on Wednesday evening.


The first half was action-packed, with the visiting team in particular playing a fast and exciting brand of football, only to be let down by their finishing.


After Polokwane City had a couple of early chances which failed to test home keeper Anssi Jaakkola. It was Ajax who took the lead after 16 minutes when an unmarked Tashrique Morris scored from five yards out after a pin-point cross from Milton Ncube.


The Limpopo side were soon putting the Cape side under pressure with their speed and combination play when going forward, but Puleng Tloane missed a good chance in the 28th minute when he did well to beat Abbubaker Mobara before sending his parting shot wide.


Jabulani Maluleke was also a constant threat down the left wing for the visiting side, but he too was wasteful in his finishing.


Ajax also had their chances to extend the lead, but Morris lost his composure when he shot straight at Polokwane City keeper Modiri Marumo on 33 minutes before being caught in two minds and missed another good opportunity just before the break.


Morris got the first chance after the break, but once again he failed to make it count as his unconvincing effort was blocked by Marumo on 52 minutes before Cecil Lolo also had a shot saved a minute later.


Following that, the game became a rather scrappy and hard-fought, with little in the way of goal-scoring chances.


The Cape side appeared to be set to just about hold on for the win, but the breakthrough came for the visiting side in the third minute of added time when Sipho Jembula tapped in from close range after Jaakkola was unable to hold onto Maluleke's free kick. – – Sapa






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Nkhatha scores on SuperSport debut

Kingston Nkhatha made the perfect start to his SuperSport United career, scoring on debut, but had to settle for a 2-2 draw against Free State Stars.


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Johannesburg – Kingston Nkhatha made the perfect start to his SuperSport United career, scoring on debut, but had to settle for a 2-2 draw against Free State Stars at Lucas Moripe Stadium, in Atteridgeville, on Wednesday evening.


Having completed his move from Kaizer Chiefs in January, Nkhatha wasted little time getting himself acclimatised to life at SuperSport, scoring just seven minutes into an otherwise dull clash against a plucky Free State side in Pretoria.


But second half goals from Mbuyiselo Thethani and Hendrik Somaeb demolished United's two-goal half-time cushion in what was a game of two very different halves.


Thuso Phala, who provided Nkhatha with the assist, scored three minutes after Nkhtaha, putting Ea Lla Koto on the back foot barely 10 minutes into the tie.


But a late comeback denied Gordon Igesund's troops what looked like three straightforward points when their 2-0 advantage looked a mountain to high to climb for the visitors from Bethlehem.


SuperSport started the day in 12th spot and were in line to move back into the top eight, but were held by a resilient Stars outfit who walk away the happier of the two.


The visitors made headway in the second half and pulled one back through young Thethani, before Somaeb added the second as a disappointed United had to settle for a point when three looked all but wrapped up with minutes left on the clock.


Igesund named Nkhatha in his starting line-up, with fellow new signing Jeremy Brockie starting from the bench, in an otherwise familiar formation, with Phala and Dove Wome combining brilliantly with Nkhatha at the head of the attack.


United's intentions were clear from the off, as Nkhatha brushed his markers aside, latched onto Phala's pinpoint delivery over the top and finishing with a cultured left-footed effort at the far post.


The Matsatsantsa faithful showed their gratitude with a rousing round of applause for the Zimbabwean international, who was known for his fractious relationship with Amakhosi supporters for his often erratic finishing.


Phala was keen to get in on the action and soon picked up a ball outside the box, danced his way around a host of defenders and expertly curled his shot around Glenn Verbauwhade, doubling SuperSport's lead in the space of three breathless minutes.


The rest of the half saw little in the way of chances, which carried into the second period where both units looked flat and unimaginative going forward.


Danny Venter was one of the few visitors to have a crack at goal, shooting from some way out but ultimately failing to test Ronwen Williams, who didn't have to move and covered easily with a simple stop.


Coming on early in the second half, Thethani breathed life back into the game when he unleashed a vicious shot that beat Williams on 79 minutes, making for a nervy end as Stars looked the more likely to make something happen in front of goal.


Ten minutes later, Stars denied SuperSport the win as Somaeb broke hearts with his strike in the dying minutes, earning Stars a valuable point as they continue in the race against relegation with the season now heading into the latter stages. – Sapa






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News sport : Ohio State honored by Governor at Ohio Statehouse (Photos)

A month after knocking off Oregon in the first-ever College Football Playoff National Championship, members of the Ohio State football team were honored at the Ohio Statehouse by Governor John Kasich on Wednesday.


Head coach Urban Meyer and school president Michael V. Drake joined the team at the Statehouse in Columbus, just a few miles from the Buckeyes’ campus.





According to the Columbus Dispatch, Kasich offered congratulations to the team and spoke to several players about their plans after graduation.


“You really lifted almost the entire state,” Kasich told the team. “In life, it’s amazing how successful you can be if you’re a member of a team.”





In addition to being honored by the Governor, the team also was recognized Wednesday afternoon at sessions for the Ohio Senate and House of Representatives.


As is customary for the national champion, the team will also have a chance to visit the White House and President Obama in the future.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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Real’s Bernabeu plans blocked

A Spanish court has annulled permission granted to Real Madrid by the Madrid city government three years ago to allow the football club to remodel its Santiago Bernabeu Stadium.


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Madrid – A Spanish court has annulled permission granted to Real Madrid by the Madrid city government three years ago to allow the football club to remodel its Santiago Bernabeu Stadium.


Last year, a court suspended Madrid's stadium upgrade in response to a petition by environmental group Ecologistas en Accion.


The permission initially given by city officials included a property swap between the club and city that is also being investigated by the European Union for possibly violating laws regarding illegal state aid.


The court ruled on Wednesday that the permission granted by the city to the club broke Spanish land use law. It said in a statement, “the modification was not made in the best interests of the general public.”


The club's plans featured enlarging the stadium, giving it a new facade, and covering its roof. It also included the construction of shops and a hotel.


“Real Madrid will work together with the city hall and regional Madrid governments to correct the necessary aspects so that the remodeling of the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium is viable,” the club said in a statement.


In December 2013, the EU began investigating whether Real Madrid, Barcelona and five other Spanish clubs may have received possible illegal state aid.


EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia then said that Real Madrid “appears to have benefited from a very advantageous real property swap.” The land in question in the swap was re-evaluated at 22.7 million euros in 2011, instead of an earlier estimated value of 595,000 euros in 1998. – Sapa-AP






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News sport : Charles Barkley and Daryl Morey argued about stats, and nobody learned anything

During TNT's broadcast of the Houston Rockets' Tuesday night win over the Phoenix Suns, Charles Barkley called the combatants the two worst defensive teams in the NBA. The Rockets — perhaps taking a cue from their on-court leader — got a bit defensive about their defense:



Daryl Morey — the Rockets' Northwestern- and MIT-educated general manager, the chairperson of the annual Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, a frequent and fierce defender of the squad he's put together, and no stranger to talking reckless on Twitter — decided to go a step further in responding to Chuck's comments:



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


Not surprisingly, the famously outspoken Hall of Famer responded with both barrels after Houston's 127-118 win:



Quoth Sir Charles:


Of the teams that's going to make the playoffs, [the Rockets are] awful defensively. [...] Just because you've got good stats doesn't mean you're a good team defensively. They're not a good defensive team. They gave up 118 points. No good team gives up 118 points.

I'm not worried about Daryl Morey. He's one of those idiots who believe in analytics. He went out and got James Harden and got Dwight Howard, and gonna tell me that's analytics. Then he went out and got Trevor Ariza, and then he went out and got Josh Smith. So, first of all, I've always believed analytics is crap. And you know I never mention the Rockets as a legitimate contender, because they're not. Listen, I wouldn't know Daryl Morey if he walked in this room right now. [...]

Analytics don't work at all. It's just some crap that some people who are really smart made up to try to get in the game because they had no talent. Because they had no talent to be able to play. So smart guys wanted to be able to fit in, so they made up a term called "analytics." Analytics don't work. What analytics did the Miami Heat have? What analytics did the Chicago Bulls have? What analytics do the [San Antonio] Spurs have? They have the best players. They have coaching staffs who make players better. And like I say, the Rockets for a long time. So they went out and paid James Harden a lot of money — they got better. Then they went out and got Dwight Howard — they got better. They had Chandler Parsons, and now this year, they went out and got Ariza. The NBA is about talent.

All these guys who run these organizations, who talk about analytics, they have one thing in common. They're a bunch of guys who ain't never played the game, and they never got the girls in high school, and they just want to get in the game. Come on, man.

[Ernie Johnson tells the viewing audience that he and Charles will appear on a panel Friday at the NBA Tech Summit where the topic will be analytics.]

And Ernie, I said the same thing about analytics last year, I'm gonna say it about it next year, I'm gonna say it about it Friday, and I'm gonna say it about it five years from now. It's just guys who ain't never played basketball. They use that same crap in baseball, and they put these lightweight teams together, and they never win. They're always competitive to a certain degree, and they don't win.

[TNT colleague Kenny Smith asks Charles if he thinks putting Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal together is "not analytical."]

Hell no! Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili and Kawhi Leonard has nothing to do with analytics. And I think when they put Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade and LeBron James together, it had nothing to do with analytics. Gimme a break.

Before we go any further — yes, Shaq did say, "That was very vitriol of you to say." And no, just like "fit out," that isn't a thing.


You can say this much for Charles — he is, in fact, consistent on the topic of analytics. He said the same stuff in August 2013, when the Philadelphia 76ers hired the analytics-minded Sam Hinkie, Morey's former second-in-command in Houston, to run the show in Philly. He's been crystal-clear in his belief that numbers alone don't benefit anyone, unless those numbers are written on paychecks given to excellent players so that they'll play for your team.


There is, of course, some truth to that — as we say every time this now-tired nerds-vs.-jocks/stats-vs.-eyes debate comes up, relying solely on statistical analysis to make absolute statements or decisions about the NBA would be ludicrous. That's not how things actually work, though. There isn't a team in the NBA, Houston included, that eschews scouting in favor of spreadsheets, and most writers who traffic heavily in stat-driven analysis also watch boatloads of game film, too. It's not an either/or proposition, and it hasn't been for quite a while (if, in fact, it ever was.)


This is Daryl Morey. Maybe now Charles will recognize him. (Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports) There's certainly been an increase in the number of analytics-conversant types in front offices over the last few years. But as SB Nation's Tom Ziller wrote last year, that's not really a case of "basketball PhDs" being replaced by "nerds who never played the game," as much as it's about the rise of people who have played (often in lower-levels of college or overseas) and/or spent their entire professional lives working in basketball in one form or another, who understand the byzantine structure of the salary cap and collective bargaining agreement (or know enough to hire people who do) and who like the idea of getting as much information as possible to make decisions.


As players have gotten more explosive, the league's talent base has grown, rules have changed and coaches have gotten more tactically ingenious, front offices have had to evolve, too. Everyone's got to be a two-way player these days.


There are lots of ways to poke holes in Barkley's assessment, if you're so inclined. The Spurs, the Heat and the Mavericks all relied heavily on analytics to help figure out the best ways to deploy their talent to win titles. One of the first people to popularize the use of possession-based stats was the late, great Dean Smith, who knew a thing or two about winning.


While it's certainly defensible to chalk the Rockets' turnaround up to paying Harden and Howard, if you're going to do that, you've got to credit Morey, Hinkie and the rest of the Rockets' braintrust for all the work that went into being able to pay those two players — a years-long teardown of the Tracy McGrady/Yao Ming squad that saw Morey, Hinkie and company use all the tools at their disposal, from statistical models to eyeball scouting, to build the sort of cache of assets (stockpiled draft picks, young contributors on inexpensive deals, etc.) that could later get the Oklahoma City Thunder to bite on the Harden deal, which made the Rockets seem like a legitimate destination, which opened the door to bringing Howard on board. (To say nothing of the fact that Barkley disliked the Harden deal when it happened.)


If you're going to say that Houston's been good because they had players like Chandler Parsons, you have to credit Morey and company for identifying him as a player whose size and skill-set made him worth taking a chance on in the second round of the 2011 draft and getting three years of ludicrous bang for his buck out of someone that every team in the league passed on. If you're going to say that Houston's stayed afloat since Parsons left for Dallas because they brought in Ariza, then you've got to credit Morey for targeting Ariza as a replacement who would fit in well on the wing between Harden and Patrick Beverley and provide value even if the career-best long-range shooting numbers he put up last year in Washington didn't carry over (and they haven't).


Parsons, Beverley, Terrence Jones, Donatas Motiejunas, Greg Smith, Troy Daniels ... under Morey, Houston has found these guys, and gotten production that outstrips their paychecks, thanks in large part to the way analytical models inform the front office's decision-making on the types of players they should be targeting. It's not just math, it's math plus scouting, plus talking to people you trust, plus being in gyms all over the world, plus breaking down film, plus being willing to consider different viewpoints as you try to find one of the many different ways out there to win a championship.


There's plenty of stuff to be skeptical about in the world of analytics and advanced stats — the often unexplained differences between models and metrics, whether efforts to measure critical stuff like chemistry are worth anything, whether the reams and reams of data now at analysts' disposal actually helps clarify things or just overloads recipients, whether the push to find new ways of keeping players healthy and on the court has gone too far and crossed over into creepy, Orwellian territory; whether stat-types have found the right language and approach to try to communicate their information to NBA decision-makers, and so on. You don't have to consider beyond-the-box-score stats the end-all/be-all of basketball fandom. In fact, you shouldn't! When we treat it like problem-solving rather than something we're supposed to have fun watching and discussing, we're selling ourselves short.


It's just a bummer that one of the greatest players of my lifetime — seriously, the numbers don't lie! — and the loudest, high-profile voice in the sport decides that just Doug Collins-and-Larry Brown-ing it up isn't enough, and that in the process of being just about entirely wrong while telling people they're wrong, he has to be a sneering high schooler about it, too. The game's always trying to teach us new things, if we're just willing to watch and listen. When we have the same tired-ass conversations about nerds, calculators and insufficiently notched bedposts, though, nobody learns anything.


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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 : Magic Johnson thinks Kobe Bryant should retire if the Lakers fail to add a superstar this summer

The Los Angeles Lakers, as was the case last season, will have tons of cap space this summer. Unless the odds go against them in this spring’s NBA draft lottery, they will also pick up a young cornerstone high up on the draft board as they did last year. They will also have Kobe Bryant, coming off of his third consecutive season-ending injury, as was the case last year.


This is all by design, as the Lakers essentially punted both 2014-15 and 2015-16, knowing that no star free agent was going to want to ride out Bryant’s last days as an active player and sign with the club. The idea is to start over once Bryant (possibly) retires following his contract’s expiration in July of 2016.


Former Laker Magic Johnson doesn’t really understand the whole idea. He thinks Kobe should walk away from his contract if Los Angeles fails to hit big on the free agent market this summer. From a talk on SiriusXM, as transcribed by ESPN Los Angeles’ Baxter Holmes:



"And I really believe this: [Kobe] should ... say to Jim and them, 'Look, if you don't sign one of these free agents [this offseason], man, I'm just not going to play next year,'" Johnson said.



Yes, because it’s that simple. The Lakers totally should have gone after Carmelo Anthony and LeBron James last summer. Someone was asleep at the wheel on that one!


It is important to note that Kobe Bryant is scheduled to make $25 million next season. If he retires, the Los Angeles Lakers are under no obligation to pay him a single penny of that.


Johnson also thinks that part-owner and basketball operations president Jim Buss is wielding too much influence in the team’s front office, and that he’s getting in the way of general manager Mitch Kupchak’s presumed attempts at greatness:



"If Jim would say, 'OK, Mitch. You run the show,' I think it would be a lot better for the Lakers, too. Mitch Kupchak knows what he's doing. He's great. He's smart. He's hard-working. He's at every practice. I think the fans would feel good [if he ran the team] as well," Johnson said.



Jim Buss probably should not be running a basketball team. Lakers part-owner and business el jefe Jeannie Buss has promised that if her brother doesn’t turn the team around by 2017 (or so) that he’ll follow through on his promise to walk away from the team. That’s probably not going to happen, but the caveat-rich hot air is in place.


To pretend like Mitch Kupchak has been shackled in his attempts to build yet another winner in Los Angeles by Jim Buss, though, is ludicrous.


What were these imaginary moves that Buss got in the way of? What was Mitch Kupchak supposed to do? Nobody wanted to take the Lakers’ money last summer, so he and Buss went all-in on a lost, rebuilding season. Free agents declined to line up alongside Kobe not so much because they see Kobe as some shot-happy chucker (which he most certainly was in the days before he passed Michael Jordan’s career scoring mark) but because they know Kobe is past his prime, and that taking (oftentimes less) money from Los Angeles meant committing to a rebuilding project that wasn’t going to pay off any time soon.


Pairing even a healthy and mindful Kobe Bryant with a star wouldn’t give the Lakers anywhere near a playoff guarantee in a Western Conference that demands that you flirt with 50 wins just to make it to the postseason. You can mock Buss and Kupchak all you want, but their hands would be tied even if Bryant took a Tim Duncan or Dirk Nowitzki-like discount in order to free up even more cap space. The Lakers had cap space last year – LeBron and Carmelo-sized cap space – and those players didn’t want to buy in.


Of course, Kobe didn’t give the Lakers that discount. He happily and rightfully agreed to work as the NBA’s highest paid player this year and next, working for a ridiculous amount of cash even while contributing terrible defense and a shot selection that more often than not puts his beloved Lakers behind the eight ball. There is no guarantee that Bryant working for a discount would have inspired more free agents to come to Los Angeles, but the bigger cap space couldn’t have hurt the team’s chances at surrounding Bryant with a winner.


Magic is tone deaf as always with these sorts of things.


The whole point of throwing all that money at Kobe Bryant was to put on a well-heeled farewell tour. The Lakers knew they weren’t going to attract their next franchise player with Bryant on the roster, they knew Kobe wasn’t up for retiring following his 2013 Achilles tear, and they knew they were probably going to have to take an embarrassing few years with Bryant on the chin while waiting out his active playing days and accruing assets and cap space.


The whole point was to just feature Kobe, and that’s it. And Magic thinks that Kobe should retire once the Lakers fail to secure a boffo free agent this summer? So that the Lakers and their fans get the worst of both worlds? Magic, as is his NBA custom since 1993, is missing the whole point.


Speaking on ESPN’s First Take, the Worst Television Program Ever Created, Johnson then distastefully went on an a detailed telling about how he’s totally not out for Jim Buss’ job (but I’d totally be better at it than Jim Buss, guys):



"He's mad at me because I criticize him," Johnson said of Jim Buss. "Then he's like, 'Magic is trying to get a job with the Lakers. Magic is trying to bring me down.' No, I'm not. I'm telling the truth about the situation and trying to make us better and trying to get us into a winning situation in terms of back to being relevant. So you get mad at me when I tell the truth."




Johnson reiterated that he is close with Buss' sister Jeanie.




"Dr. [Jerry] Buss raised Jeanie and I up together," Johnson said. "When Jeanie went to USC business school, he was bringing us along together. Jim was not part of the Lakers. He never really saw our championship years. Jim was doing his own thing.




"He came back later on, and Dr. Buss knew he wanted the kids to decide later on to run the basketball side because Jeanie was definitely going to run the business side. I like Jim as a person. But at the same time, a great CEO or person who is in a powerful position will surround himself or put together a team to help them achieve their goals and dreams. Jim has not done that."



Only Magic Johnson could put us in a position that demanded that we defend someone like Jim Buss. Congrats, Magic.


The Lakers took a shot that we all applauded in 2012, sending what were assumed to be low-rung draft picks to Phoenix for the rights to pay Steve Nash an approximation of what he’d make on the open market. They dealt a center in Andrew Bynum that would go on to play 26 more games from 2012-2014 for Dwight Howard. That experiment failed when Mike Brown did Mike Brown stuff, Nash’s body fell apart, and when the late Dr. Jerry Buss insisted on hiring Mike D’Antoni (who did a credible job, considering his options). Howard never recovered from back injuries and later left, and Bryant tore his Achilles.


Mindful of the fact that Nash wasn’t ever going to be himself again, and aware of the expectation that no prominent free agent on the 2014 or 2015 market would want to join with a recovering Kobe (who, again, has had two further season-ending injuries in the years since) the Lakers gave Bryant a ton of money just to keep the punters happy. The real rebuilding starts in 2016, and not 2014 or 2015, and Johnson is hitting the Lakers at their low point when he chides them unknowingly from afar.


This is also the guy who cheered D’Antoni’s departure in an incredibly undignified manner after promising that he was done criticizing the coach publicly.


Kobe Bryant emerged from his most recent season-ending injury to make jokes and look forward to 2015-16. Bryant could have been understandably depressed about basketball being taken away from him yet again, but instead he’s taking his absence in stride.


The guy doesn’t want to limp off the court one last time, and the legend certainly doesn’t want to turn down $25 million just because he’ll have to play with a woeful supporting cast again. Kobe, after all these years, minutes, and injuries, is part of that “woeful supporting cast,” and this is why no superstar free agents are lining up to play alongside him. Free agents weren’t exactly stepping over themselves to play in Washington with Michael Jordan, either.


How everyone but Magic Johnson understands this is mind-boggling. Either he’s that daft, or he’s appearing willfully ignorant so as to pump up his own candidacy as a potential future Laker executive.


Whatever the impetus, Magic Johnson comes off looking terribly. Again.


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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 : Greg Cosell's Film Review: Analyzing last year's rookie quarterbacks

The expectations for rookie quarterbacks have increased, and that's not necessarily fair.


People might expect every rookie quarterback to be an Andrew Luck right away, but that’s hard. It’s a process.


We saw five rookie quarterbacks become the primary starters for their teams during the season. Each of them showed some good things and some bad things, and that’s all normal in the development of a quarterback in the NFL. Let’s take a look at where they stand and what they still need to work on after their rookie seasons (we’ll break down four of them here, for more on Johnny Manziel you can read my in-depth look at him during last season here and here):


Blake Bortles, Jacksonville Jaguars


This offseason, Bortles has to go back to basics. He lost his technique.


There are all kinds of valid reason for that – the Jaguars offensive line was below average, the offense was inconsistent, there was an inability to stay on schedule during games because of that inconsistency and the Jaguars trailing most of the time – but the bottom line is he lost his technique and needs to go back to school and start from scratch. I don’t mean that in a negative way. But before the Jaguars get to “What are the best route concepts against ‘Cover 4’ zone?” they need to work with him so he has repetitive proper fundamentals. Otherwise he won’t throw it accurately enough on a consistent basis.


One thing I noticed is Bortles started to have a tendency to drop the ball too low in his release. That throws off the timing, if the release and stride isn’t working together. Then you lose velocity and accuracy. Bortles has a good arm (though not a great one) but his arm strength suffers when the mechanics suffer. There are too many moving parts.


Bortles also showed during the season he didn’t have a great feel for coverages; he did not recognize quickly and intuitively understand where defenders are in zone coverage, for example. And he would play fast at times and react to perceived pressure when it wasn’t there, but that has to do with a lack of protection. But those are normal things for a rookie quarterback, and there were good things from Bortles too.


Here’s a play that highlights many things he does well, a 44-yard gain to Allen Hurns in Week 4 at San Diego. Bortles showed the ability to avoid the rush, move, keep his downfield focus and make intermediate and vertical throws.



Bortles will have to work on his fundamentals this offseason, but there were good signs in year one.


Teddy Bridgewater, Minnesota Vikings


I like Bridgewater, and he’s a very interesting case. He has a lot of positive traits, like his feel for the game, understanding where to go with the ball, he has good pocket presence and accuracy, but there’s one other issue: He has a below-average arm.


Picture this: Imagine a waiter carrying a tray with his wrist and palm at a 90-degree angle. That’s how Bridgewater throws it. The ball sits on his palm. You can’t generate torque and velocity throwing like that.


So Bridgewater has a lot of traits you really like, but I just wonder what his ceiling is because there are throws that he’s not going to be able to make. And I don’t think it’s a strength issue that’ll be helped by their weight program over the next couple years because I don’t think you can change the way he throws the ball, although I could be wrong.


So the question ultimately is, how can you win with Bridgewater? The Vikings already tweaked their offense to fit what he does well. You didn’t see the deep digs and deep corner routes you usually see in Vikings offensive coordinator Norv Turner’s offense (and you did see those when Matt Cassel was the starter earlier in the season). Do you need to start the offense with a consistent running game, and then use what Bridgewater does well to complement that? You have to decide that as an organization. But when the Vikings review Bridgewater's rookie season they will like what they saw. He did a lot of very good things coaches like, such as his anticipation and awareness.


He had very nice anticipation on a 21-yard touchdown throw to Greg Jennings late in the season at Miami, in which he started to pull the trigger knowing where Jennings would be.



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That’s what makes Bridgewater so interesting. He does so many things well. Will that be enough to compensate for his arm?


Derek Carr, Oakland Raiders


Of all these 2014 rookie quarterbacks we’re talking about, I think Carr has the best combination of arm strength, pocket play and movement. He has a really good arm. There are times he snaps it off like Aaron Rodgers in the pocket.


Here’s a good example of high-level quarterbacking, and from a rookie. It came against San Francisco late in the season. His initial read was to the three-receiver side but the 49ers took that way with “Cover 3 lurk” with the safety Eric Reid as the lurk defender. Carr came back to the boundary lock side with Perrish Cox in man-to-man on Andre Holmes for 16 yards. It was a great read with full command of the pocket, and most importantly his feet followed his eyes so he threw on balance with good lower-body mechanics, which you can really see from the end-zone angle.



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Like the others, he has a lot to work on too. Most notably, to take the next step I think he’ll have to see things a little more clearly at the intermediate level and turn it loose on those throws. I don’t think he saw things well at that level (and that’s OK for a rookie quarterback) and often got rid of the ball short. That’s something that can improve with experience, and we’ll see how that progresses in a new offense this season.


Carr’s tendency to get rid of the ball short isn’t a bad thing. The Raiders’ sack numbers were way down. He didn’t stand there and hold the ball with a deer-in-the-headlights look. That tells me his processing was functioning. He didn’t always throw to the right guy, but he didn’t get stuck in the pocket. He struggled at times with lower body mechanics, but he had the instincts and feel of a pocket quarterback. And he showed progress with his lower body mechanics as the season went on.


Carr played well as a rookie, and as long as he progresses as he should in seeing things at the intermediate level, there’s a lot to like with him going forward.


Zach Mettenberger, Tennessee Titans


If I were the Tennessee Titans, I would not pick a quarterback with the second overall pick of this upcoming draft.


There are pros and cons with Mettenberger. The biggest problem people have with him is he is too plodding and lead-footed, and I understand that. He’s not a quick-twitch athlete (which Carr is, for example). He’s an old-school pocket quarterback who is willing to stand in the pocket, he’s oblivious to bodies around him, he’ll wait for the last minute to deliver the football. Those are positive things to build on.


His anticipation is also very good for a young player, as he showed on this 80-yard touchdown to Nate Washington against the Steelers. He is oblivious to the pressure around him and delivers a great throw against Pittsburgh's "quarters" zone coverage.



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I think Mettenberger is the type of quarterback who needs the running game as the foundation of the offense. He’s very good at play action, very good at turning his back to the defense and then snapping his head around and picking up what he needs to pick up. That’s a valuable skill.


There are things for Mettenberger to clean up. He has to learn the intricate balance between pocket patience and holding it too long. His ball placement is a bit of an issue – he has to be a little more precise. But he’s not a scatter-shot thrower so that can development. But there are signs that Mettenberger, even with some flaws, can be a good pocket quarterback. That is, if the Titans pass on a quarterback with the second pick and see if Mettenberger can develop.


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NFL analyst and NFL Films senior producer Greg Cosell watches as much NFL game film as anyone. Throughout the season, Cosell will join Shutdown Corner to share his observations on the teams, schemes and personnel from around the league.






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News sport : 88-year-old attempts to charge the mound at Rockies fantasy camp

Don't pitch up an in on an 88-year-old man. He might just charge the mound.


That's how Lew Dunlap reacted after ducking a pitch near his chin at a Colorado Rockies Fantasy Camp in Arizona. The camp is an annual event that lets fan live out their dreams of playing in the pros.



Dunlap paid $4,500 to be part of the camp – and clearly gave fans their money's worth.







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