Villa reach FA Cup quarter-final

Aston Villa shook off their Premier League woes to reach the FA Cup quarter-finals on Sunday.


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London – Aston Villa shook off their Premier League woes to reach the quarter-finals of the FA Cup with a 2-1 fifth-round win against Leicester City on Sunday in front of incoming manager Tim Sherwood.


After a woeful first half, the tie came alive when Leandro Bacuna curled in the opening goal for the goal-shy hosts in the 68th minute.


Loan signing Scott Sinclair fired in a second from a tight angle with his shot squirming through Mark Schwarzer’s desperate attempted save.


Leicester’s record-signing Andrej Kramaric pulled a goal back with a powerful header in stoppage time.


Later on Sunday holders Arsenal host Championship-leading Middlesbrough and third tier Bradford City, who toppled Chelsea in the fourth-round, entertain Sunderland. – Reuters






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Arsenal's star performer ‘out of puff’

Key Arsenal forward Alexis Sanchez is not himself and could be fatigued, boss Arsene Wenger fears.


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London – Arsenal forward Alexis Sanchez is “not himself” and could be feeling the effects of fatigue after making an impressive start to life in the Premier League, manager Arsene Wenger said.


The 26-year-old has been Arsenal’s standout performer this season and has scored 18 goals in 32 appearances since signing from Barcelona for 35-million pounds ($53.91 million) in July.


But the Chile international went off with a knee injury in last week’s 2-1 win over Leicester City and Wenger conceded that Sanchez may be showing signs of fatigue.


“He had not the same intensity in his game as he had until now,” said Wenger, whose side are fifth in the Premier League table with 45 points from 25 games.


“I’m not sure he was free in his head to sprint as he used to. I don’t know if it was down to the kick he got on his knee, but he was not himself.


“He has a swollen knee and he cannot move well, but it’s only a kick, nothing else.”


Arsenal host Middlesbrough in the fifth round of the FA Cup on Sunday before travelling to Crystal Palace in the Premier – Reuters






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Neville the man to take Hodgson’s job

Gary Neville has the aptitude to be a future England boss, according to current incumbent Roy Hodgson.


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London – Gary Neville should prioritise coaching over punditry and has the aptitude and managerial smarts to be a future England boss, according to current incumbent Roy Hodgson.


Since retiring from football in 2011 the former Manchester United and 85-cap England defender has combined work as a Sky Sports pundit alongside work as Hodgson’s assistant manager – roles for which he has been lauded.


Neville, however, acknowledged that he could not commit to both jobs long-term and had a “decision to make in the next 18 months.”


Neville may be tempted to pursue punditry following the Premier League’s staggering TV deal worth 5.2 billion pounds ($7.93 billion) TV deal, of which Sky paid 4.2 billion for 126 live games a season from 2016 to 2019.


Former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher has also opted for a career in punditry after hanging up his boots in 2013.


“That’s the coaching badges out the window for a few years,” Carragher said on Twitter upon hearing news of the new Sky Sports deal for Premier League coverage.


Arsenal’s all-time record goalscorer Thierry Henry has recently joined Sky’s stable after bringing an end to his playing days, while others like former Liverpool players Jamie Redknapp and Michael Owen are also regulars in the TV studios.


Neville already holds Uefa A and B licences and is completing his coaching Pro-Licence and could be a future England manager Hodgson said.


“If you’re asking me would I like to see Gary Neville in coaching or management then, yes, I would.


“It is up to the FA to decide what his value to England is in the future. He is a very good coach now and he will become an even better coach with experience.


“From a selfish point of view I personally would see him being more valuable to me as a football lover than as a pundit.


“Punditry is not that difficult if you know a bit about football. You don’t win and lose in punditry.”


Hodgson, 67, has two years remaining on his current deal but refused to be drawn on what his future holds after the 2016 European Championships in France.


“We’ll see. At the moment I feel good and I hope that will continue for a few more years,” he said.


“When the day comes I will know what the right time is and I’ll do it but I have an important job to do.” – Reuters






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Valdes must prove himself: Van Gaal

Victor Valdes will have to earn his spurs in United’s reserve side before he gets a first-team debut.


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London – January signing Victor Valdes must earn his spurs in Manchester United’s reserve side before he can be considered for a full first-team debut, according to manager Louis van Gaal.


The 33-year-old arrived at Old Trafford for a free transfer on an 18-month deal in January having been the bedrock of a Barcelona side that won six La Liga titles and three Champions League trophies.


Valdes, however, has failed to displace incumbent David de Gea who continues to impress in an inconsistent United side, and Van Gaal had previously stated it would be “very hard” for him to do so.


The 20-cap Spain international, who recovered from a serious knee injury playing for Barcelona in March 2014, played for United’s reserves in a 2-1 win against Liverpool on January 26.


Since then, however, Valdes has been an unused substitute on the first-team bench for seven successive matches.


“When you are out for more than a year, first of all you have to show yourself at a lower level,” Van Gaal told reporters.


“He has to do it in the second team. Like Ashley Young is doing that, like Michael Carrick has to do that. It is always the same. I think it is normal.”


Manchester United, third in the Premier League, will hope to progress to the FA Cup quarter-finals when they face League One (third tier) Preston North End on Monday. – Reuters






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Papic unhappy with team’s performance

While happy with Polokwane’s win, coach Kosta Papic has hit at his charges for not sticking to their regular game.


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Johannesburg – While he admitted he was satisfied to walk away with all three points, Polokwane City coach Kosta Papic was openly critical of his team’s approach in their Premiership clash against Moroka Swallows on Saturday night.


Rendani Ndou struck in second-half injury time to snatch a 2-1 victory for the hosts at Peter Mokaba Stadium.


“We played completely differently to the way we usually play, but I don’t want to blame the players now,” Papic said.


“One day you’re not going to play well, and one day you play fantastically and you don’t win.


“Today we won the match and got the three points, which is very important for us, and I think from these three points everything is going to change for this club.”


Polokwane continued their rise up the league table, climbing to fifth position after losing only one of their last 10 fixtures, but Papic hoped his side would stick to their regular style of play in their next game, a Nedbank Cup fixture against SuperSport United on February 25, after leaving it to the last minute against the Birds.


“The most important thing to anyone playing football is to play the way they want, and today we didn’t do that,” he said.


“I hope the next match will be better.”


Polokwane midfielder Cole Alexander, the Man of the Match, agreed with Papic that the home side had not been their usual selves.


“It was not one of our best games, but eventually we got the three points and that’s all that matters,” Alexander said.


Essau Kanyenda put the hosts in front with a superb diving header in the 10th minute, and Felix Obada equalised for the visitors in the second half, using his pace to beat two defenders and finding the back of the net.


With the match looking set to end in a draw, however, Ndou pounced on a loose ball after a goalmouth scramble and buried the winner.


Swallows coach Fani Madida shrugged off the defeat, as his side remained entrenched in 14th place on the log after going down in their 10th loss in 19 league games this season.


“I’m disappointed with the result but very happy with the performance,” Madida said.


“It was a very close game, we missed a lot of chances, and towards the end they came back, otherwise we were in control. It’s just an unfortunate one.”


Madida believed his team had learned a valuable lesson after giving away the match in the closing stages.


“When the ball is in the air you need to react and organise yourselves as defenders,” he said.


“We didn’t react, which is why they managed to get the ball after the goalkeeper (Greg Etafia) made a save.” – Sapa






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News sport : MLB battling finance website over trademark of the letter 'W'

If we could proceed with some actual baseball games (spring training works just fine), we'd all be very happy. In the interim, we're left counting down the days until camp opens, speculating a little further about which teams will compete for postseason positions, and analyzing legal disputes over letters in the alphabet.


Yeah, the latter is a real story, because according to Steven Overly of the Washington Post, Major League Baseball is now engaged in a legal battle with the financial advise website WalletHub.com over their logo, which happens to be a W.


[Yahoo Sports Fantasy Baseball: Sign up and join a league today!]


(WalletHub.com) The W on your right, to be more specific.


According to MLB's claims, WalletHub's representation of the letter W may confuse fans of the Chicago Cubs and Washington Nationals, who own brand-based trademarks of the same letter.


Of course, for the Cubs, a giant flag featuring a blue W flies outside of Wrigley Field following every victory. It's also the source of merchandising revenue (as seen in the picture above) as it appears on several different items sold around the ballpark. As for the Nationals, who currently use the curly W as their primary logo, it's a historic and merchandising trademark dating to the Washington Senators days.


The trademarked Ws in question are obviously well distinguished, but it's still the league's fear fans will incorrectly assume the website is connected to or in some way endorsed by those franchises.



“We have been engaging in conversations with Evolution Finance about how its mark can be used and registered so as to avoid confusion with the MLB marks. We believe we are close to a resolution and are interested in resolving this matter amicably,” said league spokesman Matt Bourne.



Based on the response of S. Lloyd Smith, the attorney representing Evolution Finance and WalletHub, a resolution may not be as close as the league thinks.



"It is common for trademark owners to sometimes overreach in protecting their marks. They're always concerned or cautious that if they don't enforce their marks they might lose their rights. The real question is why does MLB care? They don't own the letter W. There's lots of other Ws out there. They're just plainly overreaching in this case.”



We're not exactly legal experts, but it's difficult to argue with where the WalletHub representation is coming from. While the W is undeniably the centerpiece of their logo, the design and green background should be enough to eliminate confusion. In fact, to this point, Evolution Finance CEO Odysseas Papadimitriou says there's been no confusion in his business dealings.



“This dispute has not held us back from using it whenever we want,” Papadimitriou said. “We have been using it for two years plus and no one calls us and says, ‘Hey, I would like tickets for the Nationals.’”



They haven't taken those calls yet anyway. That will probably change now that this story is making the rounds. But the point is fans, casual fans, non-fans, and really anybody whos come across these logo is far more aware than MLB seems to give them credit for. This seems like time, energy and money better spent elsewhere.


More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:



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Mark Townsend is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at bigleaguestew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Zach LaVine explodes on national stage, wins 2015 Sprite Slam Dunk

NEW YORK — Minnesota Timberwolves rookie Zach LaVine won the Sprite Slam Dunk contest at Barclays Center on Saturday, besting Orlando Magic guard Victor Oladipo in the final round to take home the crown as the most electrifying performer of All-Star Saturday Night.


Here's a breakneck, don't-blink look at how he did it:



And now, let's take a breath and enjoy the 19-year-old's outing a bit more.


LaVine thrilled the Brooklyn crowd from his very first dunk in the opening round of competition, with the Quad City DJs preparing his path to the floor with the theme song from "Space Jam" to set the tone for what would follow — LaVine tearing off his warmups to reveal a Michael Jordan "Tune Squad" jersey before throwing down an off-the-bounce, between-the-legs one-handed reverse:



After earning a perfect 50 for his first dunk, LaVine knew he had to come strong with his second ... and, thankfully, he did:



LaVine threw himself a lob from the 3-point arc, corralled the carom with his left hand, passed the ball behind his back and dropped the hammer with his right, eliciting oohs, aahs and stink faces all around en route to another 50, giving him a perfect opening round score of 100.


Brooklyn Nets big man Mason Plumlee and Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo fell short in their attempts to make an impact on the competition, bowing our in Round 1, leaving LaVine to move on to the finals to face Oladipo, who began his evening by donning a top-hat and entering the court singing Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York" before whipping out a "540" (that was really more like a 360) two-handed reverse that was impressive enough to earn him a perfect 50, too, show tunes or no:



The former Indiana star followed that up by enlisting some help from rookie teammate Elfrid Payton for an off-the-side-of-the-glass assist on his whirling 180-degree tomahawk:



Once in the final round, though, Oladipo seemed to either run out of gas, succumb to the pressure of matching LaVine's seemingly effortless acrobatics, or both. The young Wolf, however, just kept rising, taking a running start before grabbing a handoff from teammate and fellow rookie Andrew Wiggins to go through his legs and finish with the left, his off-hand, with authority:



And after Oladipo failed to convert his preferred attempt at his fourth and final dunk — a one-handed windmill off the bounce — before eventually coming from behind the backboard with a windmill, LaVine capped his evening with a flourish:



LaVine finished with 194 points out of a possible 200 en route to becoming the first Timberwolf to win the Dunk Contest since Isaiah Rider in 1994. The 19-year-old LaVine is also the youngest champion since an 18-year-old Kobe Bryant hoisted the trophy in 1997.


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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 : NBA commissioner Adam Silver outlines his plans for the NBA's bright future

NBA commissioner Adam Silver didn’t blow anyone away with his remarks about the league in his yearly All-Star weekend address on Saturday, but in a lot of ways this should be a warming note for fans to cling to.


Silver, who recently begun his second calendar year as commissioner, emphasized a commitment to improving the quality of play and enhancements to the game itself. There were no outsized statements meant to rattle the players union, and no marks of demarcation placed to throw off the scent. Insipid talks of brand culture and out and out lies about international commitments were cast aside as Silver stuck to the same series of talking points that have marked most of his press appearances in the days since he had to stop talking about Donald Sterling.


The former Los Angeles Clippers owner wasn’t mentioned once in Silver’s remarks, nor was his name brought up by reporters. Surprisingly, reporters also did not bring up the embarrassing work of co-All-Star host James Dolan, the tone-deaf owner of the New York Knicks who was incorrectly labeled a “consummate New Yorker” by Silver earlier in the week. Nor did anyone touch on the other co-All-Star host Mikhail Prokhorov, who could be looking to sell his Brooklyn Nets after just five years of tossing ridiculous salaries around.


The game, thankfully, was the focus. Silver began his news conference by discussing an eventual phasing out of back to back games, and schedules that often force teams to play four games in five nights. This sort of subject matter isn’t exactly a page-turner, but when NBA champions often have to field their stars over a hundred times between mid-October and mid-June, working in exhibition contests, regular season games, and a two-month postseason, the miles can start to add up.


The NBA spent the better chunk of its showcase Christmas Day schedule discussing a fatigued LeBron James and a weary Kobe Bryant, two players that jumped directly to the NBA at an early age prior to spending endless seasons not only working deep into the postseason, but also working in the summer when Team USA and its in-lockstep shoe company commitments came calling. The NBA is past a point where it can expect stars like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar or Michael Jordan to turn in MVP-level seasons in either their late or even mid-30s, and an increase in days off will help even with the sort of age restrictions that prevent prospects like Kobe or LeBron from entering the NBA out of high school already in place to limit the wear and tear.


The commissioner was asked about his hopes to increase the league’s age limit from 19 to 20, something he believes is “better for the game,” but acknowledged that it will be a hard sell in negotiations with the players’ union. The union is adamantly opposed to such a change, and while the National Basketball Players Association was keen to accept a 19-year limit during collective bargaining agreement talks in 2005, a limit increase was one of the few negotiation wins for the union during the 2011 CBA discussions.


The league’s stance on this subject makes sense. The NBA product isn’t better off if an all-world prospect spends two years in the NCAA playing games against lacking competition while pretending to act as a student-athlete. The NBA features the greatest batch of coaches and development partners in the basketball world, expertly put in place for prospects even if the teenagers aren’t seeing regular game time.


However, while teams are happy to take their chances on the next 19-year old superstar, they’d much prefer allowing some money-raking NCAA team develop these players for two years for free, rather than spend millions on a teenager that might not start playing like an All-Star until the end of his rookie scale contract.


Along those lines, Silver also discussed re-working the league’s lottery system, reminding media that a majority of NBA teams were in favor of doing as much last fall prior to failing to secure a two-thirds vote needed to amend the system. Silver acknowledged what many longtime NBA observers have known for a while – that a “perception” that teams are losing games on purpose in order to gain better lottery odds is the real problem, rather than the setup itself. How any changes to the lottery process (which only rewards the worst NBA team with a one in four chance at the top overall draft pick) would work remains to be seen.


On his own, Silver also dove into the re-formatting of the current playoff system, something he discussed almost off-handedly earlier in February while talking with the Golden State Warriors’ broadcast team. Warrior fans know too well about the frustration of watching a very good team stuck in the Western Conference miss the playoffs while a substandard Eastern team sneaks in, and Silver has been proactive in his attempts to rectify the imbalance between the two conferences. An imbalance that has gone on far too long to ignore.


Silver made a point to remind that he “believe(s) in conferences and divisions,” while discussing a program that would possibly take the top two teams from each of the NBA’s six divisions before meting out the final six seeds amongst the six best records below that.


The commissioner, over this All-Star weekend at least, has yet to meet with NBPA head Michele Roberts. As is the case with Silver, Roberts is a relative newcomer to her position, but she comes to the gig with the highest of recommendations. Roberts has also turned in a sterling first season with the NBPA, while making the necessary and salient point on Friday that a gradual increase in salary cap allotments following the introduction of a $24 billion television deal in 2016 would not be in the best interests of her constituency.


Such a “smoothing” plan would be in the best interests of certain teams that, by poor luck or poor planning, would not be amongst those in line to reap significant salary cap rewards when the CBA agreement between the players and owners would push the salary cap tens of millions of dollars higher in the summer of 2016 when the new TV money starts rolling in. The NBA would not be denying its players the money they’re legally bound to earn by limiting a salary cap increase, the extra basketball-related income would still hit the NBPA coffers, but a smoothing proposal is not likely to be agreed upon. It’s absolutely just fine for the salary cap to shoot up dramatically in one year’s time, even if it feels abrupt to some observers.


Beyond that, Silver touched on all the usual talking points. Some 70 active NBA players would be taking part in this weekend’s televised festivities, with all manner of league-wide charity work hitting the New York metropolitan area. The NBA credentialed a record 1800 media members for the events, and the weekend was projected to bring in nearly $200 million to New York City. The typical and abstract relationship between Team USA, shoe companies, Jerry Colangelo and youth basketball was also discussed.


In all, though, the relatively benign subject matter – how to rest the league’s best players, when to introduce the NBA’s next great stars into the league, and how to handle and eventually spend the billions of dollars the league is set to take in – acts as a good sign for a league that is clearly thinking on its feet.






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News sport : Stephen Curry wins his first Three-Point Shootout championship

It has become popular, considering the NBA’s marked improvement in three-point marksmanship, to call the Three-Point Shootout the marquee event of not only the All-Star Saturday night lineup, but the entire weekend. This year’s competition didn’t bust any records, and it did have some NBA-influenced mitigating factors, but the contest did follow through on its promise. Golden State Warriors superstar Stephen Curry hit for 27 points in the final round in a fantastic display to win his first Shootout trophy.


With a lineup featuring the NBA’s leading scorer, last year’s All-Star Game MVP, a player who recently set a record for points in a single quarter, last year’s champion, two MVP candidates, and perhaps the greatest three-point shooter ever, the Shootout figured to be a sound draw.


By nature of the talent behind this group, however, James Harden (the league’s leading scorer and an MVP candidate), the defending champion Marco Belinelli, Los Angeles Clippers sharpshooter J.J. Redick (who in a rare instance had two makes waved off after he stepped on the three-point line, costing him three points), and even Kyle Korver (on pace to shatter the NBA record for three-point percentage) were out in the first round. Portland’s Wesley Matthews scored 22 points in his first round, enough to usually win the Shootout in some years, and he was still knocked out after his first go-round.


It was fellow Warrior Klay Thompson (24 points in the first round), former Shootout champion and 2014 All-Star Game MVP Kyrie Irving (23) and Curry (23) that would gear up for the final round. Irving managed just 18 points in his last turn, Curry caught fire to the tune of scoring 27 out of a possible 34 points (including 13 straight makes) just after, and Thompson disappointed by only hitting for 14 points as his fellow Splash Brother watched from the sidelines.


Curry leads the NBA in three-point makes this season, and he led the league in both makes and attempts in 2013 and 2014, but oddly his current three-point percentage would rank as the worst of his career if it sustains. At 39.9 percent, Stephen’s mark would rank him as a lights-out sharpshooter in any other context, but after entering the season shooting a white-hot 44 percent from long range on his career, he’s actually taking a small step back.


The Warriors don’t mind. Not only is Curry the go-to scorer on what at times has ranked as the NBA’s best offense, his all-around game has pushed him into the MVP discussion. Golden State entered the All-Star break with a fantastic 42-9 record, league-best mark that puts the team on pace for 68 wins. It should also be noted that Stephen Curry is also a really great guy.


One drawback during an otherwise fun time out was the NBA’s move to run the TNT commentary of Kenny Smith and Reggie Miller into the Barclays Center’s public address feed. Not only did their insipid back and forth reek of pointless radio chat show yammering, but the league did the festivities one step worse – there was actual canned crowd noise, obviously fake applause, being fed into the speakers and/or TNT broadcast feed after every make.


The Three-Point Shootout is just fine where it is. It will never inspire the sort of immediate cheers and gusto reserved for even the lamest of Slam Dunk Contests, but that’s just fine. The NBA doesn’t need to create a spectacle out of the event, especially when helmed by some of the league’s least-loved in-game commentators. The fake splash of applause on top of it all was just embarrassing.


The NBA’s three-point shooting is as good as it has ever been, as evidenced by a Shootout-high 27 points being saved for the final round by the best player on the NBA’s best team. The only change we’d ask, beyond the PA commentary nonsense and obvious fake crowd noise, would be to add a few more rounds – because it is so damn fun to watch this bunch let fly from 24 feet away.


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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 : Big wreck takes out a host of cars in Sprint Unlimited

A large crash on lap 46 collected 14 of the Sprint Unlimited's 25 entries on Saturday night.


The wreck started when Jamie McMurray, running third, was bumped by Greg Biffle as the field entered the tri-oval. The hit made McMurray's car squirrely and he couldn't bring it under control and he slid in front of the pack behind him.



Paul Menard, Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin and a host of others were collected in the mess.


Jimmie Johnson looked like he was going to make it through but hit Hamlin at the last minute. The impact was square to the nose of Johnson's car and busted its radiator.


Some drivers in the crash were able to carry on like Tony Stewart, who spun onto the grass but didn't sustain any significant damage. Harvick's crew repaired his car and so did Kurt Busch's.


The crash benefitted Dale Earnhardt Jr., who was on pit road before the crash because of debris on his grille. The wreck prevented him from being lapped.


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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 : Dynasty: Chris Bosh, Dominique Wilkins, Swin Cash win third straight Shooting Stars

NEW YORK — Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times, though? That's a dynasty.


For the third straight year, Team Bosh — Chris Bosh of the Miami Heat, Hall of Famer Dominique Wilkins and Swin Cash of the WNBA's New York Liberty — kicked off 2015 NBA All-Star Saturday Night by winning the Degree Shooting Stars competition, beating Team Westbrook (consisting of Russell Westbrook of the Oklahoma City Thunder, Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway and Tamika Catchings of the WNBA's Indiana Fever) in the championship round of the evening-opening shooting competition.


In the two-round timed shooting competition, each team had to complete shots from four numbered shooting locations of increasing distance and difficulty — a 10-foot shot from the right of the basket, a 20-footer from the top of the key, a 3-pointer from the left wing and a half-court shot — in order, as fast as they can. Each team had up to 90 seconds to complete the course, with the two fastest teams moving onto the championship. In this year's competition, the teammates had to rebound for one another, adding a wrinkle and, in some cases, an extra second or two to the teams' times.


In the opening round, Team Curry, consisting of Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry, his father, Dell Curry, and Sue Bird of the Seattle Storm, completed the circuit in 47 seconds. (It would've been faster had the typically sharp-shooting Currys not needed seven tries — four for Dell, three for Steph — to can their jumpers.) Team Westbrook posted a blazing 35.2-second time thanks to Penny hitting the half-court shot on his first try.


Team Millsap, led by Paul Millsap of the Atlanta Hawks — a late entry into the competition after New Orleans Pelicans power forward Anthony Davis had to bow out of All-Star Weekend due to injury — along with Hall of Famer Scottie Pippen, and Elena Delle Donne of the Chicago Sky couldn't match the pace of its predecessors, finishing the competition in 51.4 seconds, eliminating them from the competition. Team Bosh, for their part, looked every bit the rampaging, all-conquering armada that we've come to know and love, tearing through the course in a scant 30.8 seconds — capping the proceedings with a swished set-shot by Bosh — to knock out Team Curry and advance to a finals matchup against Team Westbrook.



Westbrook and company, sadly, peaked too early, struggling mightily with the half-court shot. In fact, they missed 'em all, going 0-for-26 from the timeline, as they were unable to knock one in before the buzzer sounded at the 1:30 mark ... and then, almost immediately afterward, Penny hit one. (Of course.)


Team Bosh didn't look as crisp in the championship round, either, but thanks to Westbrook and company failing to make the half-court shot, they didn't have to be, wrapping up their historic victory with a half-court shot by 'Nique — whose long-range shooting prowess TNT's Kenny Smith derided before the contest started — at the 57.6-second mark.



Team Bosh celebrated as all great champions do: with high-fives that don't quite connect.



... well, at least, that's how they'll start celebrating.



After the victory, Bosh was asked what was going through his mind when he jumped on the 55-year-old Wilkins' back:


CHRIS BOSH: "Oh, I hope he don't fall."

DOMINIQUE WILKINS: "I said I hope I didn't, either."

CHRIS BOSH: "He was telling me about his back problems, but I forgot all about that after. He's a strong guy. So he's all right."

He's better than all right, Chris. He is, once again, a champion.


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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 : Ex-NBA forward Anthony Mason in 'stable condition' after heart attack

Pat Riley and Anthony Mason smile after a 1992 game against the Portland Trail Blazers. (Brian Drake/NBAE/Getty Images) Anthony Mason, a rugged forward whose hard-charging, take-no-prisoners approach made him a fan favorite on the court, especially during his time with Pat Riley's New York Knicks, is reportedly in stable condition after suffering a heart attack and experiencing complications related to congestive heart failure earlier this week.


Longtime New York basketball writer Peter Vecsey reported Wednesday that Mason was "fighting [for his] life" after undergoing multiple surgeries, including one procedure that lasted nine hours. Vecsey reported that Mason had reached 350 pounds, had been dealing with heart problems for the past year, and was at a New York-area hospital undergoing tests when the heart attack occurred; he was later listed in critical condition, according to the New York Daily News.


Thankfully, things seem to have taken a positive turn for the 48-year-old Mason, according to a statement sent by his son, former St. John's University basketball player Anthony Mason Jr., to MSG's Tina Cervasio:



My family and I appreciate everyone's support this week, and we are grateful for all of the prayers and well-wishes for our father, Anthony Mason. Our father is now in stable condition and continues to receive expert medical care here in New York as he recovers from his medical procedures. Please continue to keep him in your thoughts and prayers. -- Anthony Mason Jr.

Mason's other son, Auburn guard Antoine Mason, has also stayed in New York with his father as he continues to undergo treatment.


Mason averaged 10.9 points and 8.3 rebounds per game during a 13-year NBA career spent with six teams that was marked by ferocious play on the court and explosions off it, and fierce battles with opponents, teammates and coaches alike. He won the 1994-95 NBA Sixth Man of the Year award with the Knicks and made the All-Star Game in 2000 while a member of the Miami Heat.


2015 NBA All-Star Game coverage from Yahoo Sports:



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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 : Stephen Curry plans All-Star Saturday tribute to North Carolina shooting victim

Stephen Curry ooks on during the second half against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Target Center. (Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports) NEW YORK — When Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry takes the court to compete in the Foot Locker Three-Point Shootout and Degree Shooting Stars contest on All-Star Saturday Night, he plans to "honor the memory" of Deah Shaddy Barakat, one of three Muslim students killed this week near the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.


Barakat, 23, his wife, Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha, 21, and her sister, Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, 19, were shot to death on Tuesday in North Carolina, where Curry grew up and starred for Davidson College. Craig Stephen Hicks, "a self-described 'gun toting' atheist with a reputation for bullying his neighbors," later turned himself in and faces three charges of first-degree murder.


Barakat's sister, Suzanne, told reporters during a press conference in Raleigh, N.C., on Wednesday that her brother, a second-year dental student at the UNC School of Dentistry, "was well-known for his 'all embracing kindness, lightheartedness, dedication to community service, love for basketball and anything Steph Curry.'" He frequently communicated his love of Curry on his Twitter account.


Word of Barakat's fandom soon reached Curry, who tweeted a message of condolence:



Curry later decided to pay special tribute to Barakat, according to Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group:


Curry said he will write on his shoes and hoped the tribute to one of his biggest fans would be picked up by national television cameras at Barclays Center in Brooklyn as he participates in the Three-Point Contest.

"Even though we never met, I think it will hopefully mean a lot to his family and friends that knew what kind of a basketball fan he was to have some kind of peace knowing that people are thinking about him and they're not alone," said Curry, the leading vote-getter in the All-Star balloting. [...]

"[..] anytime you have a guy that was that supportive and takes it to a whole another level, I'm going to do something tonight," said Curry, who typically writes the Bible verse "I can do all things..." on his shoes.

Curry's planned tribute was briefly derailed, as the shoes he planned to wear during All-Star Saturday Night — two different variations of his signature Under Armour Curry One sneaker, the "Candy Reign" and "Father to Son" models, earmarked for the Three-Point Shootout and Shooting Stars contest, respectively — were "stolen in transit to Brooklyn," as reported by George Kiel of NiceKicks.com. The theft was reported in time for Under Armour to make alternate arrangements, though; ESPN.com's Darren Rovell reported that the backup pairs "will be carried to the Barclays Center for Curry to wear," and for him to pay his respects to his late fan.


2015 NBA All-Star Game coverage from Yahoo Sports:



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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 : Buster Graham's racing helmet looks like La Tech's football helmet (Photos)

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The ARCA race at Daytona is one of the first races of the 2015 American racing season. So we say this with the knowledge that it may be like declaring victory in the first minute of a basketball game. However, we're comfortable with our proclaimation.


Buster Graham's Louisiana Tech racing helmet is the best college-themed racing helmet you'll see all year. Behold its beauty.



Graham's description of it was perfect.


"Not a lot of flash, but it's cool looking," he said.




Graham's Roulo Brothers Racing car in Saturday's Lucas Oil 200 had Louisiana Tech all over it. He said the funding for the paint scheme came from an anonymous donor who, unsurprisingly, is a graduate of Louisiana Tech (In basic terms, if NASCAR's Sprint Cup Series is the major leagues, ARCA is the the single-A level of national stock car racing).


The car didn't make it to the end of the race, however. Graham was caught up in an accident after two cars collided in front of him. He couldn't avoid the No. 66 of Leilani Munter and the right front of his car suffered significant damage.






The next appearance for the helmet (and the La. Tech car) is set to be at Talladega in May. After Graham is done with the headgear, he already has plans for it.


"We'll probably donate to Louisiana Tech," Graham said. "Probably the suit too."


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







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News sport : The oaks have returned to Toomer's Corner (Video)

The Toomer’s Oaks have returned.


Two 35-foot oak trees, which were selected from a groove of 9,000 trees in South Carolina, were planted Friday morning at the intersection of Magnolia Avenue and College Street in Auburn, which is affectionately referred to as Toomer’s Corner.


It was the first time in nearly two years oak trees had inhabited Toomer’s Corner. The previous trees had to be removed after being poisoned in 2010.



A third oak tree of the same size was planted outside the Facilities Management Complex and will serve as a backup in case anything happens to either of the new trees.


The tree planting marks the first phase in renovation the iconic corner, which is where Auburn fans come to celebrate football victories. The second phase will begin following the spring game in April. That phase will include the planting of 30 15-foot-tall trees, which came from the acorns of the original oaks.



While several fans were on hand to watch the planting of the new iconic trees, fans won’t be allowed to roll them with toilet paper — a tradition while celebrating victories — until the 2016 season to allow the trees to adjust to their new environment.


For more Auburn news, visit AuburnSports.com.


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


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