Fellaini - LVG’s go-to guy

At the start of thre season, Louis Van Gaal did not see Marouane Fellaini as a Manchester United player and was intent on selling the Belgian.


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The long-awaited emergence of Marouane Fellaini as a contributing member of the Manchester United squad was confirmed by the Belgian’s goal in the FA Cup at Preston on Monday night.


Fellaini’s increasing importance to United, however, perhaps says as much about the learning curve being experienced by his manager Louis van Gaal in English football as it does about his own improvement.


Van Gaal arrived at Old Trafford last summer intent on playing a certain style of football. Almost immediately he instructed United chief executive Ed Woodward to try to sell Fellaini, saying privately that he was ‘not a Manchester United player’.


Had a foot injury not got in the way of a subsequent loan move to Napoli last August, Fellaini would no longer be at the club. Van Gaal, however, has realised in recent weeks just how useful the Belgian can be when he needs to change his team’s style of play.


At West Ham in the Barclays Premier League 10 days ago, Fellaini’s introduction as a substitute earned United a late goal and a point from a 1-1 draw.


On Monday in Lancashire, Fellaini’s switch to the focal point of a hastily restructured 4-4-2 formation earned him what was effectively the winning goal in a 3-1 United win.


‘I have used Fellaini a lot of times already — more than ever and he scores more than ever,’ Van Gaal said. ‘Fellaini is a player that when we cannot beat the pressure with quality we can always beat the pressure another way. Now I have played him for the first time in his preferred position.’


Those who remember Fellaini at his best — for Everton and for Belgium — will recall him using his height and physical presence high up the field. He was, during his time under David Moyes at Goodison Park, a talented and effective attacking outlet.


Moyes once described Fellaini as having the best chest trap in world football. It was a peculiar statement and sounded almost as though the 27–year-old was being damned with faint praise. More interestingly, it was a talent that Moyes seemed to negate after he brought Fellaini to United for £27.5million by trying to turn him in to a holding midfield player. It was a plan that did not work and it is from positions in the final third of the field that Fellaini is now beginning to exert an influence once again.


‘The manager is the boss but of course I like that,’ said Fellaini yesterday when asked about a role up front. ‘I can score goals from there so I am happy.


‘We changed the game when the manager switched things and I went forward. It worked well.’


Van Gaal certainly did not envisage finding a place for Fellaini in the forward line when he replaced Moyes last year. The Dutch coach understandably felt that Wayne Rooney, Robin van Persie, Angel di Maria, James Wilson and Radamel Falcao would provide him with enough options in those positions.


Van Gaal did not think there was room in his midfield for Fellaini either but, as time has passed, the United manager has realised that English football — and particularly the Barclays Premier League — asks so many different questions and requires so many different answers that players like Fellaini can become useful.


Van Gaal will talk all day about his love of attractive football but he is, above all, a pragmatist and always has been.


This is the man who shunted the great Brazilian striker Rivaldo out to the wing during his years at Barcelona, the man who used Dirk Kuyt in five different positions in one Holland game — including right-back and centre forward — during a World Cup knockout game last summer.


Currently, the United manager has players like Falcao and Van Persie who are, by their own standards, failing to do their jobs. Falcao was wretched against Preston and, with Van Persie expected to be fit for the game at Swansea on Saturday, one wonders when we will see the Colombian in the starting line-up again.


It is, therefore, at times like this that players such as Fellaini start to become rather useful. For reasons that are not entirely his fault, United’s big Belgian will forever be associated with Moyes’ troubled tenure at Old Trafford. He will be known as the big-money signing who bombed.


Footballers are allowed more than one life at a club, though, more than one chance. Fellaini will never be an iconic Manchester United footballer but his contributions are becoming frequent enough to have already proved a few people wrong, including his own manager.


WHAT THE STATS SAY


MAROUANE FELLAINI has scored the same number of goals since January 1 (two) as he managed in the first half of the season. The Belgian has been used more and more by Louis van Gaal in recent weeks — and the Dutchman’s decision is paying off. United have won 58.9 per cent of the games Fellaini has played in this season, compared to 45.5 per cent when he has not featured. – Daily Mail






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Chiefs’ unbeaten run ended

SuperSport United ended Kaizer Chiefs' 19-game unbeaten Premiership run, defeating the league leaders 2-0 in Polokwane.


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Johannesburg – Second-half goals from Jeremy Brockie and Dove Wome arrested Kaizer Chiefs' 19-game unbeaten Premiership run as SuperSport United walked away 2-0 winners in Polokwane on Tuesday night.


Brockie made it two goals in two games before Wome scored his sixth league goal of the season as United halted Chiefs' superb run.


Three valuable points allowed SuperSport to climb to sixth in the standings, while Chiefs remained top of the log but are in danger of seeing their lead at the top slashed to seven points depending on results to come.


Despite Chiefs' early possession, it was Brockie who had the first taste for goal, narrowly volleying over the bar after Eric Mathoho struggled to head his clearance away.


The teams traded blows but failed to inspire any meaningful chances on target.


Ryan Chapman and Matthew Rusike had chances sail over the bar, before Brockie gave Amakhosi a scare when he breached Brilliant Khuzwayo's defence and netted what looked to be the opening goal, but was denied by an offside call midway through the half.


United came out firing in the second half and soon stole the lead through Brockie, who headed beyond Khuzwayo from Chapman's superb delivery into the area.


Brockie cooly nodded home from a tight angle to send the Pretoria side coasting into the lead and looking full value for their advantage.


Chiefs responded by peppering SuperSport with a host of chances, particularly from corners, where United looked vulnerable.


Their defence, however, stood firm and shut the door on any Chiefs attacks in their final third.


Ronwen Williams was a standout performer for Igesund's side, showing great maturity in commanding his area and thwarting Chiefs at regular intervals with good punches away from the danger zone.


Second-half replacement, David Zulu, came close eight minutes from the end but shot straight at a grateful Williams, who didn't have to move and made a good save to keep his team's lead intact in the dying minutes of the half.


Parker came within centimetres just two minutes later when he clipped the crossbar from dead in front after Mathoho's shot forced Williams into parrying away awkwardly.


Parker picked up the rebound and should have equalised, but somehow managed to miss when he went for power, thrashing the woodwork and bouncing wide of the mark as SuperSport held on for dear life.


Just when Chiefs thought they were in with a chance to equalise, up stepped Wome in the second minute of three additional minutes, scoring the second and putting the result beyond doubt at the near post.


Thuso Phala, who had been largely anonymous throughout, did brilliantly to beat his marker on the flank, before he delivered a pinpoint ball in for Wome, who prodded home the second, sending the home crowd into raptures as United condemned Chiefs to their first league defeat of the campaign.– Sapa






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Cavani goal gives PSG deserved point

Paris St Germain sustained their hopes of reaching the Champions League quarter-finals when Edinson Cavani's powerful second-half header salvaged a 1-1 home draw against Chelsea.


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Paris - Paris St Germain sustained their hopes of reaching the Champions League quarter-finals when Edinson Cavani's powerful second-half header salvaged a 1-1 home draw against Chelsea in their last-16 first leg on Tuesday.


Cavani struck early in the second half to cancel out Branislav Ivanovic's first-half header, which was scored against the run of play after the French champions had dominated from the start at the Parc des Princes.


Chelsea, who won last year's quarter-final with PSG on away goals, scored with their only chance while the hosts had several opportunities to take a lead into the second leg through Cavani and Zlatan Ibrahimovic but failed to take them.


The return will be played at Stamford Bridge on March 11.


“We could have lost, so I think the result is a positive one... against a very good team with fantastic technical players. It was a difficult match,” Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho told ITV.


PSG midfielder David Luiz told Canal Plus: “We played well. They had one chance and they scored. We had a good strategy, we have a good coach, good players. We have ambitions, we can reach the quarter-finals,”


PSG manager Laurent Blanc, having to deal with a barrage of injuries, fielded central defender Luiz in an unusual holding midfield position while Marquinhos paired up with fellow Brazilian Thiago Silva in central defence.


PSG were without defensive midfielders Yohan Cabaye and Thiago Motta, full back Serge Aurier and forward Lucas, who were all injured.


Gregory van der Wiel started at right back with the task of containing Chelsea's Belgium forward Eden Hazard, which he did rather well.


Chelsea, who were only missing John Obi Mikel, looked content to sit back and wait, hoping to hit the hosts on the break.


PSG dominated possession and came close to opening the scoring in the 11th minute when Chelsea keeper Thibaut Courtois tipped away Blaise Matuidi's header from Cavani's cross.


Uruguay striker Cavani's header at the near post from Ezequiel Lavezzi's corner was also superbly saved by the diving Courtois in the 34th.


But it was Chelsea who took the lead two minutes later with their first attempt on goal involving three defenders as Ivanovic emphatically headed the ball home after Gary Cahill cleverly flicked on a John Terry cross.


PSG went on the attack after the break and were rewarded when the unmarked Cavani equalised after 54 minutes with a firm downward header from Matuidi's cross on the right.


Ibrahimovic then slalomed through the defence before his low shot was saved by Courtois and the rebound fell to the feet of Lavezzi, whose attempt was blocked by Terry.


Cavani then had another header tipped over the bar by Courtois and after a dazzling run into the area saw his low poked shot roll just wide 10 minutes from time.


Blanc brought on Lavezzi for Javier Pastore before Ibrahimovic almost found the winner with a header that was brilliantly saved by Courtois in added time. – Reuters






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News sport : Syracuse and UConn engage in hilarious Twitter battle

Ah, look how cute. Syracuse and UConn miss each other.


The old Big East rivals don't play this season with the Orange now in the ACC and all, but that didn't stop the folks who control the schools' Twitter accounts from taking swipes at each other Tuesday. This actually looks like a trap set for Syracuse because UConn started and most definitely got the last word with this brief exchange.





It sure would be fun to see these two meet at some point in the postseason, The problem with that is Syracuse won't be in the postseason at all this year because of a self-imposed punishment it announced earlier this month as it tried to get out in front of the coming results of an NCAA investigation. But it's not like UConn is guaranteed a spot in one of the postseason tournaments at this point. The defending national champs are 14-10 overall and 7-5 in a relatively weak American Conference and the Huskies are coming off an 18-point loss at SMU. As you might expect, fans of both schools saw the exchange and then chimed in with a new round of insults and burns and by the time it all fizzled out there were probably a few hundred hours of lost productivity our nation's economy will never get back.


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[Kyle Ringo is the assistant editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at kyle.ringo@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Kobe Bryant says the 2011 lockout 'was made to restrict the Lakers'

Kobe Bryant, in his declining years, is easily the most overpaid player in the NBA. He played just 35 games this year before bowing out due to another season ending injury, making $23.5 million and he’ll make $25 million next year.


However, Kobe Bryant, for just about the entirety of his career and even when he was making the absolute most money the NBA would allow him to make, was completely and utterly underpaid. Kobe has long been aware of this, since his teens even, and he’s completely correct in reminding us that the NBA’s owners have developed a collectively bargained system that does not reward its stars with payment commensurate with their contributions.


What Kobe might be a little off on is including his beloved Lakers within the ranks of his moneyed martyrdom. In a typically-interesting and oftentimes odd interview with Chuck Klosterman at GQ, Bryant relayed that he thinks it was the Los Angeles Lakers that were the cause of the owners’ hardline stance during the 2011 NBA lockout. Despite the fact that the Lakers were swept in the second round of the playoffs prior to the work stoppage.


When asked by Klosterman as to how the Lakers were going to attempt to build a championship-level team this summer, Bryant dropped this:



But how could that possibly be done? Doesn’t the league’s financial system dictate certain limitations?




Well, okay: Look at the [2011] lockout. That lockout was made to restrict the Lakers. It was. I don’t care what any other owner says. It was designed to restrict the Lakers and our marketability.




The Lakers specifically, or teams like the Lakers?



There is only one team like the Lakers. Everything that was done with that lockout was to restrict the Lakers’ ability to get players and to create a sense of parity, for the San Antonios of the world and the Sacramentos of the world. But a funny thing happened, coming out of that lockout: Even with those restrictions, the Lakers pulled off a trade [for Chris Paul] that immediately set us up for a championship, a run of championships later, and which saved money. Now, the NBA vetoed that trade. But the Lakers pulled that sh-t off, and no one would have thought it was even possible. The trade got vetoed, because they’d just staged the whole lockout to restrict the Lakers. Mitch got penalized for being smart. But if we could do that…

Don’t flatter yourself, Kobe. Don’t flatter yourself, Lakers.


If there was any style of team that the NBA’s owners set out to destroy, it was a top-heavy Miami Heat squad featuring three of the best players at their position and cast lower-salaried helpers. It is completely fair to suggest that a litany of NBA owners, angry at superstars deciding to control their own fate in sunny Miami, wanted to somehow level the playing field. To make the money in Minnesota count as much as the money in Miami.


The real reason for the lockout was money, in general, however. The NBA’s owners needed to wrest back a chunk of basketball-related income in order to cap themselves from spending outrageously – not on superstars, but for everyone else. From tossing too-long contracts at middling players, or getting too giddy in dealing draft picks during trade deadlines and (especially) offseasons that were featuring more and more outrageous transactions.


Now, do you want to talk about a lockout that was about the Lakers? Look at the work stoppage that followed the 1997-98 season.


Prior to the collective bargaining agreement that was signed in January of 1999, the NBA did not have a cap on individual player salaries or a luxury tax for teams that had strayed too far over the league’s artificial salary “cap.”


This was why the Chicago Bulls were looking to spend some of the hundreds of millions of dollars they earned during the Michael Jordan years to toss unending amounts of cash at a new generation of players. This is why Jordan made over $31 million in his final season, and why the Lakers were able to clear cap space and outbid Orlando for Shaquille O’Neal’s services in 1996. Even with a salary cap in place, teams with space could choose to toss 90 percent of a team’s available cap space on one star, if they saw fit.


Following this CBA change, however, players were given set salaries based on how long they had been in the NBA, and the idea of a “maximum contract” was established. Not only that, the new CBA incentivized re-signing with your incumbent team, which is why young stars like Kobe Bryant, Ray Allen, Allen Iverson, and Antoine Walker all quietly re-signed with their current squads just following the lockout. Even had a team like the Bulls offered any of those players the max, as the Bulls did, those young stars could make more by staying home.


Despite the massive cap space and market advantage, the Bulls were forced into playing by everyone else’s rules, which led to the franchise’s decline. In a similar vein some 15 years later, the Lakers could not use the money earned from their massive local television contract to offer Carmelo Anthony or LeBron James $30 million a season to pair with Kobe. Not because of the 2011 NBA lockout, but because of the 1998-99 one.


You may also recall that Kobe Bryant was one of five players to actually vote against the final version of the new CBA in 1999.


Laker teammate Shaquille O’Neal had already gotten his massive contract in 1996 and he pushed to end the lockout sooner rather than later, taking on a cadre of agents and other superstars along the way. Bryant, with his second contract now likely cut from $100-something million to “just” $71 million in total, knew that this new deal would enhance the NBA’s middle class while just about underpaying even players earning “maximum” contracts. It was absolutely in his best interests to go against the grain in that instance, and an incredibly gutsy and intelligent move to make for someone at any age, much less 20-years old.


It was the subsequent overpayment of the middle class players – your Josh Childresses or Drew Goodens – that led to the 2011 work stoppage. Not a fear of a big, bad Laker machine. That had already been taken care of.


Did the NBA seemingly wrong the Lakers by overruling the trade that sent them Chris Paul, so soon after the 2011 lockout? Perhaps, but in the end the NBA-owned New Orleans club ended up making a better deal for Paul. Just nine months later, Laker fans were actually happy that the NBA overruled the Paul trade, as a lineup featuring Bryant, Steve Nash, Metta World Peace, Pau Gasol and Dwight Howard was seemingly superior to one featuring Paul, Bryant, MWP, Andrew Bynum and Josh McRoberts.


That obviously didn’t work out, but it doesn’t mean the Lakers still weren’t able to put together two different super-teams under the new rules. On top of that, the Cleveland Cavaliers worked their way toward a fearsome super-team last summer, and there is always a chance the Lakers or Knicks could do the same this summer or next with scads of cap space and a big name already in place.


Of course, that’s dependent on superstars choosing Laker or Knick-money over the money offered by their incumbent teams. Outfits in smaller markets such as Portland and Memphis don’t have to be fearful of the Laker or Knick television revenue as they cobble together maximum contracts that will actually out-bid the Los Angeles or New York offer, as outlined by a collective bargaining agreement that was preceded by a lockout.


The 1998 one, Kobe. Not the 2011 one.


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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 : Ohio State QB J.T. Barrett has screws removed from injured ankle (Photo)

In addition to Braxton Miller, who has begun to throw while rehabbing an injured shoulder, another Ohio State quarterback – J.T. Barrett – is also on the mend.


Barrett, who started every regular season game for the Buckeyes before breaking his ankle in the regular season finale against Michigan on Nov. 29, underwent a recent procedure to have two screws removed from his ankle.


Barrett documented his progress on Instagram.



Barrett is less than three months removed from the injury, so it has to be encouraging for Buckeyes fans to see his progress.


Ohio State hasn’t offered a timetable for his return to the field, but with Miller throwing and Cardale Jones returning following his historic three-game stretch, the Ohio State quarterback competition is going to be the talk of college football’s preseason.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.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 : Daily inspiration: Team manager with autism hits three on senior night

Adrian Martinez has been the team manager of the Canutillo (El Paso, Texas) High School boys varsity basketball team for three years. Martinez is a senior who has autism.


On senior night, the team thanked him by asking him to suit up and get in the game. As soon as he did, Martinez nailed a three from the corner.



Fans were wearing T-shirts with his name and number on them, as well as chanting his name throughout the game.


When he hit the shot, they erupted in a raucous cheer, a moment no one in that gym is likely to forget. Hats off the Martinez for hitting the shot, and the team and the fans for helping him celebrate.


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



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News sport : A-Rod releases hand-written apology letter to baseball fans


(AP)

We knew an Alex Rodriguez apology was coming. Some whispers said it could come at spring training in front of the media. He could have used Yankee Stadium for his grand mea culpa. There was even a rumor that he'd use Derek Jeter's Player Tribune website.


In the end, A-Rod went a different route, releasing a hand-written apology letter into the wilds of the Internet on Tuesday. In it, he says, among other things, "I accept the fact that many of you will not believe my apology or anything that I say at this point." Give him one point for self-awareness.


Here's the two-page letter, via MLB.com:






Nice handwriting, dude. But if you don't want to bother reading cursive, here's a translation:



To the Fans,




I take full responsibility for the mistakes that led to my suspension for the 2014 season. I regret that my actions made the situation worse than it needed to be. To Major League Baseball, the Yankees, the Steinbrenner family, the Players Association and you, the fans, I can only say I'm sorry.




I accept the fact that many of you will not believe my apology or anything that I say at this point. I understand why and that's on me. It was gracious of the Yankees to offer me the use of Yankee Stadium for this apology, but I decided that next time I am in Yankee Stadium, I should be in pinstripes doing my job.




I served the longest suspension in the history of the league for PED use. The Commissioner has said the matter is over. The Players Association has said the same. The Yankees have said the next step is to play baseball.




I'm ready to put this chapter behind me and play some ball.




This game has been my single biggest passion since I was a teenager. When I go to Spring Training, I will do everything I can to be the best player and teammate possible, earn a spot on the Yankees and help us win.




Sincerely,

Alex



It probably doesn't mean much at this point. Baseball fans feel how they feel about A-Rod and his apology — no matter what avenue it took or what it said — wasn't going to change that. But at least he's been doing and saying all the right things lately.


More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:



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Mike Oz is an editor for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Raouraoua withdraws from FIFA vote

Algeria's Mohamed Raouraoua has withdrawn from elections to FIFA's executive and will lose his place on the powerful group in a dramatic fall from grace.


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Johannessburg - Algeria's Mohamed Raouraoua has withdrawn from elections to FIFA's executive committee and will lose his place on the powerful 25-man group in a dramatic fall from grace.


Raouraoua was elected as one of Africa's four representatives four years ago in a swift rise up the ladder of soccer politics that marked him out as a potential future leader on his own continent.


The 67-year-old president of the Algerian Football Federation was due to be one of four candidates for two places on the committee to be decided at the Confederation of African Football (CAF) Congress in Cairo on April 7.


But he has pulled out, CAF said on Tuesday, leaving Jacques Anouma of the Ivory Coast, Tarek Bouchamaoui of Tunisia and Constant Omari Selemani of the Democratic Republic of Congo in the elections.


Anouma is an incumbent while the other two are attempting to win a place for the first time. Each of CAF's 54-member countries will vote in Cairo.


Raouraoua, a former head of Algerian television, was elected in 2011 to a seat traditionally held by a candidate from the southern region of the continent in a surprise flouting of previous convention.


Although it was not written into its statutes, CAF had previously chosen its executive committee members for world soccer's ruling body FIFA from various geographical regions with one seat automatically held by the organisation's president.


However, such was Raouraoua's initial appeal that this tradition was dispensed with.


The Algerian was touted as a possible successor to long-standing CAF president Issa Hayatou but has since been frozen out, according to African football administrators, and he felt it prudent to withdraw to avoid the possibility of a humiliating defeat.


In April, CAF are to formalise rules on the election of FIFA executive committee members.


From 2017 they will reserve one seat for the CAF president, one for a French speaker, one for a candidate from an English speaking country and one to be shared among the Arab-speaking and Portuguese-speaking countries.


The pair elected in April will serve two years.


Reuters






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News sport : Jameis Winston, Bryce Petty prepare for NFL Combine with Jim Harbaugh (Photo)

With the NFL Combine beginning in this week, flocks of prospects will head to Indianapolis to show their skills in front of scouts and GMs from across the league.


Before heading to Lucas Oil Stadium, two prominent quarterbacks – Florida State’s Jameis Winston and Baylor’s Bryce Petty – made a pit stop in Ann Arbor for some last minute tutelage from Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh.



According to the Detroit Free Press, a Michigan spokesman said the two quarterbacks arrived in Ann Arbor on Sunday with quarterback guru George Whitfield, a friend of Harbaugh.


The two have been training with Harbaugh since Sunday and came to Michigan before making the trip to Indianapolis in order to “get acclimated to the time and weather, and throw in an indoor facility before going to Lucas Oil (Stadium).”


Winston reportedly hasn’t decided yet whether he will throw at the combine, with Whitfield saying “it’s a game-time decision.”


“He’s a very big believer in himself, so it’ll be interesting. He’s prepared to do it,” Whitfield told USA Today.


Quarterbacks are scheduled to throw on Saturday, so Winston still has a few days to mull his decision.


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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 : Report: Eagles nixed Nick Foles-for-Josh Gordon trade in 2013

Oh, how the 2013 NFL season had one proposed trade gone through.


The Philadelphia Eagles reportedly turned down a trade offer that would have sent Nick Foles to the Cleveland Browns for Josh Gordon, according to ESPN.com's Phil Sheridan.


Think about that one for a minute.


Foles started six games as a rookie for the Eagles in Andy Reid's final season in 2012, with uneven results. Gordon, also a rookie in 2012, was coming off a 50-catch, 803-yard, five-TD season but was facing a two-game suspension to start the 2013 campaign. Neither player had yet to truly break out in the NFL.


Instead, the Eagles and new head coach Chip Kelly passed on the intriguing offer, and Foles had a tremendous statistical season with 27 touchdowns and only two interceptions in a 10-6 campaign. Meanwhile, Gordon led the NFL in receiving yards despite missing those two games, collecting 1,646 yards on 87 catches with nine scores.


The Eagles only had Michael Vick and Matt Barkley at quarterback. The Browns had Jason Campbell and Brandon Weeden.


The Eagles had just released DeSean Jackson, not wanting his headaches, and were counting on Jeremy Maclin as one of their top wideouts. The Browns didn't have much else at receiver outside of Gordon.


What's fascinating is that you could argue that both the Eagles and Browns might still want to move on from Foles and Gordon, respectively. The Eagles probably don't dislike Foles, and he could end up being their starting quarterback again this season if, say, a trade doesn't materialize for Oregon's Marcus Mariota. The Browns certainly know that Gordon's value is as low as it's going to get, with an indefinite suspension likely wiping out his 2015 season barring some development in his situation.


A great what-if moment that didn't happen.


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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Power Rankings: Our 2015 Chase predictions (Hint: Take 2)

Power Rankings are back!


The 2015 season is (officially) nearly upon us, so we figured there's no better place to break out Power Rankings for the first time this year than by making it the space for our official, unchangeable and definitely 100 percent accurate Chase predictions.


Here are the 16 drivers we think will make the Chase in 2015. The top four are our final four and the other 12 are who we think will be Nos. 5-16 after the season. Let's get to it.


1. Brad Keselowski: Title No. 2 for team No. 2? That's where we are leaning. Remember, he had the most wins in the Cup Series last year (6), one more than 2014 Sprint Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick (5). However, here is a possible reason to take caution. Other than Jimmie Johnson (three times), no driver since 2006 who tallied the most wins in a Sprint Cup season has equaled or improved his finish in the points standings the following season. Keselowski is in that group, as he and Denny Hamlin tied Johnson for the circuit lead in wins in 2012. Though, yes, it's hard to repeat as a champion.


If Keselowski gets to a final four, we like he and crew chief Paul Wolfe in a winner-take-all format. And we're going to go out on a limb and say while Brad may still be considered the antagonist in the Cup Series story at the end of the season, there won't be any prolonged public conflicts in 2015.


Bovada odds for the title: 8/1


2. Carl Edwards: Here's to the third straight year of a driver with a new team being a Chase contender. If Edwards gets off to a hot start in 2015 you're going to quickly lose count of all the comparisons to Matt Kenseth's 2013 with Joe Gibbs Racing. Will Edwards win seven races like Kenseth did in 2013? No. But he's going to be faster than he was last year, and we saw how consistent he can be.


Bovada odds for the title: 10/1


3. Jimmie Johnson: The six-time champion has had his two worst Sprint Cup seasons in the past four years. Is Johnson in the midst of a career swoon? Pardon us as we giggle from typing a low-grade television news teaser there. No, he's not. Yeah, 2014 wasn't a good season for Johnson as his Chase finish would have been (relatively) porous with either the old or new format. But we're not going to say it's the sign of any sort of trend.


Bovada odds for the title: 13/2


4. Kevin Harvick: Can Harvick be the first non-Johnson to repeat as champion since Jeff Gordon? We don't dislike his chances. But just ask Joey Logano about the crazy stuff that can happen to take away your title shot in a one-race format. If these four drivers make the final race, it's truly a toss-up between the four.


Bovada odds for the title: 15/2


5. Jeff Gordon: What's a bigger storyline at Homestead? Gordon's possible final race or the championship? Sure, they're married together if the four-time champion is in the final four, but if he's not, he'll be a close second to the title chase, especially depending on the drivers racing for the championship. Bold prediction time. Gordon wins at least one of the following: the Daytona 500, All-Star Race, Coca-Cola 600, Brickyard 400, Southern 500 or the Sprint Cup title.


Bovada odds for the title: 15/2


6. Matt Kenseth: Yeah, this was the only JGR team that didn't get a win in 2014. But it was also the only JGR team that kept the driver and crew chief together. Why? Because Kenseth had 22 top-10 finishes, four more than Denny Hamlin and seven more than Kyle Busch. Expect more of the same in 2015, except with a win or two.


Bovada odds for the title: 10/1


7. Joey Logano: Being eliminated from the cahse before the final race shouldn't be seen as a step backwards for Logano. Unless he struggles all year and doesn't make it out of the first round. If he gets to round two or round three and has a win or two in 2015, it's a continuation of the foundation that was built last year. Logano is going to win a title, and it's going to happen sooner rather than later.


Bovada odds for the title: 9/1


8. Kyle Busch: Is Logano taking the "is going to win a title, and it's going to happen sooner rather than later" mantle from Busch? It's a fair question to ask, though title expectations have also been heaped on Busch without steady consistency. He's finished in the top five of the standings twice, and those finishes happened six years apart. If the new rules package mimics the way the Xfinity Series cars drive, don't be surprised if this is the year Busch is a true challenger for the title.


Bovada odds for the title: 10/1


9. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin snuck through the Chase more than Ryan Newman did. He was the guy who was the epitome of avoiding bad finishes throughout the Chase. Can Hamlin be in the final four again? Yes. Can he be the guy who finishes fourth among the Gibbs cars? Yes to that too. But you can answer yes for any of the four JGR drivers to that question. How the team adapts to an extra car in 2015 will be a focal point, especially if there are struggles.


Bovada odds for the title: 14/1


10. Tony Stewart: Smoke back? He's the pick for the 2015 Daytona 500, which would guarantee a spot in the Chase. He's back to being ornery (see the weight issue during Unlimited practice) and aggressive (he had a point to prove in the first part of the Unlimited and ran near the front before being crashed). Stewart is going to win a race in 2015. Will week-to-week consistency follow?


Bovada odds for the title: 22/1


11. Dale Earnhardt Jr.: If Junior finishes outside the top 10, it's got to be the crew chief change, right? Sigh. Even if it's not, it'll be Junior Nation's most overanalyzed aspect of the 2015 season. Junior's going to be good again and he's going to win a race again. It's just a matter of not having a misstep int he Chase.


Bovada odds for the title: 10/1


12. Kurt Busch: 2015 sleeper? 2015 sleeper. Busch's partnership with Tony Gibson was fruitful at the end of the season and don't act surprised if he's a serious contender for the title. The wild card, of course, is any pending action from the Delaware attorney general's office, but we won't assume anything at this point. Busch's 2014 roller coaster evens out this year.


Bovada odds for the title: 25/1


13. Kyle Larson: If we're presuming that Larson wins a race this year, where does it happen? We'll take the easy way out and say Auto Club Speedway, where he won his first Xfinity Series race last year and closed in a hurry in the Cup Series. The worn out pavement suits his driving style as he can wheel the car up near the wall and zip around everyone, a la Kyle Busch did in 2013 to win.


Bovada odds for the title: 16/1


14. Kasey Kahne: Will Kahne once again be the fourth car in terms of performance at Hendrick. Will he need to win to get into the Chase or sneak in on points? Will Keith Rodden's return to the team be the magic elixir the No. 5 needs? Notice how one of the questions we're not asking is about Kahne's long-term future at Hendrick Motorsports. That's a big positive. He finished fourth in 2012 but the big year for Kahne at HMS could still be to come.


Bovada odds for the title: 25/1


15. Clint Bowyer: At Daytona media days, Bowyer said he figured consistency would be enough to get in the Chase in 2014. It didn't happen, so now he's all about the wins. The truth is somewhere in the middle, and Bowyer likely knows it. The No. 15 was consistent last year, but consistently meh. If Bowyer ups the performance without a win, a Chase berth isn't impossible.


Bovada odds for the title: 40/1


16. Ryan Newman: What's more indicative of Ryan Newman's chances in 2015? His first 26 races of 2014 where he top-15'd the field like crazy and made the Chase or his final 10 where he was a serious contender for the title despite not winning a race? If it's the latter, move Newman up seven or eight spots in this ranking.


Bovada odds for the title: 40/1


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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 : The 10 burning questions for the NFL's offseason


The NFL scouting combine is a big week in the offseason.


Draft prospects work out and meet with teams. Teams see agents and get a better idea what free agency will hold for them. General managers get reacquainted and feel each other out for future trades. A lot of seeds are planted in Indianapolis this week.


So with the NFL’s offseason getting into full swing this week at the combine, it’s also a good time to look at the 10 biggest questions in the NFL with free agency and the draft coming up faster than you think:


Will Ray Rice play in 2015?


Considering Rice, who was involved in a domestic violence incident that has become synonymous with commissioner Roger Goodell’s tenure, has been free to sign with anyone for a while, it’s possible the answer is no. Maybe he’ll be more attractive during a second wave of free agency when teams find they didn’t land anyone viable at running back in the first wave and there aren’t many great options left over. Rice is not helped by the fact that the last time we saw him play in 2013, he averaged just 3.1 yards per carry. Rice might resurface but he has to be concerned he won’t get that second chance.


Where will Adrian Peterson play in 2015?


Unlike Rice, Peterson is still considered an elite talent. The ice seems to be thawing in Minnesota, with Vikings officials saying they’d welcome Peterson back despite the incident last season in which he pleaded no contest in an incident in which he disciplined his son with a switch. Something may need to happen with his $12.75 million base salary, which is a huge amount for a running back in this era. The best guess is something works out with the Vikings. If not, he'll play somewhere (and no, I'm not buying it being the Dallas Cowboys).


Most likely landing spot for Darrelle Revis?


Assuming the Patriots don’t pick up Revis’ massive option for 2015 ($25 million cap hit), where does the All-Pro cornerback land? Well, how about New England? The Patriots have expressed a desire to bring Revis back on a long-term deal. One has to assume winning a Super Bowl with the Patriots was a fun experience for Revis. Coming back to New England makes sense for everyone.


If not Revis, who will be the biggest free agent to switch teams?


Defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh to the Oakland Raiders seems like a reasonable fit. The Raiders have a ton of cap room (again) and general manager Reggie McKenzie can’t afford to strike out completely in free agency (again). The Lions will clearly try to resign Suh, but they better get it done before free agency starts. If he hits the market, some team is going to break the bank for him.



Jameis Winston or Marcus Mariota at No. 1?


The only thing that seems for certain is the Tampa Bay Buccaneers will take a quarterback at No. 1. If they don’t, cutting Josh McCown will look really dumb. So who will it be? If you’re just looking at film, Winston might win because Mariota didn’t run an NFL-style offense at Oregon. But Winston has off-field questions. I’d bet on Winston but that could change before the draft in late April.



If Peyton Manning returns to the Broncos, how good will he be?


From various reports, Manning wants to come back to the Broncos and the Broncos want Manning back. Perhaps there’s a holdup over money, but it would be an upset if he’s not back under center with the Broncos for another season. But after Manning slipped last season, can he still be elite? The best guess is he’ll be managed more, like he was at the end of last season. He had 47 or more attempts four times in Denver’s first 10 games, and that’s unlikely to happen again with Manning turning 38 next month. Then maybe he’ll be fresher in December and January. He still had a 101.5 rating last year; it’s not like he’s going to fall off completely in 2015. If he returns, that is.


Who will be the opening day starting QB for the Browns?


The Browns probably have little choice but to try to retain free agent Brian Hoyer (if he wants to come back to Cleveland, of course). Johnny Manziel is working on things off the field, in a treatment facility, and he’s no sure thing on the field. There’s nothing in free agency; Hoyer is the top quarterback option by far. There’s no easy fix for the Browns in the middle of the first round, where they have two picks. They’ll probably overpay Hoyer because the unknown at quarterback is a scary place.


What will happen to Jay Cutler?


It has been a while since we heard anything about Cutler being traded. Again, when teams face the unknown at quarterback they don’t always make good choices. Someone would probably offer the Bears a get out of jail free card and take on Cutler’s horrible contract in a trade (there are a lot of desperate teams at quarterback), but that means the Bears would be rebooting at quarterback. Mediocrity at quarterback is better for job security among coaches and front office personnel than starting over. So it seems Cutler will be back.


Will Marshawn Lynch play again?


It seems like we’re going to get Lynch retirement rumors every offseason until he actually does it. Will this be the year he walks away? The Seattle Seahawks say they don’t know. There was a report that the Seahawks would offer Lynch an extension that would pay him $10 million in 2015, and while it would seem that would be enough to lure Lynch back for at least another year, you can never be sure with him.



Do the Cowboys retain Dez Bryant, DeMarco Murray or both?


Two of the Cowboys’ big three on offense are free agents. It seems impossible to believe Bryant hits free agency. It would be a shock if he doesn’t receive the franchise tag if a long-term deal isn’t worked out. Murray is trickier. He is coming off an All-Pro season but he unfortunately finds himself in the “we won’t invest in running backs” era. It’s hard to believe that after such a successful season that Jerry Jones wouldn’t want to run it back, but it’s no guarantee Murray will be back.



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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 : Earnhardt or fighting? What was the greatest Daytona 500 moment ever?


The Daytona 500 is a marquee event every year, but every so often, the race achieves transcendence. Today, Yahoo Sports' Kevin Kaduk (@kevinkaduk) and Jay Busbee (@jaybusbee) kick around two classic moments: Dale Earnhardt's win in 1998 and the infamous 1979 fight in the grass. Plus: a ranking of the best tracks in NASCAR! Have your say on both topics right here in the comments or on Twitter at #kbarguments. Fire up!


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



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News sport : Kansas to use impact-sensing mouthguards to help monitor concussions

Nov 17, 2012; Lawrence, KS, USA; A Kansas Jayhawks helmet on the sidelines in the first half against the Iowa State Cyclones at Memorial Stadium. Iowa State won the game 51-23. Mandatory Credit: John Rieger-USA TODAY Sports In a contact sport like football, the risk of concussions exists on each play. New helmet technology has been introduced in recent years in efforts to combat this, and this spring, the University of Kansas football team will be among the first to try another new piece of technology: impact-sensing mouthguards.


According to the Kansas City Star, the mouthguards “let trainers monitor hits taken by individual players in real-time” and also “collect data to reveal trends across an entire season for the whole team.”


The mouthguards don’t diagnose concussions, but they do provide critical data to a team’s medical staff. From the Star:



To be clear, the mouthguards can’t diagnose concussions – that’s for training and medical staff to do. What they can do is measure impact to a player’s head and send a digital alert to coaches and trainers when someone’s taken a hit hard enough to cause a concussion. The mouthguards may be high-tech, but the good news is that football players don’t have to do anything they wouldn’t do with any old mouthguard. They pop it in and out of their mouth at will, Harper said, and the mouthguard does the rest – even sensing when to turn off and on.



Jesse Harper, the president and CEO of i1 Biometrics, the company that developed and sells the mouthguards, said “about 20 to 25 colleges” are ordering the product, with Kansas being one of the first.


Murphy Grant, Kansas’ assistant athletics director for sports medicine, told the Star he expects “about 80” players to try the mouthguards in spring practice.


“It’s going to be a very huge undertaking, but for us the safety and health care of our student-athletes is our number one priority,” Grant said. “If we can be a part of making the game safer – and keeping the game around – then we want to.”


If all goes well in spring, Grant said the program will keep the mouthguards when the season rolls around this fall.


The mouthguards use some pretty advanced technology. From the Star:



The mouthguards’ “ESP Chip Technology” measures the brain’s linear and rotational accelerations from impacts, according to i1 Biometrics. The mouthguards use an algorithm to measure, translate and wirelessly transfer data to a handheld mobile device used by trainers on the sidelines. The data can show the magnitude, location and direction of the impact. Trainers can use the information in real-time to, for example, pull out and physically evaluate a player who took an especially hard hit, Harper said.



The data evaluation continues after the game, too.



After the game, they can take a broader look at data collected for individual athletes – some of whom are affected differently by impacts than others – and for the whole team. Digital 3-D images can show the location and intensity of impacts on individual players’ heads, possibly helping identify trends such as improper hitting or tackling techniques, Harper said.



The data collected by the schools also gets sent back to i1 Biometrics for further evaluation from different teams (at all different levels) nationwide.


The end goal is simply to make the game safer moving forward – and this sounds like it could be a significant step.


For more Kansas news, visit JayhawkSlant.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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