FA warns van Gaal over referee jibe

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has been warned following comments he made about the referee after his team's FA Cup draw at Cambridge United.


|||

London - Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has been warned as to his future conduct following comments he made about the referee after his team's 0-0 FA Cup draw at Cambridge United, the FA said on Wednesday.


The 63-year-old Dutchman said everything had been against Premier League United during the fourth-round match last month against fourth-tier Cambridge, including the referee.


Van Gaal denied the allegation that he was accusing the official of bias, saying had never been punished for criticising a referee in his long and successful managerial career.


United won the replay 3-0 and beat Preston North End 3-1 on Monday to reach the quarter-finals.


Reuters






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

News sport : NASCAR makes changes for Xfinity and Trucks Daytona qualifying

NASCAR announced changes in the Daytona group qualifying format for the Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series on Wednesday. The tweaks come days after Sprint Cup Series qualifying for the front row of the Daytona 500 elicited many complaints from drivers and featured a wreck with Clint Bowyer, Reed Sorenson and J.J. Yeley.


The Cup Series qualifying was two five-minute rounds in the first round, followed by 24 cars in the second round for five minutes and 12 cars in the final round for five minutes. The sessions are now halved in the Xfinity Series (which qualifies Saturday) and the Truck Series (on Friday) and are 2 minutes and 30 seconds.


Speaking after qualifying on Sunday, NASCAR vice president of operations Steve O'Donnell said the sanctioning body would continue to seek feedback about how best to qualify cars at restrictor plate tracks via the group qualifying format.


The Cup Series field was divided into two groups in the first round of qualifying. For the Xfinity and Truck Series, the first round will feature four groups. The second round of the 24 fastest times from the first round, which was one group in Cup qualifying, will now be two groups of 12 cars. The final round will feature all 12 cars that move on from the second round.


Cars will also be lined up single-file on pit road via a random draw instead of backing out of their pit stalls like at non-restrictor plate tracks, preventing the traffic jam of cars clogging the exit of pit lane to wait for the latest possible moment like on Sunday. The order of the line will be determined by speed in the second and third rounds. Once cars move, they must head out on to the track.


If NASCAR is satisfied with the changes Xfinity and Truck Series, don't be surprised if the Cup qualifying format at Talladega is similar in May. Talladega is the next restrictor plate race on the schedule.


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1zOFfW8

News sport : NCAA puts West Virginia on probation for recruiting violations

Aug 31, 2013; Morgantown, WV, USA; General view as West Virginia plays William & Mary at Milan Puskar Stadium. (Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports) The NCAA slapped West Virginia with probation for self-reported recruiting violations in 14 different sports, including football.


According to a release from the NCAA, coaches from those sports “sent impermissible texts and placed impermissible calls to prospects and parents” between June 2010 and February 2013. The majority of the violations stemmed from the women’s gymnastics, football, women’s basketball and women’s soccer programs. Those programs committed “Level II violations,” while men’s basketball, baseball, men’s soccer, men’s wrestling, women’s tennis, women’s volleyball, men’s swimming, women’s diving, women’s rowing and women’s track and field all were determined to have committed “Level III violations.”


The violations committed by the football program were detailed in the NCAA’s Public Infractions Decision:



The enforcement staff and the institution agreed that between August 2010 and February 2013, 10 members of the football coaching staff and the football recruiting coordinator violated NCAA recruiting communication legislation by sending 46 impermissible text messages and placing 22 impermissible telephone calls to 45 football prospective student-athletes and one parent of a prospective student-athlete.



WVU previously self-imposed several sanctions stemming from earlier violations. Now, the athletic department will be subjected to two years of probation (through Feb. 17, 2017) and recruiting restrictions.


Per the NCAA’s release, several coaches involved (it does not specify which sports) “claimed a misunderstanding in some of the recruiting communication rules.” The school also cited confusion with certain compliance software.


From the NCAA:



A number of the coaches involved in the violations claimed a misunderstanding in some of the recruiting communication rules, which was the reason many of the violations occurred. Additionally, the school did not fully understand how to use compliance software it purchased to monitor phone and text activity. It wasn’t until the software company updated the software that the school learned of the violations. The violations occurred while the school was on probation from a previous infractions case.



None of the football coaches involved were named in the NCAA’s report.


For more West Virginia news, visit WVSports.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1A6xpMw

News sport : Happy Hour: Sunday's qualifying session dominates

Happy Hour is back, back again. Happy Hour is back, back, tell a friend.


Throughout the week you can send us your best questions, jokes, rants and just plain miscellaneous thoughts to happyhourmailbag@yahoo.com or @NickBromberg. We'll post them here and have a good time.


Welcome to 2015, everyone. We've got just over 24 hours until the Budweiser Duels, and are we the only ones who instinctively want to say "Gatorade" before the Duels? Is it just us? We don't have trouble with Twin/Duel, however.


It's also the 14th anniversary of Dale Earnhardt's death in 2001, when he was running third to Michael Waltrip and Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the final lap of the Daytona 500.



If you weren't on the Twitters last night, you need to check out this site. It was first tweeted by USA Today's Jeff Gluck and it's great for some amusement, especially if you're on Twitter. Here's one of the bios it generated for us.




Unsurprisingly, the dominant topic is what happened on Sunday with group qualifying for the front row. Here's a sampling of the emails we received.


It was just outrageous! Stupid! Unsafe! What the hell is NASCAR thinking? I can't think of many fans who would've enjoyed that despite what the Waltrip mouthpieces say. - Tom


Michael Waltrip's answer after he returned to the Fox broadcast when he was done with his turn in qualifying was, uh, politically correct to say the least. It was clear he made sure to speak from the sugarcoated broadcaster's view. And, well, he's not going to be driving for much longer, so it was a play for the long term.


Kenny Wallace was also espousing the entertainment value of what happened Sunday and Tony Stewart smacked him down.



I am writing you in regards to NASCAR's new knockout qualifying format. I am a longtime NASCAR fan who not only watches from the tv but also travels to various cities to watch the race live from the track. After watching the drivers qualify for the Daytona 500 using new format I must say it is very confusing to the fans and seems useless and meaningless. I think the drivers should qualify as they have always qualified one by one alone on the track. It saves money and lives. - Rhonda


Let's slow our roll just a little bit here. Saves money, sure. But there's no need to introduce a hypothetical as a reality along with it.


Yes, there are obviously big downsides to crashes -- injuries can happen. And thankfully we're only talking about torn up sheetmetal and extra expenses right now.


While drivers may like to go back to one-by-one qualifying for the front row, now that it's gone away, can it come back? It's a question that has to be answered effectively and finally before options can be seriously discussed.


I really don't understand how a group of leaders at NASCAR whom are supposed to be at least semi-intelligent could come up with such a hair-brained idea. The race teams spend hundreds of hours fine tuning every aspect of those cars to get them to go as fast as possible only to have the idiots running the show jeopardize their safety for WHAT ? I am an old time racer from the 60"s when you won the pole it was because you had the fasted car against the clock one car at a time-no help from team members or other cars. I have watched every Daytona race since 1979 and Indy race since 1963. I am no longer a fan of NASCAR as of today. Please ask for a ground swell of fans to object to the morons running NASCAR to go back to the old way on the restrictor plate racetracks in caution to safety and to help the 1 car teams who can't afford to smash up a dozen cars . - Randy


Similar to the previous email, let's slow this one down again. Giving up NASCAR because of a qualifying session? Huh?


It's become clear from every tweak to group qualifying that teams will eventually figure out a counter to the tweak to find a competitive advantage. That's the nature of racing. You go to every nook and cranny you can within the rules to get as much edge out of everything that you can.


If single-car qualifying is not the answer in 2016, what if group qualifying goes off Kurt Busch's four-lap average idea?


The four-lap average would start when each car takes the green flag for its first full lap. It has to be four consecutive laps, and if a car pulls off during the four laps, the qualifying attempt is aborted. That way, teams are forced to run all-out for each lap and can't try to slow on the track to mess other cars' laps up.


The rounds could be five minutes for four laps, or a longer period without the field being divided in half like it was for the first round on Sunday. And while we're at it, what if the pit road box lines served as a commitment line of sorts? Once a driver backed out of his pit stall and cleared the line, he or she was committing to going out on the track and not allowed to stop on the edge of pit road. Hell, that could be implemented at every track if it was feasible.


My 1st time for qualifying. Been to more than 10, 500's. I won the tickets from Wind 95.5 radio station Ocala Fl area. I will never go to qualifying again. It sucked big time. Sitting on pit row, ridiculous. Why didn't any of them ream up as 2 and cut a few laps and then change places and run a few more. - Mark


I was at the exit of pit road for the start of the first round and wow, I had a lump in my stomach for a second. The traffic jam was absolutely remarkable. I have no clue how it looked on television, but there was not very much space between Danica and the wall when she tried to squeeze in between a car and the inside of pit lane. It was like being two feet from a crazy traffic jam.



In case you missed our guaranteed to be inaccurate Chase predictions, you can view them right here.


We think 13 cars win races this year. Which, of course, is an average of two wins per winning driver. Last year, 13 cars won races and seven won multiple races (led by Brad Keselowski with four) and six had a win apiece. The guess is we'll see a similar breakdown this season.


The view from the top of the new Daytona grandstands is absolutely fantastic. You can see every part of the track (and very far beyond), though we do recommend some binoculars if you're so inclined. It's also windy up that high, so it's something to keep in mind too.


Also, don't be surprised if the stands look emptier than normal for Thursday's Duels – for good reason. The forecast temps for Thursday are roughly a high of 50 and a low near freezing. If there's a breeze it will be mighty chilly (for Florida) in those grandstands. we're not going to blame people for wanting to stay warm one bit.


- - - - - - -


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!







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

News sport : Larry Sanders reportedly has reached a buyout agreement with the Milwaukee Bucks

Just a year and a half after signing a massive contract extension, and just over half a season into that extension, the Milwaukee Bucks and Larry Sanders will soon part ways. The Bucks will flip his contract using the NBA’s stretch provision, and Sanders has agreed to leave quite a chunk of change on the table after buyout negotiations in order become a free agent and leave Milwaukee.


Sanders, who had recently been re-instated by the NBA after serving a suspension after testing positive several times for marijuana use, had yet to return to Milwaukee and clearly wanted out. Though the Bucks have been one of the league’s bigger surprises this season, Sanders apparently wanted no part of working with the franchise. Sources told Yahoo Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski that he planned on curbing his marijuana use and moving forward with his NBA career, and the defensive-minded big man clearly wants to write his second act elsewhere. The buyout is not official, but it’s not far off.


RealGM’s Shams Charania was the first to report what ESPN’s Marc Stein had touched on earlier this week. Multiple outlets then outlined the plan Milwaukee and Sanders cobbled together – the 26-year old will leave $21 million of the $44 million he signed for in 2013 on the table. Larry has already been paid $8 million on his current contract, and the Bucks will use the stretch provision to pay him a reported additional $13 to $15 million over the next seven seasons.


This means the Bucks will be on the hook for just under or over $2 million a year until 2022, but that’s still a massive decrease from what they already owed Sanders. Prior to this agreement, Sanders was owed $11 million a year until the summer of 2018. The Bucks are already well under the salary cap, and even if the team hands Brandon Knight a massive contract next summer the squad will still have heaps of cap space with Sanders mostly off their books.


To call Sanders’ time in Milwaukee “star-crossed” would be putting it lightly. He’s certainly had his moments, and the Bucks shouldn’t be shamed for offering him that four-year, $44 million extension, but he’s had numerous pitched battles with both teammates, coaches, officials, and multiple opposing players. Just a few weeks into the 2013-14 season he was involved in a bar fight that led to a torn ligament in his right thumb, costing him 25 games. Sanders was also cited twice for leaving his German shepherd out puppies outside in the freezing cold.


Shifting attitudes regarding marijuana use allow us to rightfully pitch Sanders’ reliance on pot as far less harmful than allegedly assaulting someone at a nightclub or endangering the lives of two defenseless animals, but as a professional Sanders was letting just about everyone down by perpetually smoking the stuff. The NBA’s tests for marijuana are rather lax, but they do test for it and Sanders has just about gone out of his way to repeatedly fail to dodge the tests. He was handed a five-game suspension last season and a ten-game suspension this season, indications that he hasn’t even bothered to not smoke pot even with the knowledge that another mandated test (which increase in frequency with each appearance of pot in a player’s system) was coming up.


He’s only 26, and he should have another decade’s worth of good basketball in him. At his peak in 2012-13, Sanders was the rare defender that could both roam for endless rejections (Sanders led the NBA in block percentage that season), while still playing standout team defense and minding the glass. Once the buyout becomes official, Sanders (who has played just 26 games this season) will be able to sign with a new team and be eligible for the playoffs. The fact that the East-leading Atlanta Hawks have just under $5 million in cap space and an open roster spot should leave the rest of the NBA rather frustrated. Sanders could really make a difference this spring.


He’d have to act differently, however. Something that hasn’t exactly come naturally to Larry Sanders in five NBA seasons.


- - - - - - -


Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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

News sport : The Titans have some interesting options with the second pick


INDIANAPOLIS – There isn’t a ton of intrigue with the first pick of the draft.


The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are picking a quarterback, and even though there are two good ones, Bucs general manager Jason Licht said the team has a favorite (and there’s almost no doubt his name rhymes with “Nameis”).


You want intrigue at the top of the draft? It starts at No. 2 and the Tennessee Titans.


The Titans might not be married to taking a quarterback at No. 2, even though Heisman Trophy winners Jameis Winston of Florida State and Marcus Mariota of Oregon are the clear top two quarterbacks in this draft. They liked some of the things they saw from Zach Mettenberger last season as a rookie.


“We like Zach, but I’m not ready to commit to anything, including who we’re going to pick at No. 2,” Titans general manager Ruston Webster said.


The Titans could trade the pick, especially to a quarterback-needy team, and restock a thin roster with some extra picks. They could take an elite non-quarterback; there are a few very intriguing defensive linemen at the top of the draft.


But the first priority has to be quarterback, whoever it is. Webster made that clear.


“Until you get that quarterback position settled, you’re swimming upstream,” Webster said.


If the Titans are completely sold on the quarterback who falls to them being a future star – and let’s be clear, we’re likely talking about Mariota, unless the Buccaneers shock everyone and draft him – then it becomes pretty easy. But there are a few questions about Mariota, who ran a spread shotgun offense at Oregon. No matter how important the quarterback position is, it would be a mistake to overdraft a quarterback out of desperation. The Titans did that themselves with Jake Locker a few years ago, and that didn’t turn out.


When the Buccaneers say all options are open for them, that’s empty. For the Titans, it’s much more accurate. If Tennessee isn’t totally sold on Mariota being a franchise quarterback or feel he isn’t an enormous upgrade over Mettenberger, who has a big arm and is a prototype pocket quarterback, then they have choices.


But the Titans don’t want to find themselves in this position often, picking second, so they can’t afford to make a mistake. They need to make sure that one way or another they feel good about their quarterback coming out of the draft.


“Zach did a lot of good things for us last year, but with the way the year went last year and where we are in the draft and the guys coming out, you have to put your time in and figure that out,” Titans coach Ken Whisenhunt said.


- - - - - - -


Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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

News sport : Report: Dorial Green-Beckham planned to stay at OU until Norvell was fired

FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2014, file photo, Oklahoma's Dorial Green-Beckham takes a water break during NCAA college football practice in Norman, Okla. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File) It wasn’t a huge surprise when wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham decided to enter the NFL Draft without playing a down for Oklahoma. But according to a report from Albert Breer of the NFL Network, Green-Beckham planned to stay in Norman for the 2015 season until co-offensive coordinator Jay Norvell lost his job.


Norvell, who also coached the Sooners’ receivers, was fired on Jan. 4 and soon after joined Charlie Strong’s staff at Texas. Two days later, head coach Bob Stoops announced Green-Beckham’s plans to pursue an NFL career. According to Breer, the two “built a strong relationship” and Norvell’s departure changed Green-Beckham’s plans.


Additionally, Breer spoke with “a number of NFL evaluators” that have been looking into Green-Beckham, who was dismissed from Missouri after several off-the-field incidents and then transferred to OU. Though he couldn’t play for the Sooners in 2014 due to the NCAA’s transfer rules, Breer’s sources indicated that Green-Beckham was a model citizen during his time with the program.


From NFL.com:



According to the information gathered by a number of NFL evaluators, Green-Beckham walked the straight and narrow as, in essence, a very well-known practice-squader last fall. He was there for early-morning workouts, quickly established himself as a star on the practice field and planned to stay for the 2015 season. Those plans changed after the firing of co-offensive coordinator Jay Norvell, with whom Green-Beckham had built a strong relationship, but the gifted prospect was able to leave OU under much better circumstances than he did Mizzou.



The 6-foot-6, 225-pound Green-Beckham, the No. 1 recruit in the nation in the 2012 class, caught 87 passes for 1,278 yards and 17 touchdowns in his two seasons at Missouri. He would have certainly provided a huge boost for the Sooners’ receiving corps if he stuck around. Another season free of off-field incidents could have potentially elevated his draft stock as well.


Green-Beckham’s run-ins with the law during his time at Missouri will certainly be a red flag for NFL teams. He was arrested twice for marijuana and then was investigated for a physical altercation in which he allegedly pushed a woman down several stairs. The woman opted not to press charges and Green-Beckham was never arrested in the incident, but it was what was the final straw and led to his dismissal from the Mizzou program.


We see this every year during the lead up to the draft. Players with a rap sheet off the field will be thoroughly vetted by NFL teams and Green-Beckham has an opportunity to ease some of the concerns that surround him during his interviews at this week’s NFL Combine.


Green-Beckham’s physical skills can’t be denied. One scout Breer spoke to called him “one of the best receivers (he’s) ever seen,” so when Oklahoma (and Mizzou) fans see him on the field for an NFL team next season, they’ll be left to wonder what might have been.


For more Oklahoma news, visit SoonerScoop.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1E63R37

News sport : GM Rick Spielman says Vikings expect Adrian Peterson to remain on team


After it once appeared that Adrian Peterson might move on from the Minnesota Vikings, there are more signs by the day that he's going nowhere.


The latest sign comes from Vikings general manager Rick Spielman, who told a small group of media at the NFL combine (including USA Today's Tom Pelissero) that he believes Peterson will remain with the team, despite his 2014 domestic violence incident.



Peterson was scorned publicly for his involvement in the abuse — he called it discipline — of his child in Texas, and the ugly photos from the case that were released in the aftermath of the police report. At that point, Peterson's future with the Vikings appeared murky at best, with team officials not appearing to stand in his corner.


But as the case is wrapping up and Peterson reportedly has sought to make right of the situation and develop more of a relationship with his son, there appears to be a lot more support from within the organization that clearly values him as a football player and likely feels better about him as a man now, too.


Last week Vikings COO Kevin Warren, after previously saying otherwise, said he felt Peterson was a part of the Vikings' family. And now with Spielman's further endorsement and support, it's becoming more likely that the All-Pro back will continue his career with the only NFL franchise he's ever been a part of.


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1EQtJ0I

News sport : John Fox non-committal about Jay Cutler as Bears quarterback


INDIANAPOLIS – The Chicago Bears meeting with recently released quarterback Josh McCown is subject to some interpretation.


Maybe the Bears are just kicking the tires on a potential veteran backup.


"I think there’s obviously interest or we wouldn’t have met with him,” Fox said.


But pair that with Fox’s lukewarm comments on quarterback Jay Cutler, and it gets a little more interesting.


Fox had many chances to say he definitely wanted Cutler to be his quarterback in 2015. Many chances.


“So we’re going to ask this about eight different ways?” Fox said to one of the final questions about Cutler at the NFL scouting combine.


And his answers were lukewarm on Cutler.


“I don’t think there’s any question there’s ability and talent there,” Fox said to one Cutler question. “There’s a lot more that goes into that. We’re evaluating that as we speak.”


The evaluation clearly centers around what is best for the franchise, sticking it out with Cutler and his contract that is way beyond what he has produced as an NFL quarterback, or rebooting at the most important position. The Bears could trade Cutler and get out most of his deal. They can probably find a desperate team that would trade for him, too. But it's tough to restart at quarterback. Maybe McCown could be a bridge to a new quarterback, but he's clearly not more than that, especially since McCown will be 36 and is coming off a bad season in Tampa Bay.


Fox generally doesn’t say many definitive things in the media, so perhaps there’s nothing to be made of him not excitedly supporting Cutler. He gives bland answers to many questions. He said he hasn’t gotten to really know Cutler and fully evaluate him either.


“I don’t want to stand up here and give you a final evaluation when I’m maybe a fourth through the test,” Fox said.


Fox said he has met with Cutler, but was non-committal about Cutler being the Bears quarterback in 2015.


“We’re not up against a deadline,” Fox said. “We’ll keep you posted."


- - - - - - -


Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1E63SnI

News sport : There's 'no doubt' Denver Broncos want Peyton Manning back


INDIANAPOLIS Peyton Manning sounds positive about coming back. The Denver Broncos have made it clear they want Manning back.


What is holding up an official announcement that Manning will play again in 2015? It’s the undefined “process” that new Broncos coach Gary Kubiak kept talking about.


Manning is taking his time. General manager John Elway has been busy with a lot of things, Kubiak pointed out. So apparently there hasn’t been a huge rush to find out if one of the greatest quarterbacks ever will return for 2015.


“I think it’s Peyton needing time to assess his situation, his health,” Kubiak said. “It’s just the NFL offseason, I guess.”


Could the holdup be about Manning’s base salary, which is slated to be $19 million (and is guaranteed on March 9)? Perhaps. A restructuring could help the Broncos retain key free agents like receiver Demaryius Thomas and tight end Julius Thomas. Kubiak said that “the process” is between Manning and general manager John Elway, which made it sound like Manning’s fit in Kubiak’s offense isn’t an issue. Kubiak seemed amused by the notion Manning couldn’t fit in his offense. He said Joe Flacco maybe ran 25 bootleg plays all last season when Kubiak was the Ravens' offensive coordinator. That number would probably be about zero with Manning, and that's fine.


“You do what your players do best,” Kubiak said.


So whatever the process is that Kubiak kept mentioning, it goes on. Part of it will be Manning passing a physical because of the neck surgeries in his medical history, but that hasn’t been a problem before. Everything at this point indicates Manning will return.


“He’s been positive in talking to me, he’s been very positive with John when he came to town last week, so we continue to move forward,” said Kubiak, who has spoken to Manning but added that he didn't talk football with the quarterback. “I’ll let he and John work that out.”


Even though Manning struggled a bit late last season and will turn 38 in March, Kubiak left no doubt that the Broncos want him to be their quarterback.


“No doubt I want him to be,” Kubiak said. “I think all indications are that, everything he has said and through his conversations with John, he feels good and he has had his self assessment, or however you want to label that, and he feels good about moving forward. So we’ll continue with the process.”


An announcement will probably come sometime soon. Whenever "the process" is completed.


- - - - - - -


Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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

News sport : South Carolina LB Marcquis Roberts won't return for 2015 season

Joey Herrick #87 of the Kentucky Wildcats fights for extra yardage after a reception against Marcquis Roberts #21 of the South Carolina Gamecocks. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images) Another member of the South Carolina football team won’t return for the 2015 season.


According to GamecockCentral.com, Marcquis Roberts won’t be with the team for his junior season. Roberts, a 6-foot-1, 216-pound weakside linebacker, started 15 games and appearing in all 26 games for the Gamecocks over the past two seasons.


After missing his first two seasons with serious injuries, both of which earned him a medical redshirt, Roberts made his way into the starting lineup in 2013 and was fifth on the team with 48 tackles. He also registered 3.5 tackles for loss and 1.5 sacks.


Roberts recorded 31 tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss in 2014 and wasn’t expected to participate in spring practice as he works his way back from shoulder surgery.


Roberts, who has two seasons of eligibility remaining, becomes the ninth scholarship player to depart the program since the conclusion of the 2014 regular season. In addition to Roberts, linebacker Kaiwan Lewis, defensive end Mason Harris, defensive tackles Na’Ty Rodgers and Deon Green, fullback Gerald Turner, wide receivers Shaq Roland and K.J. Brent, and tight end Drew Owens have all left the Gamecocks.


The Gamecocks went 7-6 in 2014.


For more South Carolina news, visit GamecockCentral.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1AFhW86

News sport : Devin Booker apologizes to Tennessee cheerleader he wiped out


The collision was enough to make any football fan cringe.


Kentucky's Devin Booker went up for a first-half transition layup Tuesday night at Tennessee, got fouled hard from behind and careened into the lower body of a Tennessee cheerleader standing on the baseline facing the other direction. The impact was eerily reminiscent of severe knee injuries unsuspecting football players have suffered when their feet are planted and another player is blocked into their legs.


Thankfully, Tennessee cheerleader Kristen Huskey was unharmed. We know that because she and Booker had a nice exchange on Twitter after the Wildcats' 66-48 victory.






Would Booker have been so quick to apologize for something that certainly wasn't his fault if he'd mowed down a portly middle-aged cameraman instead of a cheerleader? Only he can answer that, but regardless it was a nice gesture from the 6-foot-6 freshman.


Booker still has to step his game up, however, to match former Kentucky star Terrence Jones.


Three weeks after Jones barreled into Louisville cheerleader Jerica Logue chasing down a loose ball during the 2012 Final Four, he found a way to atone for the four stitches she had to get at halftime to close the wound on top of her head. Jones showed up to Louisville cheerleading practice with a bouquet of flowers just as he said he would do when informed about Logue's injuries the night of the game.


- - - - - - -


Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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

News sport : First or closest? What was the best Daytona 500 finish?




The Daytona 500 has brought us some of the greatest finishes in NASCAR history, but two stand above the rest. Today, Yahoo Sports' Kevin Kaduk (@kevinkaduk) and Jay Busbee (@jaybusbee) kick around the two finest finishes in Daytona history: the very first one, in 1959, and the instant-classic showdown in 2007. Plus: a ranking of the best paint schemes in NASCAR! This clip brought to you by the Dodge Charger, so keep that in mind as you watch.


This is the latest in an ongoing series of Kaduk/Busbee sports arguments, and we both want you on our side. Have your say on both topics right here in the comments or on Twitter at #kbarguments. Fire up!


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


____

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



And keep up with Jay over on Facebook, too.







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

News sport : Larry Fitzgerald reportedly on verge of extension that'll keep him in Arizona

It seemed hard to believe that Larry Fitzgerald would play for anyone but the Arizona Cardinals, but his contract made that proposition a bit iffy.


But in the end, the team and player wanted the same thing, and Fitzgerald will stay with the Cardinals, reportedly for the rest of his career on a restructured deal.


ESPN.com's Adam Schefter reported the Cardinals and Fitzgerald are closing in on a multi-year deal. Schefter reports that it will "enable him to finish his career in Arizona." While that's always hard to project, it's hard to envision Fitzgerald with another team.


Fitzgerald had a cap hit in 2015 of $23.6 million, according to Spotrac, and there was no way the Cardinals could afford that. A restructured contract for Fitzgerald should allow them to perhaps add a piece or two in free agency, after they were 11-5 and made the playoffs last season.


Fitzgerald has been the face of the Cardinals franchise since he was the third overall pick of the 2004 draft. He has 12,151 yards and 89 touchdowns and is likely on his way to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. And it looks like he'll at least be spending a few more years with the Cardinals before he's done.


- - - - - - -


Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1E5Hlr2