News sport : H.S. baller bounces pass of opponent's back, dunks

When he couldn't find an open teammate for an inbound pass, Devon Andrews decided he'd take care of it himself. The Lorain (Ohio) High School senior guard bounced the ball off an opponent's back, then grabbed it and went straight to the net.



Andrews will play at Kent State next year. He scored 39 in Lorain's 95-55 route on Feb. 17, as the team advanced to 20-0 on the season.



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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 : Jerry Krause on Phil Jackson's New York Knick gig: 'He took the job for the money'

Phil Jackson is being paid $12 million a year to act as the president of the New York Knicks. The former Knick forward and 11-time championship coach of the Bulls and Lakers uprooted from the Malibu furnishings he’s called home since 1999 to help save the franchise he won two titles with as a player.


Those Knicks have yet to win a title since Jackson and his teammates earned a ring in 1973. The Knicks are currently working with the NBA’s worst record, and there is genuine concern as to how this lacking roster is going to win a single game in the wake of the news that Carmelo Anthony is going to sit out the final 29 games of the season after having knee surgery.


Since the beginning of New York’s courtship of Jackson, led by entertainment industry power brokers and performed on both coasts, many have concluded that the only reason Jackson returned to the scene of the crime at Madison Square Garden was because of that $12 million a year. One particular voice however, coming to this typical conclusion, is a little different. The man behind it is Jerry Krause, the man who helped save Phil Jackson from a life away from basketball in the mid-1980s, the man who acted as Chicago’s general manager and Jackson’s boss with the Bulls during the title-winning years, and the man who frequently clashed with Jackson in the final years of the Bulls’ dynasty.


From a talk with Ian O’Connor at ESPN New York, who asked Krause if he was surprised at the Knicks’ miserable season:



"I'm not surprised at all," Krause said by phone Wednesday night. "I knew Phil had a bad ballclub. If [James] Dolan offered him $2 million a year or even $5 million, he wouldn't have taken it. But $12 million is overwhelming. Phil didn't take the job because he thought he had a playoff club. He took the job for the money."



Well, yeah.


It’s just fine to take a job for money. Jackson has had myriad hip and back surgeries and even a heart scare over the last decade, he is 69-years old and his fiancée Jeanie Buss is not going to leave her post as the boss of business operations with the Los Angeles Lakers to join him permanently in New York. Money had to talk in this situation, and even after over a decade of mostly futility, the Knicks can still print money.


Is Jackson supposed to move into Atlanta to take over after Danny Ferry’s implosion or stage a power coup in Milwaukee to work for one-sixth as much … just ‘cause?


Of course, Krause might not even be taking shots, here. He’s just being accurate in pointing out that Jackson is not going to uproot a too-comfortable lifestyle and family situation in Los Angeles in order to put his reputation on the line for $2 million. Put another one in front of that, and we’ll discuss things.


Even when the Knicks put that “one” in front of it, Jackson still had to be talked into taking the gig. The Knicks were full of salted crops, Jackson would have had to immediately make a decision on retaining a superstar in Anthony that he probably wasn’t and isn’t a huge fan of (at least not at the price Anthony demands), and he would have had to encourage the team to take on Jackson’s beloved triangle offense from the front office, and not the sideline.


Krause introduced him to that offense, by the way. And Krause is no stranger to the controversies that come from having to deal with an injured superstar on a team bound for the lottery that wants to grit things out and play.


In 1985 Michael Jordan, coming off of a Rookie of the Year season that saw him lead the league in total points, broke his right foot in his team’s third game of the season. Jordan pressed to return early, but worried doctors kept Jordan on the bench as the injury was the same sort of break that befell oft-injured center Bill Walton several times. With the team out of the playoff picture, Jordan accused Krause and the Bulls of tanking for a lottery pick:



"Michael wanted to keep playing, and we had some heated arguments about it," Krause recalled. "Michael knew his body probably better than any athlete I've ever known, but we had five doctors saying he shouldn't play and so we wouldn't allow it. We had to protect the player.




"Carmelo is a veteran who knows his body, but Phil should have the final authority. When you delay the surgery like this, the doctors had better do a hell of a job. If the player comes out of it and he's not the same, then you've really got a problem."



Carmelo, famously, wanted to ride out the season until he could take part in the All-Star Game as the only Knick included the exhibition shown at Madison Square Garden. Even with three decades’ worth of technology advancements, Jordan’s injury remains a frightening one, and a team like the Bulls would probably take the same approach today. Kevin Durant suffered a somewhat similar fracture last year, and the Thunder smartly went slow in their approach to his recovery.


(Jordan’s Bulls didn’t hit the lottery, by the way. Jordan returned for 15 games and his Bulls won six of 10 down the stretch to secure the final playoff spot in the East with 30 wins.)


Another longtime combatant, former Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy, also railed against Anthony’s decision. From Randy Miller at NJ.com:



"I totally disagreed with this whole idea that the All-Star Game is so important that we should sit out regular-season games to get ready for the All-Star Game, and now with Anthony's decision to not only play in the All-Star Game but to end his season," Gundy said Thursday on ESPN Radio's Mike & Mike show. "I think it's backwards thinking from these organizations or players. It's got to be about the team, the team, the team.




"The All-Star Game doesn't need any specific player. But these teams do need these maximum salary guys."




Gundy also pointed out that Chicago Bulls guard Jimmy Butler also missed his team's final game (against Cleveland) before playing in the All-Star Game.




"I also don't understand guys sitting out the games before the All-Star Game and then playing in the All-Star game," Van Gundy said. "I don't get it. I love Jimmy Butler, but I don't understand not playing against LeBron James and then playing in the All-Star Game.




"To me, some of these decisions are really out of whack from the team concept."



That is understandable, as Anthony’s knee surgery is set to delay him for even longer than expected – four to six months – which led some to conclude that his delay may have exacerbated a knee injury that has been bothering him for a year.


All of these sides – the money, the rest, the showcasing – are understandable, though. There is never going to be a set approach with these New York Knicks.


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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 : Blazers enter West arms race, add Arron Afflalo from Nuggets for playoff push

The Portland Trail Blazers entered the trade deadline looking like they could use an injection of two-way play at the off-guard spot and a veteran to shore up their second unit on the wing as they try to stake a claim to the No. 2 spot in the Western hierarchy, or perhaps even chop into the Golden State Warriors' seven-game lead atop the conference. They found a player who seems tailor-made to check off all those boxes ahead of Thursday's 3 p.m. ET trade deadline, agreeing to terms with the Denver Nuggets on a deal that imports veteran shooting guard Arron Afflalo, as well as backup swingman Alonzo Gee, from the Denver Nuggets in exchange for reserve forwards Thomas Robinson and Victor Claver and live-wire guard Will Barton.


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Yahoo Sports NBA columnist Adrian Wojnarowski first reported the deal. Denver will also receive a lottery-protected 2016 first-round draft pick from the Blazers; it's not conveyed that year, it will become a lottery-protected 2017 first-rounder; if it still doesn't change hands that year, the Nuggets will get two future Portland second-round choices, per Woj.


Portland's had one of the best starting fives in the NBA for the past two seasons, led by All-Stars LaMarcus Aldridge and Damian Lillard, flanked by do-it-all wings Nicolas Batum and Wesley Matthews, and backstopped by steady-as-she-goes center Robin Lopez. Problems have started, however, when Terry Stotts has had to turn to his bench. While this year's second unit looked to be sturdier than last year's model after the summertime acquisitions of Steve Blake and Chris Kaman, the Blazers' bench still produces fewer points per game than all but two teams.


The frontcourt mix might not be ideal — Kaman, in particular, has tailed off after a hot start — but it looks to be strong enough, with Aldridge showing no ill effects from the torn thumb ligament in his non-shooting hand, Lopez back after missing a month and a half with a hand injury, third-year big Meyers Leonard taking a step forward on the offensive end, and long-injured reserve Joel Freeland likely back in the mix soon. The big concern, though, has been on the wing, where none of the Blazers' wing options — Barton, C.J. McCollum, Allen Crabbe or Dorell Wright — have looked particularly capable of picking up the slack off the ball behind Lillard, Matthews and Batum. Now, they've got a more bankable commodity on which to rely down the stretch.


Afflalo didn't exactly cover himself in glory during his second stint with the Nuggets, after the Orlando Magic shipped him back to Denver this summer. He averaged 14.5 points per game on just 42.8 percent shooting from the field (his worst mark since his rookie season with the Detroit Pistons) and a sub-par 33.7 percent from beyond the 3-point arc while generating nearly two fewer free-throw attempts per game than he did last season in Central Florida.


But the 29-year-old wing is a career 38.4 percent shooter from long distance, just one season removed from scorching the nets to the tune of 42.7 percent from deep in Orlando, and he should see an awful lot more open, in-rhythm looks playing in Stotts' free-flowing offensive scheme than he did in the systems run by the since-deposed Jacque Vaughn and the still-scuffling Brian Shaw. The 6-foot-5 Afflalo also has a sharp post game that Portland could deploy against smaller or weaker opposing guards, something we knew Stotts likes to do with Matthews as a change-of-pace option in favorable matchups.


Afflalo's a smart, heady player who doesn't make a great many mistakes and does little things well, and while he's not exactly a decorated playoff vet, he does have some postseason experience from his days with the Nuggets. He also has a $7.5 million player option for next season, though, meaning he's got the freedom to opt out of his contract this summer and enter unrestricted free agency. And even if Afflalo would want to stick in the Pacific Northwest, Blazers general manager Neil Olshey also has to deal with extensions for Aldridge, Lopez and Matthews, all of which would figure to take precedence over a recent short-term acquisition.


That in mind, a future first-rounder — even a lottery-protected one that transmogrifies into two second-rounders in two years' time — and three players seems like a steep price for what could be a two- to four-month rental. Then again, none of the outgoing players figured prominently in Stotts' rotation; Robinson's set to be an unrestricted free agent this summer; and both Claver and Barton have qualifying offers for next summer. They don't offer immediate help and they're not long-term building blocks, and the Blazers, right now, are just four games behind the Memphis Grizzlies for the No. 2 spot out West.


This is a team that made it to the second round last year, has made a dramatic defensive improvement (16th in points allowed per possession last season, fourth this year) and believes it has a legitimate chance to compete for a championship right now. These chances don't come around very often; when they do, you pay your money and take your chances. Arron Afflalo might not make the Blazers the favorite to topple the Warriors and represent the West in the NBA Finals, but he represents a marked improvement in an area of need, and he makes an already hard-nosed and talented Portland squad an even a tougher out in a seven-game series. (Gee, for what it's worth, is a well-traveled vet with springs who's more a spot-minutes place-holder than a player likely to make a significant impact on Portland's rotation).


From Denver's perspective, the trade's all about recouping some semblance of value for a summertime deal gone sour.


General manager Tim Connelly gave up young wing Evan Fournier and a a 2014 second-rounder for Afflalo back in June with the expectation that the veteran would help propel the Nuggets back into the playoffs. That, um, hasn't worked out, as Denver has slid to 20-33, the fifth-worst record in the West. Afflalo was unlikely to re-up in Denver this summer, and picking up a protected future first-rounder from the Blazers helps replace the protected future first-rounder they used to pay JaVale McGee's freight to Philly.


Barton's a fun player whose quickness, wiry frame and explosiveness might remind some Nuggets fans of Corey Brewer's time in the Mile High City, albeit without much of his defensive acumen, and Robinson's a former top-five pick who has at time shown flashes of being an energetic rebounder capable of scoring on put-backs and broken plays around the rim. Denver gets a chance to take a two-month look-see at whether they might be worth keeping around for the future while bringing back a pick. It's not what Nuggets fans might have hoped for heading into this season, but as damage control with things already having gone way down south, Connelly and company could've done worse.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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News sport : Duels Primer: Will any big names miss the Daytona 500?

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla – There's a chance a NASCAR star could miss the Daytona 500.


It's a true statement, though on the surface, it is a bit hyperbolic. Because of the abolishment of the top-35 rule, 13 drivers are locked in to Sunday's Daytona 500, leaving 36 drivers to race for 30 spots in Thursday's Budweiser Duels.


Here's how it works. Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson are starting the Daytona 500 on the front row. If they crash and are forced to go to a backup car in either of Thursday's qualifying races, they'll have to start at the back of the field. But they're still in the race.


Outside of Gordon and Johnson, Jamie McMurray, Carl Edwards, Aric Almirola and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. are also guaranteed to be in the 500. They posted the four-fastest non-front row times on Sunday.


However, it's not guaranteed where those four will start the race. The top 15 finishers (outside of Gordon and Johnson) in each Duel take starting spots 2-32 in the race. If the four finish in the top 15 of their duels, the spots guaranteed on speed move to the next eligible drivers who didn't finish in the top 15.


Then, rounding out the field are seven provisional spots, including one for a past Sprint Cup Series champion. The first one up on that list (who isn't guaranteed a provisional via the 2014 owner's points standings) is Tony Stewart. He's guaranteed in the Daytona 500, but if he finishes in the top 15 in his race or gets in on speed, it could go to Kurt Busch or Bobby Labonte.


The chances of Dale Earnhardt Jr. missing the 500 are quite slim. Junior isn't guaranteed in because he didn't have a top-six speed in Sunday's front row qualifying session and didn't finish high enough in the 2014 owner's points standings to guarantee himself a provisional. But for Junior to miss the 500, Kevin Harvick, Jeff Burton, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski and Matt Kenseth (all guaranteed into the 500) would all have to take provisionals. It's (incredibly likely) not happening.


Danica Patrick? Well, her chances of missing the 500 are bigger. After posting the 31st-fastest qualifying time on Sunday, Patrick needs a lot of cars faster than she was on Sunday to race into the top 15 in their duels and not need a provisional. That is, of course, if Patrick doesn't finish in the top 15 of her duel. If she does, she's in.


Here are the starting lineups for the Budweiser Duels and who our best guesses as to who will make the Daytona 500. We're not expecting any surprises, but just one crash could throw a wrench into anyone's best guesses.


RACE 1


1. Jeff Gordon - IN

2. Matt Kenseth - IN

3. Kasey Kahne - IN

4. Ty Dillon - IN

5. Jamie McMurray - IN

6. Johnny Sauter - IN

7. Trevor Bayne - IN8. Aric Almirola - IN

9. Brad Keselowski - IN

10. Joey Logano - IN

11. J.J. Yeley - IN

12. Paul Menard - IN

13. AJ Allmendinger - IN

14. Kevin Harvick - IN

15. Tony Stewart - IN

16. Casey Mears - IN

17. Michael Annett

18. Kyle Larson - IN

19. Michael McDowell - IN

20. Clint Bowyer - IN

21. Justin Marks

22. Cole Whitt - IN

23. Landon Cassill - IN

24. Ron Hornaday Jr.

25. Dale Earnhardt Jr. - IN


RACE 2


1. Jimmie Johnson - IN

2. Kyle Busch - IN

3. Carl Edwards - IN

4. Austin Dillon - IN

5. Martin Truex Jr. - IN

6. Greg Biffle - IN

7. Sam Hornish Jr. - IN

8. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. - IN

9. Ryan Blaney - IN

10. Michael Waltrip - IN

11. Bobby Labonte - IN

12. Alex Bowman - IN

13. Ryan Newman - IN

14. Kurt Busch - IN

15. Danica Patrick - IN

16. Brian Scott - IN

17. Justin Allgaier - IN

18. David Gilliland - IN

19. Jeb Burton

20. Reed Sorenson

21. David Ragan - IN

22. Josh Wise - IN

23. Mike Wallace

24. Denny Hamlin - IN


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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 : Fred Couples 'not bitter' about being passed over for Ryder Cup captain

A lot of people figured Fred Couples would be the 2016 U.S. Ryder Cup captain.


Several players on the losing 2014 Ryder Cup team asked him to take on the task. Multiple players on the 11-person PGA of America Ryder Cup task force implored him to lead. Couples, who led the U.S. to three consecutive Presidents Cup wins in his tenure as captain, said he wanted the job.


PGA of America CEO Pete Bevacqua told Couples in December that there would be more conversation and the decision, perhaps already made at that point, wouldn't be made for some time. Well, here we are: Davis Love III is going to be once again be captain and Couples has been shunned.


Couples is happy for his friend.


“I was in Chicago with Davis, he did a phenomenal job,” Couples said Wednesday, according to Golf Channel. Couples was an assistant captain for Love in 2012 at Medinah, where Love's charges surrendered a four-point, final-day lead in record-tying fashion to lose for the second consecutive time in the biennial matches.


He added, “In maybe a couple of years down the line, I’ll have another shot at it. I’m not bitter or upset or anything like that, because in my opinion they picked a great guy."


However, the 1992 Masters champion indicated that were Love, his good friend, not given a crack at redemption, he would have not reacted as cordially to the news.


“And to be honest with you, I will tell you that if it was maybe not Davis, I might have a different attitude toward this, but he’s been my friend for 30 years and I’m very happy for him," Couples said.


Couples acknowledged back in November he didn't consider himself a "PGA of America guy," meaning he didn't fit the archetype of a U.S. Ryder Cup captain. He also questioned the necessity of the task force. It's an open and obvious question to wonder if those public statements didn't cost Couples this opportunity.




Ryan Ballengee is a Yahoo Sports contributor. Find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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News sport : Denver cuts ties with JaVale McGee, sending him and a conditional draft pick to Philly

Not only were the Philadelphia 76ers nearly $22 million below the salary cap line entering Thursday’s trade deadline, the team was also almost $12 million below the salary cap minimum. That’s a floor that no other NBA team had dug beneath since that relatively unheard of cap was established in 1999, with some squads even making minor moves in rebuilding years just to move above it.


That changed last season, when the tanking Sixers happily stayed beneath the minimum. And the Sixers would have gotten away with it this year as well, had they not just dealt for JaVale McGee on Thursday.


This is tanking at its best.


Yahoo Sports’ Adrian Wojnarowski was the first to report that the Sixers will deal for McGee and his $11.25 million contract to both near that minimum cap and take in a first-round pick from the Nuggets along the way. The penalty for staying below the minimum line isn’t all that severe; teams only have to redistribute the difference between the final payroll number and the minimum cap number amongst the players left on the roster. The real kicker here for Philly is gaining yet another draft pick to work with.


McGee’s salary nearly doubles that of the second-highest paid player on the Sixers’ roster, that of Jason Richardson – making around the NBA league average this year. He’ll join Nerlens Noel and the “rehabbing” Joel Embiid as another raw 76ers big man that can jump real high and block a lot of shots and not do a whole hell of a lot of other things.


The issue with McGee, in this instance, is that this raw big man is in his seventh NBA season. He’ll be in his eighth next year when he also makes $11.25 million for the Sixers, and he is currently the only 76er who won’t be working on a rookie contract next season. McGee has played in just 22 games over the last two years, and though the center has had his moments, he is best known for his perpetual inclusions on blooper reels. How former Denver Nuggets general manager Masai Ujiri won an NBA Executive of the Year award just 10 months after signing McGee to a four-year, $44 million contract will remain a secret that only the otherwise-highly regarded Ujiri will know.


The Nuggets, after a miserable year and a half attempting to win in the wake of Ujiri and George Karl’s departure from the team, are looking to start over. Their deadline day is likely done …



… but not after dealing Arron Afflalo to Portland to start Thursday, and sending Timofey Mozgov to the Cavaliers for a pair of conditional first-round picks that both the Thunder and Grizzlies owed Cleveland. The selection sent to Philadelphia is top 18 protected this year and then top 15 protected in 2016 and 2017.


If the Nuggets continue to rank below those numbers in the standings, the pick then becomes two second-round picks in 2018. Denver may kick itself years down the line in acting so anxious to get McGee’s contract off the books, but before these ghost assets turn into real people it’s hard to judge this move too harshly on Denver’s side of things. The team will also have significant cap space this summer as a result of their work.


Whether or not JaVale McGee’s NBA presence remains ghostly is up for debate, as the Sixers could buy him out or attempt to work with him. It’s feasible that a new coach, new system and new start to things could turn him into a contributor once again, but we’ve said that far too many times over the course of his seven seasons, six (now seven) coaches, and three teams. The Nuggets were willing to part with a piece of their future in order to make JaVale McGee part of their past. That’s sadly telling.


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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 : Richmond had to be rescued after a snow drift ensnared its bus


Richmond's team bus got stuck in a snow drift on Wednesday night (via Richmond Basketball)

Securing only its second road win of the season Wednesday night at St. Bonaventure wasn't Richmond's greatest challenge of the evening.


That was a distant second to making it home from snow-covered Western New York.


The bus driver who was taking the Spiders to the airport after their 71-56 victory missed a turn and tried to make an ill-fated u-turn. That proved to be a very poor choice as the bus got stuck in a snow drift for about two hours until a tow truck came along to pull it out.


While Richmond's misadventure was routine compared to the 24-hour ordeal endured earlier this winter by the Niagara women's basketball team, the Spiders still made light of their situation on social media as they waited to be rescued. The best of the #URStuck hashtag is below:





style="margin: 8px 0 0 0; padding: 0 4px;">Spiders stuck in a snow bank #onerichmond #getusoutofhere #urstuck


A photo posted by Matt Smith (@spidur) on Feb 18, 2015 at 7:40pm PST













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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!







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Messi, Enrique truce on shaky ground

Barcelona forward Lionel Messi and coach Luis Enrique appear to have agreed an uneasy truce.


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Madrid - Barcelona forward Lionel Messi and coach Luis Enrique appear to have agreed an uneasy truce but hostilities could break out again if the Argentina forward's form dips and the club stumbles as the season reaches a crucial stage.


A series of inspirational Messi performances have helped Barca put together a streak of 11 wins in all competitions since a 1-0 La Liga defeat at Real Sociedad on Jan. 4, matching their best run under former coach Pep Guardiola in 2008-09.


They are on the verge of a place in the King's Cup final, through to the Champions League last 16 to face Manchester City and will climb above Real Madrid to the top of La Liga if they avoid defeat at home to Malaga on Saturday.


The surge in form means that rather than looking on helplessly as their club teetered on the edge of crisis, Barca fans are now starting to dream of a repeat of their historic 2009 treble.


The turmoil that followed the reverse at Sociedad, when reports of a rift between Messi and Luis Enrique surfaced in the Spanish media, is a distant memory, at least for the time being.


The forward quashed speculation he was considering leaving the club he joined as a 13-year-old but has pointedly declined to comment on his relationship with Luis Enrique, who took over from Messi's compatriot Gerardo Martino at the end of last term.


A former Barca and Spain midfielder, Luis Enrique knows that if Messi is not content, the team's chances of getting back to winning ways after failing to win major silverware in 2013-14 will be seriously diminished.


For the moment, the smile is back on Messi's face and the fans are happy but that could all change very quickly if the team loses its way again.


Messi sounded a note of caution in a Argentine television interview broadcast on Wednesday.


“We still haven't won anything,” he told Mundo Leo, a TV channel dedicated to the four-times World Player of the Year.


“There are many months of competition left both in La Liga and in the Champions League,” added the 27-year-old.


“The truth is that we are in very good shape. Luckily, after the Real Sociedad game, when we did not start the year well, everything changed.


“Now we are on a different path and everything is coming off for us.


“The team is confident and changed its attitude and desire and that is why we are like we are today. But there is a long way to go.”


Barca play their last 16, first leg at City on Tuesday, with the return at the Nou Camp on March 18, and take a 3-1 advantage to Villarreal for their King's Cup semi-final, second leg on March 4. – Reuters






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News sport : As the Browns turn: GM Ray Farmer apologizes for texting controversy


INDIANAPOLIS – The Cleveland Browns are in a bad place.


Teams miss on draft picks all the time, or go through multiple losing seasons, but nothing screams to the Browns’ apparent dysfunction more than the general manager apologizing at the NFL scouting combine for sending texts to the sideline during games.


Browns general manager Ray Farmer said it was his mistake to send texts from the press box to the sideline during games last season. That’s against NFL rules. The texts reportedly questioned play calling and personnel decisions. That’s against common football decorum.


Offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan left for the Atlanta Falcons after the season, and it has been widely speculated that the texts played a part in that. Quarterback Brian Hoyer, who is a free agent, said the controversy might affect his decision whether or not to return to the Browns.


The NFL is investigating what happened. Farmer said he has apologized. Only in Cleveland.


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“It was me," Farmer said. "To that degree, I have apologized to the people in the building, coach (Mike) Pettine, (Browns owner) Jimmy Haslam, the rest of the football staff.


“I take full responsibility for myself and my actions.”


It’s fairly amazing that any number of Browns stories that would usually be a big topic of conversation at the scouting combine – Josh Gordon’s year-long suspension, Johnny Manziel entering a treatment facility, the Browns’ lack of an obvious option to start at quarterback, 2014 first-round pick Justin Gilbert’s immense struggles as a rookie – were not even the main topic with the general manager. The NFL might end up fining the Browns or even taking away a draft pick over the rule violation.


“It’s not an excuse, but sometimes your emotions get the best of you,” Farmer said.


The Browns supported Farmer through the texting controversy. On Wednesday, coach Mike Pettine said he was upset with Farmer initially but they have worked it out. Farmer said he and Pettine have and will work well together.


“No relationship mending (is needed),” Farmer said. “Coach Pettine and I work very well together. We’ve had our conversations, we’ve gone through what that was.”


There were football questions around him discussing text messages. He was asked in multiple ways if Manziel could be the team’s starting quarterback in 2015, and he refused to give that vote of confidence, speaking only in platitudes about everyone on the roster competing for spots. Farmer said the team does have a plan at quarterback, although he wouldn’t divulge it.


Browns fans deserve better than seeing their team become a laughingstock. There’s a lot of corrections that need to be made with the Browns, and it was summed up by the general manager standing at a podium trying to explain himself and why he was undermining the coaching staff with text messages to the sideline during games.


“Anytime you make mistakes, it is humbling,” Farmer said.


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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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Banyana to compete in Cyprus Cup

Banyana Banyana will compete in the 12-nation Cyprus Women's Cup which runs from 4-11 March 2015.


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Johannesburg – Banyana Banyana will compete in the 12-nation Cyprus Women's Cup which runs from 4-11 March 2015, the SA Football Association said on Thursday.


The Vera Pauw-coached side was drawn in Group C together with Belgium, Czech Republic and Mexico.


Group A is made up of Canada, Italy, Korea Republic and Scotland while Group B comprises Australia, England, Finland and Netherlands.


“This is an exciting tournament and gives us good preparations ahead of the All-Africa Games and Olympic qualifiers,” Pauw said in a statement.


“These are the type of opponents we should have played ahead of the African Women championships which took place in Namibia last year where Banyana Banyana missed the World Cup spot by a whisker.”


A group of 30 Banyana players will assemble for camp on Sunday. The final group of 23 would be named at Safa House on February 24. – Sapa






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Figo launches Fifa presidency bid

Former Portugal winger Luis Figo launched his campaign for the Fifa presidency by revealing plans to expand the World Cup to up to 48 teams.


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Former Portugal winger Luis Figo launched his campaign for the Fifa presidency on Thursday by revealing plans to expand the World Cup to up to 48 teams.


Unveiling his manifesto at Wembley Stadium in London, the 42-year-old said the expansion of the quadrennial tournament from its current 32-team format would be “weighted towards non-European teams”.


One of his proposals for the World Cup is to split it into two 24-team tournaments played simultaneously on two different continents, followed by a final knockout stage in one country.


Another of his key proposals is the distribution of half of Fifa's wealth – $2.5 billion (2.19 billion euros) – directly to its member associations for spending on grassroots football.


The former Barcelona and Real Madrid superstar also called for the restoration of the 'old' interpretation of the offside rule, “where a player is judged offside whether directly involved in the play or not”.


Figo is standing against incumbent Sepp Blatter, Dutch football chief Michael van Praag and Fifa vice-president for Asia Prince Ali bin Al Hussein in the Fifa presidential election on May 29. – AFP






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City receive double boost

Champions Manchester City hope the return of Yaya Toure and new boy Wilfried Bony can help them bridge the gap to Chelsea.


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London – Champions Manchester City hope the return of Yaya Toure and new boy Wilfried Bony can help them bridge the gap to the league leaders.


Manchester City will be relying on two faces - one familiar and one new - to lead a final push as they try to overhaul Chelsea at the top of the Premier League, starting this weekend.


The return of Yaya Toure from international duty at the Africa Cup of Nations is a massive boost to a City side who won just once in six games without him.


That win came last time out, though, and City hope the addition of striker Wilfried Bony will be their required X factor as they try to win the title for a second successive year.


Seven points behind Chelsea with 13 games to go is a huge task but Bony, who signed in January and who has also been on international duty alongside Toure, is raring to go as City host Newcastle this weekend.


“We need to win as many games as we can because we need to make up seven points on Chelsea,” the former Swansea striker said.


“It's not easy because I've just arrived from Africa and I will have had five days of training before we play Newcastle.


“I'm not 100 per cent just yet and as I say, I've only just arrived so we will see. (But) if I am needed, I have a good record against Newcastle and I've scored three goals in two games against them.”


“They are a good side and are strong at the back but they are coming to our stadium and we need to win this game.


“Four days later we'll be playing Barcelona and we need to go into this game on the back of a strong performance.”


Chelsea, meanwhile, will hope Cesc Fabregas is over a recent illness as they travel to relegation-threatened Burnley.


Fabregas played most of the midweek Champions League match with Paris St-Germain but should be fresher for the trip to Burnley.


Chelsea coach Jose Mourinho has been shuffling his central defensive combination at times this season and captain John Terry admits the club have a difficult choice.


“Kurt (Zouma)'s done really well,” he said. “When he plays he's been great and when Gaz (Gary Cahill) plays he's been great,' said Terry.


“We will rotate and there are enough games to share around. Obviously we all want to play every game, those two are fighting it out at the moment but it could be me at any time.


“What's important is that we remain top of the league and everybody gets game time.”


Behind the top two, the battle for Champions League places is really hotting up with just five points separating Manchester United in third from Liverpool in seventh.


United face a tricky trip to Swansea while fourth-placed Southampton welcome Liverpool to the south coast. Fifth-placed Arsenal travel to Crystal Palace and Tottenham face West Ham.


Bottom side Leicester are away to Everton while third-bottom Aston Villa will be hoping for a boost from new manager Tim Sherwood's first official game in charge.


Villa host Stoke City this weekend and midfielder Ashley Westwood says the former Tottenham manager's arrival has lifted everyone.


“Training was electric,” he said. “Training was sharp, the lads were on it, if we carry that forward we will be fine. It has been good - the lads are all up for it.


“The gaffer has played at the top so hopefully he can give some good tips over.


“You can see that the way he is around the place, he is a strong character and I think that is going to be good for the team.”


Hull take on Queens Park Rangers and Sunderland host West Bromwich Albion in the weekend's other matches. – Sapa-dpa






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Victim of Chelsea fans speaks out

The victim of a racist incident involving Chelsea football fans in the Paris metro did not know the incident had been filmed.


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Paris - The victim of a racist incident involving Chelsea football fans in the Paris metro did not know the incident had been filmed and widely broadcast and will now lodge an official complaint with police, he told French daily Le Parisien.


“I don't speak a word of English ... but it was clear to me they were picking on me because of the colour of my skin,” the victim, identified by Le Parisien as Souleymane, 33, said.


The Paris prosecutor's office has started an investigation to find the people responsible for chanting: “We're racist and that's the way we like it” as they stopped a black man boarding a metro train in Paris on Tuesday.


The incident was captured on video by another passenger on the platform at the Richelieu-Drouot metro station before English club Chelsea played Paris St Germain in a Champions League match at the Parc des Princes in the French capital.


After the incident, which Souleymane said lasted six or seven minutes: “I took the next metro and went back home without telling anyone, not even my wife or kids. What would I have told my kids? That daddy was pushed in the metro because he's black?”


Police said no arrests were made in relation to the match, which ended in a 1-1 draw, but amateur footage posted on The Guardian newspaper website (www.theguardian.com) clearly showed the incident, which has been widely condemned by the soccer authorities including FIFA president Sepp Blatter and Chelsea.


Souleymane told Le Parisien he was used to racism but it was the first time it happened to him in the Paris underground.


“I didn't know I had been filmed. Talking about this now encourages me to lodge a complaint with the police,” he said.


The Metropolitan Police in London have appealed for anyone with information to come forward. – Reuters






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Terry hoping for new Chelsea deal

John Terry admits there have been no talks yet about extending his Chelsea contract beyond the end of the season.


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John Terry admits there have been no talks yet about extending his Chelsea contract beyond the end of the season.


At 34, Terry is aware time is running out for him at the top level and wants to squeeze every drop from a campaign chasing three major trophies.


He hopes to sign for another year under Jose Mourinho and is unconcerned that negotiations have not opened because he accepts the priority for Chelsea was to secure the long-term future of Eden Hazard.


‘The club know my position,’ said Terry. ‘Hopefully, I know theirs and it will get done. No talks have happened yet between myself and the club but we both respect the position.


‘There’s more important players. Hazard’s one. For me, that was the most important for the club. Without anyone telling me that, I knew that was the first priority for them. Hopefully they’ll be knocking on the door soon.’


Hazard, 24, signed a five-and-a-half-year deal last week, making him the top earner at Stamford Bridge and keeping him from the clutches of Real Madrid, at least for now.


The policy at Chelsea for players over 30 is to limit extensions to one year. Terry could secure a longer deal elsewhere and his contractual situation means he is free to talk to foreign clubs about a move.


He could sign a pre-contract leading to a free transfer at the end of the season. But he is comfortable with Chelsea’s stance, having been through the same process last year, when he was linked with moves to Galatasaray and Monaco. And Mourinho has spoken in public to confirm he wants to keep his captain.


‘The first year, I was maybe a bit nervous and hoping and knocking on the door myself,’ said Terry. ‘But we had a good chat. I know their position and they know mine. I want to stay and hopefully my performances are showing that and they want to keep me.


‘I’ll be happy with one more year and then we’ll see how we go year by year. I’ve not got much choice.’


Terry has spent his entire career at Chelsea and has been restored as the defensive bedrock of the team since Mourinho returned to west London.


There is pressure from emerging players such as Kurt Zouma, but the captain promises to be one of the last survivors from his generation at the top of the English game.


Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard plan to leave for the USA in May, Ashley Cole is in Italy and Rio Ferdinand has been unable to hold a regular place at QPR.


‘The way players like me, Stevie, Rio, Lamps, those kinds of player, have looked after ourselves in the last five or six years has helped us in our later careers, for sure,’ said Terry. ‘They’re a couple of years older than me.


‘It’s difficult when you see young boys come in like Kurt. He’s been a revelation since he came in. He’s young, fit, strong and hungry and it makes it even more difficult. We all want to play every game. Gaz (Gary Cahill) and Kurt have been fighting it out and it could be me (who’s dropped) any time.


‘It’s important to remain top of the league and everyone gets their game time. When Gaz plays he’s been great, when Kurt plays he’s been great, so it’s hard but we’re all rotating and there are enough games to share around.


‘I don’t want to rest. I’m coming to the end of my career, so it’s important I stay fit and play as much as I can.’ – Daily Mail






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Liverpool ticking all the boxes

Brendan Rodgers is confident that Liverpool can atone for their failures in the Champions League by winning the Europa League.


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Brendan Rodgers is confident that Liverpool can atone for their failures in the Champions League by winning the Europa League.


This was never a competition that Rodgers intended Liverpool to enter. However, the manager conceded that, had they been playing in the first half of the season with the panache they have displayed in the last two months, they would still be among the European elite.


“That was the frustration; we had put in two years of hard work to get to the Champions League and when we arrived there we didn't have the team,” said Rodgers.


Despite realistically only having to finish above Basel to make the knockout phase, a Liverpool side without Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge and with Mario Balotelli hopelessly off form never suggested they could make an impact.


Now, despite playing Besiktas, the leaders of the Turkish Super Lig, there is a buoyancy about Liverpool. On the wall in Anfield's Trophy Room, where Rodgers was addressing the media yesterday, hung a picture of Rafa Benitez, who took a Chelsea side eliminated from the Champions League to win the Europa League and, in doing so, revived the club and his own managerial career. Rodgers would back himself to do something similar. The last time Besiktas came to Anfield, in November 2007, they lost 8-0.


He did not disagree when it was put to him that Liverpool may be where they were under Gérard Houllier in 2001 - a team that could compete for and win the Uefa Cup but one that was not quite ready to go head to head with the European elite.


Now, having lost only one match since early December, and with Sturridge back to lead their attack, there is a bullishness about Liverpool that was never really apparent in the Champions League. The fact that Liverpool could requalify for the Champions League by winning the Europa League final in Warsaw will be an added incentive.


“That is the icing on it,” said Rodgers. “But the initial reaction is wanting to win a trophy and, if we do that and qualify for the Champions League, then so much the better.”


On Saturday evening, Liverpool raised one of the ghosts of last season by beating Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park, one of the venues where their assault on the championship foundered.


There was a period in that FA Cup tie where Liverpool kept the ball for almost two minutes, the kind of confidence that underpinned so many of their displays last season.


“People watching us now are seeing the return of the domination we used to have,” said Rodgers. “Even when we were 1-0 down at Crystal Palace there was a feeling we would go on and win the game. That was never the case earlier in the season, it was always a feeling of 'where is it going to come from?'


“Now we are ticking all the boxes, we are defensively strong, very creative and even more important is the ability to press the ball. It is a far cry from what we were a few months back.”


If one ghost was exorcised on Saturday, another will be at Anfield this evening. Although Rodgers may be right to argue that the departure of Suarez and the injury to Sturridge that cost the striker the whole of Liverpool's Champions League campaign undermined the start of the season, there was the psychological blow of failing to win the title that spilled over from one campaign to another.


And nothing quite encapsulated that more than Demba Ba's goal that resulted from Steven Gerrard's slip against Chelsea. Ba will be leading the Besiktas attack tonight. – The Independent






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