News sport : Case containing Howard's Rock at Clemson vandalized

The case for Howard's Rock at Clemson's Memorial Stadium was vandalized early Wednesday.


According to the school, the rock appears to be unharmed but the glass from the case it sits in was broken. The rock was taken out of the stadium on Wednesday.



Clemson released a statement Wednesday afternoon saying it was looking into the incident. The school said the vandalism was reported by construction workers working on stadium renovations early Wednesday morning and that police are currently investigating.


“Howard's Rock is a very important and visible part of our campus and our stadium, and we know many students, alumni and fans come to see it throughout the year,” Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich said. “We’ll work to quickly have it back in its home and available for all to see as quickly as possible.”


It's not the first time the rock has been vandalized. An 18-year-old was arrested in June 2013 after a vandalism incident on June 2, 2013. After that vandalism incident, which saw a piece broken off the rock, Howard's Rock got a new case. And now, it'll have to have an even newer case to replace the replacement that was just vandalized.


Clemson players rub the rock, named for former Clemson coach Frank Howard, before every home game for good luck.


For more Clemson news, visit TigerIllustrated.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/17zwTLJ

News sport : Texans' David Quessenberry, battling lymphoma, says he's in remission

Now here's something to warm your heart during these chilly months.


Houston Texans offensive lineman David Quessenberry, who announced last June he had been diagnosed with a rare form of lymphoma, said Wednesday that things are looking great in his battle.



Quessenberry made an appearance at the Texas Children’s Hospital with some Texans teammates when he gave the update of his condition. And after we read about the details of his struggle in this wonderfully written story from ESPN's Tania Ganguli right before Christmas, we've been keeping track of Quessenberry's fight.


And this was great word to hear on his amazing progress.


As for whether Quessenberry can return to the field, well, he says it remains his goal to do just that. His teammates have rallied around him and provided him the support he needs. But for now, he's already winning — no matter what happens with his career.


- - - - - - -


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/1zIWt8F

News sport : Mark Cuban would like to see the NBA 'go later in the season into July'

The NBA is nearing the end of the most compressed 82-game season in its history. The league, in a long-overdue move, decided to finally extend the All-Star break this season in order to give its athletes a chance to rest a few weeks past the midpoint of a campaign that could see some players work in excess of 100 games from the exhibition season in mid-October to the NBA Finals in July.


The drawback to that sort of break, which still didn’t do a whole heck of a lot for some of the league’s top stars (LeBron James, between contests and practices with the Cavaliers, the All-Star Game, and travel, really only got Feb. 17 off), was that the NBA had to squeeze its long schedule into a shortened time frame. It decided against upsetting the recent tradition of starting the season in the last week of October, and as a result 2014-15 will feature more back-to-backs and four-game-in-five-night runs than ever.


That is not a good thing. This is why the NBA’s calander needs to expand. Dallas Maverick owner Mark Cuban is more than aware of this. From Tim McMahon at ESPN Dallas, via Pro Basketball Talk:



"I'd rather us go later in the season into July," said Cuban, who still is in favor of trimming the preseason schedule. "Used to be, we had to be concerned about baseball. Now we don't. Baseball, particularly from a media perspective, has become regional, so it doesn't negatively impact us from a national TV perspective to go late."




[...]




"I've been bringing it up for years," Cuban said before the Mavs' 99-92 win over the Toronto Raptors on Tuesday, one of three games in four nights for his team. "[Commissioner Adam Silver is] more open to it, and he's going to be considering it. Everybody's for it now."



Silver might be open to it, but as McMahon noted – in a press conference prior to the All-Star Game on Feb. 15, the new’ish NBA commissioner didn’t exactly embrace the idea of July basketball:



“I've heard proposals about them moving The Finals past the Fourth of July. Generally the view has been in addition it just feels out of sync once you get into the summer historically those haven't been viewed as the best television nights, once you get into July, and just in terms of households watching TV.”



With respect to the commissioner, this makes no sense. The NBA Finals are already played in the summer.


In the NBA’s nascent days, sure, a sport created as a winter diversion saw its championship round run in April and sometimes May, but with the playoff and team expansion, the Finals have been a summertime tradition for years. Dating back three decades, even in the NBA’s northernmost American city, these things have been sweatbox affairs. For several generations of fans, the NBA is the thing that saves you from a dreary fall, distracts you from a darkened winter, brightens you with the promise of playoffs in the spring, and finishes its triumphant run just as school lets out and the days run long.


For the NBA to go until July would be no big deal. It’s true that viewers don’t tune in as much to television in the summer as they do during colder months, but by the time the latter half of the playoffs hit summer is already just about in place and most network TV shows have finished their seasons. There really isn’t much of a big difference from showing a Game 6 on either July 6th or June 16th.


The NBA would not upset Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game, which this year is set to take place on July 14th. Moving the regular season up a week or so deeper into October wouldn’t be upsetting MLB’s figurative apple cart either, as the NBA has been in active play during the World Series a couple of times in its recent history – including 2014. Pushing out an extra week in the beginning of the year, eliminating pointless exhibition games along the way, and pushing out an extra week at the end would seem to be a simple solution to the league’s player fatigue issues.


Of course, there is one issue that this NBA junkie rarely considers when approaching the league’s fandom as a whole. There is the idea that just an extra fortnight’s worth of play would encourage fan fatigue as the league tacked on yet another week to a too-long regular season and what is already a two-month long postseason run.


That’s significant, and though I’m probably projecting, I don’t understand it. What NBA fan was rolling their eyes at the prospects of seven more weeks of playoffs during last year’s Greatest First Round Playoff Ever? Even when the matchups are dull as dishwater, fans aren’t exactly tuning out along the way. Once the NFL draft finally shuffles off to the hotel bar in April, the NBA is competing with absolutely nothing but regionally-placed Major League games and the Stanley Cup Playoffs during its playoff run. By the time May ends, sweeps are over, and the NHL season ends prior to the NBA’s last tip-off. There are viewers to be courted, here.


The league would be courting them with rested players, as well. Not daisy fresh – no athlete asked to run up and down a court from October until June or even July could be – but likely fresher than we’ll (sadly) see this June. The NBA was completely right to extend the All-Star break, but the resulting rash of back-to-backs and compressed games could mitigate any advancements this season.


The 82-game season isn’t going away. There is too much money to be made in this realm for the NBA to lop 16 or so games off in the interest of a breezier season for the players. What you might get instead is a World Series Game 3 one night, and the opening game of the NBA season the next night. Some eight and a half months later, you might get an NBA Finals Game 7 in July. All while eliminating back-to-backs and hurried schedules along the way.


What, exactly, is wrong with that?


- - - - - - -


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/1zIWt8t

News sport : Baylor RB Silas Nacita says NCAA ruled him ineligible, but the story has holes

Baylor walk-on running back Silas Nacita has been dismissed from the Baylor football team after he claimed the NCAA ruled he took an impermissible benefit.


His benefit?


Taking permanent lodging from a friend instead of sleeping on various apartment floors.


Nacita, who detailed his ordeal with the NCAA on Twitter, claimed he was homeless when he enrolled at Baylor and was staying on the floors of various friends. He said a longtime family friend took him in, gave him a place to live, and that the NCAA deemed that impermissible benefit and ruled him ineligible.



It’s easy to point the finger at the NCAA and even at Baylor in this instance, but that might not be the right thing to do.


The NCAA said in a tweet that it did not declare Nacita ineligible as previously stated.



According to David Smoak, who works for an ESPN station in Central Texas that profiled Nacita during the 2014 season, Nacita was given options to relieve his homelessness and stay within NCAA rules and might not have taken advantage of them.



Smoak also noted that Nacita was told of potential housing options prior to accepting housing from a friend.


Calls and emails to Chad Jackson, Baylor’s associate AD for compliance, were not immediately returned. However, Baylor’s Campus Living and Learning said it was not aware of subsidized housing for homeless students or students whose scholarships did not cover housing. The call was directed to financial aid.


Baylor athletics director Ian McCaw released a statement regarding Nacita’s eligibility and appeared to be shutting the door on a possible return.


“Silas Nacita will not be a part of the football program moving forward due to rules violations that impact his eligibility. We appreciate his contributions to Baylor football and wish him well as he completes his studies.”


Baylor said it will have no further comment on Nacita.


Nacita’s incredible journey from a homeless high school football player and wrestler in Bakersfield, Calif., to a scholar-athlete at Cornell to homelessness vagabond, community college and ultimately Baylor was documented in a Sports Illustrated piece last December. It detailed Nacita’s broken relationship with his mother and his decision to forgo a scholarship at Cornell after a year to come to Baylor. It also chronicles his journey from Cornell to Bakersfield, which included hitchhiking and sleeping in ditches, as well as his attempts to enroll in Baylor before finally earning enough scholarship money to pay for school and walk onto the team.


There are, however, holes in the Sports Illustrated story, including a part that says Nacita had earned scholarship money from a community college and a federal loan to get enough funds to rent an apartment and buy a moped prior to joining Baylor for summer workouts in 2014.


This is the same time period that Nacita tells the Sports Illustrated writer that he was homeless and sleeping on the floors of friends.


Also, Baylor did not set up the interview with Sports Illustrated, Nacita sought it out.


It's worth noting that for Nacita to be declared ineligible by the university he would have had to have taken the apartment from a Baylor booster or someone with ties to the university not just a plain old family friend.


Fact is Baylor dismissing Nacita and the NCAA debunking Nacita’s tweet raise major questions about the validity of this story in the first place. It’s unfortunate that we can’t take what appears to be good, heartfelt and inspiring stories at face value anymore; Manti Te’o’s fictitious girlfriend saw to that.


And while it would be easy to blame the evil and heartless NCAA for forcing a poor walk-on to choose between homelessness and his dream of playing Baylor football, well, that’s not quite the case either.


Are there still good stories of people overcoming odds and pursuing their dreams? Sure. Is the story of Silas Nacita one of them? Maybe.


But right now, it’s too difficult to discern between fact and fiction.


For more Baylor news, visit SicEmSports.com.


- - - - - - -


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


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/18miljz

News sport : After tanking, two coaches suspended for 2015-2016 season

Two Tennessee high school girls basketball teams attempted to tank the same game over the weekend, and they've been paying for it all week.


Riverdale and Smyrna High Schools are both in Rutherford County. On Wednesday, the county director of schools, Don Odom, announced that both coaches are suspended for the entire 2015-2016 season, without pay.


"Good athletic coaches possess skills that maximize the players' skills, strategize winning game plans, instill self-discipline, and impart the value of teamwork to reach a common goal," he wrote in a press release.


The attempt to tank was blatantly obvious, with Riverdale players intentionally missing free throws and Smyrna players trying to score on the wrong basket. The referee halted the game to speak with the coaches, telling them that they would not be allowed to make a mockery of the game. He reported the incident to the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association (TSSAA) as soon as it ended.


"Players also learn skills that build integrity and character, primarily by how their coach models before them. In these last two areas, we failed last Saturday evening," Odom said.


At least one of the coaches is actually out for good, as Odom added that the Smyrna principal has already decided to not bring back coach Shawn Middleton.


This comes two days after the TSSAA ejected both teams for the state tournament, fined them each $1,500, and put them on probation for the 2015-2016 school year.


More coverage from Yahoo Sports:






____

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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1zIS3i0

Testing Turkey trip for Liverpool

Liverpool must battle a hostile welcome from a 70 000-capacity crowd as they face an injury-hit Besiktas in Istanbul in the second leg of their Europa League last-32 tie.


|||

Liverpool must battle a hostile welcome from a 70 000-capacity crowd as they face an injury-hit Besiktas in Istanbul in the second leg of their Europa League last-32 tie.


The Reds squeezed a 1-0 win in the first leg last week at Anfield against a tenacious Besiktas side thanks to a late penalty from Mario Balotelli.


But Liverpool, returning to the scene of their legendary 2005 victory in the Champions League final against AC Milan, are under no illusions over the size of the task they face at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium on the outskirts of Istanbul.


Besiktas, who are playing at the Olympic Stadium while their own ground overlooking the Bosphorus is rebuilt, have slashed ticket prices to totally sell out the stadium and avoid the thin attendances that have dogged Turkish football this season.


Its famously fanatical black-clad fans – known for their leftist and anti-establishment tendencies – should create the hostile atmosphere that for years has struck fear into foreign sides visiting Istanbul for European ties.


Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers wants a strong run in the Europa League to show his in-form side have firmly put their dismal start to the season behind them.


Meanwhile, European glory would be the perfect end for Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard as he bids farewell in his last season with the club.


“We knew there might be a difficult patch early in the season and that probably went on longer than we hoped and expected,” midfielder Joe Allen told the Liverpool Echo.


“At the same time we always knew we would come through it,” he added.


Still nursing a hamstring problem, Gerrard is unlikely to play on the pitch where he helped Liverpool to their famous 2005 victory, when they triumphed on penalties after recovering from 3-0 down at half-time. Defender Mamadou Sakho meanwhile is also a doubt for the Reds.


Under Croatian coach Slaven Bilic, who played for Liverpool's Merseyside rivals Everton from 1997 to 2000, Besiktas have impressed in the Turkish Super Lig this season and gave Arsenal a run for their money in a play-off for a Champions League spot in August.


However, the injury-hit side come into the tie off a hugely disappointing 1-0 defeat at the weekend away to Eskisehirspor which saw them surrender top spot in the Super Lig to arch rivals Galatasaray.


“We must forget this match and focus on the Liverpool game,” said Bilic, putting the defeat down to fatigue after the tough first leg at Anfield.


“We want to start a new winning streak starting with the Liverpool game,” he added.


Bilic is troubled by a string of injuries to key players, including attacking midfielder Gokhan Tore and above all Senegalese striker Demba Ba, the Super Lig's joint top scorer with 13 goals this season.


The former Chelsea, West Ham United and Newcastle United player Ba has been a class act for the Black Eagles all season and Besiktas team doctors have been carrying out round-the-clock treatment to get the key duo fit.


Turkish media said that Ba had responded well to treatment for a side injury and was likely to play. Meanwhile, treatment was continuing to make Tore fit after an ankle injury.


However Swedish defender Alexander Milosevic and goalkeeper Tolga Zengin are expected not to play due to injury.


The two sides also met in the 2007/08 Champions League group stage, with Besiktas winning 2-1 in Istanbul before losing 8-0 away, still the heaviest loss suffered by any club in the competition. – AFP






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

News sport : Looking at Chicago's future, as Derrick Rose weighs his recovery options

When Derrick Rose tore the medial meniscus in his right knee in November 2013, longtime followers of the NBA set to gnashing their collective teeth, and not just because Rose would be sure to miss, in effect, his second full season of basketball in two years. Rather, those who were familiar with meniscus tears were worried not only about the possibility of further surgery beyond the initial operation, but also about an athlete’s propensity for future tears. Even though Rose’s 2012 anterior cruciate ligament tear was technically the more serious injury, the fallout of a meniscus tear can be far more lasting.


Nearly 15 months to the day of that initial tear, we have the dreaded follow-up. Rose has torn his right meniscus again, and though all initial reports suggest he's not dealing with the same severe degree of tear he suffered in 2013, Rose could miss the rest of the 2014-15 season. The Bulls camp — including coach Tom Thibodeau, who spoke with the media on Wednesday — is stressing that this isn’t as significant a tear, but these sorts of remarks may have less to do with the actual injury and more to do with the approach Chicago takes in its operation procedure.


Rose could either have the meniscus removed, a path he smartly declined to take in 2013, or he could once again have it repaired. The latter would lead to a recovery time that would likely bleed into the 2015-16 season, but it would also help limit future nagging injuries, as the meniscus is put in place to help alleviate the painful stress athletic activity could put on the knee.


That option, depending on the nature of the tear, might not be available. Even if it is available, the Bulls, using the same surgeon who repaired Rose’s ACL in 2012 and meniscus in 2013, could suggest that Rose dig in to take that dreaded “snip” procedure. That decision would lead to a quicker recovery time, even if all is lost in 2014-15, but it would also leave Rose far more prone to the sort of pain and “minor procedures” that have plagued post-snip players like Dwyane Wade as they’ve grown older.


Of course, if, after two tears, the meniscus is literally beyond repair, Rose would have no choice in the matter. The doctors would have to remove what's left of it.


The Bulls won’t know Rose’s diagnosis until after he undergoes surgery. He had the surgery two days after his tear in 2013, but his team was also on the road in Portland when the tear was diagnosed. With Rose and the Bulls currently at their home base in Chicago, the team should know the plan moving forward sooner rather than later.


From K.C. Johnson at the Chicago Tribune:


An official timeline for Rose’s return won’t be known until Cole performs the surgery, but multiple sources said the belief is this tear isn’t as significant as the one Rose had in November 2013. One source said the expectation is that this procedure will be of the arthroscopic variety, suggesting a shorter rehabilitation period.

Two other sources said Rose was told after the initial surgery that a future tear was possible, if not likely, and that a second procedure typically involves “cutting” or “snipping” the damage. That generally involves a rehabilitation process of three to eight weeks.

For now, even if Rose is able to make a miraculous comeback to rejoin the Bulls later in the season, Chicago will have to push forward with a roster that was regarded as one of the deepest in the NBA entering 2014-15.


As was the case in 2012-13, Rose’s first injured season, longtime Chicago stalwart Kirk Hinrich will assume starting point-guard duties. Hinrich is rightfully considered to be the weak link in Chicago’s deep rotation. He is a favorite of the Bulls coaching staff because he calls a loud play and hustles, but he is a miserable shooter who also ruins endless amounts of Chicago possessions because of his unwillingness to make what could be construed as a daring pass. His defense is lacking, he remains a sub-par 3-point shooter, and he is currently working with a career-worst 7.2 Player Efficiency Rating. That is hard to do.


Journeyman backup point guard E’Twaun Moore also carries a single-digit PER, but he tends to blossom when given consistent minutes. As is usually the case in Rose’s absence, though, the real bulk of the duties will go to a diminutive, score-first point guard. In the grand tradition of Nate Robinson and D.J. Augustin, the 5-foot-11 Aaron Brooks will likely close most games for the Bulls moving forward.


The 2009-10 NBA Most Improved Player has endured some rough outings this season, including a 2-for-9 performance against the Milwaukee Bucks in Chicago’s last game with Rose, but by and large he has been a fantastic offensive force off the bench. Brooks scores nearly as many points per minute as Rose, and he's shooting a fantastic 43.2 percent from behind the 3-point arc this season. His defense is suspect due to his size, but even with that caveat, he might be an improvement over the version of Rose we last saw.


Derrick Rose was terrible defensively this season. He was continually caught out of position, he refused to box out either his man or the man he decided to weirdly switch over to when shots went in the air, and even the stylings of an aging Hinrich and a 5-foot-11 (if that) Brooks were an obvious upgrade to Rose on that end. It’s true that Derrick was the lead guard on Chicago’s first and second-place defensive showings in 2011 and 2012, but his interest level and execution scaled back significantly in what was supposed to be his first full season back in 2014-15.


Combine this mitigating factor with Rose’s high usage, poor shot selection and dip in free-throw attempts, and you wouldn’t be an attention-seeking contrarian in pointing out that the Bulls could effectively play better overall ball without Rose. Chicago didn’t need Rose to lead the team in 3-point attempts per game, and yet Rose shot 5.5 a contest while hitting just 28.7 percent from long range, killing any interest defenders had in not playing him for a drive. Hinrich has been awful this year and Brooks is no long-term solution, but in the here and now, this could work out for Chicago.


The Bulls never needed Rose to regain his MVP form in order to win a championship. They just needed him to be a pretty good basketball player — and it’s debatable if Rose, who shot 40 percent from the field this season, was a pretty good basketball player in 2014-15. Running the offense through an improving Joakim Noah and Pau Gasol will open up the passing lanes that were previously stagnant in Chicago’s stand-around offense. More shot attempts for All-Star Jimmy Butler, a healthy Mike Dunleavy Jr. (shooting better than 40 percent from long range) and possibly rookie Doug McDermott could be a good thing.


McDermott’s rookie year has been a wash so far, and it deserves scrutiny. Chicago denied McDermott had a knee injury early in the season even though he had begun wearing a knee brace for the first time in his basketball career. After clearly dragging his right leg around, McDermott underwent what was initially called “arthroscopic surgery.” It turned out that the rookie needed a meniscus tear attended to, and on Tuesday, the Tribune’s Johnson revealed this:



We don’t know the severity of McDermott’s meniscus tear, so it is possible that a “snip” procedure was the only available option. If it wasn’t, for the Bulls to make that sort of career-altering choice regarding a player who had not yet turned 23 years old is borderline shocking. It’s not as if McDermott rushed back and into the rotation, either; Thibodeau only plays him garbage-time minutes.


And, sometimes, not even then:



That was after Chicago’s last game, a blowout win over the Bucks. The Bulls don’t even know when Rose tore his meniscus a second time — it may not have even been in or exacerbated by the Milwaukee game — but the fact remains that the intractable Thibodeau plays certain injury-prone members of his set rotation too deep into games that have long been decided.


Chicago’s season isn’t decided. The team could genuinely improve on both ends in Rose’s absence, and there is always the possibility that Rose could not only return this season, but return as a different player. It’s clear he was hesitant and did not trust his body in 2014-15, and that could change after yet another setback.


With the fears of a second meniscus tear realized, Rose could understand that his time is short and decide to go for broke, driving relentlessly and getting to the rim as his fellow Chicagoan and meniscus-tear sufferer Wade has for years. Rose’s knees have already failed him, so what’s the point of handling them with kid gloves upon the Return 3.0?


More NBA coverage:





- - - - - - -


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/1akGsQg

News sport : Joe Nemechek to drive the No. 34 at Atlanta

Joe Nemechek is David Ragan's replacement at Atlanta.


Front Row Motorsports said Wednesday that Nemechek would pilot the No. 34 car on Sunday. The team needed a replacement for Ragan after he became the temporary driver of the No. 18 for Joe Gibbs Racing in place of Kyle Busch, who suffered a broken right leg and broken left foot in a crash at Daytona on Saturday.


If Nemechek makes the race, it'll be start No. 667 in the Cup Series for him. If you're a fan of Blblical numerology, you may think that's a big deal.


Nemechek, 51, is a four-time winner in the Cup Series, most recently with MB2 Motorsports at Kansas in 2004. Since leaving Furniture Row Racing at the conclusion of the 2008 season, he's primarily driven for his own team. Last year was the first time in six years that he made a Sprint Cup Series start for a team other than Nemco Motorsports.


He was originally entered in the Daytona 500 but withdrew and instead attempted the Xfinity Series race and ran the Camping World Truck Series race. He splits time with his son, John Hunter Nemechek, in the family's No. 8 truck.


- - - - - - -


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/1zIxAtC

Teamwork will help SA football

Matshelane Mamabolo believes that teamwork between Safa and the PSL is exactly what our football needs.


|||

For a while it sounded as though Danny Jordaan was laying down the law. And it made for interesting listening.


In a country where the professional football league has for a long time held sway over the game’s governing body, it was interesting to finally hear that normality would finally reign.


“If players are selected to play for the national team, then they will represent the country. Remember we are the governing body of football in this country and I hope that the clubs understand that,” the Safa president said yesterday.


Jordaan was responding to a question about whether the national Under-20 side that leaves for Senegal tonight to compete in the Africa Youth Championships will have all the players announced in the squad. After all the likes of Ajax Cape Town and SuperSport United had indicated they might be reluctant to release some of their players.


He was incensed that on a day when the country was celebrating the Under-17’s qualification for the World Cup there should be suggestions some clubs would want to curtail Safa’s Vision 2022 by withholding players key to the junior teams’ success.


The absence of Ajax’s Rivaldo Coetzee from Thabo Senong’s squad raised eyebrows, with some of the view the Urban Warriors had refused to release their star defender. But even here, Jordaan was adamant the national association were not pandering to the PSL’s whims.


“There was a decision taken a while back that players such as Rivaldo, who are entrenched in the senior squad, could be excused from the junior sides to allow him time with his club.”


And this should in no way be seen as Safa allowing the clubs to dictate, far from it.


For, as Jordaan explained, the two bodies were in consultation with regards to the two junior tournaments.


“We must thank the PSL chairman Dr Irvin Khoza and the clubs because this squad has been put together through their co-operation.


“We can’t have uncertainty when we have selected the teams and in this regard the clubs have really helped us.”


No laying down the law as to who is boss then but rather teamwork between Safa and the PSL, which is exactly what our football needs. And if this is how things are going to be going forward, there can be no doubt that the future is bright.


The U-17s are going to Chile in October and the U-20s might go New Zealand in May for their own World Cup. And then there will be the Olympic qualifiers for the Under-23s.


So a lot of the PSL clubs are going to have to make do without their younger players and with the new Safa and PSL partnership we can look forward to being represented by the strongest sides possible. - The Star






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

News sport : Oregon TE Pharaoh Brown ahead of schedule following gruesome leg injury

Oregon tight end Pharaoh Brown (85) is taken from the field after being injured in the fourth quarter during against Utah Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) Four months removed from a gruesome right leg injury that had doctors considering amputation, Oregon tight end Pharaoh Brown is remarkably ahead of schedule in his rehabilitation.


The 21-year-old Brown’s third leg surgery was just four weeks ago, and according to a great piece by Andrew Greif of The Oregonian, he is already able to walk gingerly without the help of crutches. He has also begun to ride a stationary bike and do light jogging on an underwater treadmill.


Not bad for a guy who left Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium on Nov. 8 in an ambulance with an injury that “stretched an artery in his leg,” included two torn knee ligaments and caused internal bleeding.


Before the injury, Brown caught 25 passes for 420 yards and six touchdowns as a junior. Now his football future is up in the air.


"People ask me am I going to play, am I going to redshirt," Brown told The Oregonian. "I mean, this is a career decision, so I want to make sure my stuff is fully healed, that I can do everything and not rush back. That's why I don't even look that long out. If I'm able to play, I'll play. If I'm not, I'm not. I'm not getting out there till I'm 100 percent healed and not only 100 percent healed but 100 percent in my mind that I'm healed.”


The injury occurred when Brown stepped on a teammate’s foot and stumbled after heading upfield from the line of scrimmage after the ball was snapped on a goal line play. As he stumbled forward, Brown extended his right leg to regain his balance but planted awkwardly and his leg buckled underneath his weight.


Though he didn’t break any bones, Brown said the stretched artery in his leg “cut off blood flow below his right shin,” leaving him in the intensive care unit at the University of Utah Hospital – where he remained for four days.


Brown had surgery in Utah to remedy the issue with his artery and then flew to Cleveland, his hometown. He was able to finish out the fall semester via online lessons and then spent most of January with his mother, who works as a hospital nurse.


He returned to Oregon following more surgeries and is rehabbing six days a week and three hours each day – mainly to strengthen the muscles “around his knee, calf and ankle.”


Brown decided not to take classes in the winter quarter in order to focus on his rehab, but he’ll be back in class in the spring thanks to the NCAA’s medical absence waiver.


"For medical reasons it was better for Pharaoh not to complete winter term," said Oregon chief compliance officer Jody Sykes. "(The waiver) allows us to apply credit, like phantom credits, that continue to keep him on track academically and he makes those up down the line. The situation is so rare and unique that we're happy to jump through the hoops to help him. He's still part of the family and the team."


Brown, who says he’s received upwards of 1,000 pieces of fan mail in addition to messages of support on social media, says he’s even surprised by the progress he’s made in a short time since the injury.


“I’m surprising myself,” Brown said. “You don’t really know what you can do till you get put through that. You really don’t know how strong you are.”


For more Oregon news, visit DuckSportsAuthority.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/1BV6SUy

News sport : Larry Sanders explains his exit from the NBA: 'Right now [...] it's not there for me'

For about two months, we've been wondering what's going on with Larry Sanders, the gifted and mercurial shot-blocking big man who parted company with the Milwaukee Bucks around Christmas amid conflicting reports about his desire to continue playing professional basketball before receiving a 10-game suspension for a fourth violation of the league's anti-drug policy relating to marijuana use. Just before the All-Star break, the former Virginia Commonwealth standout suggested that answers were forthcoming:



On Wednesday, one week after Sanders and the Bucks agreed to terms on a buyout of the four-year, $44 million contract extension he signed in August 2013, the 26-year-old offered his side of the story surrounding his departure in a first-person piece and video published by The Players' Tribune:



In the piece, Sanders confirms that he's not planning an immediate return to the NBA: "I love basketball, and if I get to a point where I feel I’m capable of playing basketball again, I will." He also clarifies the reason for his separation from the Bucks:


Well, I know I disappeared for a while, and people were wondering where I was. I actually entered into Rogers Memorial Hospital, and it was a program for anxiety, depression and mood disorders. It taught me a lot about myself. It taught me a lot about what's important and where I would want to devote my time and energy.

I think I love basketball. I'll always be playing basketball. But for it to be consuming so much of my life and time right now, that's — it's not there for me. It's not that worth it. [...]

I wish I could have said goodbye formally to the Bucks at the arena, at the Bradley Center. I want them to know that it was never about them. It was never about the fans or how they treated me, because that was awesome. These decisions are for my family.

Sanders also addressed his unapologetic use of marijuana, which has led to multiple run-ins with the league office:


Cannabis came later on in my life. It was, for me, used medically, for some of the symptoms that I was having due to a lot of stress and the pressure I was under, given my work. [...]

You come into the league, you get dropped this large amount of money out of nowhere. People automatically change around you. That just happens. You become an ATM to some people. You have to be correct in your statements. You have to state things a certain way. You give up your freedom of speech, for real. You really can't say how you feel. There's no one really, you know, trying to guide, teach you what you should do and shouldn't do.

Sanders understands that many people might hear his comments and respond with, essentially, "That's what the money is for." The stresses, pressures and responsibilities associated with being a high-profile athlete seem to be part and parcel of his chosen profession — an at-times unpleasant part, to be sure, but one for which he was being compensated to the tune of $11 million a year by a Bucks franchise that invested in him with the expectation that he'd be the centerpiece of their defensive foundation.


"I think this seems to be a desirable, lucrative job and position, so people say, 'How could you be unhappy there? How could that be a place you don't want to be?'" Sanders said. "Values and the relationships with the people I love — that's, like, my real riches. That's my lasting wealth. [...] Happiness is an internal thing."


And, in Sanders' case, pursuing that happiness and those relationships means walking away from tens of millions of dollars — the terms of his Bucks buyout stipulate that he'll receive roughly half of the remaining value of his extension, according to Yahoo Sports NBA columnist Adrian Wojnarowski — in a decision that, ultimately, only really needs to make sense to him.


People really like labels. You get to identify something with something else that you may think. It makes sense to you. You may rationalize it. I just ... don't neglect the "and," you know? Don't neglect the "and." That's what I'll say. You say I'm selfish. And I'm loving. And I'm caring. And I'm fearful sometimes, and I'm also brave. We all are more than just one thing. [...]

I'm a person. I'm a father. I'm an artist, I'm a writer, I'm a painter, I'm a musician. And sometimes I play basketball.

Right now, though, he doesn't. And considering the complicated, ongoing and oftentimes non-linear process of addressing the sorts of issues that have led Sanders away from the game, maybe that's the best thing for everyone involved.


As my colleague Eric Freeman wrote two years ago during our coverage of the complicated relationship between Royce White and the Houston Rockets relating to his anxiety disorder, "Certain jobs and responsibilities don't make sense for someone with this condition, and those specifics differ from person to person." It would be unduly speculative to conflate the conditions of White and Sanders without more information about their individual cases, but the general point holds — if specific elements of the job trigger specific serious problems for Sanders, and he and his team have been unable to find a viable path toward resolving those issues in a way that works for all parties, then maybe Sanders and the NBA just aren't a good match right now.


I'd love to see a player as unique, talented and evidently thoughtful as Sanders find his way back. For his own sake and for the sake of those close to him, I'd rather he find the internal happiness that's unfortunately eluded him in the context through which we've come to know him.


More NBA coverage:



- - - - - - -


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



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1BV6SnB

News sport : Playoff hero, dancing star Jacoby Jones cut by Ravens

They'll always remember Jacoby Jones in Baltimore.


Jones was cut on Wednesday, the team announced. He vanished from the offense and was used mostly as a returner, although he was good in that role. The Ravens decided that they didn't need the 30-year-old receiver anymore, less than a year after signing a four-year, $12 million deal.


But he has a special place in franchise history.


Jones was one of the Ravens' playoff heroes at the end of the 2012 season, making a trio of huge plays including one of the most famous catches in NFL history.


Jones and Joe Flacco hooked up for a 70-yard touchdown to tie a divisional round playoff game at Denver with just 31 seconds left. It was one of the greatest plays in NFL history, dubbed the "Mile High Miracle," and the Ravens went on to win in double overtime. Against the 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII a few weeks later, Jones had a 56-yard touchdown catch and a 108-yard kickoff return for a score. Those plays were enormous in a 34-31 win over San Francisco.


Jones parlayed those plays (and his touchdown dances) into a spot on "Dancing With The Stars," but his football career never really took off. While he remained a good returner, he had just nine catches for 131 yards last year. And now he's looking for a new job.


Jones doesn't have a spot on the Ravens roster anymore, but once he's done playing he'll always be welcomed back in Baltimore to celebrate what he did during a great Ravens Super Bowl run.


- - - - - - -


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/1vzdKEK

News sport : What's the greatest (and worst) NFL logo?




With the news that the Cleveland Browns have created a "new" logo in the most Cleveland way possible, we decided to take a look at the best and worst of the NFL's current crop of logos. Do you prefer the classic style of the Green Bay Packers or the Chicago Bears, or are you a fan of the newer styles like the Seattle Seahawks and Jacksonville Jaguars? We run down four of the best and five of the worst right here, and friend, we sure hope yours isn't among the worst.


This debate is part of Yahoo Sports' new ongoing Grandstanding series, in which Jay Busbee and Kevin Kaduk kick around every topic in sports. Check out the Grandstanding podcast, where we dive deeper into the day's big stories, and find us on Twitter (@kevinkaduk and @jaybusbee) Facebook (Kaduk here, Busbee here) or via the hashtag #grandstanding. Thanks for checking it out!


____

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/1AKJSo0

News sport : Clark Harris's 2-year-old son sings national anthem at H.S. game

Most parents are proud when their two-year-old kids string words together into cohesive sentences. Imagine how Cincinnati Bengals long-snapper Clark Harris and his wife, Jessica, must have felt as they watched their son on Tuesday night, as two-year-old Trent Harris sang the national anthem at a high school basketball game in New Jersey.


Clark escorted Trent onto the court, handed him the microphone, and stuck around for the first few lines. Seeing that Trent was cool as could be, owning the floor in a little blazer and button-down, Clark walked off to the side.



Trent never missed a beat – and he's articulate, to boot.



H/T Paul Dehner, Jr.



____

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







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

News sport : Klay Thompson can make 3-pointers with the lights out

Klay Thompson is enjoying his best season as a pro, entering Wednesday's action as the league's ninth-highest scorer (a career-high 22.3 points per game) and fourth-best 3-point marksman (43.9 percent from beyond the arc, also a career best) for the league-leading 44-10 Golden State Warriors en route to the first All-Star berth of his NBA career. Just how sweet a groove is the 25-year-old swingman in these days? Well, apparently, he doesn't even need to see the basket to connect from long distance.


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


Thompson recently visited ESPN's "Sport Science" to showcase the form and mechanics behind the hiccup-quick release on his jump shot. When the crew threw him a little curveball by cutting out the lights, though, Klay just kept right on keeping on. As it turns out, with apologies to Kathleen Hanna, he's no less dangerous with the lights out:



Thompson draining eight out of 10 triples without the benefit of actually being able to see the basket, as the broadcast claims he did, points toward the cumulative effect of the years and years of practice — the endless catch-shoot-catch-shoot reps, the tireless work to shave a split-second here and eliminate a wasted motion there — that go into building something that seems so effortless. I'm not sure Klay's got a 20-point checklist for his jumper, but the results sure seem to indicate that he's gone through a similarly rigorous process of refinement and repetition.


They also, interestingly enough, add one more layer of connectivity and comparison between Thompson and Kevin Love, for whom Klay was rumored to be traded this summer before talks between the Warriors' braintrust and the Minnesota Timberwolves broke off, leading to Flip Saunders eventually sending Love to the Cleveland Cavaliers in exchange for a package headlined by 2014 No. 1 overall pick Andrew Wiggins.


Back before Love was on his way out of the Twin Cities, though, the Wolves celebrated their All-Star power forward's marksmanship with a similarly styled promotional video:



So Love can hit 3s blindfolded, but Klay can hit them without any lights at all. Well, this seals it. Good job calling off the trade, Warriors. Smart non-move.


Hat-tip to SB Nation's Tom Ziller.


More NBA coverage:



- - - - - - -


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



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






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