News sport : Cat Zingano on what to expect from her in UFC 184 title bout: 'Just watch"

LOS ANGELES -- Champion Ronda Rousey and No. 1 contender Cat Zingano each made weight on Firday at LA Live, making official their bout on Saturday for the UFC women's bantamweight title at Staples Center in the main event of UFC 184.


Rousey, who appeared more gaunt in the face than usual, weighed at the bantamweight limit of 135 pounds. Zingano, who weighed first, was 134 1/2.


She was asked by UFC broadcaster Joe Rogan for a comment about the fight following the weigh-in. She said simply, "Just watch," and then turned and headed to the locker room.


Rousey (10-0, 10 finishes) praised Zingano (9-0, 8 finishes) as her most dangerous opponent, which she said is a good thing. As her hometown crowd cheered her, Rousey said, "I'm going to show you guys the most fantastic win ever."


Holly Holm, a former boxing champion making her UFC debut in the co-main event, weighed in at 135 1/2, the same as her opponent, Raquel Pennington.


Two fighters missed weight. Jake Ellenberger came in a half-pound over the 171-pound limit for his fight with Josh Koscheck. But he dropped his shorts and was immedately re-weighed and hit 171.


Mark Munoz came in at 187 1/4, a pound-and-a-quarter over the limit for his middleweight bout with Roan Carneiro. He has two hours to make the weight, and still hasn't gotten back on the scale.









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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring what it's been like to be Larry Sanders

A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


C: ESPN.com. A fascinating read from Kevin Arnovitz on what's been going on with Larry Sanders — what precipitated his December departure from the Milwaukee Bucks, how his substance abuse suspension short-circuited a grand statement the young big man aimed to make, how he pushed for a buyout against his representatives' advice, what led him to his first-person explanation, and so much more.


PF: The Sporting News. Sean Deveney sees National Basketball Player's Association executive director Michele Roberts' recent jabs at the way some media members conduct themselves in NBA locker rooms as another piece of evidence that she's looking to succeed in one major area that Billy Hunter failed: "She is seeking the utmost loyalty of the players she has been assigned to represent."


SF: Posting and Toasting. In which Joe Flynn argues that Miami Heat forward Henry Walker, formerly known as New York Knicks forward Bill Walker, is just the latest instance of Pat Riley haunting the Knickerbockers, and that Riles has another few former-Knick signee-reboots up his sleeve.


SG: Sports Illustrated. On a more serious tip, here's David Vertsberger's chat with Walker about falling out of the NBA, traveling around the world and finding himself back in the bigs, taking game-defining shots in South Beach.


PG: Quirks and Quiddities. Dimitri Thalakada considers Goran Dragic's departure from the desert through the lens of another circumstance in which the Phoenix Suns moved on from an All-NBA-caliber point guard: "Suns fans feeling stung by the loss of Dragić would be wise to remember [...] that sometimes you have to give up on a good team before you can create a great one."


6th: Regressing. In which Kyle Wagner argues that the rising tide of discussion about analytics that considers the Philadelphia 76ers and Houston Astros to represent the vanguard of analytically focused teams is doing a disservice to, well, everything: "[...] talk about teams' 'commitment to analytics' disingenuous by definition if the examination of that commitment ends at How much are they trying? without touching upon how much they're succeeding."


7th: ESPN.com. Michael Wallace on Luol Deng, who "can forgive because he never forgets," and how he became the man he is.


8th: VICE Sports. Matt Osgood on the itinerant and decidedly un-big-league life of a D-Leaguer, which carries with it a certain patent unfairness: "They are better at their jobs than we are at our own. Yet they occupy some ledge of perpetual almost-ness."


9th: RealGM. Brett Koremenos goes deep on the nature of play-calling in the NBA, and we get smarter as a result. Coaching!


10th: San Antonio Express-News. The San Antonio Spurs don't look very much like the San Antonio Spurs right now, and a big reason why is that Tony Parker doesn't look very much like Tony Parker. You know who knows that, and knows it needs to change? Tony Parker.


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News sport : Watch: Video from hotel where hauler containing Travis Kvapil's car was

The video from the hotel where Travis Kvapil's No. 44 car was located isn't too revealing.


TMZ obtained the security footage from the Drury Inn where the hauler containing Kvapil's car for Sunday's race at Atlanta was reported stolen.


The video shows a silver Jeep, identified in previous reports as belonging to the person(s) suspected of taking the truck. The Jeep is shown going into the parking lot and then backing up. A man then walks across the screen from the right to the left.


However, it's inconclusive if the man shown in the video gets in the truck or not. He disappears and then headlights appear as the truck and hauler drive off to the left.


The alleged theft took place shortly after 5:30 a.m. From USA Today:



According to the police report, surveillance footage captured part of the theft. At 5:25 a.m., a newer model silver or grey Jeep Cherokee was observed driving into the Drury Inn parking lot. It was seen returning at 5:32 a.m.; two minutes later, the trailer and the car inside were seen leaving the property.




Team Xtreme crew chief Peter Sospenzo called police at 5:52 a.m. to report the trailer missing.



The No. 44 team withdrew from Sunday's race and team owner John Cohen has said the team plans to be at Las Vegas.


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News sport : Cavaliers' Kyrie Irving out vs. Pacers after MRI reveals left shoulder strain

Cleveland Cavaliers All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving has been ruled out of Friday's meeting with the Indiana Pacers after a magnetic resonance imaging exam revealed a left shoulder strain.


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It's not clear precisely when Irving suffered the injury, but he did begin favoring his shoulder after this drive with just over three minutes remaining in the third quarter of Thursday night's nationally televised matchup with the Golden State Warriors:





Irving seemed to move more gingerly and look less active immediately after that possession, during which he sparred with defenders Shaun Livingston and Draymond Green before losing the ball out of bounds. He stayed in the game for another couple of minutes before exiting for reserve Matthew Dellavedova at the 1:07 mark of the third.


After a trip back to the locker room to get checked out, Irving returned to the bench and, later, to the game with 8:32 remaining in the fourth quarter to help the Cavs close out their impressive 110-99 win over the West-leading Dubs. Irving finished with 24 points on 6-for-17 shooting and a 10-for-10 mark at the foul line to go with three rebounds, two steals and an assist in 38 minutes of work.


"It's a little sore right now," Irving said after the game, according to Dave McMenamin of ESPN.com. "Obviously it's uncomfortable. We'll see how it feels tomorrow and go from there."


After the MRI came up less-than-rosy, Irving didn't travel with the Cavs to Indiana on Friday. He will be re-evaluated before Sunday's game against the Houston Rockets, according to the team. He's considered day-to-day, as are we all.


Frank Vogel's Pacers, then, catch a little bit of a break — another one for them, as Jared Wade noted at 8 Points, 9 Seconds — in the absence of Irving. The No. 1 pick in the 2011 NBA draft has averaged 19.4 points and five assists against Indiana in nine career meetings and had a pair of strong outings — 24 points, 10 rebounds, five assists and three blocks in November, 29 points, five assists and four rebounds just three weeks ago — against the Pacers earlier this season. Then again, they still have to face a very scary version of LeBron James with their own shorthanded crew. Not exactly a light evening's work, with or without Uncle Drew.


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News sport : Darnell Dockett leads long list of NFL veterans cut

It might come as a surprise, but the Arizona Cardinals have released defensive tackle Darnell Dockett, per ESPN's Adam Schefter.



Dockett tore his ACL prior to last season and missed the entire 2014 campaign on injured reserve. The colorful and outspoken defensive lineman turns 34 in May and was scheduled to hit for nearly $9 million on this year's salary cap. Dockett signed a four-year, $35.3 million deal prior to the 2010 season and has spent his entire career with the Cardinals until now.


Although injury and age work against him, Dockett still should garner some solid attention on the free-agent market. This feels like a cap-related move by the Cardinals, who previously were projected to have about $5 million in space to operate.


'Tis the season for NFL teams to hack veterans, and Friday brought a slew of financially motivated cuts.


The Miami Dolphins cut receivers Brian Hartline and Brandon Gibson. The Atlanta Falcons cut receiver Harry Douglas and offensive lineman Justin Blalock one day after chopping Steven Jackson. The Washington Redskins cut defensive linemen Barry Cofield and Stephen Bowen. It's all part of the fat-trimming teams are doing with the start of the new league year and free agency nearly upon us.


Dockett is the biggest name of the bunch, and he should find work elsewhere. As for some of the others, it's not clear that will happen, at least not immediately.


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News sport : Greg Ostertag, 7-foot-2 ex-NBA center, enjoying rec league hockey in retirement

We’ve seen what it’s like to watch a giant in 6-foot-9 Zdeno Chara play hockey. We came close to seeing 7-foot-7 Manute Bol on the ice, but sitting on the bench during an Indianapolis Ice game in 2002 caused his chronic rheumatoid arthritis to flare up and swell his feet, preventing him from taking a shift during a publicity stunt.


But if you want to see a 7-foot-2, ex-NBA player lace ‘em up and skate, head out to the Ice Den in Scottsdale, Arizona and you’ll catch Greg Ostertag playing beer league hockey.


Ostertag, who spent 11 years in the NBA with the Utah Jazz and Sacramento Kings, grew up in Texas loving hockey before steering himself towards a professional hoops career. Once he left the game in 2006, he eventually grew tired of the standard retired athlete hobby of hitting the links.


From Jim Leitner of USA Hockey Magazine:


“One day, I just decided to go find something to do besides playing golf every day,” says the 41-year-old Ostertag. “I was lucky to have a guy in Utah send me a pair of skates. Then I went to a rink, started skating around, and, once I got my feet under me again, I got into a league. I’ve been doing it ever since.

“I don’t do it to stay in shape. I do it because it’s fun. I love playing hockey, and I love being around the guys. I’d do it five days a week if I could and if I had time.”

Ostertag told Leitner that he gave up hockey for the same reason many kids do at a young age: it became too expensive. Obviously growing in a 7-foot-2 frame helped his hoops career along.


After moving to Arizona, Ostertag became friendly with Shane Doan and Derek Morris of the Coyotes, who helped keep his love of hockey alive.


Once a big presence on the basketball court, Ostertag now prides himself on his good positioning on the ice and his ability to act as a screen in front of opposing goaltenders. It makes sense. Chara is used in the same way at times. With a few extra inches on the Boston Bruins captain, how is any netminder supposed to see around that?


Stick-tap Lost Lettermen


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News sport : Former UNLV RB David Peeples dead at 29

Sep 14, 2012; Las Vegas, NV, USA; A detailed view of a UNLV Rebels helmet before a game against the Washington State Cougars at Sam Boyd Stadium. (Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports) Former UNLV running back David Peeples died Wednesday according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. He was 29.


Peeples, a Las Vegas native, died at Mountain View Hospital with the cause of death “yet to be determined.”


Peeples, the Gatorade Nevada Player of the Year in 2003, enrolled at UNLV in 2004 after a decorated career at Cheyenne High School in North Las Vegas. He rushed for 3,334 yards and 30 scores in his high school career, but his time at UNLV was marred with injury.


UNLV Sports Information Director Mark Wallington and Denver Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall, a Las Vegas native, paid tribute to Peeples on Twitter.




Overall, in parts of four seasons, Peeples rushed for 566 yards and eight touchdowns as a Rebel.


For more UNLV news, visit Rebel-Net.com.


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News sport : NBA to publish 'last two minutes' reports grading refs' late calls, non-calls

Back in January of 2014, after the NBA acknowledged that Monta Ellis got away with a closing-seconds foul on Austin Rivers that helped cost the New Orleans Pelicans a victory, Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said he loved that the league office was copping to missed calls, and not just because that particular one wound up working out in his favor.


"I love the transparency," Cuban said. "Now if I could just get them to do the same level of transparency for the other 47 minutes and 55 seconds, I'd really be making progress."


Well, we're not quite there yet, but starting Monday, the range will be down to a scant 46 minutes. (Progress!)


Beginning Monday, March 2, and continuing throughout the 2015 NBA playoffs, the NBA will provide after-the-fact play-by-play reports "regarding all calls and material non-calls that occur in the last two minutes of close games and during entire overtime periods," the league announced Friday, a move aimed at providing more specific responses to "the most scrutinized calls in NBA games."


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From the league's Friday statement announcing the new initiative:


The “Last Two Minutes” officiating report is the latest step in the league’s effort toward more transparency in its officiating program. Previous actions include this season’s launch of the NBA Replay Center, real-time postings on NBA.com and @NBAOfficial of the replays used by officials to make calls during replay reviews, and bi-weekly rule “points of emphasis” memos that are sent to teams, referees and the media. [...]

The league will release assessments of officiated events in the last two minutes of games decided in regulation that were within five points at the two-minute mark. Also, the reports will include plays from the last two minutes and overtime of OT games. Each play will be reviewed by a senior referee manager or basketball operations manager who will provide the assessments. Every play on the report will include a video link to that specific play. The reports will be posted on NBA.com/official and Media Central, the NBA’s media website (mediacentral.nba.com), by 5 p.m. ET the day after each game.

By "assessments of officiated events," according to Brian Mahoney of The Associated Press, the league means the reports "will say how the play was graded — correct or incorrect." While you might think referees would bristle at the league publishing such grades and thus inviting public scorn for missteps, the zebras are apparently on-board with the move:


"Our policy in the past was pretty much to wait until we had something that was controversial enough to really garner a lot of interest and we didn't think that that was a practical approach," NBA executive vice president of referee operations Mike Bantom said. "And it also wasn't very fair because they always tended to be errors that were made, so we tried to come up with a system that would allow us to provide some insight into our process and set a criteria that would allow us to be more standardized and more consistent."

Bantom said the referees had input into the plans and welcomed the change from the league's former policy of announcing only when calls were incorrect.

"Our prior practice of commenting only about mistakes that they made was a bone for them, something we didn't feel that was fair to them and also something that they weren't happy about as well," Bantom said. "So I think this is a solution that puts them in a much better light, doesn't hide the fact that they are human and will make mistakes, but also points out the fact that the overwhelming majority of the calls that they get correct."

According to USA TODAY's Jeff Zillgitt, a sample report culled from the Portland Trail Blazers' Jan. 19 win over the Sacramento Kings included a review of "12 plays in the final two minutes [that] concluded officials made 11 correct calls and one incorrect call."


The publication of the "two minutes reports" represents the latest in a string of moves to increase transparency in officiating matters and the league at large. The league began acknowledging missed calls before David Stern ceded the commissioner's chair to Adam Silver in February of 2014, but while those mea culpas have continued — for better or for worse — but the pace of the transparency push has quickened since Silver's succession.


First, the NBA began distributing internal officiating memos to NBA teams; then, the league opened those memos up to everybody. Later, during the Donald Sterling saga, Silver published the league's long-private constitution and bylaws, allowing everybody to take a look at the nuts and bolts of how the NBA's Board of Governors operates.


This season, the league introduced its expansive new replay review center, a 94-screen, 20-replay-station command center in Secaucus, N.J., directly connected to all 29 NBA arenas aimed at centralizing official reviews and speeding up the process of replay decisions. Silver also expanded the number of triggers that could allow officials to initiate reviews, a decision that seemed to run counter to the league's desire to shorten game-length, but also appeared to be in lock step with the overarching interest in getting more stuff right.


The NBA has even considered more extreme steps, like introducing NFL-style coaches' challenges at the D-League level, in pursuit of more accurate calls and, perhaps even more importantly, a higher level of trust among NBA fans in the accuracy of officiating. Conducting regular post-mortems on the late stages of games — looking at the big decisions, what got called, what didn't get called, what should have happened, etc. — seems like another solid step in that direction.


That said, it's only a step. As Cuban initially noted, the last few minutes of the fourth quarter and overtime are merely the tip of the overall iceberg that is an NBA game; as professional gambler and very smart Twitter person Haralabos Voulgaris noted, an awful lot of other stuff can happen in the earlier stages of games.


The somewhat amorphous phrasing of "material non-call" seems to leave some room for things to go sideways, too. While you'd figure that would cover instances of fouls that shouldn't have been fouls or vice-versa, would it also include stuff like the Charlotte Hornets getting jobbed on a five-second violation late in an early-season loss to the New York Knicks? That certainly seemed material after the fact, but would it be captured in the league's re-review? And how much does something like this really matter in the context of a league where games like Wednesday's Kings vs. Grizzlies tilt — a ragged, at-times barely officiated affair in which elbows flew, tempers flared and precious little control was exerted — wouldn't be captured in the analysis, since it wasn't a five-point game in the final two minutes?


That said, while it's unlikely that the new initiative will perfectly encapsulate any and every potential problem after the fact, no system of evaluating officials' work is ever going to be perfect. All we can reasonably ask is that the league does everything it can to keep improving the quality of officiating, establish and maintain an even playing field for the players on the court, and not bury its head in the sand when things go wrong. On that score, at least, this seems to be another sound decision by Silver and company.


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News sport : Nick Saban says expanded Playoff couldn't 'co-exist' with other bowls

Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks to the media on national signing day. Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson) Even though his team came up short and lost in the semifinal round to eventual champion Ohio State, Alabama head coach Nick Saban said the College Football Playoff as a whole was a success in its first year.


However, beyond the teams that cracked the top four, Saban said at a coaches conference held by the Minority Coaches Association that the Playoff actually had a negative effect on the rest of the bowl teams.


From the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer:



He noted the lack of attendance and interest in some of the smaller bowl games. While plenty of interest was created for the CFP, he said, it subtracted from the attention given to the other games. In his estimation, it’s a problem because it takes away the opportunities for “positive self-gratification” for a number of players on teams that do not have as much success at the end of the year.



Several FBS coaches across the country have said that they support the idea of expanding the Playoff beyond four teams, though CFP representatives haven’t budged on the four-team format just yet.


Saban says that would further detract from the rest of the bowl games.


“For the four teams that were in it, it was a great experience. It was a great experience for us,” Saban said. “I don’t know if we’re going to be able to coexist with a bowl system and a playoff system. I think you’ve got to have one or the other.


“You know, if we’re going to have an eight-team playoff, 16-team playoff, I don’t think you’re going to have bowl games. I’m not advocating either one. I’m just saying it’s going to be difficult for those two things to co-exist.”


New Florida head coach Jim McElwain agreed with Saban.


“The issue there is that I think it will lose a lot of what is college football,” McElwain said. “I’d hate to see that.”


It doesn’t seem like coaches will have to deal with the possibility of expansion any time soon. CFP executive director Bill Hancock said earlier this month that there has been “no talk of expanding” and that “we need to give (the four-team format) a chance” beyond just one year.


The College Football Playoff’s current contract for four teams is 12 years (with 11 more to go).


For more Alabama news, visit TideSports.com.


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Injured Van Persie set for long absence

Man United could be without its first-choice striker for a critical stage of the season after Robin van Persie was ruled out with an ankle injury.


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Manchester, England - Manchester United could be without its first-choice striker for a critical stage of the season after Robin van Persie was ruled out for a “long time” by manager Louis van Gaal on Friday.


The Netherlands international was hurt in United's 2-1 loss at Swansea last Saturday and left the Liberty Stadium on crutches, with a protective shoe on his foot.


Van Gaal didn't give an exact timescale of Van Persie's absence but said it was an injury that “takes a long time - it's not one week or two weeks.”


That would mean Van Persie definitely missing United's next two Premier League games - against Sunderland on Saturday and Newcastle on Wednesday - and also the FA Cup quarterfinal match against his former club, Arsenal, on March 9. After that, four of United's next five matches are against Tottenham, Liverpool, Manchester City and Chelsea - all members of the current top seven.


Van Persie's latest injury has come just as United clings to the final Champions League qualification spot in the Premier League, which is a minimum requirement for Van Gaal in his first season at Old Trafford.


United dropped to fourth in the standings after the Swansea loss, and Tottenham and Liverpool are one and two points behind, respectively.


“It is because of the rat race between five clubs that we have to win, we have to be there,” Van Gaal said ahead of the Sunderland match. “You have to win your matches because the other clubs are winning their matches.”


Van Persie has remained United's first-choice striker, despite scoring just 10 goals this season - way down on his total from recent years. He was top scorer in the 2011-12 and 2012-13 seasons, with 30 and 26 goals respectively.


In his absence, Van Gaal has to decide who to recall out of Radamel Falcao, United's expensive loan signing from Monaco, and youngster James Wilson. Wayne Rooney has recently returned to his usual role as a second striker after playing for two months in midfield.


United could also do with Argentina midfielder Angel Di Maria replicating the lively performances he produced at the start of the season.


“I've had a couple of games where things haven't gone as well as they could have,” Di Maria said. “I think it's part of that settling-in process to the English game.


“I started off quite well but I think that then made expectations rise and everyone thought I would just carry on in the same way. But football is like that, sometimes you have these ups and downs.”


Defensive midfielder Michael Carrick is back in the squad after a muscle injury.


Also Friday, the Scottish Football Association announced that Brian McClair will be leaving his role as the director of United's youth academy in May to become Scotland's performance director.


The 51-year-old McClair will begin his new post on June 1, ending a long spell at Old Trafford first as a player then a member of the managerial staff.


“Brian's association with Manchester United started in 1987 and, regardless of where he is located, he will always be part of the family,” United executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward said.


Sapa-AP






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News sport : Kyle Busch released from hospital

Following two surgeries for the injuries he sustained in a crash in Saturday's Xfinity Series race, Kyle Busch has been released from the hospital.




Busch had surgery on his broken left foot at a hospital in North Carolina after leaving Daytona. He had his right legoperated on while in Daytona.


David Ragan is filling in for Busch in the No. 18 car.


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News sport : Vince Young, Michael Sam will work out at NFL's first veteran combine

Michael Sam's Twitter account is still @MichaelSamNFL. He hasn't been employed by the NFL since late October.


But Sam hasn't given up. He has been accepted to participate in a first-ever NFL veteran combine on March 22 in Arizona. That news was first reported by ESPN's Adam Schefter.


Vince Young will reportedly be there too. The former University of Texas quarterback has signed up to participate, NFL Network's Ian Rapoport said. Young will turn 32 in May and hasn't played in an NFL regular-season game since 2011 with the Philadelphia Eagles.


It's a combine that will be similar to the college one, with position drills and physical tests, for NFL veterans who are free agents. The Associated Press reported earlier this year that about 100 veteran players were expected to be invited.


Sam, of course, is still vying to be the first openly-gay player to appear in a NFL regular-season game. The defensive end out of Missouri was drafted in the seventh round by the St. Louis Rams last year. He was cut at the end of a fairly productive preseason, and the Rams didn't sign him to their practice squad. The Dallas Cowboys did sign him to the practice squad but cut him on Oct. 21.


Sam has signed up to be on "Dancing with the Stars," but the NFL door isn't closed for him. It's not going to be easy for him though. Any team could have signed him since the Cowboys cut him, but that hasn't happened. Maybe a good workout will help him. An underwhelming performance at the college combine a year ago probably negatively affected his draft stock. He is viewed as not big enough to be an NFL defensive end and not explosive athletically enough to overcome that or transition to outside linebacker. Maybe he could change what the NFL thinks of him with a great veteran combine.


It'll be tougher for Young to change perceptions at the veteran combine. The NFL knows him well, as the third overall pick of the 2006 draft. Since he was with the Eagles, the Buffalo Bills, Green Bay Packers and Cleveland Browns have given him chances and he hasn't stuck. There are many NFL teams who need help at quarterback and haven't signed Young. Maybe a strong performance at the veteran combine can help him, because his NFL career seems dead at this point.


The veteran combine was created not only as an efficient way for NFL teams to work out free agents, but for former NFL players who still want a shot in the league. It will be up to invitees like Young and Sam to take advantage.


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News sport : Michigan DBs Jabrill Peppers and Blake Countess show off gymnastics skills (Videos)

The folks in Ann Arbor seem to be really jacked up about the beginning of spring practice.


First, new Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh said the first day of spring drills is “like coming out of the mother’s womb” and that he would attack it “with an enthusiasm unknown to mankind.”


Practice began on Tuesday and Wolverines defensive backs Jabrill Peppers and Blake Countess showed that they head-over-heels excited to be back on the field.



That’s Peppers, a redshirt freshman, showing off his gymnastics skills during what looks to be a special teams drill. Peppers, who recently moved from cornerback to safety, missed the majority of the 2014 season with various injuries. The former five-star recruit is expected to make an impact for the Wolverines in the fall.


Two days after Peppers’ impressive backflip, fifth-year senior Blake Countess took the gymnast skills to another level.



Unlike Peppers, Countess, an All-Big Ten honorable mention selection in 2014, actually has a gymnastics background from his youth, so that seems like a bit of an unfair comparison. Still, it shows off the kind of athletic ability the Wolverines will have on display in their secondary in 2015.


Following the conclusion of Friday’s practice, the Wolverines have a week off before picking things up again on March 10. From then on out it’s three practices per week until the team’s spring game on Saturday, April 4.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


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News sport : Derrick Rose out 4-to-6 weeks after knee surgery, return this season expected

Derrick Rose underwent successful surgery on Friday morning to remove the damaged portion of the torn medial meniscus in his right knee. Chicago Bulls general manager Gar Forman termed the surgery "minor" in a session with reporters — Rose reportedly walked out of the hospital bearing his full weight on his own following the procedure — and estimated Rose's recovery timeline at four to six weeks, and said that the Bulls expect the star point guard to return.


"We expect Derrick to be playing this season," Forman said.


The short side of the four-to-six-week timeframe would peg Rose's estimated return at March 27. The far end brings us to April 10, three games before the end of the Bulls' regular season and eight days before the start of the 2015 playoffs.


Rose will begin "aggressive" rehabilitation on Saturday, with an eye toward being back to basketball activity in a week.


More NBA coverage:



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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 : Greg Cosell's Film Review: DeMarco Murray and his value to Dallas


The conventional wisdom is that the NFL is now a passing league.


Any conversation about the NFL usually comes back to that notion, that it’s a passing league. And I’m not disagreeing with that. But no matter how much it’s said that the NFL is a passing league, the Dallas Cowboys ran through DeMarco Murray last season.


The Cowboys were very good, too. They went from a string of .500 seasons to a 12-4 record, an NFC East championship and nearly a playoff win at Green Bay once the team started going through Murray. Murray allowed the Cowboys to control the tempo and to make sure the defense wasn’t on the field too much. He was their most important player, the foundation of their entire team.


But Murray is scheduled to become a free agent on March 10, and do you re-sign him if you're Dallas? That’s a difficult question. If you knew the unknowable, namely how Murray would hold up in seasons to come after a huge workload last season, then I think re-signing him is an easy choice. He was Dallas' most important player last season, and I don't buy the notion that running backs don't have value. But it's not that simple.


First it’s important to take a look at what kind of a back Murray is. Because he doesn’t have an Adrian Peterson-level skill set, or even a Le’Veon Bell-type skill set. We talk all the time about “system quarterbacks,” and you could say that Murray is a system runner.


Murray is at his best as a decisive downhill runner with short area burst. That’s why the outside zone run was a staple this season for Dallas. The Cowboys’ fantastic offensive line was consistent all season stretching the front side and sealing the back side, and Murray is an excellent one-cut downhill runner who is at his best when his options are limited. On inside zone, you have to find and create your own space, and Murray is not a creative, intuitive runner. He's a little too stiff and straight-line to be a great natural runner. But running downhill in the outside zone, or even in gap schemes like “power” and “counter”? He’s very good.


Here are two examples, on back-to-back plays against the St. Louis Rams in Week 3, of how good he is at pressing the hole, influencing second-level defenders, then making a sharp cut to the vacated area.


Here he impacts linebacker Alec Ogletree, makes a great cut and gains 14 yards.



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And on this run he impacts linebacker Jo-Lonn Dunbar and gains 20.



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Murray also improved dramatically this past season in his physicality. He developed a punishing element to his game, and there’s a mentality that goes along with that. There are guys that can do that for 10, 12 carries a game, but there are not a lot of players who can do it for 25 carries a game. Murray can. That’s a skill.


That’s why I feel like if you know you’d get Murray’s same production, or at least close to it, then it’s a no-brainer to re-sign him. As I said, I don’t buy into the notion you don’t need a great running back – if you want the run game to be the starting point for your offense, you need a great back. You can’t just plug one in. For example, I don’t think there are 10 backs in the league who can do what Marshawn Lynch does for the Seattle Seahawks. He’s their foundation on offense. Murray isn’t the level of back Lynch is, but you can’t just plug in a back and have him do what Murray did for the Cowboys over 392 carries last year.


But Murray's workload is an issue.


There aren’t many NFL backs who have carried at least 392 times in a season (just nine, counting Murray), but generally when backs have that many carries their play slips afterward. Eddie George, Larry Johnson, Terrell Davis and Jamal Anderson are examples. So the Cowboys have to wonder if Murray can replicate what he did in 2014 if they re-sign him. It would be rare among the backs who have experienced that type of workload in a season.


This is why the question of signing Murray is a tough one. Murray and the Cowboys are a perfect fit together: He is a great fit in their zone-based running game, and the Cowboys benefited from having a back who can sustain drives and control a game. The Cowboys’ success last season started with Murray, and Murray isn't the kind of back who can be plugged into any system and have a huge season. If the Cowboys don’t re-sign him (assuming they don’t replace him with a Peterson-level back), their offense has to be different next season. Their whole team would have to be different.


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NFL analyst and NFL Films senior producer Greg Cosell watches as much NFL game film as anyone. Throughout the season, Cosell will join Shutdown Corner to share his observations on the teams, schemes and personnel from around the league.






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