Mata, Di Maria not justifying price tags

Juan Mata and Angel Di Maria are the two most expensive players in Manchester United's history.


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Manchester, England – Juan Mata and Angel Di Maria are the two most expensive players in Manchester United's history, costing a combined 97 million pounds ($150 million) last year as the club looked to regain their status as England's top team.


So far, they aren't living up to their price tags - and there's a chance neither will be in United's lineup when the team visits Newcastle in the Premier League on Wednesday.


Mata, bought for 37.1 million pounds ($57 million) by David Moyes, has mainly been used as a substitute by new manager Louis van Gaal this season despite a decent scoring record when he has started for United. A World Cup and European Championship winner with Spain and twice Chelsea's player of the year, the playmaker is a forgotten man at Old Trafford these days.


Di Maria took over from Mata as United's costliest player when he was signed from Real Madrid for 59.7 million pounds ($92


million), but his form has dipped after an encouraging start.


Van Gaal hasn't found the best position for the Argentina midfielder, who admitted before the 2-0 win over Sunderland on Saturday that he was still in the “settling-in process” in English football. Di Maria was poor by his high standards against Sunderland and was substituted at halftime -quite a fall from grace for a player who was man of the match in last season's Champions League final.


“I cannot deny what I see and we have to give Angel a little bit more time to adapt to the Premier League,” Van Gaal said. “The rhythm of the game is so high here, much higher than in other countries. He has to adapt to the culture and we have to give him time to adapt and also to lift his confidence again.”


With Adnan Januzaj impressing as Di Maria's replacement against Sunderland, the Argentine may even find himself on the bench at Newcastle as United look to keep its place in the Champions League qualification places.


United's fight with Arsenal and Liverpool for third and fourth place looks set to go to the wire this season, with the three clubs separated by two points. It could be more exciting than the title race, as Chelsea has a five-point lead - and a game in hand - over second-place Manchester City heading into the full midweek program in the league. – Sapa-AP






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Kane spurred on by Cup final failure

Harry Kane has promised Tottenham will use the pain of the League Cup final defeat to fuel their challenge for future trophies.


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Harry Kane has promised Tottenham will use the pain of the League Cup final defeat against Chelsea to fuel their challenge for future trophies.


Mauricio Pochettino's team were unable to emulate their New Year's day win over Chelsea as the Blues eased to a 2-0 win at Wembley on Sunday.


It was a bitterly disappointing day for the north London club, who had hoped to win their first silverware of the Pochettino era.


Instead, Kane and his team-mates had to watch Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho cavort around Wembley as he celebrated the first trophy of his second spell in charge at Stamford Bridge.


Those painful images are already burned on Kane's memory and the young forward is determined to use them to ensure there is no repeat the next time Tottenham are within touching distance of winning a competition.


“It's the worst feeling in the world losing, and losing in a final on the big stage even worse,” Kane said.


“It's disappointing. The lads gave it everything and I thought we played well.


“But in these big games you don't always get the luck you need and I felt Chelsea did with a couple of deflected goals which on another day wouldn't go in.


“When you see Chelsea lift that trophy at the end it gives you that fire in your belly to be back here and lift a trophy.”


Losing at Wembley to their London rivals capped a dismal week for Tottenham, who also crashed out of the Europa League against Fiorentina on Thursday.


But, with a top four finish in the Premier League still a possibility for Spurs, Kane revealed Pochettino told his players to be proud of their efforts so far this season.


Asked what was said in the dressing room, Kane said: “Just to be proud of ourselves. We've come a long way. It's a very young team with a new manager.


“I thought we gave a good account of ourselves. A lot of us were playing in our first final.


“To be in a final in the first season is great. But we have got to learn from it.”


On a personal level, Kane's lacklustre performance in his first major showpiece occasion was something of a letdown after his brilliant breakthrough season.


The 21-year-old had scored 24 goals before Sunday. But he was easily subdued by Chelsea defenders John Terry and Gary Cahill.


“I'm always disappointed when I don't score, but it's tough. Chelsea are a good side. I've said that before. They have one of the best defences in the league and showed that here,” Kane said.


“We gave it a go and played the way we wanted to, but it just went their way.


“I'm enjoying everything this season. It shows we are doing well when people are interested in you.


“But we have got to move on. We have a game on Wednesday and hopefully I can get on the scoresheet and get back to winning ways.”


After scoring Chelsea's first goal – his first in a major final – on the stroke of half-time and delivering a rock-solid display in defence, Terry was hailed once again as the best English defender of his generation.


But the 34-year-old wasn't so overcome with emotion that he would consider coming out of international retirement.


Terry retired from England duty in 2012 after being stripped of the captaincy following allegations he racially abused then QPR defender Anton Ferdinand.


Asked if he would make an England return, Terry said: “No. It's the simple answer, I don't want to go into it right now.


“Being back at Wembley, the atmosphere, the stadium, it's one of the best I have played in, but it's never crossed my mind.


“I have drawn a line under it and the England squad can move on now.” – AFP






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City must adapt and change

For all Manchester City's attacking riches, the champions' out-dated tactics are not lighting up the Premier League and they are in serious danger of losing their crown.


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London - If you were to ask Premier League fans which attacking players they would like their clubs to sign given a limitless budget, the likes of Manchester City's Sergio Aguero, Edin Dzeko and David Silva would be at the top of most wish lists.


Put them in a rigid 4-4-2 formation like City manager Manuel Pellegrini, however, and they may not be so keen.


For all Manchester City's attacking riches, the champions' out-dated tactics are not lighting up the Premier League and they are in serious danger of losing their crown.


After playing with two strikers and neglecting the midfield battle during Tuesday's 2-1 Champions League defeat by Barcelona, Pellegrini attracted criticism.


By opting to stick with the same formation against a re-energised Liverpool on Sunday, the Chilean scored an own goal as stunning goals from Jordan Henderson and Philippe Coutinho helped Brendan Rodgers's side to a 2-1 victory.


With Yaya Toure alongside Fernandinho in the centre and David Silva and Samir Nasri on the left and right, City were over-exposed in midfield and not the creative force many would have predicted.


Liverpool's attacking trio of Coutinho, Adam Lallana and Raheem Sterling skipped around City's uninspired formation at will, leading to further suggestions they need to change their approach.


Pellegrini, however, does not agree.


“The formation was not the problem. It was the best decision. In the first half it was a close game,” he told reporters. “When they won the game we were playing with just with one striker so that wasn't the problem.


“I think they scored two beautiful goals, both from the edge of the box and impossible for Joe Hart to save. It was a close game, we had chances - David Silva, Kun (Aguero) hit the post and had another chance.”


City's hopes of defending their Premier League title now hang in the balance this season as leaders Chelsea boast a five-point advantage with a game in hand.


“It's three points less, when we drop points it's difficult to try to reach the top of the table,” Pellegrini said.


“We must try to continue, to win the next game and as many games as we can, and we'll see where we finish.”


Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho, busy sliding around the Wembley turf after League Cup success against Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, will have no complaints if Pellegrini sticks to his misfiring formation. – Reuters






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Liverpool out to maintain impressive run

Liverpool look to make it 12 straight unbeaten in the league when they host lowly Burnley.


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London – Liverpool look to make it 12 straight unbeaten in the league when they host lowly Burnley. The Reds are two points off a Champions League qualifying spot after beating champions Manchester City on Sunday.


Fresh off a win over the reigning champions, the Premier League's hottest team casts an eye towards the other end of the table as they attempt to extend an impressive run in midweek.


Liverpool beat Manchester City 2-1 on Sunday to make it 11straight league games without loss. The win lifted the Reds to fifth place, two points behind Manchester United in the final Champions League qualifying place.


There's little time to celebrate though for Brendan Rodgers' team as Burnley go to Anfield on Wednesday.


And while the Clarets are in the relegation zone after winning just one of their last 10 league matches, Liverpool know it won't be easy.


All they have to do is remember back to Boxing Day and a struggle to record a hard-fought 1-0 success in the reverse fixture at Burnley.


“We have just got to keep going now,” Jordan Henderson said after the City game. “We've got another big game on Wednesday against Burnley and that will be tough for us as we found out when we went there.


“They'll make it difficult but this result will give us great confidence. We've got momentum and we've just got to keep building and finish strongly.”


Manchester City try to get their title hopes back on track by hosting last-place Leicester. The holders are five points behind leaders Chelsea, who also have a game in hand.


Even though they've won just three of eight games in 2015, City manager Manuel Pellegrini isn't ready to concede just yet.


“I think we never give up about the title,” he said. “We must try to improve out play first and after that try to win our next game.


“I hope that the team will recover and we can win on Wednesday. Every point we drop is more difficult.”


Chelsea follow up their League Cup final victory with a visit to West Ham. It's a match-up of teams going in opposite directions.


The Blues' six-game unbeaten run has given them breathing room at the top. West Ham are down to ninth after just one win in 10 and were booed off by the home fans following Saturday's 3-1 loss to Crystal Palace.


“We have to take responsibility for Saturday's performance, and use the big negative as a big push, as motivation for a tough game against Chelsea on Wednesday night,” manager Sam Allardyce said. “We have to make sure Saturday doesn't dent our confidence, which is the last thing we want.”


Southampton, who've fallen to sixth after winning once of the past five games, visit Crystal Palace on Tuesday, while Aston Villa host West Brom and Sunderland are at Hull.


On Wednesday, third-place Arsenal seek a seventh league win in eight when they travel to QPR, Manchester United are at Newcastle, Tottenham try to rebound from their League Cup loss at home against Swansea and Stoke host Everton. – Sapa-dpa






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Rodgers heaps praise on Coutinho

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers believes it is “frightening” to discover how much Philippe Coutinho is worth now.


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Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers believes it is “frightening” to discover how much Philippe Coutinho is worth now after the Brazilian scored the winner in a potentially decisive 2-1 victory over Manchester City


The forward's goal kept the Merseysiders within touching distance of the Premier League top four and diminishes City's own hopes of retaining their crown with them five points behind Chelsea having played a game more.


But it was Coutinho's strike from the left corner of the penalty area 15 minutes from time that continued his personal rise.


The 22-year-old, who arrived from Inter Milan in 2013 for £8.5 million (11.7 million euros) signed a new five-year contract last month and has added goals to his game following Rodgers' request.


The Liverpool manager also told how this victory was particularly pleasing given the late night trip home from Turkey where his side were knocked out of the Europa League to Besiktas on Thursday.


“It was a brilliant result and an equally brilliant performance,” said Rodgers. “We thoroughly deserved it, the players were relentless. It was very pleasing.


“Getting back at 4:30am in the morning on Thursday and not getting home to 6am and then to prepare for a game against the champions is not easy. You have to take your hat off to them for the way they dealt with that.


“It's a big one but there are still a lot of games to go. It was a significant win because it keeps us in the chase.


“Coutinho is operating on a very high level. His performances in particular since he signed his contract have been a joy to watch.


“He came in at 19, is still developing. He's a sensational footballer. To beat Joe Hart from that angle with that power was phenomenal.


“He is a player that has always assisted and made the final pass, he's a very selfless player, he's a very humble guy. There are improvements he can make, he is playing at a football club who adores him and loves it here.


“He has a humility, wants to work and is an absolute joy to work with. He was £8.5 million a few years ago, it's frightening to know what he's worth now.


“To keep them to one shot on target in a game they wanted to win was incredible.


“We can only focus on Burnley, we just have to concentrate on the next game and finish as high as we possibly can.


“If we can get into the top four it is better achievement than last season. We just need to keep collating the points.”


Jordan Henderson's 10th-minute opener had been cancelled out by Edin Dzeko 16 minutes later before Coutinho found the winner.


Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini refused to concede that his side's title challenge is over despite this result meaning they failed to put any pressure on Chelsea who competed in the League Cup final with Tottenham.


“It is not over,” he said. “You never know in football.


“Liverpool scored very good goals. We also missed some good chances. It was a close game where Liverpool played very well.


“We are worried about our team, not anyone else. It is important to carry on playing in the same way. We scored nine goals in the last two Premier League games, that's why I played the same team.


“Were Liverpool more energetic? The only way to explain is that they played well.


“We have to see the reaction in the next game. I hope the team will recover.


“I'm concerned that we are losing the ball too much - pressure is a factor. There is much we must analyse to improve.


“Of course it is difficult to reach the top of table if you lose three points. But we must keep going and try to return to our normal performance and see where it takes us.” – AFP






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News sport : Lightning make big moves: trade Connolly, Gudas and acquire Coburn in different deals

It's 2:00am on the East Coast on what's now officially trade deadline day. Do you know where your favorite team's players are?


Well, if you don't, then you might want to look in the cities of Boston, Philadelphia, and/or Tampa Bay because all three teams were involved in late night trades. Tampa Bay was the catalyst for two separate, yet significant deals.


Let's start with the first deal to go down: Tampa Bay trades forward Brett Connolly to Boston for a second round pick in both the 2015 and 2016 drafts.


Boston needs a jump start to their at times stagnant offense. They're hoping Connolly can provide that; however, it's not like Connolly was tearing up the Lightning this season. He's got 12 goals and 3 assists in 50 games played. Now that's at the NHL level. Prior to this year, Connolly spent two seasons with the Syracuse Crunch (AHL) where he racked up 120-points in 137 games played. The potential is there, but can Claude Julien bring it out of him?


The good thing for the Bruins is that he's cheap. According to NHL Numbers, he's a $851,000 cap hit. His contract is up at the end of the season; however, he's scheduled to be a restricted free agent, allowing Boston more control over his future.


As for the return, the Bolts get two second rounders in 2015 and 2016. Tampa Bay has drafted increasingly better during Steve Yzerman's tenure as GM. All else fails, he can flip the picks for something else in the future.


For the Milbury Scale, I give this ... ONE MILBURY!



The Milbury Scale 2014 - 1 Milbury

Minutes after the Connolly trade was announced, ish got real.


Rumors flew around about the Philadelphia Flyers desire to trade defenseman Braydon Coburn. Ron Hextall finally found a buyer in Tampa Bay, and the return was hefty. The Lightning sent Radko Gudas, a first round pick and a third round pick, both in 2015, to Philly.


Coburn, 30, has spent the better part of 9 seasons with Philadelphia. During that time he's played 576 regular season games and earned 161 points; he averages 21:57 TOI. He leads the Flyers in penalty kill TOI at 3:01 per game. Coburn comes with a hefty $4.5-million cap hit that expires at the end of next season. Reports are that he had a modified no movement clause and agreed to waive it to come to Tampa Bay.


In order to get him, the Bolts parted ways with defenseman Radko Gudas, and 2015 draft picks in the first and third rounds. Back in early January, Gudas underwent arthroscopic knee surgery and at the time was projected to be out at least four months. That prognosis has not changed as of late and the Flyers probably won't see the ornery d-man until next year. With that being the case, his $992,000 cap hit will go on the Long Term Injured Reserved list. In salary, Gudas is owed $1-million for this year and $1.4-million the next; after that, he'll be a restricted free agent.


As for the draft picks, who the hell knows what Philly will do with them. Maybe they'll keep them. Maybe they'll trade them in a different deal. Maybe they'll burn the picks on eventual draft busts.


I'm giving this a Milbury Scale of 3 Milburys.



The Milbury Scale 2014 - 3 Milbury

Why? Because I think Philadelphia might have actually won this deal. I like Gudas, warts and all. He's annoying and physical, everything that the Flyers love on their roster. Plus they've stocked up on good draft picks in a deep draft. Also, it's late and I might not be thinking clearly...


(Major s/t to Chris Johnston of Sportsnet for cryptically tweeting that we should all stay up even though it was pretty late. These trades followed not too long after.)


- - - - - - -


Jen Neale is a staff writer for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow her on Twitter!










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Di Maria will come good - Rooney

Manchester United winger Angel Di Maria has struggled recently after a bright start to life in the Premier League.


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Angel Di Maria had long since departed by the time Wayne Rooney struck twice to challenge Louis van Gaal’s claims that Manchester United lack a 20-goal striker.


Di Maria was hooked at half-time after yet another poor performance. It was a humiliating exit for United’s record £59.7million signing.


Van Gaal insists he just needs time to adapt to the Premier League but there are concerns about the manner in which the Argentine has faded after a bright start. His contribution against Sunderland was negligible for a player of his pedigree. It has raised questions over whether Di Maria and his family have settled here, particularly after raiders targeted their Cheshire home last month.


However, Rooney has no doubts the former Real Madrid man has what it takes to be a success. ‘Today was one of those days that every footballer has,’ said the United captain. ‘He is a great player, he has shown that, and you don’t lose your talent overnight. I’m sure he will be a big player for us between now and the end of the season.’


After hearing his manager talk of the need for a striker capable of scoring 20 goals a season, despite playing him in midfield for much of the campaign, Rooney gave Van Gaal a reminder of what he does best. The England striker’s brace took his league total to 10 and made him the first player in history to hit double figures in 11 successive Premier League seasons.


‘I was obviously pleased the manager played me up front and delighted to get the two goals,’ said Rooney. ‘I’m ready to play there if and when he wants me to.’


Rooney scored his first from the spot after Wes Brown was controversially sent off by Roger East for fouling Radamel Falcao, when replays showed it was John O’Shea. Sunderland intend to appeal against the red and must do so by 1pm today in the hope it is overturned and Brown will be available to face Hull tomorrow. With East insisting it was not mistaken identity, and that he sent off Brown for fouling Falcao in the act of shooting, the red card cannot be transferred to O’Shea.


Sunderland boss Gus Poyet said: ‘Wes is confused because the referee said he sent him off because he made contact with Falcao but he didn’t. He sent him off for something that didn’t happen.’


MAN UTD (4-2-3-1): De Gea 6; Valencia 6.5, Smalling 6, Evans 5, Rojo 6; Herrera 5.5, Blind 6.5; Di Maria 4 (Januzaj 46min, 7), Rooney 7.5 (Mata 86), Young 7; Falcao 6 (Fellaini 68, 6). Subs not used: Lindegaard, Carrick, McNair, Wilson. Booked: Valencia.


Scorer: Rooney 66, 84.


SUNDERLAND (4-1-4-1): Pantilimon 6; Reveillere 5.5, O’Shea 5, Brown 6, Van Aanholt 6; Cattermole 6.5; Johnson 5.5, Larsson 6, Gomez 5, Wickham 5.5 (Vergini 67, 6); Defoe 6 (Graham 67, 5.5). Subs not used: Bridcutt, Fletcher, Graham, Coates, Mannone, Watmore. Booked: Van Aanholt. Sent off: Brown.


Man of the match: Wayne Rooney.– Daily Mail






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I felt like a kid - Mourinho

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho said he felt “like a kid” after claiming the first trophy of his second Stamford Bridge tenure.


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Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho said he felt “like a kid” after claiming the first trophy of his second Stamford Bridge tenure with a League Cup final victory over Tottenham Hotspur.


A deflected John Terry strike and a Kyle Walker own goal gave Chelsea a 2-0 win at a rain-soaked Wembley on Sunday and earned Mourinho his third success in the competition after two triumphs during his first spell as the west London club's manager.


It ended a 914-day wait for silverware for the 52-year-old Portuguese – the longest of his managerial career – and he expressed hope that it was a sign of things to come for his nascent Chelsea team.


“For me it's very important to feel that I'm a kid,” said Mourinho, whose previous trophy had been the 2012 Spanish Super Cup he won with Real Madrid.


“Before the game I had the same feelings as my first final, I don't know how many years ago. It's important for me to feel the same happiness after the victory. It's important for me to feel that I am a kid at 52 years old.


“I know I have a team to build, which is what we are doing, but I feed myself with titles. It's difficult for me to live without winning things, even knowing that we are doing the work to be stable for many years.


“I need to feed myself with titles. It's important for me, it's important for the boys. For the club it's one more cup.


“But it's the first one of the new team. You have Petr Cech, John Terry, (Didier) Drogba, and after that everybody belongs to a new generation of players. So as a team, very, very important.”


One of Chelsea's new generation to feature prominently at Wembley was 20-year-old French centre-back Kurt Zouma, pressed into action as an auxiliary holding midfielder in the absence of the suspended Nemanja Matic.


“It's very difficult for a central defender to play there,” Mourinho said.


“Because central defenders, they don't (usually) have pressure from behind. They are pressed in their faces, not pressed from behind.


“In that position, you're surrounded by players. You have to think quick, you have to decide quick. It's very, very difficult, but our new Marcel Desailly, he worked hard during the week and did a fantastic job for us.”


Mourinho's first League Cup success, in 2005, proved the precursor to back-to-back league titles, but although Manchester City's 2-1 loss at Liverpool earlier left Chelsea five points clear in the Premier League with a game in hand, he said there was still a long way to go.


“We have lots of difficult matches to play,” he said. “Twelve matches to play, still difficult.”


Spurs had stunned Chelsea 5-3 when the sides last met at White Hart Lane on New Year's Day and they started positively, with Christian Eriksen hitting the bar from a free-kick and Harry Kane testing Cech with a low shot.


But Terry's goal arrived with cruel timing just before half-time and after Walker had inadvertently deflected a shot from Diego Costa into his own net in the 56th minute, Tottenham's fight faded.


However, Spurs head coach Mauricio Pochettino said he was proud of his team's display and with 21-year-olds Kane and Eric Dier and 20-year-old Nabil Bentaleb among those getting their first taste of a major final, he urged his players to build on the experience.


“We respected our style, our philosophy,” said the Argentine, who joined Spurs after leaving Southampton at the end of last season.


“For us I think we need to take a lot of positive things. I think we are a very young squad. Today, 23 and a half years the average (age) on the pitch and for many players, the first final.


“I think we are in a good way. It's sure that we will play a lot of finals in the next few years.” - AFP






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Spurs will rise again - Pochettino

Mauricio Pochettino is confident his young Tottenham squad will be involved in many more cup finals in the years ahead, despite losing the Capital One Cup final to Chelsea.


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Mauricio Pochettino is confident his young Tottenham squad will be involved in many more cup finals in the years ahead, despite losing the Capital One Cup final to Chelsea yesterday.


The Spurs manager was impressed by what he saw from his side as they outplayed Chelsea for spells of the game at Wembley but conceded either side of half-time.


Pochettino said: ‘We are a very young squad: today, 23.5 average age. For many players, they will play a lot of finals in the next few years.


We played much better in the first half, and we respected our style and philosophy. We have to take a lot of positives.


‘We finished the game stronger than them. We created, in the last 12 minutes, many chances. We were in the game if we’d scored.’


Pochettino admitted that playing a Europa League tie in Florence three days before the final was not ideal preparation, but added: ‘It’s not an excuse. We need to improve and learn. We will do that from this final. This group has a very bright future.


‘For us, it’s one step forward because the team is very young. For many players, it was the first final. Before the game, when we were on the pitch, I asked Harry Kane if it was his first time at Wembley and he said yes. But it’s a good experience for our team.’


Pochettino, in his first season in charge at the club, said it was an honour to be on the touchline alongside Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho.


‘I admire Mourinho, he’s one of the best managers in the world,’ Pochettino revealed. ‘When I was a player I played against him. And now, to stay face to face in the final at Wembley, it was a dream. I have a lot of respect for him.’ – Daily Mail






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Terry leads Chelsea to League Cup triumph

John Terry scored the goal that set his side on the way to a 2-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur in the Capital One League Cup final.


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London - John Terry embellished his status to Chelsea fans as “captain, leader, legend” by scoring the goal that set his side on the way to a 2-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur in the Capital One League Cup final at a rain-sodden Wembley on Sunday.


The former England captain was once again a quite inspirational presence for the club that adores him as he defended like a lion and scored a 45th-minute goal to ease Chelsea nerves before Kyle Walker's deflected own goal from a Diego Costa shot settled the final in the 56th minute.


It meant an ecstatic Terry lifting the League Cup 10 years since he first did so under Jose Mourinho's watch - and just as in the last reign of 'The Special One', he will be hopeful that it signals an era of supremacy for the west London club.


“That's the first one, it's massive. It meant an awful lot to us (to win the League Cup) in 2004-05 in Jose's first year here,” Terry told Sky Sports.


“That could be the start of something very good but we have to kick on and we have the league to focus on, but it's a great win today.”


Victory indeed capped a perfect day for Chelsea, which may effectively have seen them claim two trophies, after their nearest Premier League title challengers Manchester City lost at Liverpool.


They are now five points clear with a game in hand and Mourinho, fresh from ending his personal drought of not having won any trophy for three years, still has a treble in his lofty sights with the Champions League also on the agenda.


“The pressure was there before the game, obviously, but that's what cup finals do to you,” Terry said.


“I thought we played very well, handled the game very well and delighted with the win.


“I think it was fairly even first half, second half I thought we controlled it a little bit better and deserved winners.”


There could be no argument about Chelsea's superiority against a side who thrashed them on New Year's Day even though Spurs had the better of a poor first half in which the one moment of quality was Christian Eriksen's free kick for Spurs that rattled Petr Cech's bar.


Most interest seemed to stem from Costa's desire to enjoy a war with everything that moved until Branislav Ivanovic was awarded a free kick just before halftime, skillfully controlling Terry's aimless hoik towards the touchline and drawing the foul from Nacer Chadli.


From Willian's free kick, chaos reigned as Danny Rose failed to clear, the ball deflected to Terry and his shot struck Eric Dier to leave Hugo Lloris helpless.


As the rain careered down after the break, Cesc Fabregas found Costa on the left edge of the box and his shot-cum-cross took a cruel deflection off Walker, beating hapless Spurs keeper Lloris on his near post.


Tottenham's efforts to conjure a response were fairly soggy, with Eden Hazard and Fabregas coming closest to adding to the lead, and even when they did threaten, the immaculate Terry made a superb intervention to block Harry Kane.


Mourinho's sentimental side then shone through as he brought Didier Drogba on in the 93rd minute, reuniting the three survivors of the 2005 triumph, Drogba, Terry and Cech. – Reuters






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Giroud repays Wenger’s faith

Olivier Giroud was singled out as the worst of a bad bunch after Arsenal's surprising 3-1 home defeat to AS Monaco, with the France international missing a glut of goalscoring opportunities.


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London - Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said he had no qualms about keeping Olivier Giroud in the team despite his misfiring midweek Champions League display and his faith in the striker was rewarded with a goal on Sunday.


Giroud was singled out as the worst of a bad bunch after Arsenal's surprising 3-1 home defeat to AS Monaco in the first leg of their last-16 tie on Wednesday, with the France international missing a glut of goalscoring opportunities.


Instead of listening to an army of critics, though, Wenger retained the Frenchman in his team for the visit of Everton in the Premier League on Sunday.


Giroud struck in the first half of a 2-0 win, masterfully stroking home a corner to help propel Arsenal into third in the league.


“I defended Olivier Giroud because nobody misses chances on purpose,” Wenger told BT Sport.


“Everyone misses chances and even if strikers don't score if you finish 0-0 it is still a good result. He deserved his goal today.”


It was Giroud's fourth strike in as many games in all competitions and his 12th for the season despite having missed nearly three months with a broken foot.


Wenger said he never considered dropping the 28-year-old.


“Not really because he's an important player in the box with his presence up front, even defensively. The worry for me was him lasting 90 minutes,” the Arsenal boss told reporters.


“When a guy misses (chances in) one game, straight away to take him out (would be harsh) and I thought his presence would be important against Everton.


“It was a great goal. He responded very well and I'm not happy only because he scored a goal but also because of the workrate he put in today from the first to the last minute.”


Giroud thanked his manager and team mates after the win, in which Tomas Rosicky scored a late second, for giving him the chance to lay the ghosts of Wednesday night's defeat to rest.


“Arsene Wenger gave me the possibility to bounce back,” the striker said. “We (the team) wanted to do that together and I think we did well this afternoon.” – Reuters






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News sport : LeBron's missed free throws help Harden win MVP duel as Rockets edge Cavs in OT

For the second time in four days, LeBron James went head-to-head with a fellow MVP candidate leading a Western Conference contender. But while he dominated Thursday's matchup with Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors, on Sunday, Houston Rockets star James Harden matched him step-for-step in a rough-and-tumble contest that featured 13 ties and 11 lead changes, and came down to the final seconds of overtime.


And on this particular occasion, the most gifted player in the game found himself bedeviled at the worst time by an uncontested 15-footer.



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With the Rockets leading his Cleveland Cavaliers 104-103 late in the overtime session of a nationally televised Sunday showcase contest, James beat excellent Rockets defender Trevor Ariza off the dribble to gain the lane, where he was fouled while attempting a layup by Houston forward Josh Smith. The whistle sent James to the foul line for a pair of free throws that could have tied the game and given the Cavs a one-point advantage with just 4.2 seconds left.


But James, who had struggled from the line all day, found no charity at the stripe, missing them both — making him just 3-for-11 from the foul line on the day — and prompting ABC play-by-play man Mike Tirico to exclaim, "Are you kidding me?" as Harden corralled the miss.


After a pair of Cleveland fouls to extend the game, Harden stepped to the line on the other end with 0.6 seconds remaining and a chance to seal the victory. As the Toyota Center crowd serenaded him with "M-V-P!" chants, Harden made his first free throw before missing his second — intentionally, he said after the game, at the behest of head coach Kevin McHale. The plan to bleed out the final six-tenths backfired, though, as Cavaliers guard J.R. Smith snagged the rebound and called timeout, giving them one last look at a potential equalizer.


The Rockets snuffed out the Cavs' attempt, though — Josh Smith covered up a potential lob to the rim, and James' inbounds pass to little-used 3-point shooter James Jones resulted in a catch-and-after-the-buzzer shot that was blocked anyway, putting the finishing touches on an impressive 105-103 overtime victory.


In his return to the lineup after missing Friday's loss to the Indiana Pacers with a sore back, James led all scorers with 37 points on uncharacteristic 15-for-35 shooting — his highest single-game shot total in more than nine years, two more than he needed to score a career-high 61 — to go with eight rebounds, four assists, three steals and three blocks in 42 minutes for the Cavaliers, who were once again without All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving as he works his way back from a left shoulder strain. (Cleveland head coach David Blatt said Irving's expected to be back for Tuesday's meeting with the Boston Celtics.)


But after missing eight freebies in a two-point loss — those final two in OT, obviously, looming largest — James didn't seem particularly excited about the rest of his stat line.




The missed free throws wrote a frustrating end to a physical matchup that featured thrilling, high-level play in the early going, but at times seemed to be barely officiated later in the proceedings. (It might be a good thing for referees Danny Crawford, Michael Smith and Tony Brown that the NBA's "last two minutes" reports, which will evaluate calls made and not made during the final two minutes of the fourth quarter and throughout OT periods in close games, won't start getting made public until tomorrow.)


Things began getting especially dicey after halftime, when hard-nosed Rockets point guard Patrick Beverley's attempt to draw an offensive foul on a driving James about 2 1/2 minutes into the third quarter turned into something a bit spicier than a mere question of "block or charge?"



Both James and Beverley were assessed technical fouls for their role in the skirmish, while Beverley also received a personal foul for sliding into LeBron's path too late on the bang-bang play.


About seven minutes later, James would again find himself in the midst of a scrape, this time with Harden, who took a somewhat Rodmanian approach to letting LeBron know he didn't appreciate his tight defense:



James and his teammates, as you might expect, didn't particularly appreciate Harden's decision to go south of the equator, which earned Houston's hirsute All-Star a flagrant foul-1 — but not a flagrant-2, which would have carried with it an automatic ejection:





It remains to be seen whether Harden will face additional discipline from the league office for his foray into crotch karate. There's precedent for it, though — Miami Heat star Dwyane Wade received a one-game suspension for a low blow on Ramon Sessions, then of the Charlotte Bobcats, that didn't even earn Wade a personal foul at the time. (In fact, remarkably enough, Sessions was the one who got called for the reach-in.)


Perhaps the most baffling confluence of physical play and absent discipline, though, came at the one-minute mark of OT, as Harden drove on James and ... well, just take a look:



"That's got to be something!" exclaimed Tirico after watching James reach in on Harden, Harden hook James' arm, Harden move his feet a few times without taking any dribbles, James recover and straddle Harden's left leg, all as three officials just ... sort of ... chilled? The result of the play: a shot-clock violation. Duh.


Amid all the silliness and strong-arming, though, there was quite a bit of wonderful basketball, and some brilliant late-game dueling between Harden and James, two of the league's top three scorers and two members of the lead pack in the race for this season's Podoloff.


Harden scored 18 of his team-high 33 points after halftime, showcasing his penchant for creating contact and getting to the line (9-for-12 at the stripe post-intermission, 15-for-18 in the game) while also displaying his talents for creating space and bombing away from long-distance:



... and his water-through-pavement capacity to find every open crease in the lane on his way to the basket before finishing through contact:



James answered the bell, doing his level best to stifle Harden when defending him one-on-one:



... while also making some absurd shots of his own late in the game, as he carried a Cleveland offense that was once again without Irving and, for all intents and purposes, might as well have been without Kevin Love (a relatively quiet 21 points, all of which came in the first three quarters):



In the end, though, it was the Rockets' ability to cash in on their freebies (26-for-33 at the line) and the Cavs' inability to do the same (11-for-21, topped by LeBron's dismal outing) that wound up providing more than enough of a margin to give Houston its fifth straight win and burnish an impressive late-and-close résumé:



The Rockets now sit at 41-18, just 1 1/2 games back of the Memphis Grizzlies for the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference, and improved to 19-8 without injured center Dwight Howard. There are plenty of reasons for that — improved play in the middle from Donatas Motiejunas, midseason acquisition Smith finding his form, stout team defense helping keep Houston near the top of the league in points allowed per possession — but the biggest remains Harden, the serpentine lefty who described the tenor of Sunday's contest to ABC's Lisa Salters as "playoff basketball."


"Whatever it takes to win," he said. "Both teams competed hard. I'm happy we came out with the victory."


Harden began his postgame interview by rubbing his left shoulder, prompting Salters to ask him multiple times whether he was feeling all right. Harden said he was.


"I'm a warrior," he said, smiling.


And on Sunday, he was a victorious one.


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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 : Former Florida player Chris Johnson dead at 22

Chris Johnson, a former Florida player who most recently played for Duquesne, died on Friday.


Per the Allegheny County medical examiner's office, Johnson died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He was 22.


From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:



He was found in a car in Churchill at 10:59 a.m. Friday. He is from Ocala, Fla. The medical examiner ruled the death a suicide.



“Everyone associated with the Duquesne football program is deeply saddened by the tragic loss of Chris," Duquesne football coach Jerry Schmitt said in a statement. "Chris was a passionate football player who was also a great teammate, who was loved by many. Our thoughts and prayers go out to Chris’ family at this difficult time.”


Johnson's final game at Florida was the 2013 Sugar Bowl loss to Louisville. He was ejected in the second half for throwing a punch after an onside kick. He was a senior in 2014 at Duquesne and had 55 tackles playing defensive back.



"I'm trying to peel it back as best I can," Justin Wentworth, Johnson's defensive coordinator while at Trinity Catholic, told the Ocala Star-Banner. "Nobody will ever know. When I texted with him on Wednesday, it was all good. You wouldn't have known anything. You ask how everything's going. How's life? How are classes going?


"He said everything was going good – typical upbeat, Juice stuff. Getting this news hurts deep. It's a knife to the heart."


According to Wentworth, Johnson was nicknamed "Juice" because his running style in high school resembled O.J. Simpson's. He played both defensive back and running back at Florida and had five carries for 35 yards in 2012.


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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!







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News sport : Jimmie Johnson wins frigid, drizzle-ridden Atlanta race

Mar 1, 2015; Hampton, GA, USA; Sitting with a electrical heater and a beer, Bennie Waller of Milledgeville, Ga., watches the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 50 from the infield at Atlanta Motor Speedway. (Kevin Liles-USA TODAY Sports) HAMPTON, Ga. - 40. 52. 44. 66. 40.


No, it's not a list of the cars collected in either of the surprisingly large accidents on Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway. It's a list of the mean Fahrenheit temperatures of this date at the track over the last five years. And since Jimmie Johnson ran a race that offered very little reason for question, we turn our attention to this: why on earth is there a race in Atlanta on the first day of March?


All right, fine, we'll give Johnson his due: his victory in the nobly-aimed, awkwardly-named Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 is the 71st of his career. He's eighth on the all-time wins list, now only five behind Dale Earnhardt. He's one point off the Cup standings lead behind Joey Logano, and he's almost surely punched his ticket into the Chase. He started 38th thanks to Friday's qualifying debacle, and even so managed to weave right through the field and lead 92 of the race's 325 laps.


All of which means that the next time the Sprint Cup series comes around to Atlanta, Johnson could very well be the seven-time defending champion. And for the sake of the track and the fan base around it, that return should be well over a year from now.


NASCAR, its tracks, and its broadcast partners create every year's schedule using a mixture of fixed dates, ratings considerations, weather forecasts, and probably a bit of alchemy. With all that in mind, it's not hard to envision a scenario where Atlanta ended up with this immediate post-Daytona date because it was the only one available.


Problem is, consider the factors working against this race from an attendance standpoint. The weather this time of year in Atlanta is generally gray and miserable, the kind of not-quite-sun, not-quite-snow that inspires ennui and bad poetry. Plus, NASCAR scheduled the very first race after Daytona for the second-closest track to Daytona, which means that all but the most independently wealthy of the mobile RV segment of the fanbase would opt for warm Florida over drizzly Georgia. (During last week's Daytona 500, Fox's Mike Joy advised fans on the way home from Florida to stop in Atlanta. It was a good, if ridiculously far-fetched, effort.)


Granted, there's a case to be made that at-track attendance is less important than ratings, that as long as the product is delivered to the viewing public via NASCAR's massive new television contracts, it doesn't much matter the source. Onscreen, Atlanta looks like Texas looks like Charlotte looks like Kentucky looks like ... you get the idea. Of course, the scattered stands are a bit of a discordant backdrop, like a symphony with one kazoo, but mathematically, you can make a case that the millions watching on TV carry greater weight than the tens of thousands pushing through the turnstiles at any given track.


Atlanta itself also carries a measure of blame; this is a fickle, front-running sports town. The track lost a date a few years back in large part because of attendance (and because track owner Speedway Motorsports Inc. wanted to give a date to Kentucky). So the city's rep and fan behavior do it no favors.


Plus, the track date is a bit of a moving target. Too early in the year, and you get the chilly mess of Sunday. Too late in the spring, and the temperature heats up hot enough to cook infield fans in their tents. Wait until after August, and college football and the NFL claim a huge chunk of potential ticket-buyers.


Nothing's ever simple in NASCAR; every action has a thousand unintended reactions. Still, this is one that,at first glance, seems fairly easy to implement: start the west coast swing one week earlier, and slot Atlanta into the season's fifth week. (Mean temperature data for the past three years, the only available: 64, 55, 70. A wee bit better than Sunday.)


Atlanta's one of NASCAR's best tracks from a pure driving perspective, as well as one of its most historic. Drivers love racing here, and championships have been won here. It deserves a better date, a better fate than Daytona afterthought.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. (Full disclosure, he lives in Atlanta.) Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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News sport : Big crash on backstretch ends with cars piling into bare concrete walls


Before last Saturday's Xfinity Series race, the lap 256 crash that happened among Denny Hamlin, Jamie McMurray, Jeff Gordon and Ryan Newman at Atlanta on Sunday would be just another crash. But now that we're in a post-Kyle Busch broken-bones world, it'll hopefully be yet another catalyst for change.


After Hamlin got loose coming off turn two, he collected McMurray and Newman. McMurray's car spun into Gordon's and both of their cars slammed into walls that weren't covered with protective SAFER barrier, the same type of bare concrete walls that Busch's car slammed into at Daytona, breaking his right leg and his left foot.


"Wouldn't have been too bad except I found that one spot where there's no SAFER barrier," Gordon said. "I can't believe it, that's amazing to me. Anyway, hopefully soon that will get fixed."


All of the drivers involved in the crash were uninjured.



After Busch's crash at Daytona, Atlanta announced that it would add protective tire barriers onto the inside wall of turn four. Gordon hit the inside wall entering turn three, mere feet after SAFER barrier on the inside of the backstretch wall ended.


And he didn't find the only spot without SAFER barriers, either. The entire backstretch outside wall is not covered and it it wasn't for Gordon's car serving as a roadblock, McMurray was heading for a major impact with the unprotected backstretch wall.


Given the changes Daytona set in motion with its announcement of safety improvements following Busch's crash, Atlanta Motor Speedway was scrambling to react with less than a week until its race weekend began. And while it's fair to criticize the track for not having the bare inside walls more protected than it did, there's nothing it could have done for the outside wall for Sunday's race.


However, there's definitely things that can be done in preparation for 2016. And there's things that will be done, as, ideally, NASCAR makes SAFER mandatory at every inch of wall possible in anticipation of the coming season. Sunday's crash was just another example that it's not in enough places right now.


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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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