Terry desperate for new Chelsea deal

John Terry admits he is fighting for his family’s financial future as he waits for Chelsea to activate a one-year contract extension.


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John Terry has admitted he is fighting for his family’s financial future as he waits for Chelsea to activate a one-year contract extension.


Terry, 34, scored Chelsea’s opening goal in the 2-0 victory over Tottenham in the Capital One Cup final on Sunday and was later named man of the match.


The Chelsea captain yesterday posted pictures of his eight-year-old twins, Georgie John and Summer Rose, asleep in bed with the cup between them. His son was also wearing his dad’s winner’s medal.


‘I am fighting for my future, for my family’s future and I want to give it everything,’ said Terry.


‘I don’t know how long I have left. Hopefully I have a few years left but if this is my last year then I


hope I will go out on a bang.’ Terry also revealed he will retire at the top and will not play at a lower level, or for another team, when he leaves Stamford Bridge.


Terry said: ‘The manager came in, sat me down, and made it clear that if you work hard you will get extra years and you will play, but if not there are other players who are younger who can play and will fight for their place. This is a year roll-on. I am fighting for myself and my family, and to prove people wrong. It doesn’t come much bigger than that.’


Chelsea have already indicated they will address his £150,000-a-week contract before the end of the season and Jose Mourinho has admitted it is a ‘formality’.


Terry added: ‘I also think there’s a right time to go as well. I would say at the start of my career, as a player you look at it and you want to get to 35... I have my little target to play next year but beyond that, two or three years.’


The defender also ruled out a return to the England team despite calls for him to come out of international retirement.


‘No (I won’t return),’ he said. ‘It’s the simple answer. I don’t want to go into it right now... but it’s never crossed my mind. I have drawn a line under it and the England squad can move on now.’ – Daily Mail






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News sport : Nik Stauskas loses rivalry bet, dons Michigan State shirt


Two weeks ago prior to Michigan hosting Michigan State in Ann Arbor, former Wolverine Nik Stauskas and former Spartan Draymond Green made a bet about the outcome and talked a little trash to each other on Twitter.


Both are in the NBA these days. Stauskas is a rookie with Sacramento and Green plays for Golden State.


The Spartans won and Stauskas was forced to pay up by wearing a Michigan State T-shirt and being photographed in it. Green posted the spoils of victory on his Instagram account for the world to see on Monday. He also gave Stauskas credit for being a standup guy.





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[Kyle Ringo is the assistant editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at kyle.ringo@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Markieff Morris, Whiteside, Len all ejected as Heat top Suns in wild affair

Tempers flared when the Miami Heat and Phoenix Suns clashed at AmericanAirlines Arena, with an evening of physical play resulting in a handful of technical fouls and a trio of third-quarter ejections.



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Business picked up in earnest with just under nine minutes remaining in the third quarter and the Heat holding a 12-point advantage over the visiting Suns. Miami point guard Goran Dragic — a member of the Suns just two weeks ago, before he expressed displeasure with the Suns' three-point-guard rotiation and a lack of trust in the Phoenix front office and publicly requested a trade, which landed him in Florida and earned some harsh words from Suns general manager Ryan McDonough — stole the ball from Phoenix forward P.J. Tucker and took off on a fast break.


Suns forward Markieff Morris, who's been a bit salty of late, hustled back to snuff out Dragic's layup attempt, and he did so with extreme prejudice and physicality:



Morris met Dragic in the air, missing his right-handed swipe at the ball but body-bumping his former teammate off-course, sending him tumbling to the deck under the basket and rolling back past the photographers' area along the baseline. After reviewing the play, the referees assessed Morris a flagrant foul-2 for "unnecessary and excessive" contact, earning him an automatic ejection at the 8:43 mark of the third quarter.


You could argue that the play didn't merit a flagrant-2 — Morris didn't seem to be acting with malice, he seemed to make a play on the ball, and Dragic certainly fell hard, that seemed to be due more to the high-speed, mid-air collision than because Morris acted in an "unnecessary and excessive" manner. Then again, you could also watch the play and say that Morris got his hands up high, that going straight through Dragic's body did represent an excessive means of trying to contest the shot, and that by creating that collision, Morris is responsible for Dragic's careening aftermath.


In any event, Morris finished with 13 points on 6-for-10 shooting to go with five rebounds and one assist in 21 1/2 minutes of play before his early exit. Dragic got up a bit gingerly, but hit the two free throws that came with the flagrant and stayed in the game until picking up hsi fifth personal foul less than one minute later.


If Morris' hard foul represented simmering tensions between two clubs fighting for playoff spots in their respective conferences, the bad blood boiled over just four minutes later, when Miami's Hassan Whiteside and Phoenix's Alex Len — two big, good, young starting centers who'd been bumping and needling one another all game long — decided the time had come to make their festering discontent both blatant and ground-and-pound-based:



Whiteside grabbed the offensive rebound after a Dwyane Wade miss and threw down a dunk in Len's mug. While attempting to defend the shot, Len whacked Whiteside in the face. After he got smacked, Whiteside didn't exactly try to prevent his body from coming down directly on top of Len. (Again, they'd been doing this sort of stuff to one another just about all night.)


The Phoenix big man responded to this by shoving Whiteside to the ground. Whiteside responded by executing a pretty sound double-leg takedown and bringing the 7-foot-1 Ukrainian to the ground, drawing the attention of the officials, their teammates and the hootin'-and-hollerin' Miami crowd.


Your man Rod Steiger-at-SeaWorld was pretty amped up about the fracas:



No punches were thrown and no teammates appeared to leave the immediate areas of their benches, so, all told, to borrow a phrase from one of the finer films of 1991, they ain't no brawl. And yet, for their roles in the tussle, both Len and Whiteside got the gate, too, exiting the contest at the 4:26 mark of the third. Whiteside finished with 17 points on 8-for-12 shooting, 10 rebounds (six on the offensive glass), two steals and two blocks in 26 minutes. Len had 10 points on 4-for-9 shooting, 11 rebounds, two steals and an assist in 27 minutes.


After three ejections in less than five minutes, cooler heads prevailed ... for literally 42 seconds.


That's how long it took for Heat forward Henry Walker — plucked off the scrap heap, re-signed to a second 10-day contract earlier Monday — to team with "The Birdman," Chris Andersen, in lowering the boom on unejected Suns twin Marcus Morris as he drove to the basket:



After initially ruling Walker's smackdown a common foul, the officials went to the videotape and upgraded it to a flagrant-1, meaning nobody got ejected. Kind of boring, all things considered, right?


The haymakers eventually ceased and both sides eventually got back to the business of basketball, which was much more Miami's cup of tea on this particular night. The Heat kept control throughout the fourth and pulled away late, finishing on a 16-9 run over the final five minutes to seal a 115-98 win. Despite dealing with foul trouble throughout, Dragic did his fair share of damage to his former team, scoring 21 points (5-for-9 from the field, 2-for-2 from 3-point land, 9-for-9 from the free-throw line) in just 15 minutes of floor time. Unheralded rookie Tyler Johnson led the way with a career-high 26 points in 26 minutes off the Miami bench, making 10 of his 13 shots and adding three steals in the victory, which improved the Heat to 26-33 on the season.


It was yet another disappointing loss for the Suns, who turned in a dismal shooting performance — 42.3 percent from the floor, 7-for-31 from long distance, and only 25-for-38 on freebies — while committing 19 turnovers that led to 22 Miami points. Tucker and Eric Bledsoe each had 20 for the Suns, who have lost 10 of their last 13 games and now sit at 31-30, 2 1/2 games behind the Oklahoma City Thunder for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.


More NBA coverage:





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News sport : Texas still has a pulse thanks to Isaiah Taylor's game-winning floater


The first time Texas had a chance to hold for the final shot on Monday night, the outcome was a contested 25-foot jumper from Jonathan Holmes that barely even drew iron.


The Longhorns were a bit more successful the second time.


With Texas and Baylor tied in the final seconds of overtime, Javan Felix drove right, drew the attention of the defense and zipped a cross-court pass to teammate Isaiah Taylor. Lester Medford and Taurean Prince got caught watching the ball and were slow to rotate, enabling Taylor to split them both off the dribble and sink a floater to give his team a potentially season-saving 61-59 victory.


Had Texas not overcome a 10-point deficit in the final seven minutes of regulation against the No. 14 team in the nation and then found a way to win in overtime, its flickering hopes of earning an at-large NCAA bid likely would have been snuffed out.


A loss would have dropped Texas to 6-11 in the Big 12 entering its regular season finale on Saturday against Kansas State. Only Florida State in 1998 and Iowa State in 1992 have ever received at-large bids despite finishing four games below .500 in league play, and the Longhorns didn't accomplish enough in November and December to join that list.


In reality, Texas (18-12) will still have work to do to make the NCAA tournament even if it wins its final Big 12 game to improve to 8-10 in the league.


Though the Longhorns have beaten West Virginia, Iowa and Baylor and have not lost to a single opponent that isn't an NCAA tournament contender, they're still just 3-11 against RPI top 50 opponents. To feel secure about its chances on Selection Sunday, Texas probably has to beat Kansas State on Saturday and reach the Big 12 title game the following weekend. To give themselves a realistic shot, the Longhorns better at least defeat the Wildcats and then reach the semis.


That the Longhorns are in this position is stunning considering all the players they have back from a team that won 24 games and reached the round of 32 of the NCAA tournament last season.


Every rotation player besides reserve guard Martez Walker returned this season and the Longhorns added elite 7-foot freshman Myles Turner to an already deep, talented frontcourt. They spent most of the first two months of the season in the top 10 in the polls despite the loss of Isaiah Taylor to a wrist injury, however, they have not fared well against rugged competition in Big 12 play. Five of Texas' six Big 12 wins prior to Monday night had come against Texas Tech, TCU and Kansas State.


Texas won Monday despite surrendering 21 offensive rebounds to a Baylor team that is among the national leaders in that category. Kendal Yancy, Demarcus Holland and Felix each scored in double figures from the backcourt and the Longhorns held Baylor to just 33.3 percent shooting. Felix, Holmes and Holland each had 3-pointers during Texas' 16-6 surge to end regulation and force overtime.


The Longhorns' victory was marred by an incident during overtime that began with Taylor scrambling for a loose ball and catching an incidental elbow. No punches were thrown in the ensuing scuffle but a total of seven players were ejected for leaving their respective benches, four from Texas and three from Baylor.



Members of both teams jawed at one-another again as Baylor left the floor after postgame handshakes, a bad look for both under the circumstances.


The Bears had no reason to talk after losing a winnable game. And the Longhorns should just be happy their season still has a faint pulse.


(Thanks for the video, SBNation)


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







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Reds can win all their games - Rodgers

Liverpool have found a way to recover from a tough start to the season and with the race for a top-four finish hotting up they are going into matches believing they can win them all, manager Brendan Rodgers said.


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London - Liverpool have found a way to recover from a tough start to the season and with the race for a top-four finish hotting up they are going into matches believing they can win them all, manager Brendan Rodgers said on Monday.


Last season's Premier League runners-up struggled to cope with the new-found expectation thrust upon them at the start of the campaign while a host of new arrivals found it difficult to make up for the sale of talisman Luis Suarez to Barcelona.


But Liverpool are now the form side in the league and their unbeaten run since early December has moved them up to fifth - two points behind fourth-placed Manchester United.


With Champions League qualification a distinct possibility after Sunday's 2-1 victory over champions Manchester City, Rodgers is delighted his side have finally found their groove.


“It takes a little bit of time to get going and bringing in a certain method of play,” he told a news conference.


“We had to stay strong during a tough moment. We've found the solutions and we're playing at a high level.


“It's tight. Arriving in there has always been our objective,” he said of the top four. “We want to keep chasing right to the end.


“Every game is super competitive and every team has got quality. We are going into every game respecting the opponent but believing we can win.”


Having downed second-placed City, Liverpool now turn their attentions to relegation-threatened Burnley on Wednesday.


Rodgers will be without Jordon Ibe “for a few weeks” after the winger picked up a knee injury against Besiktas last week but captain Steven Gerrard is making good progress in his recovery from a hamstring problem.


After scraping a 1-0 win over Sean Dyche's Burnley in December, Rodgers is expecting another tough test at Anfield.


“We know they are a good side, we had a very close result over Christmas,” he said. “Sean is very talented. They have gone away from home in big games and got good results.


“Burnley have given everything for the cause. Sean will be up there among the candidates for manager of the year.” – Reuters






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Chelsea, Everton fined by FA

Chelsea and Everton have both been fined 30 000 pounds for players' misconduct during their Premier League match last month.


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London - Chelsea and Everton have both been fined 30,000 pounds ($46,100)for players' misconduct during their Premier League match last month at Stamford Bridge, the Football Association said on Monday.


Tempers boiled over near the end of a feisty game with players from both sides involved in a melee.


“Following an incident in the 86th minute of their fixture on 11 February 2015, both clubs were charged with failing to ensure their players conducted themselves in an orderly fashion and/or refrained from provocative behaviour,” an FA statement said.


“The charge against Chelsea further alleged that their players surrounded the match Referee and/or became involved in a mass confrontation.”


Both clubs admitted the charge and were also warned about their future conduct. – Reuters






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Johnson suspended amid investigation

Sunderland midfielder Adam Johnson has been released on bail after his arrest on suspicion of underage sex.


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London - Sunderland and England midfielder Adam Johnson was arrested on Monday on suspicion of having sex with an under-age girl, the BBC reported.


“A 27-year-old man was arrested earlier today on suspicion of sexual activity with a girl under 16,” Durham Police said in a statement.


Johnson was later released on bail.


British media said Sunderland had suspended Johnson, who has won 12 England caps, while police investigations were ongoing.


Reuters






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News sport : Who's next for Ronda Rousey? Who's left?

It didn’t take long for fans and pundits to wonder what was next for UFC women’s bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey after her 14-second decimation of Cat Zingano at UFC 184 this past Saturday. It was Rousey's 11th win in 11 fights, and Zingano was the last legitimate contender in the division who could challenge the 28-year-old phenom.


Rousey has effectively wiped out any and all competition in the last two years on her warpath to UFC superstardom. Liz Carmouche, Miesha Tate, Cat Zingano, Alexis Davis and former Olympian Sara McMann have all fallen victim to world’s most dangerous female. To make matters more aggravating for UFC matchmakers, Rousey is finishing these opponents in record fashion; her last two opponents – Davis and Zingano – were finished in 30 seconds, combined.


‘Rowdy’ is running out of people to fight, and UFC announcer Joe Rogan thinks he may have a solution: Fight men. Or, at least, Rogan had an opinion on how she would stack up against her bantamweight counterparts in the men's division.


“There [are] a lot of guys her size she could beat," Rogan said on The Dan LeBatard Show last week. "I mean, a lot. If you took the roster of the UFC's bantamweights, 135 pounds, and you paired them up against Ronda Rousey, she might be able to beat 50 percent of them.”


Whether or not Rousey could actually beat a man is a moot point since no commission would ever allow something like that to take place. However, given Rousey’s almost unbelievable ability to dominate her division, the prospect of the former Olympic judoka fighting a man has become a lightning rod in the MMA community.Ronda Rousey reacts after defeating Cat Zingano (not pictured) on Saturday at UFC 184. (USAT)


Rogan is well versed in mixed martial arts, receiving his black-belt in taekwondo at 15, and receiving his Brazilian jiu-jitsu black-belt from Eddie Bravo years later, so he is completely aware of what making such a statement means. But this is Ronda Rousey, and as Rogan has seen first-hand on numerous occasions by now, there is something special about the UFC’s first and only women’s bantamweight champ.


The division is short on contenders and Rousey hasn’t shown any signs of slowing down. There is former world champion boxer, Holly Holm, who defeated Raquel Pennington on Saturday’s UFC 184 co-main event. Holm is undefeated and with a great pedigree, yes, but her performance on Saturday was more of a glimpse into the future, than a coming-out party.


The champ’s other logical competition comes from Cristiane “Cyborg” Justino, who is not even in the UFC at this moment and most question if she could ever make the bantamweight limit of 135 pounds – as Justino has competed her entire career at 145 pounds and above.


Rousey, who starred in the Expendables 3, and has upcoming roles in the Fast 7 and Entourage films, is scheduled to begin filming a new, unnamed film now that the Zingano fight is in her rear-view. And since Rogan’s idea of competing with the men is never going to happen, perhaps the UFC would be wise to let Rousey build her stock in Hollywood while they attempt to find suitable contenders for their most dominant champion.


What say you, Cagereaders. Who do you want to see Ronda Rousey fight next? In a commission-less world, does Rowdy have the goods to give the men a run for their money?






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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring DeAndre Jordan's Defensive Player of the Year candidacy

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: SB Nation. Not only should DeAndre Jordan be in the conversation for Defensive Player of the Year, Doc Rivers offers, he should far and away be the leader in the polling. Jesus Gomez intelligently discusses why Rivers might be off a bit in his estimation.

PF: Bucksketball. A fantastic look from Nick Whalen on the always-moving John Henson, and his future in Milwaukee beyond 2014-15.

SF: SB Nation. Michele Roberts, clearly, still has quite a bit of research to do regarding what reporters need in order to do their jobs.

SG: HoopsAnalyst. Steve Novak, as you’d expect, is incredibly averse to the three-point shot.

PG: Blog-a-Bull. Nine things to stuff in your pipe about the Chicago Bulls’ weekend that was.

6th: Sports Illustrated. Here are 50 must-read anecdotes from the Sloan Sports Analytics Conference.

7th: NBA.com. Speaking of must-readers, here is David Aldridge’s weekly look around the NBA, featuring the death knell of the Suns’ three-guard offense.

8th: Red 94: Comparing Tracy McGrady’s best season as a Rocket to James Harden’s MVP-level season with the Rockets this year should remind you just how brilliant T-Mac was when healthy.

9th: Bleacher Report. Derek Harper fondly recalls the toughness and versatility of his former teammate, Anthony Mason.

10th: The Daily Beast. Robert Silverman on Anthony Mason’s legacy. You should read this.


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






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News sport : Keith Olbermann returns to air, offers bizarre apology for Penn State tweets

Following his suspension for a barrage of foolish tweets aimed at Penn State students and fans, Keith Olbermann, the self-righteous, egomaniacal ESPN host, returned to the air Monday and offered what was apparently supposed to be some sort of apology.


In the long-winded “apology” which opened his show, Olbermann made a bizarre comparison between social media and batting practice in baseball.


To recap: among a bevy of other obnoxious tweets, Olbermann called Penn State students “pitiful” in response to a link which detailed the efforts of thousands of Penn State students in THON, which raised over $13 million for pediatric cancer.


Olbermann said he did not click on the link before sending the tweet.


Here’s the full thing in all of its bizarre glory:



“Under ordinary conditions if I had come across that fact on Twitter or elsewhere, I would have been retweeting it with my congratulations or retweeting it with my congratulations and then my donation,” Olbermann said. “But this is a batting practice world now. And in this batting practice world there is no time for anything good – only everything fast. Fast and resonant of the smack of the ball hitting the bat. That’s the position this can put you in.”


How eloquent, Keith.


Olbermann then went on to point out his previous charitable donations (over 200) to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and the Make-A-Wish Foundation and that he does not publicize those offerings.


He also made reference to the “wild, wild west of social media” and went back to that weird batting practice metaphor, seemingly placing at least some of the blame for his idiocy on social media itself.


“In my haste to win batting practice on Twitter, I’ve attached the word pitiful [to charity]. As I tweeted last week, I’m sorry for the Penn State tweets – stupid and immature. But I’m much more sorry about batting practice. So for me, batting practice ends, and as quixotic as this may seem to you, I hope you will join me in trying to end it for all of us, so we can get back to what matters.”


Whatever you say, Keith.


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News sport : If its team huddles are any indication, the Nuggets can't wait for the season to end

This is why sportswriters need to be given floor-level, “press row,” seats again.


In the hours after a blowout home loss to the Utah Jazz on Friday evening, Denver Post columnist Chris Dempsey dropped this little nugget about the National Basketball Association team that plays in Denver:



A fourth-quarter huddle late in the Nuggets' 104-82 loss to the Utah Jazz on Friday broke with this phrase: "1-2-3 ... six weeks!"




As in six weeks to go until the end of the season. That's 24 games, 46 days and 1,152 minutes away.




Tax day, April 15, is getaway day: the last day of the Nuggets' season. Rest assured, there are players who are already counting.



There are Nuggets fans that are already counting. I’d be lying if I didn’t tell you that I’m also looking forward to the day when Nugget games aren’t located just one channel over when I flip around on League Pass from night to night. They are a dreary, dreadful watch.


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Denver has lost 19 of 21 games. The team made a series of trades to bring in future assets this season, and coach Brian Shaw seems like he’s well on his way toward being given the boot following the six weeks that his players can’t stop chanting about. There have been calls to fire Shaw immediately in the wake of this embarrassing post-huddle break, and while that might do some good on the sensational side, there is no real massive benefit in playing hardass with the rest of the roster (presumably the ones that aren’t breaking huddles like that) for the final 22 contests.


It’s not wrong to call for Shaw’s firing if this is true, but is that really going to do much? The Nuggets are a mess. This has to be a low point.


The Nuggets were cobbled together in the hopes of grabbing a lower rung playoff spot, but the outfit is currently working with the third-worst record in the West. The two teams below Denver, Los Angeles and Minnesota, were designed with the future in mind. These Nuggets? Weirdly, they decided to stick to the remnants of a roster that George Karl took to 57 wins just under two years ago, without recognizing that good health and good luck (not to mention the presence of Karl and Andre Iguodala) had as much to do with that record as anything.


As it stands, the Nuggets are the worst watch of all – a team created to score 45 wins that will be lucky to manage 25 – pushing the ball and getting nowhere offensively, while barely registering defensively.


One fan and Nugget writer, Andrew Feinstein at Denver Stiffs, is not enjoying this execrable era of Nugget basketball:



But while even the most educated of Nuggets fans can tolerate losing as long as it's for a bigger purpose reason, no fan can tolerate the type of losing we're collectively experiencing this season. The Nuggets haven't just lost 19 of 21 games - including 10 straight at home - but they've lost them in the worst fashion possible: blowouts, early blowouts, no effort, no defense, no spark, no entertainment value and so on. And while fans like me secretly root for the losses to pile up knowing that a high value lottery pick could be available at the end of this long, dark tunnel of despair, try explaining that to the person paying thousands of their hard-earned dollars a year towards season tickets.



You can’t watch this team, and Nugget fans aren’t – TV ratings are down 53 percent from last season’s just-as-dull 36-win team, and the squad’s home attendance figures are third-worst in the NBA.


Now that we’ve established the low point – a truly embarrassing and unprofessional low point – where does this team go from here?


The team had to package a future first-rounder that Oklahoma City owed them in order to dump JaVale McGee, and partially as a result the squad will have cap space this summer. It will also have three players making eight figures a year next year in Ty Lawson, Danilo Gallinari, and Kenneth Faried. This, sadly, will be Denver’s core next year.


Lawson and Faried are certainly tradeable, but they’ve also been revealed a bit. Faried did well to bound over international opponents during last summer’s World Championships, but he remains a lacking defender on the NBA level with no true consistent offensive game to turn to when things go sour. Lawson, as is his custom, has turned in some brilliant nights this year, but to these eyes he still looks like he’s working through that early-season ankle injury, and his off-court exploits are frightening to say the absolute least.


Lawson is also the guy that took full advantage of the team’s extended All-Star break, stretching things out to the point where one travel derailment (and we’re giving Ty the benefit of the doubt, here) made him a no-show for his first post-break Nuggets practice. Gallinari is a lessened version of his former self, overly relying on three-pointers he’s hitting just 31.8 percent of, never the same following a knee injury the Nuggets may have botched.


Because the Nuggets made repeated attempts to move back into the playoffs following Karl’s (and Masai Ujiri’s, who is also on the hook for several poor Nugget personnel choices) departure, the team hasn’t tanked to a high end level in 2014-15. The squad was even just two games under .500 after 38 games, and odds have them selecting sixth overall in this year’s draft even after the most recent malaise.


Gobbling up draft picks will help, and the team does have the right to swap first-round picks with the New York Knicks (current holders of the NBA’s worst record, not likely to improve all that much next season even after throwing money around) in 2016, but this is a slow build.


Conditions make it so Denver will probably only get to grab Memphis’ first-rounder in 2017, and while an aging Grizzlies squad may have fallen off by then, the Memphis front office has been planning its post-Zach Randolph turnaround for some time. Denver will also get Portland’s lottery-protected first rounder in 2016 in exchange for Arron Afflalo, a good take, but that pick won’t put anyone over the top.


As it stands, the Nuggets are dreadfully dull, they’re not competing, they’re clearly working with a lame-duck coach in Shaw, and there are still some lingering concerns as to how on top of things the franchise’s front office is.


I wouldn’t want to hang around either. Just 44 more days, everyone.


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






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News sport : UNC QB Marquise Williams to miss spring practices with hip injury

DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 26: Marquise Williams #12 of the North Carolina Tar Heels throws a first quarter pass while playing the Rutgers Scarlet Knights during the Quick Lane Bowl at Ford Field on December 26, 2014 in Detroit Michigan. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) North Carolina starting quarterback Marquise Williams will miss spring practices while he recovers from a hip injury, the school announced via its website.


Backup Mitch Trubisky will take all the first team reps in Williams’ absence.


Just because Williams isn’t suiting up doesn’t mean the coaches don’t expect the same type of effort out of him. Quarterbacks coach Keith Heckendorf told GoHeels.com, that he wants Williams taking mental reps while the team goes through drills.


"I want [Williams] to get as much out of spring ball as anyone,” Heckendorf said. “When he walks off the practice field I want him to be exhausted mentally from concentrating on every read and every play on every progression on every defense."


Heckendorf also noted that Williams was still the starter, but that the competition was not yet closed.


Williams and Trubisky were in a fierce competition for the starting role at the beginning of the 2014 season and split time at starter through the first month of the season before Williams eventually won the job. Williams threw for 3,068 yards, 21 touchdowns and nine interceptions and ran for 788 yards and 13 touchdowns in 2014.


For more North Carolina news, visit TarHeelIllustrated.com.


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News sport : Wizards owner Ted Leonsis created an off-putting tribute to Martin Luther King Jr.

The NBA and its owners tend to rate very highly when it comes to encouraging diversity amongst its workforce, and the league itself routinely promotes Black History Month amongst many other inclusive endeavors.


Sure, there have been some notable step-backs, but usually this group of one-percenters seems to act properly when faced with what could be sensitive topics.


I’ll let the readers decide if Ted Leonsis’ decision to pair his face with that of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s visage, in some ham-hock attempt at celebrating Black History Month, would rank amongst those proper acts.


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From the Wizards’ Facebook account, via Vice, take a look at what popped up on Saturday:



(Via Facebook, though I'm not sure they want to take credit for this one.)

(At least Leonsis got the month right. Barely.)


As Vice pointed out, even Leonsis’ choice of pull quote is a little maddening – the sort of Tony Robbins-esque nonsense that corporate types love to spew while combing their various industries for new loopholes to exploit. That’s not the most upsetting thing here, though.


At best, Ted Leonsis is aligning his thoughts with that of Dr. King. That’s passable – his words are usually ones worth riding with.


The average viewer, here, would contend that Leonsis is outright comparing himself to Dr. King, all while passing off some corporate-speak pablum as on the level as one of King’s statements. That’s outrageous and infuriating enough.


At worst? This is the owner of a basketball and hockey team, someone who made most of his fortune in investing in AOL in its nascent days, piggybacking on Martin Luther King Jr. in order to win some weird strain of Facebook favor. The median take is also the absolute worst take.


“Doing well is doing good” means absolutely nothing, and yet Ted Leonsis still somehow failed to live up to the ideals behind his own made up language.


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






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News sport : Kevin Garnett bought 1,000 tickets to Wolves-Clippers to give away to fans

Kevin Garnett waves to fans at Target Center. (Jesse Johnson-USA TODAY Sports) Kevin Garnett's stunning return to the Minnesota Timberwolves at the NBA's February trade deadline brought with it a fresh injection of excitement for a franchise in the midst of a youth-movement-led rebuilding effort. The reintroduction of the greatest player in franchise history after eight years in the East carried with it a powerful nostalgia, a sense of a career come full circle and, as we saw during Garnett's first game back in Minneapolis, a significant surge of energy that showed Andrew Wiggins, Zach LaVine and the rest of the young Wolves just how electric the Target Center can become during big moments.


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While the 38-year-old Garnett isn't nearly as live a wire as the 19-year-old version that stormed the Twin Cities straight out of Farragut Academy, or nearly as complete a player as the 27-year-old model who won league MVP honors while carrying the Wolves to the 2004 Western Conference finals, he's an inarguably thrilling character who can still clean the glass and direct a defense while acting as a magnetic mentor for the Pups. He's another major reason to show up and watch the games ... and that's very literally true for Monday's matchup with Chris Paul, DeAndre Jordan and the Los Angeles Clippers.


From Paul Walsh of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune:


Kevin Garnett, the Big Ticket, has bought 1,000 tickets to give away to Timberwolves fans for Monday’s home game at Target Center vs. the Los Angeles Clippers as a way to say thanks to fans for their warm welcome upon his return to the team last week.

“The response and support I’ve received from Wolves fans since my return to Minnesota has been nothing short of amazing. It’s been unbelievable,” Garnett, acquired in a trade with Brooklyn, said in a statement released Sunday morning by the team. “As a gesture of thanks, I would like to treat some fans to Monday night’s game against the Clippers. Love you all, and thanks for the love. Enjoy the game on me.”

Those tickets, as you might expect, went quite quickly, according to the Wolves:


Thank you for your support of the Minnesota Timberwolves. Earlier this morning, the 1,000 tickets purchased by Kevin Garnett were claimed in under 3 minutes.

But for Wolves fans who came up short on snagging those KG freebies but share an age group with the team's bright-future pieces, Minny decided to offer another low-cost option for checking out the Clippers contest:



It remains to be seen whether Garnett's return will energize the Wolves' base to the point of packing the gym for the remainder of this lottery-bound season, or whether the team will continue to look for cost-cutting methods of lowering the barrier to entry for fans who might have turned away since Garnett last stalked the hardwood in Minnesota. This sure does seem to represent a nice start, though, one in keeping with KG's vocal gratitude at his reception by the Minneapolis faithful against the Washington Wizards last Thursday night.


"I've been back before and I never paid attention to how much love is here still for me because I'm too busy being focused on the game," Garnett said after the win, according to Jon Krawczynski of the Associated Press. "And tonight it was just over the top. I did not know the city missed me like this. I don't think that you can ever wish or ever think the city loves you like this. But to see it is reality and I'm very appreciative."


And, clearly, he's more than willing to show a pretty significant token of his appreciation.


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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 : Corey Hart slices foot stepping into a hot tub


(AP Photo)

Corey Hart is giving Ronald Belisario and Chris Sale a run for the weirdest injury to come out of spring training this year.


From Rob Biertempfel of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review:



Belisario fractured his shoulder climbing out of his pool and Sale is said to have fractured his foot while stepping off the back of his truck.


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Now you can add entering a hot tub to the list of potentially dangerous activities for a baseball player.


The good news is that Hart is only expected to be out for a few days. The 32-year-old veteran signed a one-year deal with the Pirates this offseason as he tries to get his career back on track. He missed all of 2013 while recovering from knee surgery and only played 68 games in 2014 with the Seattle Mariners.


Hart entered camp as Pittsburgh's backup first baseman and could also see some time in the outfield.


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Israel Fehr is a writer for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him at israelfehr@yahoo.ca or follow him on Twitter.






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