Krul luck for Newcastle ‘keeper

Manchester United managed to beat Newcastle United at St James’ Park thanks to to fluffed clearance by Magpies goalkeeper Tim Krul.


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Perhaps, and it is a very flimsy perhaps at this stage, there is a burning of the old Manchester United DNA inside the team that Louis van Gaal is dragging into the fight for a Champions League qualifying place.


By the very finest of margins, they have now won 15 of their last 22 games. It was the 89th minute last night when his misfiring team, with Juan Mata on, Marouane Fellaini off, Radamel Falcao dropped and Angel Di Maria cursing his own substitution, found something to grab an unlikely victory.


It was then that Wayne Rooney, whose desire is leading a team who were once more implored to attack by their own supporters in the game's closing stages, forced uncertainty amongst three Newcastle defenders, to such an extent that Mehdi Abeid lost his head and passed to his goalkeeper from a matter of yards.


Tim Krul, who until then had been excellent, hacked a clearance to Ashley Young and his quickness of foot and crisp finish gave his side victory. Young slapped the club crest on his shirt as he roared to those celebrating supporters.


It was rarely pretty, but the manager has already spoken of his lack of concern about that missing element of his side. Manchester United destroyed Newcastle 4-0 at the same ground last season and David Moyes is now managing in Spain.


The storm until Young's late strike belonged to Papiss Cissé and the close-range spit he fired into the neck of Jonny Evans just before half-time. The former certainly appeared fortunate to have stayed on the field after the two came together.


Evans looked more innocent, appearing to spit to the floor after the pair had tangled. Cissé did not see it like that, immediately moving within inches of the Northern Irish defender and spitting. It was a major moment which, like the penalty Newcastle should have been awarded in the game's opening stage, was missed by the referee Anthony Taylor. For that, Cissé is potentially facing FA retrospective action.


The best news for the home side was the return of substitute Jonas Gutierrez after overcoming testicular cancer.


Their manager John Carver believed United's goal followed a throw that should have gone to his side and not the visitors.


Newcastle should have had their penalty in the ninth minute, when Chris Smalling clipped the legs of Emmanuel Rivière as he broke through on the left side of the Manchester United penalty area. There was an argument that referee Taylor's view of the incident was blocked. It was not a defence for his assistant, Peter Kirkup.


The storm overshadowed a half in which Van Gaal's side should have led. They were territorially dominant and dangerous without ever truly finding the cutting edge that remains elusive.


The best opportunities had been theirs. On the half hour, Fabricio Coloccini fell over when under no pressue, which allowed Di Maria to again pick out Rooney and Krul closed him down quickly.


Rivière's was an evening to forget. In the 48th minute Coloccini picked him out with a fine header from a Ryan Taylor free-kick. From a matter of feet he had just De Gea to beat at the Gallowgate End but his weak shot was flicked away by the visiting goalkeeper.


The save from Van Gaal's fellow countryman Krul was far more impressive six minutes later. Fellaini had time to take the ball down on his chest and turn and Krul did extremely well to parry the ball to his right. From there Young took it down, switched it to his right foot and shot for goal, only to see his close-range shot bravely blocked by the Newcastle goalkeeper.


It had the potential to be a huge save. With 20 minutes remaining a dithering Ander Herrera was caught in possession by the substitute Ayoze Perez. The Spanish forward slipped Cissé through to his right, and the forward, who should not have been on the pitch, made a poor connection and dragged his right-foot shot wide of the far post.


De Gea still had to make one final key act after Young's goal, saving superbly to his right to deny Cissé's downward header in the 90th minute.


NewcastleManchester UtdSubstitutions: Newcastle Perez (Riviere, 59), Gutierrez (Taylor, 65), Gouffran (Ameobi, 81); Man United Januzaj (Di Maria, 59), Mata (Fellaini, 82), Carrick (Rojo, 89).


Booked: Newcastle Gutierrez; Man United Rojo, Valencia.


Man of the match De Gea Match rating 5/10


Possession: Newcastle 33% Man Utd 67%


Attempts on target: Newcastle 2 Man Utd 5. Referee A Taylor (Wythenshawe). Attendance 49,801. – The Independent






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Pirates upbeat despite draw

Orlando Pirates remained upbeat ahead of their Soweto Derby clash against Kaizer Chiefs, according to coach Eric Tinkler.


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Johannesburg – The Orlando Pirates camp remained upbeat, according to head coach Eric Tinkler, despite losing some momentum ahead of their Soweto Derby clash against runaway Premiership leaders Kaizer Chiefs this weekend.


The Buccaneers stretched their unbeaten run to eight straight league matches with a 1-1 draw against Free State Stars in Phuthaditjhaba on Wednesday night, but the hosts brought an end to the visiting side's four-game winning streak.


While Pirates remained fourth in the standings, Chiefs regained their 10-point lead over Wits at the top of the log with a 1-0 win over Ajax Cape Town in a simultaneous fixture at FNB Stadium.


“They (Stars) made it very difficult for us and worked their socks off, so it's back to the drawing board,” Tinkler said.


“We've got a big one coming up this weekend and at least we go into that game with a lot of confidence.


“We've still got an unbeaten record, so that's a good thing.”


Pirates took the lead in the eighth minute of the midweek fixture, with Kermit Erasmus collecting a neat through ball down the middle and slicing the ball in from just inside the area.


With seven minutes left in the first half, however, Moeketsi Sekola equalised for the hosts from long range to secure a share of the points.


Stars extended their unbeaten run to five league matches but continued to struggle in 13th place in the standings, in an attempt to stay in touch with a tight mid-table battle.


Ea Lla Koto were set to face Pretoria giants Mamelodi Sundowns in another home clash on Saturday.


“This match was good preparation for the Sundowns game and the boys are becoming solidified. Their mental capacity is getting stronger and stronger,” said Stars coach Kinnah Phiri.


“Looking at the game over the weekend, I think we'll put up another battle and give them a very tough time.” – Sapa






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City needs freshening up - Pellegrini

Manuel Pellegrini explained his decision to drop captain Vincent Kompany to the bench for their 2-0 home victory over Leicester City.


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London - Manuel Pellegrini explained his decision to drop captain Vincent Kompany to the bench for Wednesday's 2-0 Premier League home victory over Leicester City, saying he needed to freshen up his faltering champions.


“Kompany (didn't start) for the same reason Zabaleta, Fernandinho, (Samir) Nasri and (Edin) Dzeko weren't playing - it was important today to refresh the team both mentally and physically,” Pellegrini told the BBC.


“It was not a difficult decision - I felt we needed to refresh the team tonight. I felt it was a good moment to rest him.”


After chastening 2-1 defeats by Barcelona in the Champions League and Liverpool in the Premier League, there was an anxiety about City's play, but David Silva's goal just before the break and James Milner's late effort proved sufficient to see off a Leicester side rooted to the foot of the table.


Manchester City remained five points behind leaders Chelsea with the London club having played a game less but Pellegrini said they were not pre-occupied by the leaders' results.


“When you don't have the result you need in the last match, the next game is very difficult and that's why today it was most important to get three points but we dominated the game,” he said.


“We are not thinking about Chelsea, just our team. Just to win our game, we can think nothing about what Chelsea can do.


“We have to think about performances and see at the end of the season whether they drop points or not.”


Leicester hit the post and had two strong penalty appeals waved away, a cause of irritation for manager Nigel Pearson.


“They are always big calls. But three in one night is a bit surprising, isn't it?” he said.


“I don't need to talk about those decisions because the fact you are interested in them means you have seen them and know the rules.


“I know what I think and I'm keeping it to myself.” – Reuters






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Mourinho jovial after Chelsea win

Jose Mourinho was full of jokes and wisecracks and even lauded the display of referee Andre Marriner after Chelsea beat West Ham United.


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London - Jose Mourinho was full of jokes and wisecracks and even lauded the display of referee Andre Marriner after his Chelsea side took another stride towards winning the title with a 1-0 victory at West Ham United on Wednesday.


The Premier League leaders, who have a game in hand, maintained their five-point advantage over second-placed Manchester City after Eden Hazard's close-range header in the first half proved the difference in a thriller at Upton Park.


“It wasn't the best game to have after a final to play West Ham,” Mourinho told reporters, referring to Sunday's League Cup triumph over Tottenham Hotspur at Wembley.


“It was really difficult and the emotion was so high. The players were fantastic with their commitment and the referee was so good, letting the game go and controlling the game with yellow cards.


“West Ham are the best team playing the way they play but my players gave everything to win the game. We had chances to score more goals and when you don't do that you are in permanent danger so this is a great victory for us,” added Mourinho.


Chelsea had to withstand wave after wave of West Ham attacks in the second half led by the dangerous raiding of left winger Stewart Downing but the defence stayed strong and Thibaut Courtois sparkled in goal.


“In every title race you have difficult matches to play,” said Mourinho. “You have matches where you need quality, others where you need luck and others where you need to adapt to the opponents.


“Today was one of those and Gary Cahill, John Terry and Kurt Zouma were good in handling the direct football while Courtois was amazing.


“It was a game where you could lose two points and I'm happy with the fact we won.”


Hazard nodded the only goal from six metres in the first half after a pinpoint cross from Ramires but West Ham manager Sam Allardyce said it should have been ruled out because the Belgium winger was offside “by six inches”.


Mourinho had his audience rolling in the aisles when he said midfielder Nemanja Matic would have missed Wednesday's game even if he had not been serving the final game of a two-match suspension.


“I'm going to tell you something,” Mourinho laughed. “He got an injury celebrating the cup win on Sunday even though he didn't play.


“It's not a big injury but today he couldn't have played. He twisted his ankle celebrating on the pitch.” – Reuters






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Evans isn’t a spitter - LVG

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal attempted to play down the controversy following an apparent spitting exchange between Jonny Evans and Newcastle United forward Papiss Cisse.


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London - Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal attempted to play down the controversy following an apparent spitting exchange between his defender Jonny Evans and Newcastle United forward Papiss Cisse on Wednesday.


The pair tussled during the first half of the Premier League game at St James' Park which the Manchester side won 1-0 and Evans appeared to spit towards Cisse as he lay on the ground before the Newcastle player got to his feet and returned the compliment.


“I didn't see it. I don't think Jonny Evans is a spitter,” Van Gaal told the BT Sport. “Maybe spitting on the floor but we are on the bench and you cannot see from there.”


Newcastle manager John Carver was also unaware of the incident.


“I haven't seen it,” he said.


Newcastle were unfortunate not to get an early penalty when Chris Smalling brought down Emmanuel Riviere and as the game looked to be heading for a goalless draw until Newcastle keeper Tim Krul booted a clearance straight to Ashley Young who scored in the 89th minute.


“I think we have dominated for 90 minutes, maybe our best match of the season, especially in an away match we deserved the victory,” Van Gaal, whose side are coming under pressure in the battel for a top-four slot, said.


“We didn't reward ourselves in the first half. It was a narrow escape because our rivals have won also so it's a rat race.


“We have created a lot of chances and could have scored much earlier. They also made two big chances and I think David de Gea rescued us at that time.”


United stayed fourth in the table and remained on course for a Champions league place despite another unconvincing performance and they were indebted to Wayne Rooney's persistence for pressurising Krul into the mistake which led their goal.


“It was a crazy run from Wayne Rooney, a lost ball, that shows the fighting spirit in this team,” Van Gaal said.


“We want to win. All my changes were to win, not to hold the result.” – Reuters






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Swansea’s Gomis collapses in Spurs game

Swansea striker Bafetimbi Gomis collapsed during an English Premier League game at Tottenham and was taken to a hospital.


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London – Swansea striker Bafetimbi Gomis collapsed during an English Premier League game at Tottenham and was taken to a hospital as a precautionary measure.


The France striker was attended to by medical staff for about four minutes and was wearing an oxygen mask as he was carried off the pitch on a stretcher.


“I wanted to reassure you concerning my health,” Gomis said hours later in quotes published on Swansea's website. “It actually looks much scarier than it is physically dangerous, and I am feeling well now.”


Gomis said he had been under stress and suffering from fatigue because of the health of his father, which required him to go back and forth to France for visits.


“He is fine,” Swansea manager Garry Monk said of Gomis. “Coming off the pitch he was fine, talking and he actually wanted to stay on the pitch.”


Gomis, who went to ground as the players made their way to restart after Nacer Chadli gave Spurs a seventh-minute lead, has a history of losing consciousness during games.


“It's something that we're well aware of and it's part of his history, but obviously he's had all the checks,” Monk said. “We knew about this when he came to the club. He's had all the medical checks that you can possibly do and it's just part of his life. It's to do with low blood pressure.”


Monk is not sure whether Gomis, who joined last year from Lyon, lost consciousness in the incident which stems from a long-standing condition.


“We'll clarify now with the club doctor and see what we do from here, see whether we pick him up or he gets his own car back,” Monk said.


In the opening match of the 2010-2011 campaign in the French league, Gomis was playing for Lyon when he collapsed with 15


minutes remaining during a 0-0 home draw with Monaco, and was replaced by midfielder Kim Kallstron.


Gomis also had a blackout while training with the France team in 2008.


“I was disappointed that I couldn't help my team tonight,” Gomis said, “but now everything is back in order.”


White Hart Lane was the ground where Fabrice Muamba, playing for Bolton at the time, suffered a cardiac arrest during an FA Cup quarterfinal match against Tottenham in 2012. Muamba's heart stopped beating on its own for 78 minutes, but started again after arriving at a hospital. – Sapa-AP






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News sport : Russell Westbrook, four days after facial surgery, drops career-highs in scoring and rebounding

Russell Westbrook didn’t have to return this early, but Russell Westbrook couldn’t seem to help himself on his way toward making a very Russell Westbrook-like return.


The Oklahoma City Thunder guard came back just four days after undergoing surgery to repair a fracture in his right cheek to score a career-high 49 points, nab a career-high 16 rebounds, and dish 10 assists alongside three steals in OKC’s 123-118 overtime win over Philadelphia. This is the most points scored in a triple-double since one Larry Joe Bird managed as many 30 years ago.


Westbrook, whose face was literally dented by an inadvertant knee to the face from teammate Andre Roberson on Friday night, showed absolutely no hesitation despite playing through the fracture.


Wearing a facemast (and at times with an upside-down NBA headband, which he will no doubt hear about from the league office) for the first time in his career, Westbrook crashed bodies in two early possessions while going after steals, and he scored his first five points by putting his head down and diving right into Sixer defenders. Any thoughts that the MVP candidate would be hesitant in working through his facial fracture were dashed just a few minutes into the contest.


Westbrook’s first make of the game came at the 8:45 mark of the first quarter, tossing in a runner as Philly big man JaKarr Sampsons whapped him on the face, sending Russell to the line. With Kevin Durant out, Westbrook attacked early and often – he attempted to set up his teammates several times to start the contest, but when their attempts fell short and Philly ran out to an eight-point lead, Russell was forced to dial up his own offense.


The Western Conference February Player of the Month managed nine points and three assists in the game’s first five and a half minutes, as the Thunder roared back to take the lead against the hapless Sixers. With his team down 15 after a surprising initial surge from Philadelphia, Westbrook emerged from a timeout with this gem:



This dunk marked the first two points of a 20-2 run to end the first period, a run that fed mostly off of Westbrook’s brilliance. He finished the period with 16 points, six rebounds and three assists. Westbrook also played the entire first quarter. Though it should be noted that two of the Thunder’s strongest runs came with Russell on the bench (he was a -14 on the night), it was absolutely astonishing to see Westbrook gather more and more strength as the game moved along. He would have had 17 rebounds as well, had he not pawed his last carom just after the game’s final buzzer.


The Thunder are in the middle of a relatively easy stretch of games, which not only made Russell’s return a small surprise, but the fact that the Sixers (led by eight three-pointers and 31 points from the recently acquired Isaiah Canaan) competed this well was a borderline shocker. The 76ers’ work on Wednesday, however, doesn’t take away from the idea that the MVP candidate could have decided to take a little more time off.


Westbrook missed a contest on Sunday against the tanking Lakers, the Sixers’ 2014-15 season ended sometime in June of 2013, and the Thunder are set to take on the Kyle Lowry-less Toronto Raptors, the Blake Griffin-less Los Angeles Clippers, the Western doormat Minnnesota Timberwolves and the Derrick Rose and Jimmy Butler-less Chicago Bulls twice in games perched between Westbrook’s injury and the Ides of March. The opportunity to string this out was there.


Even with Durant injured, it would seem that a win over Philadelphia would be all but assured, but Westbrook’s dogged determination won out. And outside of a few more trips to the towel rack (it can get sweaty under there), the 2015 All-Star Game MVP didn’t seem to be bothered by the mask (although he did ditch the headband in the game’s final moments).


He did, in the days leading up to his return, take a little issue with his paucity of NBA-approved facemask options. From a question and answer session with Anthony Slater at NewsOK.com:



Did you have any say in what the mask is going to look like?




Just regular. I mean, you can’t get crazy with the mask. The league is only going to (allow) me to have the clear mask. So that’s all I got.



The NBA couldn’t make an exception for one of its most stylish players? Especially after the four-week run he just peeled off? Let’s let the NBA’s own website discuss Westbrook’s lights-out month of February:


Westbrook averaged 31.2 points, 9.1 rebounds and 10.3 assists as the Thunder went 9-3 in February. He joined Oscar Robertson as the only players in NBA history to put up a 31-9-10 line for a calendar month (minimum 10 games played). Westbrook capped the month by becoming the first player to record three consecutive triple-doubles since James in March 2009. Westbrook also ended the month with six consecutive games with at least 20 points, 10 assists and five rebounds, the first player to do this since Michael Jordan in 1988-89.


The Thunder are pretty well chuffed to have Westbrook play through what he calls his “little den.”


After a win on Wednesday and a 9-3 February run, Oklahoma City would seem to have the best odds to hang onto the final playoff spot in the Western Conference bracket – the squad is currently a game up on an injury-addled (though improving; really, really improving) New Orleans Pelicans team heading into Thursday night’s contest with Chicago. Durant won’t play in that contest either, but OKC seems to have more than enough to circle the wagons.


Yes, the win came over a lacking Sixers outfit. And, yes, the Thunder were often at their best with Westbrook off the floor, but it hardly matters. Russell Westbrook is having an outstanding season, and even though he has missed 15 of his team’s 61 games so far, this is a player that should be seriously considered as the NBA readies the home stretch of its MVP race.


If Westbrook had been healthy all season? This MVP race would have been over weeks ago.


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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 : Tyler Zeller's game-winning buzzer-beating layup pushes Celtics past Jazz

Wednesday night's matchup between the Boston Celtics and surging Utah Jazz featured 47-plus minutes of so-ugly-only-a-mother-could-love-it offense, but man, did those last few seconds make up for it.


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Boston held an eight-point lead after an Isaiah Thomas jumper with 2:17 to go, but the Jazz stormed back, ripping off a 9-2 run to draw within one at 83-82 in the final minute. Celtics swingman Jae Crowder saw a potential cushion-providing layup swatted at the tin by Utah monster Rudy Gobert, but Jazz point man Trey Burke couldn't convert a short runner that would have given Utah the lead with 9.6 seconds remaining. But Utah retained control after the ball went out of bounds, giving Quin Snyder's crew another chance to take the lead.


The first-year head coach put the ball in the hands of his max-money forward, and Gordon Hayward made a play:



Hayward took the inbounds pass, shook pitbull defender Avery Bradley with a behind-the-back dribble to create space, then attacked Celtics center Tyler Zeller off the screen, pulling up for a tough midrange jumper that he splashed over Zeller's outstretched arms to give Utah an 84-83 lead.


There was just one problem: the Celtics, led by Hayward's former college coach at Butler, Brad Stevens, had 1.7 seconds and a timeout left.



Snyder elected to have the 7-foot-2 Gobert guard inbounds passer and newly minted Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month Marcus Smart, and the Celtics' play call took advantage of that cross-match. Zeller, guarded by Utah power forward Derrick Favors, raced from the top of the key to the basket as Crowder cut from the left block to replace him and Bradley cut from the right elbow to the far corner. All those cuts along the free-throw line worked as de-facto screens, which Utah switched, leading to Zeller finding himself one-on-one with rookie Jazz swingman Rodney Hood.


Smart lofted a perfect lob pass over Gobert and Hood, connecting with Zeller under the basket. He stayed down long enough to allow a helping Hayward to fly by, and just barely got the ball up in time — two-tenths of a second remaining on the game clock, just past the hand of the hard-charging Gobert — to watch it bounce off the window, carom off the rim and fall softly through the net, giving the Celtics an 85-84 victory that finished in far more thrilling fashion than anyone could have predicted for the lion's share of the proceedings, and afforded Zeller some sweet redemption after failing to stop Hayward on the other end.


"It feels great, especially after going down there, you know, giving them a bucket," Zeller told Comcast SportsNet New England's Abby Chen after the game. "It's great to be able to win this one."


In the aftermath of the play, some observers wondered whether Snyder might have been better off letting someone else guard the inbounder and having shot-swatting marvel Gobert stationed in the paint to protect the rim. But as NBA TV's Brent Barry pointed out, the Jazz might have still come away with the victory had Gobert — who finished with 10 points, 16 rebounds, three blocks, three assists and a steal in 36 minutes — pressed up tighter on Smart at the point of attack:



Whatever Utah's shortcomings on the final possession, you've got to tip your cap to the Celtics for executing in a tight spot. Zeller, who finished with eight points, 11 rebounds, two blocks, one steal and one assist in 30 minutes of floor time, credited his final-play patience and presence of mind to a teammate's intervention.


"Actually, somebody walked up to me right before it and said I got time for one shot if I can go up," he said. "It worked great."


(That sage Celtic? Little-used Italian shooter Luigi Datome, who came over from the Detroit Pistons in the three-way trade deadline deal that shipped out Tayshaun Prince and Marcus Thornton while also importing Thomas and Jonas Jerebko. Nice work, Gigi.)


As smooth as the finished product looked, though, this wasn't quite how Stevens drew it up in the Celtics' final huddle.


"It was actually supposed to get a post-up for a move," Zeller said. "But [Hood] fronted me, so [Marcus] just threw it up over the top, and made it a lot easier on me."


And, in the process, made the evening miserable for the Jazz, who lost for just the second time since the All-Star break despite holding Boston to a 37.5 percent shooting mark from the field.


Thomas led the way with 21 points on 6-for-12 shooting, seven assists and three rebounds in 26 1/2 minutes off the Celtics bench. Fellow reserve Crowder added 18 points, four boards, two dimes and a block in 33 minutes for Boston, who bounced back after a brutal blowout at the hands of the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday to score their fourth win in six games and improve to 24-35, drawing within two games of the eighth and final playoff spot in the East.


Favors and Burke each scored 16 to lead the Jazz, while Hayward added 13 points, three boards, three assists and the near game-winner. After the final buzzer, Butler products Hayward and Stevens shared a brief embrace ... joined, somewhat awkwardly, by the Celtics' Crowder:



It was, perhaps, the perfect ending to a game that was almost uncomfortably close throughout.


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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 : Kevin Durant on his injury-plagued 2014-15: 'I’m not packing it in at all.'

Kevin Durant cannot return too early from treatment on his right foot. He is absolutely putting his career in danger if he rushes back to play on a foot that is causing him pain, as the sort of fracture that Durant suffered last fall could line him up for a lifetime of pain and endless breaks if he takes shortcuts with his recovery. Other NBA players as disparate as Michael Jordan, Pau Gasol and Zydrunas Ilgauskas have managed to enjoy lengthy NBA careers after breaking the same bone Durant broke in October, but All-Star types like Bill Walton and Yao Ming have also seen their fortunes crumble because of the condition.


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With the potential severity of the injury in place, and with a recent re-evaluation of his health leading to Durant’s return to the bench, NewsOK.com’s Anthony Slater wasn’t out of line in the slightest when he asked Durant if the reigning MVP had considered a worst-case scenario for 2014-15:



You feel very confident you will return this season?




No doubt. No doubt. I’m looking forward to returning this season. No doubt. I’m not packing it in at all.




You’ve been pretty much injury free before this year. Are you frustrated, what’s your mindset?




Obviously, I’d love to play. I love playing basketball, I love my teammates and I love the organization. I want to play for them. But it happens. It happens. It’s a part of the game. And once I figured that it’s a part of the game and I’m not the first one to go through it, I was at peace with it. But obviously I didn’t take it too well because I wanted to play. But I know I can’t be out there hobbling around, limping around on one foot. I want to be out there at full strength.



Durant underwent a second surgical procedure on Feb. 22, an operation that replaced the screw that was placed in his right foot last October, after it was determined that the screw needed to be in place to stabilize his recovery moving forward. It had been suggested by some that Durant would try to pitch his comeback alongside the similarly-returning Russell Westbrook (who came back just four days after surgery on Wednesday evening) as the Thunder attempt to hit the home stretch at full health.


Instead, sanity is prevailing. Durant doesn’t need to be at 100 percent to play because he is incapable of playing through pain. Durant needs to be at 100 percent because any bit of pain from that right foot means that significant pressure is being put on that rather fragile bone, pressure that usually leads to another fracture.


As we discussed upon Kevin’s initial fracture, his combination of frame and game is just about unprecedented in this league. Larry Bird might be around the same size, but he certainly couldn’t sky like Durant. Larry Nance could sure throw down, but Larry Nance wasn’t asked to run his 6-10 frame through screens like a shooting guard, as Durant is. Michael Jordan, Ray Allen and Reggie Miller certainly ran quite a bit during their time as off guards, but they didn’t have to do so with Durant’s massive frame to support.


He’s a special, unique player that truly needs to take as much time as needed to work his way toward a pain-free existence. With the Thunder currently a game up on New Orleans for the final playoff seed out West, there is absolutely no reason for Durant to come back too early.


And there is absolutely no reason to believe that he’ll be out for the rest of the season, mainly because Durant and the Thunder have handled this injury so intelligently thus far.


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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 : The 10-man rotation, starring Kevin Garnett making an on-court impact

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: 1500ESPN.com. Steve McPherson breaks down the defensive impact that Kevin Garnett has had on the Minnesota Timberwolves since returning at the trade deadline, showcasing some of the subtle things that the future Hall of Famer can still do defensively at elite levels, even at 38 years of age.


PF: Bucksketball. The Milwaukee Bucks have lost five of their last seven games and looked particularly dismal offensively since swapping Brandon Knight for Michael Carter-Williams. What exactly has been going on in Wisconsin since the All-Star break? Jeremy Schmidt takes a deep breath, holds his nose and dives in.


SF: The National Post. Good stuff from Eric Koreen on Greivis Vasquez's struggles to find solid ground amid shifting role responsibilities, which help offer some visibility into the Toronto Raptors' inconsistent play over the past couple of months despite an offseason aimed at staying steady: "[It's] a good reminder that as much as you try to preserve chemistry and promote continuity, things inevitably change."


SG: Sports Illustrated. More phenomenal work from Rob Mahoney on the development of Dante Exum, the 19-year-old Australian point guard who's still a ways away from becoming a consistently positive offensive performer on the NBA level, but whose defensive acumen has helped Utah become the league's top defense over the last five weeks.


PG: Basketball Insiders. Mo Williams, on something of a surge since coming to the Charlotte Hornets from the Minnesota Timberwolves in a trade last month, tells Jessica Camerato that he didn't do a good enough job of appreciating just how special it was to be part of those dominant LeBron James-led Cleveland Cavaliers teams in the late aughts: "When you never think it’s coming to an end, you forget about yesterday.”


6th: Eye on Basketball. We've seen pieces on this topic before, but there's nothing wrong with revisiting Kyle Korver's finely tuned pre-game shooting routine, as Zach Harper does here.


7th: Nylon Calculus. Seth Partnow takes a look at the relationship between teams' offensive efficiency marks and how quickly they tend to get shots up.


8th: Denver Post. In the aftermath of the Denver Nuggets' decision to can Brian Shaw, Mark Kiszla wonders why other candidates would seriously consider the Nuggets' head coaching vacancy. (Especially considering, as many have suggested, Denver's ownership isn't exactly looking to back up the Brinks truck for new hires.)


9th: Sports Illustrated. Chris Mannix on the nomadic NBA lifestyle of 2012 lottery pick Thomas Robinson, now on his fifth team in three NBA seasons after being claimed off waivers by the Philadelphia 76ers. Quoth Sixers head coach Brett Brown: "He’s not going to have a better environment to have a legitimate chance to be a legitimate NBA player.”


10th: CoachUp. Now you, too, can make post moves like Nerlens Noel!


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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 : Report: Michigan State's Macgarrett Kings Jr. charged with 2 misdemeanors

Michigan State WR Macgarrett Kings Jr. has been reportedly charged with two misdemeanors after he was arrested early Saturday morning.


From The Detroit Free-Press:



Kings, who will be a senior receiver in the fall, has been charged with drunken and disorderly conduct and obstructing, resisting, hindering or assaulting a police officer, according to East Lansing 54-B District Court documents. Both are misdemeanors punishable by up to 93 days in jail and $500 in fines.


Kings, 21, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was arrested in East Lansing at 2:36 a.m. on Saturday, according to court documents. MSU coach Mark Dantonio could not be reached immediately for comment on the status of Kings with the team, which starts spring football March 24.



It's not the first time that Kings has been arrested around this time of year as a member of Michigan State's football team, either. He was arrested in April of 2014 for DUI and OWIafter his blood alcohol level tested at 0.234 on a breath test. He missed much of Michigan State's spring football season and was sentenced to 13 months probation in the summer following a plea deal.


If he's convicted of the charge of drunken and disorderly conduct, it's a violation of his probation. As part of the terms of his probation, per the Free-Press, he was prohibited from consuming alcohol.


Kings had 29 catches for 404 yards in 2014. Before his 21st birthday in September, Kings said he wanted a touchdown or two against Wyoming. He didn't even get a catch, though he had two carries for two yards.


For more Michigan State news, visit SpartanMag.com.


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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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Chelsea continue winning ways

Premier League leaders Chelsea chalked up another three points with victory at West Ham United.


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London - Premier League leaders Chelsea chalked up another three points with a 1-0 victory at West Ham United to protect their five-point lead over champions Manchester City.


City, who laboured to a 2-0 win over bottom club Leicester City, might have hoped Chelsea would suffer a hangover from their League Cup final win over Tottenham Hotspur but Chelsea are made of sterner stuff and Eden Hazard's header decided matters at Upton Park.


David Silva's goal and a late effort from James Milner enabled City to stay in touch, although Manuel Pellegrini's side were unimpressive at The Etihad Stadium where Leicester belied their lowly position.


Goals from Olivier Giroud and Alexis Sanchez gave Arsenal a 2-1 victory at Queens Park Rangers to keep them third, nine points behind Chelsea.


Manchester United hung on to fourth, two points above resurgent Liverpool, with Ashley Young's 89th-minute goal sealing a 1-0 win at Newcastle United.


Chelsea have 63 points from 27 games with City on 58 from a game more. Arsenal have 54 with United on 53.


Jordan Henderson scored for the second game running as in-form Liverpool beat Burnley 2-0 at Anfield to climb to fifth.


Tottenham rebounded from their Wembley disappointment to beat Swansea City 3-2 and stay in the hunt for a top-four finish, although the game was overshadowed by Swansea's Bafetimbi Gomis fainting in the first half.


The French forward was carried off the pitch but remained conscious after medical treatment at the ground.


Everton's worrying league form continued in a 2-0 defeat at Stoke City. – Reuters






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Chiefs sink Urban Warriors

Mandla Masango scored his sixth Premiership goal of the season as Kaizer Chiefs beat Ajax Cape Town at the FNB Stadium.


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Johannesburg – Mandla Masango scored his sixth Premiership goal of the season as Kaizer Chiefs eased past Ajax Cape Town 1-0 at FNB Stadium.


Masango scored his first goal of 2015 as Amakhosi stretched their lead at the top of the table to 10 points with nine games left in the season.


The Soweto outfit returned to winning ways in the league after suffering their first loss of the campaign a fortnight ago against SuperSport United in Polokwane.


Ajax, meanwhile, extended their dismal away record against the log-leaders.


The Urban Warriors have not beaten Chiefs away from home since September 2007, having not even managed a goal away from home against Chiefs since 2011.


Unbeaten on home soil so far this season, Chiefs struck early and went ahead after 15 minutes thanks to Masango's simple tap-in after George Lebese's effort was stopped by Anssi Jaakkola.


Masango was quickest to respond and stabbed home the game's only goal to hand Chiefs their eighth win at home, taking the Glamour Boys to 50 points, 10 ahead of Wits in second place.


Despite going behind early on, Ajax were unlucky not to get more out of the game, often taking the game to their hosts and finding themselves in dangerous positions in front of goal.


Chiefs, though, were solid in defence and had Itumeleng Khune in goal, the goalkeeper making his first Premiership appearance in more than six months.


Khune was on hand to sweep up Ajax's chances, which were few and far between.


The visitors arrested a run of seven straight league games without a win over the weekend when they beat Chippa United, but were quickly brought back down to earth with a brave, but ultimately fruitless, performance in Johannesburg.


Chiefs, on the other hand, did what they needed after Wits mounted a challenge on Tuesday night by beating Mamelodi Sundowns to send a warning Chiefs' way.


But regardless of their less than impressive display, Stuart Baxter's men will take a bit of confidence into this weekend's Soweto Derby and have the upper-hand on their cross-town rivals – Orlando Pirates – who were held to a 1-1 draw by Free State Stars in a simultaneous game on Wednesday. – Sapa






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Pirates frustrated by Stars

Orlando Pirates lost momentum in the build-up to this weekend's Soweto Derby, settling for a draw in their PSL fixture against Free State Stars.


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Johannesburg – Orlando Pirates lost momentum in the build-up to this weekend's Soweto Derby, settling for a 1-1 draw in their Premiership fixture against Free State Stars in Phuthaditjhaba on Wednesday night.


The Buccaneers stretched their unbeaten run to eight straight league games, taking the early lead before Stars hit back in an electric first half, but the hosts put an end to their four-match winning streak.


“We always knew it was going to be very difficult. I thought we started extremely well and our movement was very good, but we got the goal and then I don't know what happened,” said Bucs coach Eric Tinkler.


“We stopped doing the right things at the right moments, our crossing was poor, our decision-making in the final third was poor and that last pass always let us down, so that created difficulties for us.”


Looking to bag three points away from home, in an effort to place some pressure on runaway log leaders Kaizer Chiefs, the visitors moved in front in the eighth minute when Kermit Erasmus collected a neat through ball down the middle, flicked on by Mpho Makola, and sliced the ball in from just inside the area.


With Pirates throwing all their weight into defence before the break, however, Moeketsi Sekola equalised for Stars from long range to leave matters square at the interval.


The home side could have taken the lead six minutes later, after Bucs shot stopper Brighton Mhlongo fumbled two saves, but they were wayward with their repeated strikes.


Both sides created multiple chances in the second half, but they struggled to really threaten the opposition defence with their finishing, as the match ended in a stalemate.


Stars piled on the pressure in the latter stages, in an attempt to cause an upset, but they wasted their opportunities to remain entrenched in the bottom half of the table.


“It was a balanced game and we created a few chances going forward, but so did they, and all in all I think the boys played very well and put up a good fight ,” said Stars coach Kinnah Phiri.


“Looking at Pirates as a top team in this country, I'm happy the midfield and defence stood very firm.


“They scored a goal from a lapse in defence, but I think after that we stood very strongly.” – Sapa






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News sport : Brother of top QB recruit Shea Patterson hired at Ole Miss

Shea Patterson is the No. 1 dual-threat quarterback in the class of 2016. He's Rivals' No. 3 prospect overall. He's listed as having a solid verbal commitment to Ole Miss.


And his brother is now a member of the Ole Miss staff.


Per the Clarion-Ledger, Sean Patterson is the associate director for recruiting operations and was added to the staff directory on Monday. Per an Ole Miss spokesperson, Sean Patterson started working at Ole Miss on Feb. 23.


While it's obvious that there are advantages to Ole Miss hiring Sean Patterson for a position that was unfilled after it was created in 2014, hiring a coach or family member of a prized recruit to the staff of a team is nothing new. There may be more notable examples in basketball, but it's not unheard of in football.


And it's not like Ole Miss is hiring Shea's brother from out of nowhere, either. It just looks really transparent.


Sean, a former quarterback at Duquesne, was an offensive quality control assistant for LSU until he resigned earlier in February on the same day Shea Patterson made his verbal commitment to the Rebels. Before that, he was an assistant at Arizona, a school where Shea had previously verbally committed. He decommitted from the Wildcats in July, a week after Sean had taken the position at LSU for the 2014 season.


Shea Patterson is a native of Shreveport, La., and had scholarship offers from 28 other schools including LSU and five other members of the SEC. If his brother doesn't find that it's a good fit at Ole Miss, he can always change his verbal commitment again and sign with a different school on National Signing Day 2016. We're sure there are many other programs who would gladly hire Sean to secure the services of Shea.


For more Ole Miss news, visit RebelGrove.com.


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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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