News sport : UCLA may find itself on the outside looking in after Arizona loss

LAS VEGAS — Ten minutes away from a potentially season-saving victory against the nation's fifth-ranked team, UCLA endured a lull at the worst possible time.


Quick shots, missed box-outs and poor transition defense fueled a five-minute Arizona surge that transformed a seven-point deficit into an eight-point lead and enabled the top-seeded Wildcats to emerge with a 70-64 victory.


Whereas Arizona will spend Saturday battling either Utah or Oregon for the Pac-12 tournament title and a potential No. 1 seed, UCLA has an anxious two days ahead of it. The Bruins are at the mercy of the selection committee after completing a season in which they rebounded from a five-game losing streak over the holidays to finish fourth in the Pac-12 yet still find themselves in jeopardy of missing the NCAA tournament for the third time in six years.


"It's frustrating because I feel like if we won tonight, we were probably a sure thing," sophomore guard Bryce Alford said. "That's what hurts the most. If we won tonight, we were confident we were going to win the tournament. Now we don't have the chance for an automatic bid and we have to sit and wait. That's not fun, but we put ourselves in that situation."


Most mock brackets had UCLA as one of the last teams out of the field entering Friday's game because the Bruins (20-13, 11-7) simply don't have enough quality wins. They toppled NCAA tournament-bound Utah and Oregon at Pauley Pavilion, but those two victories, a sweep of Stanford and a rout of Long Beach State are the only wins UCLA has over RPI top 100 teams.


Where UCLA may have let its season slip away was not in the second half against Arizona on Friday but on the road weeks earlier against some of the Pac-12's lightweights. The Bruins lost winnable February matchups with Arizona State and Cal and finished only 2-8 in true road games for the season.


UCLA coach Steve Alford hopes the selection committee takes into account that the Bruins have improved considerably over the course of the regular season and have notched their three best wins in the past six weeks. They also played competitive games against Arizona twice during that stretch, though both resulted in losses.


"I like our chances," the elder Alford said. "We're like a lot of people who are going to sit and wait. I've been doing this a long time, and I'll be hard-pressed to believe there's [36] better at-large teams than what we are."


The best news for UCLA was that the final impression it left on the selection committee was as good as the Bruins could have hoped for in a loss.


They turned Arizona into a jump shooting team with a long, active 3-2 zone. They built a 47-40 lead with 12 minutes left in the second half. And they did it all with maybe their best player limited by the unwieldy mask he had to wear to protect the facial injury he suffered the previous day.


Kevon Looney's long arms and quick hands made him effective at the top of UCLA's zone, but he scored only five points in part because he was hesitant to risk getting hit in the face again while driving into traffic or attacking the offensive glass. The freshman forward also had limited peripheral vision as a result of the mask, which certainly wasn't helpful defensively.


"I didn't have a lot of time to get used to the mask. The hardest part for me was seeing on defense. I played on top of the zone, and it was hard to see screens coming up behind me or seeing the weak side or seeing rebounds coming off. It was hard. It was hard to see."


Perhaps Looney's diminished vision played a role in the missed box-outs during Arizona's 15-0 second-half surge. Five offensive rebounds by the Wildcats netted three baskets during the run, two of which had nothing to do with UCLA playing zone because they came off missed free throws.


"Rebounding was the biggest factor in that 4 to 6-minute stretch they had," UCLA guard Norman Powell said. "I think they had something like three free throw blockout rebounds and they scored on all of them."


So now all UCLA can wait and hope that the selection committee ignores the warts on their profile. The Bruins looked good enough to play in the NCAA tournament Friday night, but it's their season-long results that will be judged.


"I think everyone in the room is confident we should be able to get in," Bryce Alford said. "We're one of the best teams right now. Even though we lost today, we lost to a big-time team and we played them well. If the committee looks at the eye test, I thought we passed that today."


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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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News sport : Iowa State moves on to Big 12 title game after Oklahoma misfire


Oklahoma forward Ryan Spangler found himself alone beneath the basket with the ball in his hands and three seconds remaining in a Big 12 Conference semifinal game against Iowa State. All he had to do was make the layup to tie the game and send it to overtime.


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But Spangler endured the nightmare scenario instead. He missed and walked off the court having to live with it for years to come.


The good news for Spangler and his teammates is the Sooners are pretty darn good and will definitely receive an at-large berth to the NCAA tournament. He'll be back on the court with new life next week and he's only a junior. He can take another shot at winning a Big 12 title next season.


But that is probably little consolation in the immediate aftermath.


Spangler's miss certainly wasn't the only reason the Sooners couldn't pull off what would have been a mini-upset. They played from behind most of the night and scored on only three possessions in the final five minutes.


Iowa State, the defending Big 12 tournament champ, will face Kansas on Saturday in the championship game thanks to four players scoring in double figures. Forward Georges Niang led the Cyclones with 13 points. He missed a free throw on the other end second before Spangler's missed layup that would have given the Cyclones a 3-point cushion and forced the Sooners to attempt a 3-pointer to tie.


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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 : Defending national champ UConn upsets Cincinnati in American quarterfinals


Don't look now America. Defending national champion UConn is playing good basketball at tournament time again and moved within two games of making an improbable trip to the NCAA tournament.


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But it still has work to do.


Guard Ryan Boatright kept the Huskies alive Friday night by draining a 3-pointer in the final second to upset Cincinnati 57-54 in the American Athletic Conference quarterfinals.


At 19-12 overall prior to Friday's game, the Huskies weren't even considered to be on the bubble and that appears to be helpiing them. They're playing with desperation and urgency and doing it well. Boatright scored 18 points and Rodney Purvis added 17. The Huskies combined to make 11 of 30 3-pointers.


UConn is the No. 6 seed in the American tournament. It beat No. 11 South Florida to get to Friday's game against third-seeded Bearcats. Now it moves on to a meeting with No. 2 seed Tulsa in the semifinals on Saturday.


(Thanks Rob Dauster for the video)


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News sport : Ticket punched: Texas Southern wins NCAA berth with SWAC final still to come

Texas Southern will play Southern on Saturday afternoon in a Southwestern Athletic Conference championship game that comes with a catch.


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Texas Southern already won the championship and the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament on Friday night when it beat Prairie View A&M in a semifinal game in Houston.


Say what?


Five SWAC teams were deemed ineligible for the NCAA tournament this season by the NCAA because of failing scores in the Academic Progress Rate system that encourages retention and progress toward degree for student athletes.


Southern is one of those teams and the team it beat in its semifinal win, Alabama State, also was ineligible. That made the other semifinal the real championship game and rendered the actual championship game meaningless.


So why were ineligible teams allowed to compete in the tournament at all. This isn’t the first time the SWAC has had this problem and in past years the conference hasn’t allowed ineligible teams to compete in the conference tournament. Last year only seven teams participated.


According to a report in USA Today that said only four teams in the conference were ineligible, SWAC commissioner Duer Sharp asked the presidents of the schools to include the ineligible teams and the presidents voted to do so.


The USA Today report said Southern, Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Grambling and Mississippi Valley State were ineligible for APR scores. A separate report by the Montgomery Advertiser confirmed Alabama State is also ineligible. That’s half the conference.


If two ineligible teams would have advanced to the championship game, the conference would have sent the eligible team that advanced deepest to the NCAA tournament. If two eligible teams advanced to the same level before losing, the conference would have sent the highest seeded eligible team.


All of this leaves a glaring question for Texas Southern coach Mike Davis in Sunday’s game against Southern. Why would Davis bother playing any of his core players in a meaningless game with the NCAA tournament still to come?


“I’ve never been in this situation before where we won the tournament on the night before,” Davis said in a postgame radio interview. “I’m not going to get our guys hurt (Sunday), but we’re definitely going to come out and try to win the tournament. We play a pretty good Southern basketball team and it’s my job to get these guys back up and ready for the game tomorrow.”


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News sport : Kevin Harvick wins pole at Phoenix

Kevin Harvick's quest for seven-straight top-two finishes has an nice advantage on Sunday.


Harvick won the pole for the race at Phoenix, posting the fastest times in the second and third rounds of qualifying on Friday.


His compadre on the front row? Joey Logano, the Daytona 500 winner who has qualified in the top five of all four Sprint Cup races this season.


Harvick won at Phoenix last year in the penultimate race of the season before he won at Homestead to win the championship. Before the Phoenix race, he finished second at Texas and he was second to Logano in the season-opening Daytona 500. He was second at Atlanta to Jimmie Johnson and last week won at Las Vegas.


Yes, Harvick is rolling. But we don't have to tell you that, do we?


Tanner Berryhill and Travis Kvapil missed the race. The rest of the top five for Sunday's race is Jamie McMurray, Matt Kenseth and Ryan Newman.


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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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News sport : Dolphins reportedly trade WR Mike Wallace to Vikings




Mike Wallace’s status with Miami has been up in the air for quite some time and the Dolphins finally pulled the trigger and traded him on Friday.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Wallace and his $9.85 million salary is headed to Minnesota along with a seventh-round pick in exchange for a fifth-round selection.


Wallace signed a five-year, $60 million deal with the Dolphins two years ago, but has not lived up to expectations. He caught 67 passes for 862 yards and 10 touchdowns last year, but caught flak for having a bad attitude and reportedly removed himself from the team’s season finale against the Jets.


Wallace began his career with the Steelers, where he established himself as a big-play threat. In four seasons in Pittsburgh, he caught 235 passes for 4,042 yards and 32 touchdowns. In his first year with Miami, he caught 73 balls for 930 yards and five scores.


Miami acquired third-year wideout Kenny Stills from New Orleans earlier to pair up with Jarvis Landry and also signed tight end Jordan Cameron on Thursday, making Wallace expendable.


Also, as noted by Yahoo Sports' Charles Robinson, the money saved from the Wallace trade could potentially be the deciding factor in Miami's efforts to re-sign tight end Charles Clay, who is coveted by division rival Buffalo.



On the other side of the deal, Wallace gets a fresh start in Minnesota and can provide a deep ball threat for second-year quarterback Teddy Bridgewater.


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News sport : Joakim Nordstrom suspended 2 games for boarding Oliver Ekman-Larsson

As reported earlier, Chicago's Joakim Nordstrom was to be given his day in court for his hit on Arizona's Oliver Ekman-Larsson. The Department of Player Safety handed down their ruling, and it's two game ban for Nordstrom.


Mr. Burke, if you'd please do the honors...



Pretty cut and dry. Nordstrom saw the numbers of OEL, and didn't pull up on the hit. (Side note: found out the correct way to say 'Joakim' from the video...)


For his troubles, Nordstrom, will be $6,630.82 lighter in the wallet. The forward will miss Chicago's next two games against San Jose and the New York Islanders.


The Blackhawks currently sit in third in the Central Division at 86-points. They're 5-points behind St. Louis and Nashville for the top spots, and 5-points ahead of Minnesota who sits in the first Wild Card slot. With the wealth of talent Chicago has, it remains to be seen if they'll be negatively impacted by the loss of Nordstrom. He's only played 31 games for them this year and has 2-points.


Now if you want to start your weekend off with some hilarity, fish around the social media sites for the most die-hard of Blackhawks fans. According to their theories, and I'm paraphrasing, this suspension is another indication that the NHL hates the Blackhawks.



Via QuickMeme.com

That's straight up Canadian market MSM tinfoil hat paranoia right there.


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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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News sport : Denny Hamlin wants to ban shifting at Phoenix

Phoenix International Raceway is mentioned as unique because of its configuration, namely the dogleg on the backstretch.


It's also unique because drivers have the option of shifting off the corners. Because of NASCAR's gear rule, drivers can shift from third to fourth gear to get better acceleration. Typically, road courses and Pocono are the only places where Sprint Cup Series drivers use the shifter handle at race speed.


Denny Hamlin doesn't like shifting at Phoenix.


"I wish NASCAR would really come up with a ban on that," Hamlin said Friday. "There is no reason why we should be shifting on a one-mile race track. This is a short track, not a road course. Make the gearing so we cannot shift because it's just dumb for us to have the option to be able to shift. Everything that they're trying to do with the whole gear rule and less horsepower, it throws that all out the window when you're able to go out here and shift. It will be an option and people will try to do it. I'm sure late in the runs it will be effective, but it's just with the gear taken out and the horsepower, we're just lugging off these corners and you're just flat footing it. As a driver, it's tough to be able to race that way so we're having to shift to try to get up off the corner. Hopefully looking forward we can change it to where you don't have to do that."


NASCAR's new rules package for the Cup Series took away some horsepower via a tapered spacer. However, because of other tweaks, corner speeds have been up through the first two intermediate track races of the season and will likely also be increased at Phoenix.


If NASCAR wanted to get rid of the option of shifting for drivers at Phoenix, it could make a move before the penultimate race of the year in November. Or, since there will be even more rules changes in 2016, it could leave the gear rule alone with the idea that things will be different in 2016.


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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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News sport : The value of Nazem Kadri in Toronto (Trending Topics)

There are a lot of controversial players on the Toronto Maple Leafs roster at any given time. That's how it goes in Toronto.


The one grabbing headlines this week was, for once, not Phil Kessel or Dion Phaneuf, but rather Nazem Kadri. The reason was that he missed a team meeting — he overslept, apparently — and it wasn't for the first time. So he was healthy-scratched by the club for three games in what is probably a rather pivotal contract year for him.


The difference in three games of missed time might not make a big deal to his point totals or bargaining position, per se, but effectively being suspended by the team for them as punishment for missing meetings might. Now the Leafs get to ask, “Is this a guy around whom we want to build our team?” Even if the obvious answer is an emphatic yes, that gives them a little more flexibility.


The tear-down of the Leafs roster as it's currently constituted is probably going to come pretty quickly. Most people expect that the club will shop Phaneuf and Kessel this summer, and probably throw in a guy like Tyler Bozak for good measure. This makes sense. They're expensive guys who are quickly approaching their age-30 seasons, which in player evaluation circles is seen as a point of no return. Even if you disagree that a player's prime is when he's about 23-26 years old, you'd have to agree that more guys than not start seeing the wheels come off their productivity after they hit the big 3-0.


And no, neither Phaneuf nor Kessel are as bad as people make them out to be, but if the Leafs hold onto them throughout a rebuild, at what point are they going to get a better value on the trade market for them than they would, say, this summer? It seems very unlikely. And if you're trading Kessel, you kind of have to trade his hop-along buddy, Bozak, whose numbers aren't even that good when he plays with an elite goalscoring winger. Without Kessel, the Bozak deal would probably be close to a David Clarkson-type disaster; a player with a big dollar value and lots of years, but who makes minimal impact.


And this is where Kadri comes in. He is — and also has been — poised to become Toronto's No. 1 center for some time now, and of late he's actually starting to get more minutes at 5-on-5, which indicates just how seriously the Leafs take his quality. Even in doling out the punishment this week, team president Brendan Shanahan acknowledged that they see Kadri as crucial to the team's future plans. So it's important to ask where Kadri can take this club if we presume he's going to be their No. 1 guy next year and going forward, and what that probably ought to cost them.


Let's start with the basics: Kadri leads Toronto centers in even-strength minutes per game, but still isn't really used as the team's No. 1 center. Bozak plays tougher competition and with better teammates; his most common collaborators are Kessel and James van Riemsdyk. Kadri's are the now-traded Dan Winnik and the also-now-traded Mike Santorelli. That's a pretty sizable decline in scoring quality. And yet Kadri scores more than twice the goals per 60 minutes (0.8 to 0.3) and sets up 10 percent more assists (1.0 to 0.9). You might say that's due to how hard the competition is for Bozak, but Kessel and van Riemsdyk are both more in “Kadri” territory, so this seems to be a function of Bozak just not being good enough for the minutes he's given.


In fact, over the last three years, Kadri has outperformed in much the same way: Much more goalscoring, slightly more assists, and without the benefit of easy zone starts or great llinemates. He also makes Kessel a lot better than Bozak does :



Photo via Ryan Lambert

So what this tells us is that, while he hasn't really been given much of an opportunity (Kessel's minutes with Bozak over the last three seasons are more than quadruple those with Kadri), this is pretty obviously a guy who can and does keep up with superstars. Not that Toronto's going to have many of those for him to center throughout this rebuild, but if, say, William Nylander continues on his current development path can play there for a few years before — or if — he transitions to center, then that seems like something that can work for him.


But the question is, what does his ceiling look like? Is he a franchise cornerstone in the way that Morgan Rielly seems like he could be? To answer this question we have to look at some comparables, keeping in mind that for the last three seasons he's played a second-line role in his age 21, 22, and 23 campaigns (these numbers are defined as the age a player is when the season starts, so this season is technically Kadri's age-23 year even though he turned 24 five days after it started).


Fortunately, a lot of guys have played three seasons at that age during the Behind the Net era, so we can look up their performance pretty easily to compare and contrast them, thanks to War On Ice . What's interesting here is that Kadri is grouped mostly in the middle in terms of usage: He doesn't play super-tough competition, but his one starts don't stand out as being egregiously easy either.


Based on a number of factors, I've put together a list of a few comparables by age, and we can use that to see how favorably Kadri compares.



Photo via Ryan Lambert

As you can see, this is a PDO-fueled run against weak competition (and with weak teammates, to be fair) that makes him look extremely good, with comparables like Paul Stastny and Jaden Schwartz and Nicklas Backstrom cropping up as far as production goes. But I think that relative corsi number, and the comparables it conjures up, are interesting even if those players all played tougher minutes than Kadri. As you'll see, the percentages were never going to run that way for very long.



Photo via Ryan Lambert

The competition didn't get much harder, and the teammates improved, but the numbers really started to level off here, even despite the easier zone starts. Toronto remained a bad possession team, but Kadri continued to outproduce his teammates in this regard. When he's on the ice, the Leafs are better, and that's pretty straightforward. But look at the comparables here. You're getting a lot more Jordan Staal, Matt Duchene, etc. and still have some elite players mixed in there as well. If you can get a center who scores like Claude Giroux, Evgeni Malkin, and Ryan Johansen based on this quality of teammate, you take that pretty happily.


Photo via Ryan Lambert

Finally we come to this season, and the numbers for Kadri are more or less in line with with what they were last year, but he's starting in his own zone more often than his teammates. He's keeping up the scoring despite his worst PDO in the last three seasons, and that says to me that, as a player, he's clearly improving. Eric and Jordan Staal continue to feature in the comparables, but you're also getting guys like David Krejci and Ryan Kesler as well.


In all, nine guys appeared as a comparable four times or more, with the most common being Stastny (six), and Backstrom and Eric Staal (five each). Dubinsky, Hodgson, Schwartz, Seguin, Shaw, and Toews were there four times apiece. And I think that's probably not a terrible set in which to place Kadri overall. He's probably at the low end of the group, because he's sure not Backstrom, Staal, Toews, or Seguin. But is he Dubinsky, Stastny, or Shaw? That sounds about right.


And as far as what that means he's going to be paid, the good news for the player is that Kadri certainly looks like one of those guys who's going to be helped a lot by the NHL adding “advanced” stats to their arbitration dealings. Kadri's boxcar stats — 16-20-36 in 64 games — don't jump off the page, but with the numbers settled down from those lofty highs a few years ago, and given all the other factors, he projects pretty well regardless. A number in the $5.5 million range for multiple years wouldn't be undue.


That's close to what most people think of as first-line center money, yes. And Kadri's shown that this is a group he belongs in regardless of Bozak's presence on the roster, however much longer that lasts.


So no, I wouldn't be too concerned about this missed meeting. Regardless of his perceived ”attitude” issues Kadri is still a clear No. 1 center.


Ryan Lambert is a Puck Daddy columnist. His email is here and his Twitter is here .


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News sport : Add Golden State to the list of teams that are resting important starters

The NBA head office, unless some rash of fines are levied between Friday afternoon and the opening seconds of Friday evening’s Denver/Golden State game, apparently does not mind when teams rest their starters in the middle of what could be an eight-month season. As well they shouldn’t.


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The Golden State Warriors are the latest team to not only sit starters, but actually lean on the idea of “rest” as the reason why significant chunks of their rotation will not be suiting up:



This comes just 24 hours after the Memphis Grizzlies decided to rest their weary starting lineup in a game against the smarting Washington Wizards.


Teams have rested starters for years, but franchises always made a point to list a phantom sprained ankle or knee tendinitis as the reason for the benching. In the wake of the San Antonio Spurs admitting to sitting starters for rest, instead of made-up minor injuries, more and more teams are going to take advantage of hot play in autumn and winter as an excuse to sit players out of meaningless games in early spring.


The difference between the Spurs’ 2012 application and the current batch is the head of this monster. David Stern infamously fined the Spurs a quarter of a million dollars for having the audacity to besmirch the sanctity of a basketball game shown on basic cable TV (with a repeat ‘Charmed’ lead-in), all because Spurs coach Gregg Popovich referenced “rest” over fake injuries as the reason for his team’s disappearance.


The Grizzlies and Warriors? Under new commissioner Adam Silver, they’ll go scot-free. Again: as they should.


Golden State is 51-12, and they’re seven games up on the struggling Grizzlies with the top seed in the West. The two teams below Memphis, Portland and Houston, are working through significant injury woes. The Warriors aren’t going to set any records this season for winning percentage, so it hardly needs to chase down over the top winning marks as their long year moves along.


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You can question the decision to sit out against the Nuggets, however.


Friday marks the first night of a back-to-back, with the Warriors taking on the terrible New York Knicks on home on Saturday. The W’s then play the similarly-lowly Los Angeles Lakers on Monday before squaring off in a rematch against the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday. It’s true that the Warriors might want to have their rhythm about them in time for the game against the Hawks, who are a game and a half behind GSW in the race for the NBA’s best record, but it would seem in the team’s best interest to sit out the contests against New York and the Lakers as opposed to laying down for a streaking Nuggets team.


Following that Hawk contest, the Warriors will then spend 12 of their final 14 games either playing against teams currently in the playoffs, or teams that are acting like playoff teams (Utah, Denver). Only the Timberwolves and Suns will provide a break.


Golden State will finish the season with the West’s best record, by far, and they should be considered a championship favorite heading into the postseason. The next few weeks, however, are going to be rather rough – even if the outcome of the contests has no bearing on Golden State’s future.


Better get the rest in now, I suppose. And just sleepwalk through those Knickerbocker and Laker games – that counts as well.


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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 : Steelers, Ben Roethlisberger agree to contract extension

Despite various trade rumors through the years, and a rocky early portion of his career off the field, it seems like quarterback Ben Roethlisberger will be with the Pittsburgh Steelers for his entire career, or very close to it.


Roethlisberger, who played near an MVP level for much of last season, has agreed to a new contract extension with the Steelers, the team announced on Friday. Terms were not immediately known. Roethlisberger had one year left on his current deal.


Roethlisberger has guided the Steelers to two Super Bowl titles and it seems like he'll have a good shot for the Pro Football Hall of Fame when he's done. In 2010 his Steelers' future wasn't so certain. He was suspended six games by the NFL (later reduced to four) for violating the league's conduct policy, regarding a case in which he was accused of sexual assault in Georgia. He was never charged in that case. No criminal charges were brought in a similar case in Nevada from an incident in Reno in 2008. Roethlisberger was reportedly shopped in a trade. The relationship between him and the team seemed strained. But he stayed in Pittsburgh. Things have gone much smoother since then.


Roethlisberger has been the Steelers quarterback since 2004. Last year he threw for 4,952 yards and 32 touchdowns. He just turned 33 years old, and it appears that he'll be with the Steelers into his late 30s. There was a time when it didn't seem like Roethlisberger would be a lifetime Steeler, but the team has ensured he'll be around for many more years.


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News sport : Buffalo Bills' interesting offseason continues with Percy Harvin signing

The AFC East is going to be the most interesting division in football next year, and it might not be close.


Everyone is loading up to make a run at the New England Patriots, the defending champs. Another big name was added to the mix, as receiver Percy Harvin was signed by the Buffalo Bills. He signed a one-year deal, according to ESPN's Adam Schefter.


Harvin has had an odd career. He missed almost all of the 2013 season with the Seattle Seahawks, after being added in a massive trade with the Minnesota Vikings, but was one of the Seahawks' best players in their Super Bowl win. Then he was suddenly traded to the New York Jets last season, with stories of altercations with teammates being reported. The Jets, who obviously traded for Harvin with no real vision of why they were trading for him, cut him. Now he goes to the Bills who are coached by Rex Ryan, the Jets' coach last year. Apparently Ryan saw something he liked.


Harvin comes with some baggage and injury history as well, but he's an extremely quick player who can line up in the backfield, catch passes out of the slot and return kicks. The Bills will have many different ways in which they can use him.


The Bills have also added running back LeSean McCoy and re-signed defensive end Jerry Hughes, one of the top names in this year's free-agent class. They traded for quarterback Matt Cassel, too. The Patriots are still the king of the division, but the other teams are hoping there's an opportunity to catch them this season. They're all loading up.


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Barca president to face tax evasion charges

A Spanish judge has decided to send Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu, his predecessor Sandro Rosell and the club to trial over alleged tax fraud in the signing of Brazil forward Neymar.


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Madrid - A Spanish judge has decided to send Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu, his predecessor Sandro Rosell and the club to trial over alleged tax fraud in the signing of Brazil forward Neymar.


Bartomeu, Rosell and club are accused of defrauding the tax authorities of around 13 million euros ($13.8 million) between 2011 and 2014 by trying to hide the real cost of the deal.


Rosell initially said Neymar had cost 57.1 million euros but the club later admitted a host of additional contracts with the player and his father had pushed the value of the transfer closer to 100 million.


Judge Pablo Ruz decided there was enough evidence to proceed with a trial on charges of tax fraud and maladministration, court documents published on Friday showed.


Barca announced they would appeal the decision and said they believed the evidence did not show a crime had been committed.


In a statement on their website (www.fcbarcelona.es), the club added that their members, who are due to vote for a new president at the end of the season, should remain calm.


Bartomeu, a vice president under Rosell who was involved in negotiating the Neymar transfer and is standing for reelection, said at a court appearance last month that neither he nor the club and its officials had intentionally committed tax fraud.


Barca coach Luis Enrique told a post-training news conference on Friday he and his squad were focusing on playing football.


The La Liga leaders, who play at Eibar on Saturday, have a chance of repeating their historic 2009 treble of Spanish league and Cup and Champions League this season.


They have a one-point advantage over second-placed Real Madrid in La Liga, take a 2-1 lead into Wednesday's Champions League last 16, second leg at home to Manchester City and are through to the King's Cup final.


“What we have control over are the training sessions, everything else is in the hands of the justice system,” Luis Enrique said when asked about the tax fraud trial.


“We will see what happens when there is a final decision on the matter,” he added.


“Unfortunately we are used to controversy, rumours and this sort of news but we have to carry on with our job.” – Reuters






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Spurs get green light for stadium

Tottenham Hotspur have finally been given the go-ahead to build their new stadium after a small local firm admitted defeat in its objections.


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Tottenham Hotspur have finally been given the go-ahead to build their new stadium after a small local firm admitted defeat in its objections to the 400 million pounds ($589.36 million) scheme.


The Archway Sheet Metal Works had a legal challenge to a compulsory purchase order rejected last month but could have appealed.


The firm has now decided not to do so, it announced on Friday, adding in a statement: “We have always been willing to negotiate with the club on a reasonable and proper basis.


“We will continue to try to achieve a proper settlement by agreement if that is possible.”


Spurs have relocated more than 70 local businesses from the site, which is adjacent to the White Hart Lane home they have occupied since 1899.


By moving for what is expected to be the 2018-19 season, they will increase their capacity from barely 36,000 to 56,250.


Before then Tottenham expect to move elsewhere for at least one season, possibly alternating between Wembley and sharing with League One (third tier) club Milton Keynes Dons.


The club also applied several years ago to move permanently to the Olympic Stadium but lost out to London rivals West Ham United. – Reuters






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City manager remains defiant

Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini has committed himself to the club despite speculation that failure to land a trophy this season could see the Chilean packing his bags.


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London - Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini has committed himself to the club despite speculation that failure to land a trophy this season could see the Chilean packing his bags.


The champions are five points behind Chelsea in the Premier League and face a daunting task in Barcelona next week where they will try to overturn a 2-1 first-leg deficit in the Champions League last 16.


Both domestic cups also passed them by, but 61-year-old Pellegrini batted away questions about his future on Friday.


“My future is very easy,” he told a news conference. “I have a contract here until June 2016 and I will finish my contract here and if I can extend my contract, I will extend my contract.


“When I sign a contract, I always try to finish my contract in the amount of years I sign at the beginning.


“If I am not happy, maybe you try to finish your contract before. Here I am very happy.”


City's players return to the pursuit of a second consecutive title at struggling Burnley on Saturday having enjoyed the rare luxury of a two-week break.


A shock FA Cup exit at the hands of second tier Middlesbrough meant they were not in action last weekend, allowing Pellegrini's squad a welcome breather before they set their sights on a crucial period that could define their season.


After visiting Burnley, City go to Barcelona, then host West Bromwich Albion before tricky away games at Crystal Palace and Manchester United.


Should they get through those fixtures still only five points behind leaders Chelsea they may fancy their chances of overhauling Jose Mourinho's frontrunners who will still have to play Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool.


“The break was very useful,” Pellegrini said.


“The win against Leicester was important, it was a good break for the players and we worked well and we are going to have now two weeks without a day off thinking about the three games we must play.”


During City's inactivity, Chelsea suffered a Champions League exit at the hands of Paris St Germain, but Pellegrini said that would have no bearing on the title race.


“The pressure is the same whether you are still in the Champions League or not,” he said.


While Burnley look destined for relegation they drew 2-2 in December and City midfielder Frank Lampard said the Lancashire club will pose a threat at Turf Moor.


“They're a very strong unit - they showed that earlier in the season when they came from 2-0 down to earn a draw with us and it won't be for the want of trying if they don't stay up - they've got as good a chance of anyone,” he said. – Reuters






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