Chiefs add to Swallows’ relegation woe

Kaizer Chiefs added to relegation-threatened Moroka Swallows' misery in a 3-0 win at a rain-swept Dobsonville Stadium.


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Johannesburg – Kaizer Chiefs consolidated their lead at the top of the Premier League and added to relegation-threatened Moroka Swallows' misery in a 3-0 win at a rain-swept Dobsonville Stadium on Wednesday night.


The final scoreline was no reflection of the uneasy moments The Amakhosi experienced in a relatively well-matched encounter between the Soweto rivals until the 84th minute – Chiefs in front only from a 22nd minute own goal up to this point.


Chiefs finished the gruelling, tense, but at times disarrayed encounter with a flourish as George Lebese with a masterly lobbed shot in the 85th minute and Bernard Parker with a powerful drive in the 86th minute produced late goals of the highest order.


With defending champions and second-placed Mamelodi Sundowns simultaneously picking up three points at the expense of Chippa United, the situation at the top of the log remains more or less unchanged, with Chiefs remaining in front by eight points, but having played one extra game.


It was the crucial own goal from Swallows defender Larry Cohen midway through the opening half that turned the course of the match.


Cohen was attempting to clear George Lebese's corner instead of leaving the high ball for goalkeeper Greg Etafia deflecting the ball into his own net.


The hapless Cohen made amends during the second period when he cleared balls off his own goalline with goalkeeper Etafia already well-beaten.


Swallows, now with Patrick Mabedi as caretaker coach in place of the deposed Fani Madida only 24 hours before the kickoff, looked like a team without a dominant leader lacking in co-ordinated direction.


Swallows understandably threw players forward in the second half in order to try and neutralise the one-goal lead that Chiefs took into the interval, there was little collective effort in piercing the wall-organised Chiefs' defence.


From being only one goal ahead after 85 minutes, Chiefs might well have added to their three-goal tally at the death as The Birds' spirit sagged even further.


A shot from Parker thudded against the post and point-blank, fearless saves by Etafia thwarted Parker, Lebese and Siphiwe Tshabalala in turn.


Swallows launched an equal number of forays from mid-field, but they appeared to lose their way when confronted by a well-organised, iron curtain Chiefs' defence that never lost its shape or composure. – Sapa






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City making progress - Pellegrini

Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini said his side are making progress despite being handed a masterclass in Champions League football by Barcelona for the second season in a row.


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Barcelona - Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini said his side are making progress despite being handed a masterclass in Champions League football by Barcelona for the second season in a row.


The City boss tried to remain upbeat after his expensively-assembled squad fell to a 1-0 defeat on the night and 3-1 aggregate reverse that left them facing up to another European disappointment.


City's owners have spent more than 300 million pounds ($448.35 million) since the start of the 2011-12 season in an effort to compete with the continent's elite, but they were torn apart in the Nou Camp.


While they could have snatched a draw had Sergio Aguero scored a late penalty after Ivan Rakitic's first-half opener, it would have given a misleading impression of a game in which they were clearly second best.


“I wouldn't say it was a failure but a disappointment,” Pellegrini told a news conference.


“We are improving. We have reached the last 16 for the last two years and we have been unfortunate to have faced Barcelona both times.


“If we had scored the penalty then it would have given a different story to the game but Barca were a better team than us.


“We now have nine games to play in the Premier League and we will try to be champions.”


The pressure is growing on Pellegrini with the team also stumbling in the Premier League, where they trail leaders Chelsea by six points, having lost two of their last three matches.


“About my position it is not the time to talk about it and we will discuss the situation of the team at the end of the season,” Pellegrini added.


“The thing is that if we had played against another team then maybe we would have gone through.”


Pellegrini admitted that they were overrun in defence but said that City had had to attack to overturn the first-leg defeat.


“We had to score two goals in order to go through and so we had to take risks,” said Pellegrini.


“Still we looked to keep players back in defence because we knew about the threat that Barca also have in attack.” – Reuters






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Sundowns outclass Chippa

Mamelodi Sundowns comfortably beat Chippa United 3-0 in a Premiership clash at Loftus Versfeld.


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Pretoria – Mamelodi Sundowns comfortably beat Chippa United 3-0 in a Premiership clash at Loftus Versfeld.


The match had a bit of everything after scoring through an own goal, penalty and from open play.


Mbhuyiselo Sambu scored an own goal in the 4th minute and Teko Modise converted a penalty in the 48 minute. Rodney Ramagalela struck a well-worked team goal for the defending Premiership champions.


It was the worst possible start for Chippa after Sambu directed the ball into his own net after a cross from Sundowns striker Cuthbert Malajila on the flank.


Sundowns midfield ace Modise tested his shooting range from outside the box with a thunderbolt that brushed the outside of the net to the relief of the visitors.


In the early stages of the match, the Brazilians looked like a well-oiled machine with the players combining superbly in the opposition territory.


After an extended period in possession of the ball, left-back Tebogo Langerman delivered a cross into the box that found the off-target header of Alje Schut in the 14th minute.


Sundowns were showing promise of more goals and were piling on the pressure against the retreating opposition.


With Chippa rooted in their half, Sundowns blistering winger Khama Billiat beat Sambu to the ball in a dangerous position but his heavy touch saw the ball roll out of pitch.


Anthony Laffor's tenacious style of play was proving difficult to handle for the Chippa backline. In the 22nd minute the striker dribbled past two opponents but his subsequent shot curled away from the target.


Chippa did not offer much resistance against the defending champions, and would not pose a threat to the defence for the remainder of the half.


Having started the first-half with an early goal, Sundowns were out to replicate their start in the second half.


After mounting an attack on the opposition Siyanda Zwane was fouled by Manti Moholo in the box for the penalty which was converted by Modise.


Chippa midfielder Siyabulela Shai attempted to spur-on his teammates with a sensational run, but he was stopped in his tracks by a Ramahlwe Mphahlele tackle in the 52nd minute.


With the Chilli-Boys lacking impetus when going forward William Twala made a solo-run on the right flank and unleashed a shot that was collected by goalkeeper Denis Onyango.


With the regulation 90 minutes having lapsed substitute striker Ramagalela delivered the final dagger with the third goal.– Sapa






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Pirates battle past Aces

Orlando Pirates stayed in touch with fellow Premiership contenders Kaizer Chiefs and Mamelodi Sundowns, securing victory over Mpumalanga Black Aces.


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Johannesburg – Orlando Pirates stayed in touch with fellow Premiership contenders Kaizer Chiefs and Mamelodi Sundowns, securing a 2-1victory over Mpumalanga Black Aces in wet conditions at Orlando Stadium on Wednesday evening.


“It was not a great performance, if I'm honest,” said Pirates coach Eric Tinkler.


“We looked a little bit cagey, our movement wasn't very good and we looked lethargic during stages of the game.


“We created a few opportunities... and though it was not a great performance overall by our boys, it was a gutsy performance.


“Sometimes you've got to grind out those results even when you're not playing so well. It was vital to get the three points,” he said.


Lehlohonolo Majoro had perhaps the best chances for a dominant Pirates outfit in the first 40 minutes, but he hit the side-netting from close range midway through the opening period and blasted well over the bar shortly after the half-hour mark.


The Buccaneers broke through ahead of the break, however, when Siboniso Gumede was shown a yellow card for holding Thandani Ntshumayelo in the area, and Oupa Manyisa scored from the resultant penalty.


The visitors showed more intent in the second half but wasted multiple opportunities, repeatedly firing high and wide.


Pirates keeper Brighton Mhlongo was untroubled for most of the match, though he did produce a great diving save just after the interval to deny a direct attempt from a free kick.


With less than 20 minutes left, the hosts extended their advantage when Thabo Rakhale netted a curling strike, setting himself up by rounding a defender and burying a superb long-range effort.


Aces were handed a lifeline two minutes later when Thabo Matlaba brought down Tshidiso Tukane, and Tendai Ndoro hit the back of the net from the penalty spot.


They were unable to find the equaliser in the closing stages, however, as the home side pocketed all three points.


While Pirates stretched their unbeaten run to 11 successive league matches, remaining third in the top-flight standings, Aces were entrenched in the bottom half of the table with six matches left in the campaign.


“We couldn't convert our chances and luck was not on our side, but all in all the boys gave their best.


“They played very well, so I've got no complaints, and we'll now go back to the drawing board,” said Aces coach Jacob Sakala. – Sapa






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Barcelona send City packing

Lionel Messi set up Ivan Rakitic to score the winner as Barca beat Man City to reach the Champions League quarters.


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Barcelona - Lionel Messi set up Ivan Rakitic to score the winner as Barcelona beat Manchester City 1-0 on Wednesday to reach the Champions League quarterfinals for a record eighth consecutive season.


Faced with the daunting task of overturning a 2-1 first-leg loss, Manuel Pellegrini's City needed an inspired showing from goalkeeper Joe Hart just to avoid a thrashing as Messi and Neymar ran amok at Camp Nou.


City's only chance of a lifeline came with a penalty in the 78th minute, but Barcelona keeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen saved Sergio Aguero's spot-kick.


Messi passed for Rakitic to score in the 31st-minute of a lopsided first half that saw Neymar and Luis Suarez hit the woodwork for the home side, while a rattled City racked up four bookings to one shot on goal.


City has now lost to Barcelona at this stage of the competition for two years in a row, and is still waiting to make its first appearance in the final eight of Europe's top-tier tournament.


The contest also highlighted the gulf that has opened up between Spanish and English football at the highest level of club football.


With Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid also through, Spain now has three teams in the quarterfinals for a third season in a row. By contrast, after having a quarterfinalist each year from 1997-2012, England has none for a second time in three seasons.


Juventus also advanced on Wednesday after winning 3-0 at Borussia Dortmund and 5-1 on aggregate in the night's other game.


City's sloppy start, with several erred passes, almost cost it dearly.


Bayern Munich coach Pep Guardiola took his seat just in time to see his former team nearly open the scoring when Dani Alves recovered the ball from Vincent Kompany inside City's area. His pass found Neymar, but the Brazilian's shot hit one post and squirmed along the goalline before turning past the other upright.


While City's showed early jitters, Barcelona displayed its usual flair and Messi drew the first of many saves from Hart after a quick interchange with Andres Iniesta.


City quickly found itself in the predicament that the only way it could slow down Messi- who dribbled through at least three City player's legs before halftime- and Neymar was by bringing them down. That meant Fernandinho, Aleksandar Kolarov, and David Silva were all booked for fouling the duo by the half-hour mark, and Samir Nasri would further hamstring his side by kicking Neymar after Rakitic put Barcelona in front.


Barcelona's goal was, fittingly, a choral affair.


Jordi Alba started a counterattack, Neymar used a smart move to lure in right back Bacary Sagna, and Messi drew the deserved attention of three defenders before lobbing a pass over the top to the unmarked Rakitic.


Rakitic used his chest to control Messi's cross before lobbing the ball over Hart and into the far side of the net.


Luis Suarez, scorer of both Barcelona's goals in the first match, was the quiet member of Barcelona's attacking trio until Neymar met his run with a long pass that left him with Hart to beat, only for his chipped shot to bounce off the post one minute before halftime.


City improved with winger Jesus Navas on for Nasri in the second half and pushed some of the action into Barcelona's area.


Navas' incursion in the 65th caused Barcelona to scramble, but a City side that needed two goals to force added time could only cling to Hart.


While counterpart Ter Stegen smothered Aguero's spot kick after Gerard Pique had fouled him, Hart had a superb second half that included denying Messi on three clear scoring chances as well as blocking back a pair of Neymar strikes.


Barcelona will now turn its focus to Sunday's home game against Real Madrid, when the Catalan club will look to protect its one-point lead over its fierce rivals at the top of the Spanish standings.


Sapa-AP






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News sport : Matt Wieters shut down from catching due to elbow tendinitis


(AP Photo)

The Orioles are hoping this minor setback in Matt Wieters' recovery from Tommy John surgery won't keep him out of their starting lineup come opening day.


Wieters, 28, missed most of 2014 after injuring his right elbow and had Tommy John in mid-June. He's been able to DH during spring training but hadn't been cleared for a return behind the plate until Tuesday. He caught six innings in Baltimore's Grapefruit League game and though the initial signs were positive, he felt enough discomfort in his arm on Wednesday to raise some concern. The team consulted with Dr. James Andrews, who recommended that Wieters take some time off. He was supposed to catch again on Thursday.


''The big day for us was coming into today,'' said Orioles manager Buck Showalter. ''He has some tendinitis working there. With all the time we have left, we thought it would be prudent to just try to get ahead of it."


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It's been already been a tough spring for Wieters. He's hitless in 23 at-bats and if he isn't ready to catch by the time the regular season rolls around, he'll likely be placed on the DL, even if he's healthy enough to bat. Caleb Joseph is in line to get the start at catcher if Wieters isn't available.


The Orioles are staying optimistic though. The soreness Wieters is experiencing was expected as he ramps up the intensity and volume of his throwing to game conditions. Until he's ready to give it another go Baltimore will continue to be cautious with their multi-time All-Star catcher. and if that means he missed opening day, so be it.


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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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News sport : Steve Spurrier's troll game is in midseason form

If this is the spring practice version of Steve Spurrier's trolling, we can't wait to see what the South Carolina coach has in store for us during the 2015 regular season.


In an interview with USA Today's Paul Myerberg, Spurrier dropped this gem when discussing his team's 7-6 season.



Of course, Tennessee fans will be quick to point out one of South Carolina's six losses was to the Volunteers. And at South Carolina, too.


Plus, you can also point out how much of a stretch calling South Carolina's 2014 "decent" is. It was a disappointing year for the Gamecocks, who started the year ranked in the top 10. And it even left Spurrier pretty much speechless after that Tennessee loss.


But while Vol fans can counter with that factoid, they also can't dispute the giddiness of the program following the 2014 season. Heck, how can you forget this video? And it was before the demolition of Iowa in the TaxSlayer Bowl.



Only 5.5 more months until football season.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Does Jamal Mashburn hate Christian Laettner? How does Bo Kimble remember Hank Gathers (podcast)


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[Note: this is the latest episode of Yahoo Sports' new Grandstanding podcast, in which Jay Busbee and Kevin Kaduk kick around every topic in sports with the help of notable sports figures. Subscribe to Grandstanding via iTunes right here, or via other podcast feeds right here. Thanks for checking it out!]


They're here! The greatest sporting days of the year! The NCAA tournament is upon us, and today on the podcast we've got some legends of the past to get you fired up for the present.


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We start by talking with Jamal Mashburn (1:55 mark), and we discuss who the former Kentucky star is picking to win the NCAAs (take a guess) and whether his Kentucky teams could match up with the 2015 version. We also ask him about the recent 30 for 30 documentary "I Hate Christian Laettner," and we ask if he too actually hates Laettner (13:47 mark). Finally, we get his perspective on the remainder of this year's Final Four hopefuls outside of those cats from Lexington.


From there, it's off to Bo Kimble, one of the stars of that legendary 1989-1990 Loyola-Marymount team (26:49 mark). This was a squad that could score 100 points in a college-length game like they were tying their shoes, but they suffered unimaginable tragedy when their leader, Hank Gathers, died on the court late in the season of heart failure. Kimble tells us what Hank was really like (39:34 mark), as well as how the team banded together in the wake of his death, how they handled a run-and-shoot offense unlike any other in the game, and how he'd love to take over the coaching reins at Loyola-Marymount.


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After these, we figure you'll be all ready for the NCAA. Size up all the contenders and pretenders with our previous podcast featuring Yahoo Sports' Jeff Eisenberg right here.


[Thanks for listening to the Grandstanding podcast. Hit us up on Twitter (@kevinkaduk and @jaybusbee) Facebook (Kaduk here, Busbee here) or via the hashtag #grandstanding.]


____

Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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News sport : Larry Brown: 'I honestly believe Kentucky would make the NBA playoffs in the East'

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These are the sorts of things that do a disservice to both college and pro basketball. It’s just fine to compare players from different eras within the confines of their particular realm – wondering if Bill Walton could have pulled off a 21-of-22 shooting night in 2015, or just how many home runs Barry Bonds would have hit against 1960s pitching – but modern comparisons between current pro and college athletes seem gauche, tactless, and only designed to draw attention to the voice making the comparisons.


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Unluckily for us, SMU coach Larry Brown has never minded falling on the wrong side of tact, and has never shied from drawing attention to himself.


The former ABA and NBA coach, in making the media rounds prior to his Mustangs’ opening round matchup against UCLA on Thursday, decided to be the latest one to delve into the needless “how would Kentucky do in the NBA?” nonsense:



Nobody needs this.


Coming from an NBA scribe that doesn’t watch nearly as much college basketball as I’d like to, as someone who has seen way more of the New York Knicks than I would like to (both the current 14-win version of the Knicks, and Larry Brown’s miserable 23-win Knick team from 2006), I am more than secure in pointing out that the Eastern Conference is as bad as it has ever been, and that the Kentucky Wildcats are a devastatingly-good college basketball team.


The 2014-15 Kentucky Wildcats would also be a devastatingly-bad NBA basketball team. They’d be absolutely perfect for the Eastern Conference, in fact.


The East is awful. Two teams, those Knicks and the infamous Philadelphia 76ers, are outright tanking the season. Two other teams, the struggling Orlando Magic and Detroit Pistons, are attempting to pick up the pieces left by the salted-crop work of the franchise’s previous general managers. The Brooklyn Nets are helmed by an owner and general manager that love to watch the world (and profits) burn, the Indiana Pacers, Miami Heat and (to a far lesser extent) the Charlotte Hornets have been beset by injury this year, and the Boston Celtics don’t mind taking their time through a long, loooong rebuilding effort.


The three teams that are tied for the seventh, eighth, and ninth spots in the East currently are on pace for 38 wins. Kentucky could finish the season 40-0.


The Wildcats, as John Calipari pointed out just a few games into the team’s perfect regular season, would also be destroyed by any number of Eastern Conference teams. Even by the Knicks and Sixers, two squads made up almost entirely of 10th men.



Kentucky currently features four players who could be drafted in the lottery portion of June’s NBA draft, with seven overall players listed as being likely for selection in most mock drafts. The Wildcats are taller than most NBA teams. The team has won 34 consecutive games by an average of 20.9 points per contest, and by comparison the 72-win Chicago Bulls team of 1995-96 “only” won by an average of 12.3 points per game. This is an incredibly good basketball team whose status is more or less assured even if the squad is knocked off in an upset in the Elite Eight.


Such is the nature of one-and-out setups like the NCAA Tournament. For the same reason that Kentucky could be upended by Notre Dame in a week and a half, the Kentucky Wildcats most certainly could take a game from any number of NBA Eastern or Western Conference lottery teams. Such is the nature of sport, and this is a huge part of the reason many of us who have ignored NCAA Basketball all year will tune into March Madness. NCAAniks who have ignored the NBA all season would do the same if Golden State and Oklahoma City had a one-game opening round playoff series to play this April.


To wit:



"You can't beat them unless Kentucky really helps you, but that's what makes March Madness March Madness," Ole Miss coach Andy Kennedy said. "You don't have to beat them four out of seven. You just have to be the better team for three hours."



What Kentucky couldn’t do is take a seven game series against any NBA team. Or a five or three-game series. And they certainly couldn’t produce the mediocre record needed in order to win 46 percent of games in an 82-game season and make the playoffs out East.


Ignore this year’s NBA rookie class for further proof of evidence, as every rookie’s context in his initial year varies as he deals with disparate roles, franchises, and injury woes. Look at the 2014-15 Minnesota Timberwolves for further proof, though.


This team has won just 21 percent of its games this season, good for last in their conference and just percentage points up on the Knicks overall. The Timberwolves feature the last two top overall picks in the NBA draft, and two other recent lottery picks that have played very well in Shabazz Muhammad (us NBA folks are as surprised as you are) and Zach LaVine. The team ranks last in defensive efficiency this year, and 25th in offense.


They’ve also lost twice to a somewhat older but far less heralded batch of hopeful NBA prospects from Philadelphia by a total of 17 points. The Timberwolves may feature a cadre of All-Stars and perhaps the NBA’s best two-way player in Andrew Wiggins five years from now and no active Sixer outside of Nerlens Noel may be making an NBA impact in 2020, but Philadelphia is older and arguably deeper than Minnesota. As all NBA teams are, in comparison to Kentucky.


As it is when discussing the greats of female sports, why do we have to denigrate both sides in order to make a stupid, basic cable TV-level “point?” Kentucky, despite the amateur impermanence of its future NBA stars, and despite not having yet played in the postseason, might already be a legendary NCAA team. Why is it that bored types like Larry Brown have to now rank them amongst awful-at-worst or forgettable-at-best NBA teams? Why can’t we just let Kentucky be Kentucky?


When will we stop putting microphones in front of Larry Brown?


When he stops talking, one supposes. This might take a while.


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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 : Fresno State WR Delvon Hardaway has a partially torn ACL

Fresno State could be without wide receiver Delvon Hardaway for part of the 2015 season.


Coach Tim DeRuyter said Tuesday that Hardaway has a partially torn ACL.


Unfortunately, we got a little bit of bad news with Delvon having a knee injury," DeRuyter said via the Fresno Bee. "We think he'll be out about six months so it will be that first month of the season that he'll be back. Hopefully, he'll be back to full speed by then, but we fully anticipate he'll be playing ... this season and hopefully it will be early."


Hardaway, a redshirt freshman in 2014, was Fresno State's fourth-leading receiver in 2014 with 23 catches for 279 yards and two touchdowns. Given the departures of Josh Watson and Greg Harper, two of the receivers with more catches and yards than Hardaway in 2014, he figured to play a more prominent role in Fresno State's passing attack.


DeRuyter also said that DE Todd Hunt had a torn ligament in his hand and is expected to be out three or four months. Hunt started all 14 games for Fresno State in 2014.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Warriors-Hawks: Three things to watch for in the rematch between the NBA's best




It's been just under six weeks since the first time the Golden State Warriors and Atlanta Hawks squared off this season in a meeting of the best teams in the Eastern and Western Conferences this season. A matchup that we expected to be an instant classic turned out to be just that, as the two brilliant clubs combined for 230 points in a nip-and-tuck, back-and-forth battle that eventually saw the homestanding Hawks come away with an eight-point victory to overtake the Dubs for the best record in the NBA.


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The Warriors have since regained the lead in the race for home-court advantage throughout the postseason, entering Wednesday's action holding a 53-13 record that puts them a whopping half-game up on Mike Budenholzer's 53-14 Hawks. Most of the stuff that we highlighted back in February remains true as the two teams prepare to reacquaint themselves with one another on Wednesday, with the action now shifting to the Bay Area for a late-night contest that — thankfully, this time — will be nationally televised on ESPN.


Golden State and Atlanta are still two of the only four teams (along with the Portland Trail Blazers and San Antonio Spurs) to rank in the top 10 in the NBA in both points scored per possession and points allowed per possession; the Warriors are now No. 1 in both categories, while the Hawks rank sixth in offensive efficiency and fourth in defensive efficiency. They're still right up their at or near the top of the league in team field-goal percentage, 3-point percentage, Effective Field Goal and True Shooting percentage, and opponents' field-goal percentage. These are two deep, gifted, disciplined, balanced and well-coached squads; that much has not changed over the last month and a half.


Some circumstances, however, have shifted, and there are some different keys worth considering. Here are three things worth keeping an eye on as we hunker down for a rematch that we can only hope will live up to its predecessor:


Justin Holiday has some pretty big shoes to fill stepping in for Klay Thompson. (Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports) 1. Understudies under the microscope. In the first meeting, Klay Thompson led all scorers with 29 points on 11-for-20 shooting, while Kyle Korver continued his season-long sniping by drilling five of nine 3-pointers en route to 17 points. This time, though, both star shooting guards will be sidelined, with Korver working his way back from a broken nose suffered during the Hawks' Sunday win over the Los Angeles Lakers and Thompson out at least a week after spraining his right ankle during the Warriors' Monday win over ... the Lakers. (Hey, c'mon, Lakers. Quit injuring fun shooters.)


While the Warriors and Hawks each have enough firepower to withstand the loss of a premier shooter, both teams still certainly feel the absence of their high-volume long-distance bombers.


Golden State's offense experiences a significant drop-off without Thompson available to help distort defenses. With Klay in the mix, Golden State roasts the opposition to the tune of 112.5 points per 100 possessions, according to NBA.com's stat tool, head and shoulders above even their league-leading offensive efficiency mark. Without him, they're averaging 102.5 points-per-100, which would rank 17th among the 30 NBA teams over the course of the full season, just below the middle-of-the-pack Utah Jazz and Washington Wizards.


The Hawks, too, sputter without their sharpshooting two-guard, but the decline's even more pronounced. Atlanta averages 110.9 points-per-100 with Korver on the floor, comfortably above Golden State's No. 1 full-season mark, and just 97.5 points-per-100 when he's on the pine, which would make them the league's second-most feckless O, ahead of only the dismal Philadelphia 76ers.


Golden State coach Steve Kerr said Tuesday he was leaning toward starting Justin Holiday in Thompson's stead against the Hawks. There's not exactly a whole lot of past performance to analyze here, as Holiday has shared the floor with the Warriors' other four starters for all of two minutes over the space of two games thus far this season. But the long-armed, quick-footed, 6-foot-6 Holiday has shown the capacity to fill in gaps pretty nicely thus far this season; in a larger (if still not exactly significant) sample size, Warriors lineups featuring the Stephen Curry-Holiday pairing have outscored opponents by 41 total points in 111 minutes.


In his lone start of the year — during last Friday's loss to the Denver Nuggets, in which Kerr elected to rest Curry, Thompson, Andre Iguodala and Andrew Bogut, earning the Warriors head coach some sternly worded emails — the 25-year-old swingman and brother of New Orleans Pelicans point guard Jrue Holiday scored a team-high 23 points on 9-for-16 shooting, including a 5-for-7 mark from 3-point land. You wouldn't necessarily wager on Holiday pulling off such a sound Thompson impression from long distance again Wednesday night, but with the rest of the Warriors' big guns (namely Curry) likely to be back in the fold and drawing Atlanta's defensive attention, you'd expect him to get some opportunities to step into lightly contested shots and make the Hawks pay.


Kent Bazemore could be a wild card on Wednesday. (Ed Szczepanski-USA TODAY Sports) On Atlanta's side, defensive-minded backup Kent Bazemore is expected to get the start against the team with which he broke into the league and our collective consciousness as a bench-celebrating legend.


The 6-foot-5 guard has seen his accuracy slip when called on to open games this season — he's shooting 44.8 percent from the floor and 42.7 percent from 3-point land in 54 appearances off the bench, compared to just 40.4 percent from the field and 27.3 percent beyond the arc in his six starts — and he missed six of eight triple tries during Monday's win over the Sacramento Kings. But his ability to goose the Hawks' transition game by running out on the break, his defensive activity at multiple positions — you'd expect him to see plenty of former teammate Curry, but he'll check everything up to threes and maybe even small-ball fours for stretches — and his ability to hit open shots from the corners, like the one that helped put away the Kings with just over a minute left on Monday, could make him a wild card on Wednesday. If he can replicate his contributions from the first meeting between these two clubs this season — 11 points on 4-for-6 shooting, a perfect 3-for-3 from deep, five rebounds, an assist and a block to go with customarily tough defense in 26 1/2 minutes — he could help Atlanta deal the Warriors just their third home loss of the season.


2. Second-unit strength. While Curry and Thompson combined to hang 55 points on the Atlanta defense last month, the Hawks carried the day thanks in large part to more balanced offensive contributions, with seven players scoring in double-figures in the win. That included big outings from reserves Bazemore, Mike Scott (17 points on 5-for-7 shooting in 17 minutes) and Dennis Schröder (nine points, seven assists, no turnovers in 17 1/2 minutes).


"I think we share the ball more than they do," Schröder said after the game. "I think that's why we won the game tonight."


But with Bazemore likely to join the starting lineup and Scott sidelined by a broken toe, Atlanta will need contributions from other sources. Can point guard Shelvin Mack — averaging 7.3 points and 1.5 assists in 15.3 minutes per game while shooting 44.1 percent from 3-point land over his last 10 games — continue his strong play since returning to the rotation after the All-Star break?


On the other side, the Warriors' reserves — who are pitching in 35.3 points per game as a unit, 11th best in the NBA — need a stronger outing in the friendly confines of Oracle Arena, particularly from offensive facilitators like Iguodala (3-for-8 in the February loss, but in the midst of a strong run of form over his last 13 games), Leandro Barbosa (just 3-for-10 from the field in the first meeting, shooting just 37.5 percent since the All-Star break) and big man Marreese Speights (3-for-8 in February, coming off a DNP against the Lakers following his one-game suspension for pleading no contest to an August 2014 DUI charge). If the Warriors can get more offensive punch from the second unit, it'll help ease the pain of losing Thompson, take the creative burden off Curry, and perhaps short-circuit Atlanta's defensive discipline enough to turn the tables.


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Can Jeff Teague and company take away Stephen Curry's room to operate? (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) 3. Run 'em off the line. Heading into the first meeting, I expected a Hawks team that allowed more 3-point attempts than any other team in the league to struggle with containing a Warriors attack that led the league in 3-point percentage. But while the Splash Brothers did their thing — a combined 8-for-17 from downtown — the Warriors finished with a 12-for-33 mark from deep, while Atlanta scorched the nets to the tune of a 15-for-27 finish from beyond the arc.


With Korver and Scott, who combined for eight of those 15 triples, sidelined, can Atlanta match the Warriors' firepower? Conversely, with Thompson sidelined, will Curry — who struggled at times with the Hawks' aggressive closeouts in the first game — find enough daylight to be able to keep the Warriors' offense on-time and on-target against an Atlanta defense that recently trapped and stifled the high-octane Cleveland Cavaliers into disarray?


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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 : NCAA drops immediate eligibility hardship waiver for transfers

NCAA athletes who transfer will no longer be able to apply for a hardship waiver to become immediately eligible at a new school.


The NCAA ratified an amendment this week allowing transfers a possible sixth-year of eligibility. The extra year replaces the ability for a recruit to play immediately at his or her new school if granted a waiver.


From July 2012-June 2013, the NCAA approved 127 of 236 hardship waiver applications. The amendment applies to athletes not eligible to use a transfer exception and players transferring from one FBS school to another are not eligible to receive a transfer exception.


Under the new scenario, a player who redshirted as a freshman and transferred after his redshirt sophomore season could be eligible to play two years at his new school after sitting out a season.


According to the NCAA's new guidelines, a school does not have to immediately file an eligibility extension request upon receiving notice of an incoming transfer. Athletes already enrolled at their new universities for the 2015-2016 season aren't able to request immediate eligibility under the old system.


Last April, NCAA president Mark Emmert talked about the sanctioning body's desire to reformulate the rule.


The most prominent hardship waiver case before the 2014 season was Michigan's request to have USC running back Ty Isaac immediately eligible after his transfer. The NCAA denied the waiver request for Isaac, and he'll be eligible to play in 2015.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Chris Borland's family knew of his retirement plans before 2014 season




Long before San Francisco 49ers linebacker Chris Borland publicly revealed his retirement from the NFL after just one season, his family was aware that his professional football career could be a short one.

In fact, Borland told his parents following the 49ers final preseason game on Aug. 28 that he was leaning toward retiring after the 2014 season. Still, he still planned on making an impact on the field – even if it was only for one season.


“He passed a note to his mom and I after the last preseason game, thinking this would be his last year,” Jeff Borland, Chris’ father, told the San Jose Mercury News. “At the same time, and this is very important, he also expressed he planned to go all out and not hold back whatsoever. He set the loftiest of goals, and he maybe came within an ankle injury of achieving them.”


Jeff Borland said even though he knew he would only play a year, Chris still wanted to prove that he could perform at the highest level.


“We kept it to ourselves. It wasn’t a farewell tour. It was, ‘Let’s go see what we can do and see if we can do it at this level.” Jeff Borland said. “The 49ers gave him a chance. An injury (to Patrick Willis) gave him an opportunity, and he got to prove to himself, if not others, he’s not to short, not too slow and whether his arms are not long enough.”


He certainly did prove himself, too. After replacing the injured Willis (who also retired last week) in the starting lineup, Borland quickly established himself as a playmaker at middle linebacker and ended up leading the team in tackles.


Even after that success, Borland decided the risk associated with playing football was just too much.


“For the team and organization and the sport and his teammates, he gave it everything he had,” Jeff Borland said. “He didn’t hold back. When the season was over, he revisited this thought and didn’t see any reason to change his decision.”


Chris told ESPN’s Outside the Lines that he researched the long-term effects of head injuries and brain trauma and didn’t want to face that possibility down the line.


"I just thought to myself, 'What am I doing?'" Borland said. "Is this how I'm going to live my adult life, banging my head, especially with what I've learned and knew about the dangers?"


Jeff said the family supported Chris’ decision “100 percent” and that he is already “looking for work.”


“He’s got to get on with his life,” Jeff said.


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News sport : Celebrating the 20-year anniversary of Michael Jordan's return to the NBA

It does feel like it has been 20 years since Michael Jordan returned to basketball. It doesn’t feel like it was just yesterday.


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It feels like it has been that long since Michael Jordan was enigmatic, a bit of a surprise, and unpredictable. It does feel like ages since Jordan seemed fallible, with no excuses to lean on. The various permutations of Jordan’s varied careers since then – dominant NBA champion, doting househusband, iffy NBA executive, aged and weary NBA player, NBA outcast, failed NBA executive, owner of a mediocre and then miserable and then middling once again NBA team – make it so Michael Jordan’s first return to the Chicago Bulls feels ever so long ago.


On March 18, 1995, a year and a half following his retirement from basketball and some 21 months following his last NBA game, Jordan’s representatives issued a brief statement:



(Courtesy David Falk.)

The deducement that followed wasn’t difficult. MJ was a few weeks removed from walking out of Chicago White Sox spring training camp in the wake of the Major League Baseball players’ strike, and he had been practicing with the Chicago Bulls at the team’s suburban practice facility for most of March. The assembled media was not allowed to watch his work with the Bulls, a team he was still under contract to, but they could scamper after Jordan as his various Corvettes left the facility following the scrimmages. Left without answers to support their guesswork, media could only trudge back inside to the practice court to be greeted by a series of shrugged shoulders from Jordan’s would-be teammates – most of whom had never been a teammate of Jordan’s during his initial 1984-1993 run with the Bulls.


That run ended with three championships, the culmination of a wearying rise to become the lead player in the NBA’s first three-peat champion since the mid-1960s. Jordan and the Bulls had battled and lost time and time again to the Eastern Conference’s old guard – the underrated Bucks, the legendary Celtics, the much-loathed but damn-good Detroit Pistons – working through three coaches prior to Phil Jackson’s hire in 1989.


Jackson’s ascension meant that Jordan would have to adhere to the triangle offense; a stark contrast in style from his final weeks spent with former coach Doug Collins, who made Jordan a point guard late in 1988-89 in order to ensure that MJ’s imprint (and the resultant statistical glory) was left on every possession. Jackson’s Bulls fell yet again to the Pistons in 1990, but what followed were three long, grueling but glorious years of championship play. A turn spent on the 1992 Team USA Olympic team only added to the workload.


Rumors about Jordan’s retirement were already in place when the Bulls downed the Phoenix Suns to take the 1993 title, and the unending reports about Jordan’s staggering gambling losses also added to the fatigue. Jordan’s father James Jordan was murdered in July of that summer, a shocking development that unsurprisingly sent Michael reeling.


Later that fall the typically-cogent Phil Jackson failed to immediately come up with a substantive answer after Jordan asked his coach what he felt his player had left to accomplish with the Bulls. That brief pause from Jackson, after Jordan’s query, was enough to steel MJ’s decision. He was through with the NBA.


The next year and a half would be spent playing his way through a walking tribute to his father.


Jordan spent the winter of 1993-94 adapting to the baseball batting stance of the famed Charley Lau, whose pupil Walt Hriniak worked as Chicago White Sox hitting coach at the time. Jerry Reinsdorf owns both the Bulls and White Sox, and when Jordan asked Reinsdorf for a shot with the Sox, there was no hesitation to bring the 6-6 curio on board.


Infamously, Jordan struggled after being designated to the Double-A Birmingham Barons. A Sports Illustrated cover mocked Jordan initial turn as a right fielder, as several crusted baseball veterans criticized both Jordan and the White Sox for potentially taking a Double-A roster spot away from a potential prospect. Forgetting for a second that Major League Baseball was just five decades removed from denying roster spots to any player that shared Michael Jordan’s particular racial heritage.


What’s often lost amongst the mockery is the fact that Jordan, after barely touching a baseball bat for 13 years, managed to hit at the Mendoza Line for a pro team in a sport that relies on skill and timing as much as it does athletic gifts and hard training. That, at age 31, he was able to hit .252 working mostly against rising prospects in the Arizona Fall League later in 1994 was even more impressive.


That he endured the slings and arrows in order to pay tribute to his father, who had always envisioned him a baseball player, is telling.


The Bulls, in Jordan’s absence, were no longer considered championship contenders. Chicago games were still all over the national television lineup, and two Bulls (with Scottie Pippen winning the MVP, and Horace Grant being voted in as a reserve) were sent by popular vote to start the 1994 All-Star Game, but the team was considered second-tier until it finished 1993-94 with 55 wins – just two fewer than Jordan’s championship Bulls managed the year before.


Rallying around defense and the triangle offense, the Bulls eventually fell to the New York Knicks in a controversial and closely contested second round series. Trade rumors surrounding the soon-to-be 29-year old Pippen abounded the following offseason, as several of Jordan’s old teammates either chased free agent money to other teams, or retired from the game. By the time Jordan started practicing with the 1994-95 Bulls, only four former teammates – Pippen, B.J. Armstrong, Will Perdue, and Pete Myers (but just barely) – remained. Chicago was hovering around the .500 mark at the time.



It’s not apocryphal to suggest that Jordan’s practice presence put a little spark into Chicago’s game. The Bulls struggled to score at times, but they remained a top-flight defensive outfit, and had won six of seven games minus-MJ during Jordan’s practice run, all prior to what was decided would be his first contest back – a nationally televised showing against the Indiana Pacers, pitched in Indianapolis, during the height of March Madness.


Jordan would be given the start over Myers, who had ably served as a defensive bulwark in Jordan’s replacement for a season and a half, and he would continue his baseball tradition of wearing No. 45, seemingly in acknowledgment of a new chapter in his life.


Working against a championship contender from Indiana, Jordan struggled in his first game back:



Outside of his 7-28 shooting mark, Jordan’s 18 points, six rebounds, six assists and three steals were solid enough; but the mark of demarcation between Jordan’s Bulls and the Bulls team that had previously won six of seven was telling. Chicago overcame an 18-point deficit to force overtime mostly with Jordan either on the bench or off the ball. Indiana eventually prevailed 103-96.


Michael’s less-touted second game, a WGN-televised affair against a Celtics team trying to make the final playoff seed in the East, was better. Working within the familiar confines of the Boston Garden, MJ made more than half his shots on his way toward 27 points as the Bulls rolled in a blowout:



Faced with another title contender, a national TV setting, and Jordan’s first night spent in Chicago’s new United Center, the Bulls fell to the Orlando Magic in his third contest back. Jordan hit less than a third of his attempts as the Bulls struggled to keep up with a balanced Magic attack that featured former Bull Horace Grant hitting 7-11 shots from the field.


The next night went a little nicer. Following a one-on-one rejection of what could have been a game-clinching jumper by Steve Smith, Jordan responded with this:



Three nights later, back in Madison Square Garden and again on national TV (counting the WGN telecasts, each of Jordan’s comeback games had been nationally televised at this point), Michael pulled off the famous “double-nickel” against the beloved New York Knickerbockers:



Chicago ended up winning 12 of 14 contests following the Orlando loss. The team finished with a 47-35 record and a seeming batch of working knowledge of just how to work with Michael Jordan, Basketball Player. The Bulls frontcourt defensive fears were seemingly assuaged after it stole home court advantage and topped a burly Charlotte Hornets squad in the first round by a 3-1 mark, and though the dreaded Orlando Magic waited in the second round after sweeping Boston, to many this still appeared to be the same bunch of Magic youngsters that had been made to look foolish by a veteran Pacer squad in the postseason prior.


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The Bulls’ depth, Jordan-less offense, and defense created what seemed to be a safe 91-90 lead in Orlando late in Game 1, as another home court thievery seemed in order. Jordan was asked to ice the game, and he responded with this:



Embarrassed at the literal hand of Magic guard Nick Anderson, who grew up in Chicago idolizing Jordan, MJ famously reverted back to No. 23 against the wishes of the NBA’s marketing department (the league would go on to fine Jordan, as players are not allowed to switch jersey numbers midseason, much less mid-playoff series), and managed a sterling 38-point (on 17-30 shooting), seven-rebound, four steal and four-block performance. He had as many turnovers (two) in 43 minutes as he had managed in the final 18.1 seconds of Game 1.



The Bulls had home court advantage over the NBA’s Next Great Thing, and they had their old Michael Jordan back. What they didn’t have was an identity.


When Jordan first discussed returning with Chicago coach Phil Jackson prior to his return, he wondered if a return starting in the playoffs would best suit the needs of player, coach, and team. Jordan was worried about the loss of muscle memory he’d suffered during his baseball turn, and his personal training staff worried about the propensity to injury that a heavier Jordan (who had bulked up his upper-body in anticipation of 90 mile per hour fastballs) would submit himself to. Wouldn’t a month and a half of training be better than time spent traveling and playing actual contests?


With 27 games to go in the season, Jackson countered that Jordan would need 25 games to acclimate himself. MJ balked, and Jackson countered with 20. Jordan asked about 10 before eventually returning with 17 contests to go. Though Jordan and the Bulls would win 13 of those games and take the first four of six postseason contests, Jackson could see that the whole affair was a pound-foolish endeavor.


From his 1995 book, ‘Sacred Hoops,’ Jackson documented the distance that carried over from a star-struck cast of Bulls watching Jordan from afar in practice:



“Once Michael official joined the team and started playing in games, the situation didn’t improve. Some of the players were so bedazzled by his moves they’d unconsciously step back and wait to see what he was going to do next. And Michael was so absorbed in his struggle to prove himself that he still had the touch, he often made uncharacteristic misjudgments. To make matters worse, his teammates were reluctant to make demands on him. In one game, Michael missed Steve Kerr, who was wide open in the corner, and drove to the hoop, only to get clobbered by three defenders. Kerr was the best three-point shooter in the league last year. When Michael went to the free throw line, I asked Steve to inform Michael that he was open, and Steve looked at me and shrugged his shoulders. There was no way he was going to tell the great Michael Jordan how to play the game.”



Jordan wasn’t selfish, he wasn’t routinely trying to choose his own shot over a pass, and most of his turnovers were the result of poor communication as he attempted to feed teammates both familiar and unfamiliar. Teams have a hard enough time trying to implement pedestrian starters to new teams at the mid-February trade deadline. Jordan, instead, was pushed into service on March 19; and his 1994-95 usage rate would have led the NBA that season had he played enough games.


It was akin to this year’s Bulls team, very good but not great, acquiring Russell Westbrook to replace Derrick Rose for the year on March 19. Except for the fact that the 1994-95 version of Michael Jordan wasn’t as good as Russell Westbrook is currently. Mainly because Jordan never performed in the “1994” part of “1994-95.”


Chicago’s fitful attempts to balance both sides offensively proved unsustainable. Jackson and the team’s coaching staff also chose to double-team Magic center Shaquille O’Neal and hound the Orlando’s three-point shooters in an attempt to make former Bull Horace Grant beat the team with long two-point shots. Former Bull Horace Grant did eventually go on to beat the team with long two-point shots, as the Bulls fell to Orlando in six games.


From there, the glory returned. Chicago would lose B.J. Armstrong to the expansion draft, build Ron Harper back into shape, turn Will Perdue into Dennis Rodman, and swap out five other role players (including Pete Myers), and win 72 of 82 regular season games the next season. Jordan’s angry revenge tour would include a sweep of the Magic, a title won on Father’s Day, and two more NBA titles to come before he retired again in early 1999.


Jordan would, of course, return to the NBA as at first a general manager and then active, aging player with the Washington Wizards. Failing to make the playoffs in two seasons with the team, Jordan was let go by late Wizards owner Abe Pollin as both player and executive in 2003. After licking his wounds for three years, MJ then assumed GM duties of the then-Charlotte Bobcats, before moving on to own the team now known, once again, as the Charlotte Hornets. Divorced and re-married in the years since, Jordan seems content in his current role.


And that announcement feels like it was made so, so many eras ago:



Michael Jordan was always going to return to basketball. If he hadn’t retired following the withering 1992-93 season, he would have certainly retired the 1993-94 season; and he may have needed even longer to recover from his whirlwind existence as an NBA legend prior to the inevitable return.


The unpredictability that permeated his 27-game, two month stint between “I’m back” and the crushing Game 6 loss later evolved into the most predictable of storylines: Jordan worked on his game, he worked on his body, and he developed a rapport with an evolving group of teammates that had to learn how to treat Jordan as a leader, as opposed to a living legend.


And Jordan, finally back on a basketball court, had to re-learn how to be both.


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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 : Fantasy Baseball Rankings: First Base

More rankings: Top 250 | 1B | 2B | 3B | SS | C | OF | SP | RP


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