News sport : Kansas fans still lamenting 2010 NCAA loss to Missouri Valley foe


Kansas will finally play Wichita State on Sunday in a game many in the state, mostly Wichita State fans, have been wanting to see for years.


You can't blame Kansas fans for not being too excited to see another Missouri Valley Conference opponent in the bracket after what happened last time they encountered a team from that league in the tournament. In 2010, The Jayhawks faced Northern Iowa in the Round of 32 and Panthers' guard Ali Farokhmanesh hit one of the more famous shots in tournament history to provide the cushion his team needed to pull off the upset.


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The Omaha World-Herald brilliantly used Farokhmanesh to remind Kansas fans of their nightmare in a story and video published Friday. Farokhmanesh played reporter interviewing Kansas fans at first and second-round games at the CenturyLink Center.


Farokhmanesh asks Jayhawks fans for their favorite NCAA tournament memories and then their worst, and his name came up often, though no one seemed to recognize him, including a former classmate. Farokhmanesh is now a graduate assistant coach on Tim Miles staff at Nebraska.


(Thanks for the video Omaha World-Herald)



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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 : Chuck Bednarik, namesake of the Bednarik Award, dead at 89

FILE - This undated photo shows Chuck Bednarik, of the Philadelphia Eagles. Bednarik, a Pro Football Hall of Famer and one of the last great two-way NFL players, has died. He was 89. (AP Photo) Penn's legendary linebacker and College Football Hall of Famer Chuck Bednarik passed away early Saturday morning. He was 89.


Bednarik, who is the namesake for the award given to the top defensive player in the country, played both linebacker and center for the Penn Quakers. He was a three-time All-American and was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1969.


Bednarik won the Maxwell Award, which honors the nation’s top player, in 1948 and finished third in Heisman voting that same year. The Maxwell Football Club, which issues the Maxwell Award, founded the Chuck Bednarik Award in 1995.


Bednarik was the first overall pick by the Philadelphia Eagles in 1949. Known as “Concrete Charlie” because he sold concrete to supplement his income, Bednarik played linebacker and center for the Eagles until 1962.


He was lauded for his ability to play all 60 minutes in a game and criticized modern players for not having the drive to do the same. Bednarik missed only three games in his 14-year NFL career. Bednarik was the last NFL starter to play regularly on both offense and defense until Deion Sanders did it for the Dallas Cowboys in 1996.



Prior to his time at Penn, Bednarik flew 30 combat missions over Germany as a gunner during World War II.


Bednarik is survived by his wife, Emma, and five daughters — Charlene Thomas, Donna Davis, Carol Safarowic, Pam McWilliams, and Jackie Chelius, as well as 10 grandchildren and a great-grandchild.


Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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News sport : Saturday lookahead: Four storylines to watch

Thursday was one of the most chaotic and fun days in NCAA tournament history. The only suprise Friday was that there were no surprises. What does Saturday have in store for us? Here's a primer to get you ready for the opening day of the round of 32


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1. Does Cincinnati have any chance of upsetting Kentucky? Scroll down the list of attributes a team needs to challenge Kentucky, and you'll soon discover that Cincinnati doesn't have nearly enough. Three-point shooting is a must against a long, athletic Kentucky team rife with shot blockers to protect the paint, but the Bearcats are 290th nationally in 3-pointers made and do most of their scoring at the rim. Cincinnati is also a below average defensive rebounding team, which should mean lots of second-chance opportunities for a Kentucky team that excels on the offensive glass. Stout defense could enable the Bearcats to keep the game competitive for a while, but this is not an offense built to solve Kentucky's formidable defense. They play at too slow a tempo to score before the Wildcats are set, they don't have a single scorer averaging more than 9.9 points per game and only Troy Caupain is shooting better than 34.2 percent from behind the arc.


2. Will either No. 14 seed make the Sweet 16? Midnight may strike for both remaining NCAA tournament Cinderellas on Saturday, but UAB probably has a better chance of making the Sweet 16 than Georgia State does. The Blazers are a totally different team than the one round of 32 opponent UCLA beat by 12 on Thanksgiving weekend at the Battle 4 Atlantis. Coach Jerod Haase needed time to get one of the nation's youngest rosters to jell after losing five of his six leading scorers from last year's 18-win team. UAB finished fourth in Conference USA, but the Blazers stormed through the league tournament and toppled third-seeded Iowa State on Thursday because they're peaking at the right time. They're a menace on the offensive glass, they have improved defensively and Virginia Tech transfer Robert Brown and freshman William Lee have matured into dangerous scoring threats.


3. Which lower-seeded team has the best chance of winning Saturday? If contrasting styles make for good fights, then Saturday's duel between in-state foes Butler and Notre Dame should be especially compelling. The sixth-seeded Bulldogs win by slowing down the tempo and defending and rebounding. The third-seeded Irish win by spreading the floor, attacking off the dribble and bombing 3-pointers. Whichever team does a better job imposing its will on the other will likely walk away with a round of 32 victory and a Sweet 16 bid. Butler has a pretty good chance of winning that battle as long as standout forward Roosevelt Jones is healthy enough to not only play but make an impact. Jones hurt his knee against Texas, but returned to play the final five minutes with a slight limp.


4. Who will win the duel between D'Angelo Russell and Arizona's defense? There's no secret what must happen for Ohio State to have a chance to upset second-seeded Arizona on Saturday. The Buckeyes either need D'Angelo Russell to have a huge scoring night or they need the standout freshman to take advantage of the defensive attention paid to him and create opportunities for his teammates. The challenge for Russell is that he will likely face one of the nation's elite perimeter defenders in Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, a long, athletic 6-foot-7 wing versatile enough to guard four positions. Ohio State used all sorts of tactics to free Russell against VCU, from backdoor cuts, to running him off a series of screens for catch-and-shoot shots, to letting him attack with the ball in his hands. He had 27 points against the Rams and will probably need a similarly brilliant night to keep the Buckeyes competitive Saturday.


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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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Kane relishes being a marked man

Spurs striker Harry Kane is not worried about being a marked man after winning his first call up to the England squad.


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London - Tottenham Hotspur striker Harry Kane is not worried about being a marked man after winning his first call up to the England senior squad on the back of his fine form this season.


The 21-year-old has scored 26 goals in all competitions this season and on Thursday was included in England's 24-man squad for the March 27 Euro 2016 qualifier against Lithuania at Wembley and the friendly against Italy later this month.


Kane says Premier League defences are now making extra efforts to stifle him, but the Spurs hitman does not believe it will affect his performances.


“I'm confident. If other teams want to put two or three (defenders) around me, fair enough,” Kane told the Daily Mail.


“People say I will lose the element of surprise, but what makes great players is they perform season-in, season-out. Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, scoring 40 goals every year.


“I notice it already, defenders are tighter, they're grabbing hold of me as soon as I move.”


Kane will compete alongside established strikers Wayne Rooney, Daniel Sturridge and Danny Welbeck for a place in Roy Hodgson's England starting lineup.


Despite his inexperience at senior level, Kane believes he can transfer his domestic form onto the international stage.


“I'm taking nothing for granted. My attitude now will be the same as it has been at every level when I've played for England: work hard, train hard and try to impress the manager,” he said.


“I'm going there with the aim of working my way into the team. I don't expect to turn up and play because I've scored a few goals this season.


“We've got some great players, up front especially, but I'm ready to fight for my place. I don't want to just be a squad man.”


Reuters






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No more confrontation says Mourinho

Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho no longer feels the need to implement a “confrontational leadership” style with his players.


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London - Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho no longer feels the need to implement a “confrontational leadership” style with his players because their season is going largely to plan.


The 52-year-old Portuguese returned to Stamford Bridge for his second spell in charge last season but got off to a disappointing start by his own high standards and failed to win any silverware in 2013-14.


This season, however, Chelsea have already won the League Cup and boast a six-point advantage over Manchester City at the top of the Premier League table with a game in hand.


“This season I don't need confrontational leadership - last season I felt I needed it a few times,” Mourinho told reporters.


“Basically, it's when you are ready to provoke your players to try to create some conflicts with the intention to bring out the best of them.


“In this moment I don't think I need that with this group because things are going in the direction I want.”


It has not been all smooth sailing for Mourinho this season, however, as Chelsea were knocked out of the FA Cup by League One (third tier) Bradford City and were eliminated in the last-16 of the Champions League by Paris St Germain.


“Obviously you can say 'but you lost in the Champions League', or 'you lost against Bradford',” Mourinho said.


“But globally, generally, the way they work, the way they behave, the way they live together, their motivations, their responsibilities, their frustrations, the way they react to the negative moments, the way they react to the positive moments, the absence of complacency, all this is going well.


“So I just need to be present. I don't need to be a big leader, or even try to find strategies as a leader.”


Belgian forward Eden Hazard felt the wrath of Mourinho's “confrontational leadership” style last season after neglecting his defensive duties during Chelsea's Champions League semi-final exit to Atletico Madrid.


Hazard, however, has been Chelsea's standout player this season but Mourinho said he is unsure if the 24-year-old's development is down to the criticism he received.


“I don't know if it was that or it was his maturity coming, his level of ambition,” he said. “I just think that was a natural evolution.


“He wants to be the best, to improve his game, score more goals. I still call him a kid but he's a man. He's a great player.”


Reuters






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Falcao calls in tears, says ex-agent

Radamel Falcao has been reduced to tears by his Manchester United nightmare, according to his former agent.


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London - Radamel Falcao has been reduced to tears by his Manchester United nightmare, according to his former agent.


Silvano Espindola revealed that Falcao phoned him from Old Trafford last week before playing for the Under 21s against Tottenham.


The 29-year-old striker, on loan from Monaco, expressed fears that he risked a recurrence of his serious knee injury by playing against lower-grade opposition.


Espindola, Falcao’s friend and former representative, told AS Colombia: ‘We speak a lot. I am not going to tell you he feels happy because he isn’t. We speak a lot, and we cry together.’


It looks increasingly unlikely that United will sanction a £43million permanent deal for the £280 000-a-week front man at the end of the season.


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Sturridge upbeat ahead of Man U clash

Fierce rivals Manchester United and Liverpool are all too aware of what is at stake when they clash at Anfield.


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London - Liverpool players ramped up their preparations ahead of the crucial top-four showdown with fierce rivals Manchester United at Anfield on Sunday.


Having both spent heavily in the summer transfer window, both teams are under huge pressure to secure Champions League football next season and while previous meetings between the two may have been contested higher up the table, this year’s encounter still has plenty at stake, given the broadcasting revenue linked to Europe’s top club competition.


All too aware of what is at stake is Liverpool striker Daniel Sturridge, who believes three points and momentum in the race for a top-four finish will render the local bragging rights associated with the fixture as incidental.


He told Liverpoolfc.com: “Of course, it’s a rivalry, but it’s another three points and we’ll just approach the game as we always do - that’s the most important thing.


“It’s going to be a big game for us. We’re going into the game looking to win it, as we always do, and we’re looking forward to it. We’ll go into this game with the right mentality.”


Meanwhile, Sturridge was full of praise for attacking dynamo Philippe Countinho, whose development this season has been central to an upturn in form for Liverpool, who have not lost in their last 13 league games, since the 3-0 defeat by United in December.


On Coutinho, Sturridge said: “He’s great to play with. He’s very skilful, sees a pass and scores very nice goals, also, so it’s a pleasure to play with him.


“He’s quite chilled, he’s not too loud. He has a little bit of a joke, but he’s just a relaxed, calm guy. He comes in and does his work and is humble, just like everyone else is.


“I think it’s down to him to work as hard as he possibly can to get to where he wants to be - and I am sure he wants to aim for the stars.


“That’s very possible with the attributes he has, so as long as he continues doing what he’s doing, I’m sure he’ll go a long way in the game.”


Meanwhile, Michael Carrick has recently returned from injury to regain his place in the starting line-up, and the oldest player in the United squad knows he must provide assistance to his teammates.


“There is a responsibility that comes with the experience you have,” he told United Review. “There is a lot of experience within the squad and there is also a group of younger lads and you try to help them.


“I’m not one to sit everyone down and discuss things; it’s more about giving advice and little pointers at different times.”


“It’s good to be back and I feel fine,” he added, when asked about his fitness. “Once you get back, you just want a run of games and hopefully I can get that.”


Carrick missed the start of the season, before a run of games from December to January was halted by another injury. He returned for United’s game against Newcastle earlier this month, and has impressed since.


“It’s been a bit of a nightmare season for me injury-wise,” Carrick continued, “and just at the time in my career where you’re getting a little bit older and you want to be playing as much as you can.”


Carrick signed a one-year contract extension, the Premier League club said on Friday.


Daily Mail, Reuters






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El Clasico will give you goose bumps

El Clasico is arguably one of sport’s greatest events and football’s greatest rivalry says Matshelane Mamabolo.


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El Clasico! Need I say more? I bet you are all counting down to on Sunday night? Who wouldn’t? It is, after all, arguably one of sport’s greatest events.


Barcelona vs Real Madrid. I get goose bumps just saying that.


At 10pm our time on Sunday, a significant part of the world will be focused on Spain for what is “without doubt the biggest club game on the planet: The clash that stirs the strongest passions; pola-rises families, friends and nations and enjoys the largest TV audience of any football rivalry”.


The quoted words are not mine - though I wish I’d coined them because they sound so smart - but were written by Guillem Balague in his foreword to Richard Fitzpatrick’s book El Clasico. It is a fascinating book, one that gives some good insight into “football’s greatest rivalry”.


In it, Fitzpatrick attempts to not only get to the bottom of what makes this clash such a classic but he also makes an effort to answer a myriad of questions that will make you understand the history of the rivalry and thus appreciate this epic encounter all the more.


Among the questions he also looks at are the effect the rivalry has on the cultural life of Spain; the reason El Clasico consumes the country as well as the extent to which the country’s Civil War is still being played out on the football fields of Barcelona and Madrid.


Of course there are other big rivalries in great club rivalries in Europe. But those remain within the ramparts of their city wall whereas El Clasico’s tentacles - much like our own Soweto derby between Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates - reach across the land.


And then and beyond to the rest of the world.


Fitzpatrick travelled the width and breadth of Spain to get answers to these questions and more and the result was this well-written book that will leave its reader something of an expert on El Clasico.


So instead of just discussing the effect either of Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo will have in Sunday’s match, you can outdo your mates by telling them about the Boixos Nois and the Ultra Surs - the two clubs’ diehard fans who are easily a subject of a book themselves they are so extreme.


Fitzpatrick tells the story of how the Boixos Nois (Crazy Boys) attacked a Real Madrid bus back in 2010 as it made its way to the hotel in Barcelona forcing the players to flee to the sanctuary of the hotel foyer upon disembarking at their destination from the coach that had some of its windows smashed.


Things used to be much worse though years ago as Fitzpatrick illustrates in many ways.


One of those is the reaction of Barcelona to Luis Figo’s move to the arch enemy, the Portuguese star being termed traitor, mercenary who should be killed as indicated by the fans’ fluttering white handkerchiefs in the wind.


That day Figo, who had already taken 23 of Los Blancos’ 29 corners since he joined took none.


But there had been worse.


In the 1943 Copa del Rey semi-final, for instance, Barcelona beat Madrid 3-0 at home in the first leg and looked to be on their way to the final.


But before they took to the field for the second leg in Madrid, the director of state security, Jose Finaty Esrciva de Romani, dropped into the visiting dressing room to deliver a message.


“Do not forget,” he apparently cautioned “that some of you are only playing because of the generosity of the regime that has forgiven you for your lack of patriotism.”


Madrid duly won the second leg 11-1 and in his match report, Juan Antonio Samranch, who later became the IOC president, wrote: “It was not a question of playing badly or well. Barca simply ended up by not playing at all.


“Individual players were fearful of making even the most innocent of tackles,” he wrote.


They have nothing to be fearful of these days and on Sunday night at Camp Nou, we are sure to be treated to yet another enthralling instalment of the amazing story that is El Clasico.


While you wait for Sunday, 10pm, do yourself a favour and get the book.


Saturday Star






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Why can't arsenal fans love Giroud?

What will it take for Arsenal fans to really love Olivier Giroud? Yes, he is appreciated but not loved, says Martin Keown.


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London - What will it take for Arsenal fans to really love Olivier Giroud? Yes, he is appreciated by the home faithful at the Emirates but not to the same degree as other top strikers.


Sergio Aguero, Diego Costa and Harry Kane are worshipped at their clubs. But with similar goal- scoring exploits this season, Giroud doesn’t get anywhere near the same level of affection from his fans or the rest of the football world. He is valued as a player but not unconditionally loved. He deserves much more credit.


Of the strikers mentioned, only Aguero has a better minutes per goal rate in all competitions this season than Giroud, who is a good link man and an important source of goals for Arsenal.


He started the season in fine form and then was unlucky with injury but he hit the ground running as soon as he returned.


After his performance in the Champions League first leg against Monaco, everyone rushed to criticise and dissect his game. If Costa or Aguero have a bad game, there is no discussion. With Giroud it is as if he always has to play well to win people over. He’s never allowed an off-day.


What has been impressive is the way he has bounced back mentally from that, scoring in four of his last five games. The only match in which he didn’t score was against Manchester United in the FA Cup, when he started on the bench.


The circumstances of his arrival are part of the problem for Giroud (right). Arsenal fans have been fed a diet of pace and movement ever since Arsene Wenger arrived. From Marc Overmars and Nicolas Anelka to Thierry Henry and Robin van Persie, Wenger’s forwards have always been about great mobility and raw speed.


Giroud is not as quick or graceful across the turf but he was bought as a replacement for Van Persie. He is an entirely different type of player, so that he has shaken off any unfair comparisons with the Dutchman is to his credit. It’s also interesting that Danny Welbeck and Alexis Sanchez were signed almost as Giroud’s replacements but the Frenchman is still the go-to man in the middle.


His involvement shows how Wenger’s philosophy has almost come full circle. When he arrived he sold John Hartson and instead opted for pacy forwards. Now he has reverted to Giroud, who is in a similar mould - there’s not a great deal of difference between a Welsh battering ram and a French one.


Not to say they are one-dimensional players, far from it. Hartson was technically sound, a giant in the air and provided a different attacking dimension. Giroud offers the same. But Wenger now seems to want physicality back at the top of the side.


That means the team have had to play in a different way, though that is not a bad thing. Giroud’s link-up play is exceptional and Arsenal use him like a backboard, holding up play and waiting for others to run from deep and join the attack and he has been at the heart of many of Arsenal’s best team goals.


Although he does not have the same movement as previous Arsenal greats, he is versatile and wholehearted, and that has endeared him to most of the fans. It goes without saying how powerful he is in the air and that has opened up a route to goal that has been for so long ignored by Arsene Wenger.


Wenger has an outstanding track record of improving strikers - I witnessed how he transformed Emmanuel Adebayor - and he is doing the same with Giroud. His only focus is on what players can do. And you can see in Giroud the benefits of having a manager who believes in you.


Giroud has talked about playing out of his comfort zone to try to improve. He has done that and hopefully Arsenal fans will come to love him more. But ultimately for any striker, it shouldn’t matter what you look like or how you play, as long as you offer goals. Luckily for Giroud, he does just that.


Daily Mail






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Safa join millions in mourning Mokone

Safa has joined millions around the globe in paying tribute to Steve “Kalamazoo” Mokone, who died on Friday.


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Johannesburg - The South African Football Association has joined millions around the globe in paying tribute to Steve “Kalamazoo” Mokone, who passed away on Friday morning.


Mokone, 82, was based in the United States at the time of his death and has been battling poor health of late. He passed away four days shy of his 83rd birthday.


“We have lost a true legend here, a man who will always be remembered for putting South Africa on the world map with his football skills. During the dark days of apartheid in this country, Kalamazoo gave us hope. He went overseas and became the first black player from this country to play in the professional ranks when he joined Coventry City,” said Safa President Danny Jordaan in mourning the man he said was a global, continental and South African legend through and through.


“Today we and most players enjoy the fruits of his toil, because had he failed there he would have perhaps denied current South African footballers a chance to be recognised overseas. He was a great South African Ambassador on the football front and we would like to thank him for his contribution in shaping the game in our country.


“On behalf of Safa and the football-loving people of our country, I would like to convery our deepest condolences to the Mokone family, friends and relatives, that may they find strength in prayer during these difficult times.”


Mokone was born in Doornfontein, Johannesburg, but his family ended up settling in Pretoria.


He was on the books of the now-defunct Durban Bush Bucks.


In 2003 the then State President, Thabo Mbeki conferred him with the newly-conceived Order of Ikamanga - South Africa’s highest honour for achievement in the creative and performing arts and sport.


Having joined Coventry in England back in 1955, he moved to Dutch side Heracle and then Torino in Italy.


Bebbe Branco, an Italian football writer, described him at the time as one of a kind.


“If Pele of Brazil is the Rolls-Royce of soccer players, Stanley Matthews of England the Mercedes Benz and Alfredo di Stefano of Argentina the Cadillac of soccer players, then Kala of South Africa, lithe and lean, is surely the Maserati,” said Branco.


Kalamazoo was once on the books of Barcelona but went on loan to French side Marseilles as Spanish giants had their quota of foreign players. While playing for Torino, South Africa football journalist Horatio Motjuwadi once wrote glowingly about him.


“Like everywhere Mokone played, the people of this northern Italian city swore by his soccer boots.


That was where, in 1961, he was dubbed the Maserati of soccer players. He made another spell-binding first appearance for Torino, scoring all five goals in a 5-2 victory against Verona. Months later, on tour in Russia, he became the first foreigner to score a hat-trick in a game against the biggest team in the land, Kiev.”


Mokone rounded off his career with a stint in Australia and Canada in 1964.


He enrolled at Rutgers University in the USA, emerging seven years later with a doctorate in psychology.


Mokone’s life, and especially his time in Holland, led to an Amsterdam street being named after him - the first black professional in Holland that has a street named after him in that country. He followed that up with and provided the inspiration for the book and subsequent film De Zwarte Meteoor (The Black Meteor).


Kalamazoo Mokone fact file:


Full Name: Stephen Madi Mokone


DOB: 23 March 1932 (age 82)


Place of birth: Doornfontein, RSA


Position: Striker


Career:


1955 - 58 Coventry City


1958 - 59 Hercales Almelo


1959 Cardiff City


1959 - 60 FC Barcelona (never played)


1960 - Marseille (loan)


1960 - 61 Torino


1961 - 62 Valencia FC


1964 Sunshine George


1948 - 64 SA National Team (SA Black XI)


Pretoria Home Stars


ANA






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Pele backs Blatter for 5th term

Pele is supporting Sepp Blatter's bid to continue running world football as the Fifa president prepares for battle.


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London - Pele is supporting Sepp Blatter's bid to continue running world football as the Fifa president prepares for his toughest-ever election battle.


Blatter is taking on three rivals in Fifa's May election, including Pele's friend, Luis Figo, the former Portugal, Barcelona


and Real Madrid player.


But Pele is insistent that the 79-year-old Blatter should serve a fifth, four-year term despite lingering questions over Fifa's handling of ethics scandals.


Pele told The Associated Press: “Of course in life you must have some changes, but I will support Blatter, I think he is still has opportunity to do nice administration.”


The Brazilian, at a Subway sandwich store promotional event, insisted that “Blatter has more experience” than his rivals.


The Fifa president is chosen by a ballot of Fifa's 209 member associations.


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Carrick signs Man U contract extension

Manchester United midfielder Michael Carrick has signed a one-year contract extension, the Premier League club said.


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London - Manchester United midfielder Michael Carrick has signed a one-year contract extension, the Premier League club said on Friday.


The 33-year-old has been at Old Trafford since 2006, winning five Premier League titles and becoming a cornerstone of the United midfield with his cultured passing and disciplined defensive work.


“He is, for me, my second captain behind Wayne Rooney and he can also read the game as a team player so that's very important,” manager Louis van Gaal told the club website.


“He has also an excellent pass forward. I like, as a manager, forward passers so that's very important for me.”


Carrick, who started his career at West Ham United before moving to Tottenham Hotspur, has played nearly 400 games for United.


He has also made 31 appearances for England and was named in Roy Hodgson's squad this week.


Reuters






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Gerrard return a selection headache

Liverpool have played six Premier League games this season without Gerrard and won them all.


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London - Leaving a fit Steven Gerrard out of a Liverpool team to face Manchester United would until recently have been considered an act of madness, but it is a genuine dilemma facing boss Brendan Rodgers on Sunday.


The Liverpool captain came back from injury as a second-half substitute in Liverpool's 1-0 win over Swansea City on Monday following a five-week layoff.


But with the club having coped manfully in his absence, there is no guarantee he will immediately muscle his way back into the starting lineup for his last game against Liverpool's fierce north-west rivals before joining LA Galaxy.


Liverpool have played six Premier League games this season without Gerrard and won them all.


They have a win percentage of 41 from the 34 games in all competitions that Gerard has played this season and 69 from the 13 games he has missed.


That alone will provide food for thought for Rodgers, who sought to play down the growing debate about Gerrard's role in the team by rallying behind the former England skipper on Friday.


“It's simple. It's been unfair on the boy,” Rodgers told reporters.


“This is a guy who has been, and still is, a wonderful player. But when he was out injured, we had people trying to sensationalise the story. People were trying to write him off when he was injured.


“He's back now, and it's maybe not the story you want, but he's totally committed. He's a fan of this club, and his support for guys like (Jordan) Henderson, (Joe) Allen, has been fantastic.”


Allen and Henderson have undoubtedly flourished in recent weeks while Gerrard was injured.


The former has adopted greater on-pitch responsibility and taken on some of Gerrard's goalscoring mantle with spectacular strikes against Manchester City and Burnley, while a scrappy goal against Swansea took his tally to three in three league games.


Having been handed a run in the team, Allen has also shown qualities that have been largely unsighted since he joined the club, recycling possession with confidence and precision.


Liverpool have dragged themselves back into top-four contention and now sit two points behind Sunday's opponents, who occupy the final Champions League qualifying spot, with nine games to play.


Rodgers is unlikely to jeopardise their chances with sentiment, but at the same time rightly pointed out that Gerrard's introduction against Swansea “stabilised” the team.


Lucas Leiva's return from injury is also likely to provide further competition in midfield with Rodgers confirming the Brazilian will be assessed before United's visit to Anfield.


Reuters






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Ajax march into last eight

Ajax Cape Town displayed great resilience when they beat Bloem Celtic to advance to the Nedbank Cup quarter-finals.


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Johannesburg - Ajax Cape Town displayed great resilience to hold on for a 1-0 victory over Bloemfontein Celtic to advance to the Nedbank Cup quarter-finals at the Athlone Stadium on Friday evening.


Ajax pounced early on a defensive lapse in the box when Franklin Cale crossed the ball into the path of Tashreeq Morris who tapped in for an easy goal in the ninth minute.


After conceding early, Celtic fought back almost immediately when blistering winger Thapelo Morena found some space in an advanced position to unleash a shot with the side of the foot, but his attempt flew over the target.


Ajax showed no intention of defending the slender lead and were out for more goals in what would turn into an open and exciting encounter.


Toriq Losper brilliantly beat his marker to accelerate up the pitch with the ball and played through Erwin Isaacs inside the box.


Isaacs took two deft touches to make space for a shot that flew straight into the arms of Celtic goalkeeper Patrick Tignyemb in the 18th minute.


It was a battle at the back between Ajax defender Rivaldo Coetzee and Celtic striker Lerato Lamola as they tussled for the ball near the corner flag.


The tricky Lamola got the better of his opponent to whip in a cross into the box, but there was no teammate wiling to complete the move.


Ajax were soon in with another scoring opportunity when Bantu Mzwakali combined with Cale and powered through the opposition wall to shoot and force Tignyemb into a superb save in the 23rd minute.


In the following exchanges both teams threatened each other with attacks but none was able to find the back of the net.


At the end of the half it was advantage Ajax, but the visitors were beginning to mount a fight-back in hunt for the equaliser.


In the second half Ajax showed that they could also defend as they contained the opposition attack after some sustained pressure.


In the 73rd minute Celtic midfielder Musa Nyatama was the instigator in a move that saw the ball brush the crossbar after an effort from Lamola.


Playing at home in front of an expectant crowd, Ajax held onto their lead for dear life and marched into the last eight.


Sapa






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News sport : Official calls absurd technical foul on Providence coach late in close game


When official Terry Oglesby called a technical foul on Providence coach Ed Cooley, it did not decide the outcome of the Friars' first-round game with Dayton or change momentum.


But it could have.


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The Flyers went on to beat the Friars easily 66-53, helping Oglesby avoid the nightmare scenario of having a needless technical foul decide an NCAA tournament game.


Dayton was winning 50-42 with 3 minutes, 42 seconds remaining in the game and Cooley was unhappy with his team. During a timeout with his team assembled in a huddle in front of him. Cooley grabbed a folding chair meant for him to sit in and tossed it behind him emphatically in an effort to light a fire under his players.


Oglesby, who probably sees this type of things dozens of times over the course of the season from coaches across the Midwest where he generally officiates, called a technical foul on Cooley, who was stunned at the call and rightfully so.


Sure, if Cooley is throwing chairs because he doesn't like the officiating, that's one thing. But there was no interaction with the officials leading up to the incident and every reason to believe Cooley was simply trying to motivate his players. An official shouldn't be interfering with that unless a coach is out of control, which Cooley clearly wasn't.


Dayton's Jordan Sibert made only one of the two technical free throws, but, again, in an eight-point game with almost four minutes remaining, any point is a big point and a referee shouldn't be giving them to either team without merit.


(Thanks for the video Matt Norlander)


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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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