News sport : Report: Cleveland Browns could be 'Hard Knocks' favorites

In the where-were-you-a-year-ago news category, there's this dispatch from Buffalo News NFL writer Vic Carucci:



Oh. So yeah, there might be one or two storylines with this year's program. It would almost be a major disappointment — short of the madball Philadelphia Eagles or Rex Ryan's Buffalo Bills circus landing the show — if HBO didn't come to Berea, Ohio this summer.


Here's a random sampling of what we could be in story for this August:


• Is Johnny Manziel healthy, (still) wealthy and wise?


• Will Josh Gordon be selling used cars outside the team facility in a Terrell Owens-esque bird to the team and league?


• Can Josh McCown use his powers of motivation and extreme mediocrity for good?


• How many times will owner Jimmy Haslam speak, and of those times, how many will his foot stay out of his mouth?


• Can a Browns receiver score a touchdown? (This is no farce.)


• Will all of head coach Mike Pettine's hair fall out?


OK, so that last one might be a bit anticlimactic, really. But this is a team that is made for this sort of spectacle, and things could go horribly wrong, as many people believe, or things could turn upside down and this could be the start of the feel-good story of the fall.


Either way, we're watching it. You know, if it happens.


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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Gerrard’s 38 second humiliation

Steven Gerrard's final match for Liverpool against Manchester United was a nightmare. All 38 seconds of it.


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Sometimes, a man can rage just a little too hard against the dying of the light. That was the pitiful reality of Steven Gerrard’s final match for Liverpool against Manchester United.


He wanted it too much. The heroic last hurrah, the script from the heavens, the breathless drama, the epic final scene.


Gerrard’s codas are rarely short of spectacular. Last-minute goals, revivals, miracles even. This was a screen grab — blink and you’d miss it — a dismal little cameo that, knowing the man, will probably haunt him into his twilight years. And not just as a footballer either.


Gerrard hoped for so much from his final Anfield appearance against Manchester United. These are the games he knows he will miss and he wanted so badly to make it count. It was over before it had begun.


Thirty-eight seconds. That was Gerrard’s contribution to this game. Introduced at half-time by Brendan Rodgers, with Liverpool already trailing, Gerrard no doubt hoped to make a big impact on the 45 minutes. He failed even to make it to 45 seconds — seven short when a stamp on Ander Herrera ended his involvement.


It is possible to have sympathy for Gerrard’s misguided desire while also believing referee Martin Atkinson’s straight red card was entirely merited. Gerrard put one in on Juan Mata — very hard but fair — Herrera then gave him one back, and Gerrard stamped on him in fury as retaliation. Atkinson saw it and flashed a red card instantly.


He also booked Herrera, although that may have been as a sop to the home crowd, watching their talisman disappearing forlornly down the tunnel. Gerrard didn’t even protest greatly. He knew he was wrong, he knew he had lost it in his desperation to leave the pitch a winner on 90 minutes. He knew he had let his team-mates down, too — and admitted it in a heartfelt apology, made immediately after the match.


Last year, the slip against Chelsea — that was misfortune. This he recognised was little short of madness. Did it cost Liverpool the game, or at least a point? Possibly. Considering how close the scoreline was with 10, who knows if United would have held out against 11? Certainly, Gerrard’s exit left Liverpool with a hill to climb, doubly so when Mata scored his second of the game — one of the goals of the season to stretch United’s lead to 2-0.


The defeat leaves Liverpool five points adrift of the top four and still to visit Arsenal and Chelsea. The first of those games must be played without Gerrard, who will also miss next month’s FA Cup quarter-final replay against Blackburn Rovers.


After this, how much he will start of the remainder of the season is unknown. A player so overwhelmed by need as his final weeks slip away is hardly reliable. Gerrard had not been sent off in the Premier League for nine years, so this was entirely out of character. That will worry Rodgers as he prepares to regroup for one last assault on Champions League qualification.


Manchester United are in the box seat now. Having ridden their luck so often this season, with a daunting run of fixtures one of two things had to happen. They would either improve, as promised by Louis van Gaal, who claimed his teams always got stronger in the second half of his first season; or United would experience a fearful reckoning, savaged by tougher opponents.


Following an impressive display against Tottenham Hotspur last week, United appear to have taken option one. The first half here, certainly, was as good as they have played all season.


They reduced Liverpool to less than 40 per cent possession, the midfield was exceptional and they scored a vital goal through Mata.He is one of the three most improved players under Van Gaal and all were in effect yesterday. Michael Carrick has had a huge influence as a defensive screen since returning from injury, while Marouane Fellaini has tremendous nuisance value as a deep-lying targetman, a unique position Van Gaal appears to have created for him.


Mata is in much better nick than this time last season under David Moyes, too, particularly as a goal-scorer. His two yesterday were exceptionally taken — and constructed. It was a beautifully worked move for the 14th-minute opener. Daley Blind won the ball on the left, feeding Fellaini who picked out Herrera in the middle. It was his pass that clinched it, splitting the Liverpool defence and leaving Mata with only Simon Mignolet to beat. The finish was equally impressive, shooting across the goalkeeper inside the far post. Liverpool’s usual fluency was missing but after 35 minutes they should have levelled. Jordan Henderson crossed from the right, the ball falling to Daniel Sturridge, who generously laid it back to Adam Lallana.


Maybe he regretted his decision after Lallana powered his shot low against the perimeter advertising. It wasn’t terribly wide, but Lallana had to do better from there. He made way for Gerrard at half-time.


Liverpool improved, strangely, despite being reduced to 10 but United were worth their victory and — Gerrard’s sad exit aside — were responsible for the most memorable moment of the afternoon.


It came after 59 minutes. Carrick broke up play and fed the ball to Herrera. His blocked shot fell to Mata who then found substitute Angel di Maria. He paused, waited for the opening, and chipped it back to Mata. What happened next was simply delightful. Mata took two steps back, sized up the dropping ball and hit a sideways scissor kick on the volley which utterly defeated Mignolet.


By far the best team for an hour, United could have won by more had Wayne Rooney not had an injury-time penalty saved after Emre Can had clumsily felled Blind. It was a fine diving stop by Mignolet and of particular frustration for Rooney, being only his fourth shot on target at Anfield in his career.


That Liverpool had earlier got a goal back and had Van Gaal’s men sweating for a while is tribute to a spirit that is increasingly independent of Gerrard’s presence — and will need to be in the coming weeks.


The goal came from Sturridge in the 69th minute, beating David de Gea at his near post from a lovely pass by Philippe Coutinho, to remind Roy Hodgson there is not just the one prolific English striker in the Premier League right now.


At the end, Atkinson was booed by the locals, although it is hard to see what he got so drastically wrong. If anything Liverpool were lucky — Martin Skrtel appearing to stamp on De Gea in the last move of the match, provoking a mild scuffle. Atkinson looked to have missed it, the television cameras didn’t, and considering what happened to Diego Costa earlier in the season, it is unlikely the FA will either.– Daily Mail






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Downs the last of the big guns

Mamelodi Sundowns produced another potent performance against Platinum Stars and advanced to the quarterfinals of the Nedbank Cup.


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Mamelodi Sundowns produced another potent performance yesterday and advanced to the quarter-finals of the Nedbank Cup.


The fact that Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates had crashed out of the tournament the day before, means Sundowns remain the only big gun in the tournament that involves teams from lower leagues.


Though Sundowns turned up late, it was yet another superb match with the team continuing their fine form.


Yesterday’s 3-1 win over Platinum Stars, sealed withy goals from Mzikhayise Mashaba, Khama Billiat and Hlompho Kekana, took the goal-scoring tally of the Brazilians to 14 out of five matches in all competitions – the Absa Premiership, the Nedbank Cup and the CAF Champions League.


Sundowns dominated the opening half and midfield had the lion’s share of possession.


Attackers Billiat and Cuthbert Malajila saw promising chances fall short as Stars defence stood their ground.


There was finally a breakthrough when the visitors broke the deadlock. The goal by Mashaba, who returned to the line-up, was a classic.


Kekana, who had been babysitting Downs midfield, exchanged passes with Teko Modise, who brought Themba Zwane into the game. Zwane off-loaded to Billiat, who returned the favour. Zwane spotted his namesake Siyanda Zwane’s run down the right into the box and he obliged with a through ball.


The defender composed himself and released a pass to the spot kick. Mashaba was the beneficiary.


After superb control, the utility player fired his shot beyond the reach of keeper Kabelo Dambe.


Stars needed to respond and they tried. Striker Ndomiso Mabena surged forward down the right and he swung in a curve ball, but keeper Denis Onyango stretched to punch it.


Stars were relentless in their search for an equaliser.


Towards the end of the first half, their efforts yielded fruit. Stars playmaker Mogakolodi Ngele was the orchestrator. The Botswana international eliminated Zwane with a brilliant stepover and fed Letladi Madubanya just outside the box. Madubanya unleashed a low shot that Eleazar Rodgers guided into the net. An effort to restore their lead saw Modise combine with Zwane before the latter found Billiat on the edge of the box. But the shot by the Zimbabwean star went agonisingly over the bar.


The second half was not contested at the same pace.


The tempo decreased. Stars had an opportunity with Mabena and Rodgers combining well against Downs defence. Mabena laid a pass for Sthembiso Msomi, who made a run from the deep, but his shot went straight to Onyango. Sundowns didn’t have clear cut chances. Besides the header by Malajila, it was dry.


However, with 10 minutes to go, Sundowns increased their tally with Billiat adding a second goal.


Kekana, who moved forward following the introduction of Bongani Zungu, found Billiat on the edge of the box. Billiat made a world-class turn before rifling a left footed shot that bewildered Dambe.


After the goal, Billiat played like a possessed man. He navigated his way around Stars defence and only a tackle could stop him. However, it was an illegal tackle. Referee Zolile Mthetho awarded a free kick.


Up stepped Kekana, who curled a scorcher to make it 3-1.


Stars tried to force their way back into the game, but it wasn’t to be. Pitso Mosimane even threw in defender Wayne Arendse in place of Malajila as they stormed into the last eight of the Nedbank Cup.


Sundowns remain in the running for the Absa Premiership, the Nedbank Cup and the CAF Champions league. - The Star






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LVG savours ‘most important’ win

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal ranked Sunday's victory over Liverpool as one of the most important moments of his career.


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Liverpool - Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has managed some of the world's top clubs and his country's national team on the biggest occasions but he still ranked Sunday's 2-1 victory over Liverpool as one of the most important moments of his career.


With the race for a top-four finish in the Premier League becoming increasingly tense, United struck a potentially decisive blow with goals from Juan Mata in each half helping them move five points clear of Liverpool in fourth place.


United were the better side for most of encounter and Van Gaal said the victory was forged from playing Liverpool at their own game.


“They were in fantastic shape, but we beat them with their own weapons - the pressure on the ball,” Van Gaal told reporters, referring to the relentless pressuring of the ball that Liverpool boss Brendan Rodgers has made his trademark.


“The gap is one point behind (Arsenal in third), five ahead of Liverpool, six to Tottenham and Southampton; the moment was very important, one of the most important of my career.”


Liverpool trailed United by 10 points after losing the reverse fixture 3-0 in December but had dragged themselves back into contention with an unbeaten run in the intervening period.


United's victory, however, has left Liverpool again playing catch-up although Dutchman Van Gaal said they were not yet dead and buried.


“When you are top club, manager, players - and Liverpool is - you have to deal with defeat. Liverpool can do that,” he said.


United managed to stifle Liverpool entirely in the first half and made the most of their superiority, opening a two goal lead with goals either side of Steven Gerrard's 38-second sending off for stamping on Ander Herrera.


While the hosts clawed a foothold in the match with a Daniel Sturridge goal with 20 minutes to play, they never looked like snatching a leveller as United put in arguably their most accomplished performance of the season.


Van Gaal, however, was only partially satisfied.


“It was the best first 45 minutes,” he said. “But in the second half we were not so good.


“Then we played eleven against 10 and it should have been easier but it was not.


“But the first half was very good because I knew Liverpool would press us, and they did, but we played them off the pitch, scored a fantastic goal and gave nothing away.” – Reuters






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Gerrard apologises for red card

Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard apologised after he was sent off in their 2-1 defeat to fiercest rivals Manchester United.


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Liverpool - Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard apologised after he was sent off for a rash stamp having been on the pitch for just 38 seconds of their 2-1 defeat to Manchester United on Sunday.


Gerrard entered the fray as a halftime substitute but received a straight red card after reacting to a poor tackle from United's Spanish midfielder Ander Herrera.


With Gerrard set to quit Liverpool for MLS side LA Galaxy in the close season, this was almost certainly his last appearance for the Merseysiders against their fierce north-west rivals.


“I need to accept it; the decision was right. I've let down my team mates and the fans. I take full responsibility,” Gerrard told Sky Sports.


“I don't know what caused it. Probably just a reaction to the initial tackle.


“I shouldn't say more about it really. I've just come out here to apologise to the dressing room and supporters.”


Gerrard had been left on the bench by manager Brendan Rodgers after only recently returning from injury with Liverpool embarking on an impressive winning run in his absence.


With United bossing the opening 45 minutes at Anfield, Gerrard immediately set about adding a physical side to Liverpool's game that was missing in the first half.


He flew into a challenge on Juan Mata, sparking the Liverpool crowd into life, but then reacted moments later when Herrera caught him with a reckless lunge.


Mata then scored his and United's second goal shortly afterwards with a superb volley.


While 10-man Liverpool clawed a goal back through Daniel Sturridge, United cruised through with Wayne Rooney failing to beat Simon Mignolet with a late penalty that would have added gloss to the scoreline.


Liverpool boss Rodgers accepted Gerrard's apology.


“It is good of someone when they do get sent off to come out and apologise but he was probably very frustrated watching us in the first half and he was man enough to come out,” Rodgers told reporters.


“With Steven it was purely that he wanted to make an impact and he has apologised for it.


“You suffer with 10 against 11 and it was great respect to the players on the team who kept fighting. The players showed immense responsibility and spirit to keep the game going until the end.”


Defeat left Liverpool five points behind United in the battle for a top-four finish and a spot in next season's Champions League. – Reuters






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Mourinho grateful to super-sub Remy

Jose Mourinho believes he owes a debt to Loic Remy after the striker came off the bench to score the winner in the 3-2 victory over Hull City.


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London - Jose Mourinho believes he owes a debt to Loic Remy after the striker came off the bench to score the winner in the 3-2 victory over Hull City on Sunday that moves Chelsea six points clear in the Premier League title race.


The French striker, who has been used mainly as a substitute by the Chelsea manager following his move from Queens Park Rangers in August, came on at the KC Stadium after 75 minutes following Diego Costa's hamstring injury.


The 28-year-old then scored with his first touch to put Chelsea back in front after they had squandered a 2-0 lead, a goal which allowed the Londoners to regain their six point lead over Manchester City.


“Every time he plays, he's there. He probably deserves more than what I've given him,” an admiring Mourinho told Chelsea's official website.


“Sometimes a coach can feel he owes something to a player and with Remy that's the case. I think I owe him something. Every time he plays he gives us a lot, I'm so happy for him because he deserves it.”


Mourinho's side may boast a healthy lead and a game in hand advantage over City, but the Portuguese coach is taking nothing for granted in Chelsea's attempt to win their first league title since 2010.


“The title race should be over, in normal conditions,” he said. “The reality is that we have a six point lead, the best situation we've had all season.


“At this moment, we have a six-point lead with one match in hand, which could help us or not. I'm pretty confident, I believe in my players, I believe we can do it but I know it's difficult.”


Despite letting their two-goal lead slip in 74 seconds when Ahmed Elmohamady pulled a goal back and Abel Hernandez capitalised on an error by Chelsea goalkeeper Courtois, Mourinho was pleased with the performance.


“We let the lead go but we played fantastic football with the ball from the first minute,” Mourinho said.


“When at half time, it's 2-2 and you want to win the game, the most important thing is to play how we did from the start, that's what I told the players.


“From the first minute of the second half, we went back to quality football, creation and movement. Sooner or later, the goal was going to arrive.” – Reuters






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Suarez goal sinks Real

A lethal finish from Luis Suarez gave Barcelona a 2-1 victory over Real Madrid in a typically frantic 'Clasico'.


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Barcelona - A lethal finish from Luis Suarez gave Barcelona a 2-1 victory over Real Madrid in a typically frantic 'Clasico' as they stretched their lead over their rivals at the top of La Liga to four points.


While the personal battle between Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo captured the attention before the game, it was Uruguayan Suarez who settled the Nou Camp contest with a deft touch and a deadly strike into the corner of the net after 55 minutes.


Barcelona went ahead against the run of play when French defender Jeremy Mathieu headed home his first league goal for the Catalan club from a Messi free kick after 18 minutes.


Ronaldo had already hit the crossbar but he made no mistake after 30 minutes when he slotted the ball past keeper Claudio Bravo following a delightful backflick by Karim Benzema.


Real pressed forward with Gareth Bale having a goal harshly ruled out for offside and Benzema missing a golden chance before Suarez took his opportunity.


Barca finished the stronger as they secured a significant victory in the title race that moved them on to 68 points from 28 games, four ahead of second-placed Real with 10 matches left.


“There is still an eternity to go and also we have the Champions League to think about. It would be a mistake to take anything for granted,” Barca's Javier Mascherano told reporters.


“Against a team like Madrid you always have to give your all as they push you to the limits both physically and mentally. We put a lot into this game especially when you consider we played in midweek (against Manchester City).”


The pressure is growing on Real coach Carlo Ancelotti with the team having one win from five games in all competitions.


Real defender Sergio Ramos said: “We gave our all but we lacked luck in the first half, and they controlled the game better after that.


“The difference is only four points and we are going to keep fighting in the league. We will not ease up.”


The main doubt in the Barca lineup was whether Sergio Busquets would be fit to start and he began on the bench with Mascherano continuing in central midfield.


Toni Kroos returned to pull the strings in the centre of the pitch for Real after being rested in their victory over Levante last weekend.


Real started well, overrunning Barca in midfield, and from one of their attacks at pace Benzema crossed for Ronaldo whose side-foot volley from a narrow angle hit the underside of the crossbar.


Ramos lost his man though at a free kick from Messi and Mathieu had plenty of space to head home and give Barca the lead.


The game became more hectic with Neymar missing in front of goal and at the other end Ronaldo bringing Real level.


Suarez had figured little in the game but later produced a superb finish and then in the closing stages, he, Neymar and Messi missed chances to give Barca a more comfortable win.


Earlier, Sevilla piled on the misery for Villarreal with a Coke strike setting them on the way to a 2-0 victory in La Liga following their midweek Europa League triumph over the same opponents. – Reuters






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News sport : Wichita welcomes home the 'Kings of Kansas' after victory over Jayhawks


Wichita State fans welcomed their team back to campus from the NCAA tournament Sunday night just a few hours after the Shockers soundly defeated Kansas in the Midwest Regional in Omaha, Neb.


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Wichita State has clamored for years for an opportunity to play the Jayhawks who have resisted, but the game finally happened thanks to the selection committee placing the teams in the same regional and each team winning its opening game in the tournament. The Wichita Eagle newspaper was on hand to report on the team's arrival and the welcome it received.


The significance of the victory was evident from the smiles and cheers that greeted coach Gregg Marshall and his players as they stepped off the team bus. It was also obvious in posts and pictures on social media, including one Shockers fan holding up a T-shirt in the arena moments after the game ended that read "Kings of Kansas."


“Shocker Nation has a lot of pride right now,” Marshall told the Wichita Eagle. “All those people who’ve had that ‘little brother syndrome’ have a chance to puff out their chest.”


The Shockers will play Notre Dame on Thursday night in the Sweet 16.


(Thanks to the Wichita Eagle for the video)



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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 : Melo Trimble forced to bench with head injury as West Virginia ousts Maryland


West Virginia’s pressure defense gave teams in the Big 12 Conference fits all season and it led the Mountaineers to victory Sunday over a Maryland team forced to play much of the second half without its best ball handler.


The Mountaineers forced more turnovers per game than any team in the nation and Maryland proved incapable of dealing with the relentless approach. West Virginia forced 23 miscues from Maryland in a 69-59 win that put the Mountaineers back in the Sweet 16 for the first time since it advanced to the Final Four in 2010.


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West Virginia’s reward is an opportunity to play giant killer against undefeated Kentucky, the tournament’s No. 1 overall seed.


Terrapins point guard Melo Trimble was knocked to the ground at the 15-minute mark in the second half by a moving screen from West Virginia big man Nathan Adrian. None of the three officials on the court called a foul.


Trimble returned to the court after a brief stay on the bench, but six minutes later he fell to the floor after leaping high into the air to try to intercept a pass. Maryland forward Damonte Dodd inadvertently kicked Trimble in the head as he ran past and Trimble was held out of the rest of the game with a head injury.Mar 22, 2015; Columbus, OH, USA; Maryland Terrapins guard Melo Trimble (2) reacts after an injury during the second half against the West Virginia Mountaineers in the third round of the 2015 NCAA Tournament at Nationwide Arena. (Joe Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports)


Trimble was vital to the Terrapins in the first half, scoring 12 points with five assists. Maryland shot 55 percent in the first half and made six of nine 3-pointers. But the Terrapins went 2 for 10 from behind the arc after halftime and had frequent trouble just getting into their offense. Maryland senior Dez Wells accounted for eight turnovers and scored just nine points.


Heartbreaking images of Trimble sitting on the bench unable to help his team were countered by images of elation from the West Virginia side. Coach Bob Huggins had criticized the NCAA before the game for scheduling tip-off times too late, but his team seemed unaffected by the start time.


Four starters scored in double figures for West Virginia, which accumulated 15 steals. Sophomore forward Devin Williams had a double-double with 16 points and 10 rebounds. Gary Browne had 14 points and five steals.


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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 : Buddy Hield's big block against Dayton helps lead Oklahoma to Sweet 16


Oklahoma is back in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2009 after eliminating Dayton from the NCAA tournament on Sunday 72-66 in front of a hostile crowd in Columbus, Ohio.


Coach Lon Kruger became the first coach in history to take four teams to the second weekend of the tournament. He previously guided UNLV, Florida and Kansas State to the Sweet 16.


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Buddy Hield, the Sooners' star guard, might have saved the day for Oklahoma with 64 seconds remaining when he recovered from a Dayton steal to swat away a layup attempt from Darrell Davis. If Davis had made the layup, the Flyers would have cut the Oklahoma lead to two with a minute left and significantly amped up the pressure on the Sooners.


Oklahoma simply had too much for Dayton, which was playing its sixth game in 10 days. The Flyers were trying to get back to the Sweet 16 for a second straight year after not advancing that far for three decades. But Hield and fellow guards Jordan Woodard and Frank Booker combined for 43 points.


Forward Ryan Spangler has rebounded from a painful moment in the Big 12 tournament to play well in the NCAA tournament. Spangler scored nine points with 11 rebounds in a first-round win over Albany and had six points and 12 rebounds on Sunday.


In the closing seconds of a Big 12 conference tournament semifinal game against Iowa State, Spangler missed a wide-open layup that would have tied the game and sent it to overtime.


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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 : Jon Jones ribs NFL star brother Chandler Jones about potential charity fight

When UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones and his younger brother, NFL standout Chandler Jones, teased a charity fight earlier this winter, and it was mostly dismissed as nothing more than a little harmless family jawing.


After all, Chandler Jones is a Super Bowl champion with the New England Patriots and his coach, Bill Belichick, is a future NFL Hall of Famer that surely wouldn't allow any kind of fight against one of the most talented fighters ever. Each brother clocks in at around 6-foot-5 and both weigh in the mid-200’s (Jon cuts large amounts of weight to reach his light heavyweight limit of 205 pounds). They teased each other and had their respective fun, but talk quickly died down.


Apparently, as it is with things of a brotherly nature, one sibling isn’t entirely OK with letting the Cain vs. Abel fantasy match-up go, because early on Saturday older brother Jon took to social media to answer a fan’s question.


What ensued was pure family feuding gold:







No response yet from brother Arthur (the third Jones brother, who also plays in the NFL as an Indianapolis Colt), but it got us thinking: If fantasy matchups are the name of the game, why not give the fine folks over at the WWE a call – Wrestlemania is just one week away…


Three brothers enter, one brother leaves.






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News sport : Wichita State earns a win to savor against Kansas

To understand how Wichita State toppled second-seeded Kansas and earned in-state bragging rights for many years to come, you only need to watch one sequence from Sunday's hotly anticipated NCAA tournament clash.


The Jayhawks already trailed by nine points midway through the second half when Wichita State freshman forward Zach Brown deflected a Frank Mason pass and tipped it into the frontcourt. All the urgency should have been with Kansas considering the deficit it already faced, yet Brown outraced Kelly Oubre to the ball, attacked the rim and threw down a two-handed transition slam.


No play better sums up why seventh-seeded Wichita State claimed a 78-65 victory over Kansas than that one did. The Shockers may not have the size and strength in the paint that the Jayhawks do or a roster full of former McDonald's All-Americans, but they played Sunday's game like the outcome mattered more to them.


Wichita State's victory was meaningful to its program for more reasons than merely just securing a spot in the Sweet 16 against third-seeded Notre Dame. It also served as some revenge against Kansas for refusing to consider scheduling the Shockers even as they've ascended from quality mid-major to budding national power.


Two years ago, ninth-seeded Wichita State stunned Gonzaga and Ohio State en route to one of the most improbable Final Four appearances in college basketball history. Last year, the Shockers validated that and then some by completing the regular season unbeaten before suffering their first loss against Kentucky in the NCAA tournament. This year, Wichita State has overcome the graduation of star Cleanthony Early to eclipse 30 games for the third straight year, win a regular season league title and reach the Sweet 16 for the second time in three seasons.


Wichita State won Sunday by outplaying Kansas in virtually every facet of the game.


All five Shockers starters scored in double figures on Saturday, led by Tekele Cotton's 19 points and Fred VanVleet's 17. Guard Evan Wessell even played 6-foot-8 Perry Ellis to a virtual standstill despite giving up four inches and 30 pounds, using his quickness advantage to sink four threes.


Kansas got 17 points apiece from Ellis and Devonte Graham and 16 points from Frank Mason, but many of its other top players were no-shows. Ever-erratic Wayne Selden in particular went scoreless as Kansas shot only 35.2 percent from the field.


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







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News sport : Russell Westbrook logs 10th triple-double of season to push Thunder past Heat

We take it as read, at this point, that Russell Westbrook — he who comes out of three knee surgeries seemingly as explosive as ever; he who continues playing after his face gets dented by a teammate's knee; he who misses one (1) game after having surgery to repair his broken face — is no mere mortal. And yet, as he continues to produce at staggering and statistically unprecedented levels, keeping his Oklahoma City Thunder afloat without its (other) best offensive player and best defensive player, we seem to keep saying to ourselves, "There's no way he can keep this up ... can he?"


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On Sunday, the All-Star point guard offered the latest piece of evidence that the answer to the latter question can be found in the former given, albeit with a bit of a caveat — that this particular beast can keep carrying the load if his teammates can lighten the burden just a little bit.



After popping for 30-plus points on 10 separate occasions since the All-Star break, Westbrook had his lowest-scoring full-game outing of the season on Sunday, chipping in just 12 points on 5-for-16 shooting against in a matinee matchup with Dwyane Wade, Goran Dragic and the Miami Heat. (Westbrook scored only two points in the second game of the Thunder's season, but he left that loss to the Los Angeles Clippers after fracturing a bone in his right hand early in the contest.) It scarcely mattered that he wasn't getting buckets, though, because of how many he got everyone else.


Westbrook tied a career-high — one he's set and matched in the past month — with 17 assists, propelling the Thunder to a 93-75 home win over the Heat that gave Oklahoma City a three-game advantage over the New Orleans Pelicans and Phoenix Suns in the race for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. He also pulled down 10 rebounds to go with his dozen points and 17 dimes, marking his second straight triple-double, his eighth since the All-Star break, and his league-leading 10th of the season. The entire rest of the league, by way of comparison, has combined for 27.


As if the air through which Westbrook's been soaring wasn't rare enough already, here's the complete list of players to have logged 10 or more triple-doubles in a season since 1985-86, which is as far back as Basketball-Reference.com's fantastic database goes: Magic Johnson (five times), Larry Bird (twice), Fat Lever (twice), Grant Hill (twice), Jason Kidd (twice), Michael Jordan (once) ... and now Westbrook. Pretty good company, I'd say.


It's especially impressive that Westbrook's rubbing shoulders with so many historic elites considering how few healthy teammates he's running with these days. Without Kevin Durant, without Serge Ibaka, without Nick Collison (sidelined by a sprained ankle) and, after the opening minutes of Sunday's contest, without starting guard Andre Roberson (ditto), Oklahoma City's game-changing marvel just keeps charging forward, pressuring opposing defenses and creating opportunities for those Thunder teammates who are healthy enough to work their way into the fray.


Enes Kanter, back in the lineup after missing Friday's win over the Atlanta Hawks, feasted on Miami's interior defense to the tune of 27 points on 12-for-20 shooting and 12 rebounds; Westbrook notched the direct assist on half of them. Ditto for rookie Mitch McGary, who received Russ helpers on three of his six makes en route to 14 points and eight boards off the bench. Starting center Steven Adams made five shots on Sunday. Westbrook assisted on all of them.


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All told, Oklahoma City made 40 baskets on Sunday. Five of them came during the 14 minutes in which Westbrook was off the floor. (Which, by the way, sounds like something that will become a problem for Scott Brooks' club at some point.) Westbrook made five himself. That means Westbrook directly assisted on 17 of the other 30 Thunder buckets during his time on the floor, an assist rate of 56.7 percent that dwarves even his own league-leading mark (47.8 percent.) I'd say we need to get this dude his own State Farm commercial, but he already wears glasses on his own ... and anyway, I'm not sure Russ would ever go for all that plaid.


Anthony Morrow chipped in 12 points, two rebounds and two steals off the bench for the Thunder, who have gone 17-6 since the start of February. They're tied for the league's second-best record over that stretch with the Cleveland Cavaliers, trailing only the West-leading Golden State Warriors. Despite having Durant for only five of those 23 games, the Thunder boast the NBA's No. 2 offense during that stretch, averaging a scorching 110 points per 100 possessions, just one-tenth of a point-per-100 behind the league-leading Cavs, and the league's fourth-best "net rating," trailing only the Dubs, the Cavs and the surging San Antonio Spurs.


The ball's moving, the points are piling up, the well-fed big men are crashing the boards and doing what they can to protect the paint ... it's not the way Sam Presti and company would've drawn it up, but it's working. As a result, the Thunder have not only a bit of breathing room in the race for the eighth seed, but a not-totally-outside-the-realm-of-possibility shot at catching the Dallas Mavericks, who sit in the seventh slot, four games ahead of OKC, with 12 games remaining.


Sure, the idea of the Thunder going from 3-12 to the No. 7 seed with less than half a season of Durant and without their premier rim protector down the stretch seems crazy. Then again, what about Westbrook's post-All-Star explosion has made sense? At this point, the only sure bet when it comes to the Thunder and their unparalleled point guard seems to be to bank on the unexpected, and to not even bother feigning surprise when the NBA's primary chaos agent calmly rides the tidal wave to his intended destination.


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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 : LeBron flicks in post-buzzer 40-footer, throws down huge alley-oop as Cavs outgun Bucks

Here's the kind of groove LeBron James was in during the second half of Sunday's matchup with the Milwaukee Bucks:


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After a fourth-quarter whistle, James pulled up from the antler on the Bucks' half-court logo, flickadatwrist-ed a set-shot/pass at the bucket, and got nothing but nylon from about 40 feet out. Yep. That kind of rhythm.


In the early going, it didn't look like it'd be that kind of Sunday for James and his Cleveland Cavaliers. The Cavs opened the matinee meeting sluggish, especially on the defensive end, allowing a Bucks club that has posted the third-worst offense in the NBA since the All-Star break (and the three-way trade that shipped out top scorer Brandon Knight in favor of sour-shooting point guard Michael Carter-Williams) to shoot 60.5 percent from the field in the first half. All five Milwaukee starters chipped in at least eight points, as the Bucks rode a 36-22 advantage on points in the paint and some cockeyed Cavaliers shooting (18-for-44 from the floor, 4-for-14 from 3-point land) to a nine-point halftime lead.


After intermission, though, Cleveland course-corrected. James sparked a 13-4 run late in the third quarter, scoring six points and assisting on an Iman Shumpert layup to put the Cavs up 75-73, their first lead since early in the second.


The Bucks stayed within hailing distance early in the fourth, but a small-ball, spread-the-floor-and-bomb-away Cavs lineup — Tristan Thompson in the middle, James alongside, ex-New York Knicks J.R. Smith and Iman Shumpert on the wings and reserve Matthew Dellavedova running point — blew Milwaukee's doors down the stretch. That crew ripped off a 24-9 run over the space of 7 1/2 minutes, punctuated by Smith and James connecting on this high-flying alley-oop flush on the fast break:



Goodnight, Milwaukee. Please drive home safely.


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A few minutes of garbage time later, a Shumpert triple finished off a 108-90 victory, the Cavs' third straight and ninth in their last 11 games, to improve to 46-26 on the season. Cleveland now sits 3 1/2 games ahead of the Chicago Bulls atop the Central Division, and has the same cushion over the Bulls and Toronto Raptors in the race for the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference.


James led all scorers with 28 points on 10-for-17 shooting, with 21 coming on an 8-for-11 mark after halftime. He added 10 rebounds, six assists, a season-high five steals and a block in 39 1/2 minutes of work. Smith added 23 on red-hot 7-for-9 shooting from 3-point land, draining three wide-open long balls during the Cavs' game-deciding fourth-quarter run. All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving, who struggled with his shot a bit but helped carry the Cleveland offense through the slow first-half start, finished with 20 points, seven assists, three rebounds and two steals in 31 minutes.


Those contributions led the FOX Sports Wisconsin to throw up the following graphic late in the contest:



... to which we can only imagine that Kevin Love (nine points on 4-for-13 shooting, three rebounds, two assists, two turnovers in 29 minutes) had something like the following reaction:



Ah, well. You'll get 'em next time, Kev.


Carter-Williams led five Bucks in double-figures with 19 points, five assists, four steals and three rebounds, but he also committed six turnovers in 34 minutes at the controls. Giannis Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton each added 15 points, but Milwaukee was simply outgunned and outclassed in a second half that saw the Cavs outscore the Bucks 64-37, leading to Milwaukee's sixth straight defeat. Jason Kidd's club, one of the league's most surprising success stories in the first half of the season, now stands at 4-13 since the trade deadline, dropping two games below .500 at 34-36.


"We take one game at a time, and I think this is a perfect time for this team, for coaches and players to be put in," Kidd said, according to Genaro C. Armas of The Associated Press. "No one thought we were going to be here."


That may be, but if the Bucks — who are now just 1 1/2 games ahead of the No. 7 Miami Heat and three games clear of the No. 8 Boston Celtics — they might not stay here for long.


Clips above via @_MarcusD_ and @cjzero.


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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 : Justin Verlander says coddling pitchers only 'delays the inevitable'

In today's baseball landscape it's difficult to find a pitcher with more than five years service time who hasn't spent a day on the disabled list. Among the most notable names on that short list is Detroit Tigers right-hander Justin Verlander.


Now entering his 11th season (10th full), Verlander will look to make it ten straight with at least 30 starts and nine straight with no less than 201 innings pitched. It's a remarkable run of durability combined with dominance. And as we learned on Friday, the man behind it all his own theories on why younger pitchers are breaking down once they reach the major leagues.


In a new column from ESPN's Buster Olney, Verlander says that teams are spending too much time coddling pitchers before they reach the big leagues. In doing so, Verlander adds, teams are only managing to delay the inevitable breakdown until they start counting on those arms as major league contributors, which ends up costing them even more.



“I think baseball coddles guys so much now that you delay the inevitable. I think the reason you see so many big leaguers blowing out at a young age is because they would have done it before. But now teams limit pitch counts so much, even at the major league level, that now a guy in his second or third year will pop, when it would have happened in the minors.




“Before,” he continued, “when there wasn’t such an emphasis on pitch counts, I think you kind of weeded that out. Then guys would have surgery [in the minor leagues]. Then they’d come back. And then they’d get to the big leagues.”



In essence, Verlander is suggesting that teams turn their young pitchers loose and hope the blowout comes sooner than later. Based on recent statistics, particularly the numbers of pitchers requiring Tommy John surgery on a yearly basis, it almost sounds like a logical approach. However, as Dr. Glenn Fleisig counters, a lot more goes into the breakdown of each individual pitcher.


As the research director at Dr. James Andrews’ American Sports Medicine Institute, Fleisig has studied countless numbers of elbow injuries. He's looked at when they occurred, how a pitcher felt leading up to the injury and the extent of the damage. His findings suggest that poor mechanics and pitching while fatigued are often the biggest factors, which honestly sounds like a victory for coddling.



“I have tremendous respect for Justin Verlander. You and I are not Justin Verlander. We’ve never thrown 200 innings in the major leagues, or even one inning. So he has a different perspective than we have. But I also have a different perspective. I have science.”




"With biomechanics, we can now identify who has poor mechanics, and there are a lot of progressive organizations that are now modifying kids' mechanics in the minor leagues after they're drafted and as they develop."



Science is a powerful tool, no question about it. And the beautiful thing about this is method is the acknowledgement that no two pitchers are created the same. There are pitchers like Verlander, who are simply structurally and mechanically superior. There are pitchers who need to be coddled or molded. And there are pitchers in between, who can be turned loose but should be monitored.


All such pitchers exist, and the key to helping each of them succeed is to correctly identify where they fall. So no, Verlander isn't necessarily wrong. He just knows what works for him, and at 32 years old, there's no reason to change that thinking.


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Mark Townsend is a writer for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at bigleaguestew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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