News sport : High school girl enlists New York Jets' help to ask boyfriend to prom

Well, here's one way to get your boyfriend's attention to ask him to prom, if he's a New York Jets fan.


Sarah Kardonsky of Division Avenue High School at Levittown, N.Y. decided to go all out with her #promposal. She asked her boyfriend Michael Pagano to prom by getting multiple Jets players including cornerback Antonio Cromartie to film a video, with every one of them asking Michael to go to prom with Sarah.


Here's guessing a simple note would have worked too, but this is a pretty impressive effort.



The Jets retweeted the reaction shot to the video, which had to add to what must have been a pretty surreal day for Michael and Sarah.



So there are two truths following Sarah's gesture: It created a memory both students will remember forever, and nobody at Division Avenue High School is ever, ever beating Sarah's #promposal. And also, nice job by the Jets to make it happen.



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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Random Recap: The 1962 Virginia 500

Welcome to Random Recaps, our new weekly feature at From The Marbles. In this space, we'll recap a race from the past at the track the where Sprint Cup Series is racing next.


This week's race is the 1962 Virginia 500. Need to know how Random Recap works? Click here.


After Fireball Roberts had mechanical issues, Richard Petty cruised to victory in the Virginia 500.


Petty led the final 121 laps of the race, beating Joe Weatherly by a half lap for the win. While Weatherly was Petty's closest competitor, by the end he was his only real competitor either. He was the only driver to finish on the lead lap.


Petty led for 145 of the race's 500 laps and led for 24 laps from laps 112-135. He was passed by Roberts for the lead and he went on to lead the next 244 laps before Petty took the lead for good.


Roberts ended up having to retire because of a rear end problem. He completed 415 laps and finished in 18th place.


Rex White, Fred Lorenzen and Lee Petty rounded out the top five and they were all one lap down. From there, well, it was a long way back to sixth. Marvin Panch, who finished a spot behind Lee Petty, was eight laps down.


Darel Dieringer, the 10th-place finisher, finished 31 laps behind Richard Petty.


Only 14 of the race's 32 entrants were running at the end of the race, which featured two cautions. The most common parts failure was a rear end issue. In addition to Roberts, it plagued five other drivers.


Epilogue: In the last two races at Martinsville, the drivers who finished in 18th have ended the race on the lead lap. And if you think two cautions at Martinsville is crazy, it is for modern NASCAR. Every race since the 1989 spring race has had more than five caution flags. The 1971 spring race, also won by Richard Petty, featured just one caution for three laps. We're going to bet that won't happen on Sunday.


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







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News sport : DL3: Tiger Woods confident he'll make 2016 Ryder Cup team

No one seems to have any clue whether or not Tiger Woods is going to play in the Masters in two weeks, but 2016 U.S. Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III knows Woods anticipates making his Hazeltine-bound team.


"He's expecting to make the team," Love said in an interview on BBC Radio. "He and I keep in touch a lot more than we have. He still has a good attitude and is working hard."


However, Love is in the dark like the rest of us about Woods' Masters status.


"I spoke to a few people who tell me he's working very hard and is eager to get back," Love said. "I suppose he has a plan for the Masters - we're hoping to see him back soon."


Woods announced Feb. 11 that he would not play again on the PGA Tour until his game is "tournament ready." He has since skipped The Honda Classic, just minutes from his home in Jupiter Island, Fla., and last week's Arnold Palmer Invitational, a tournament he has won eight times.


Notah Begay III, Woods' friend and former Stanford teammates, said on Golf Channel that the 14-time major winner is essentially a coin flip on if he'll play in the year's first major.




Ryan Ballengee is a Yahoo Sports contributor. Find him on Facebook and Twitter.







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News sport : South Carolina teases 2015 black jerseys (Photo)

South Carolina will have black jerseys at its disposal again in 2015.


The Gamecocks wore black against Tennessee in 2014 and will probably wear black at some point this season based off a tweet from the equipment department.



You're not crazy if you think they look similar to what SC wore last year. Here's a look at the jerseys from the Tennessee game.




The main difference looks to be the shoulder piping. It was horizontal on last year's jerseys and now appears to be vertical to match the Gamecocks' garnet and white jerseys from a year ago.






For more South Carolina news, visit GamecockCentral.com.


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







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News sport : New UMass AD shows he has a sense of humor

Reach for the stars, Ryan Bamford.


Bamford was recently hired as Massachussetts' athletic director. He came from Georgia Tech, which recently beat Mississippi State in the Orange Bowl. And the Yellow Jackets are members of the ACC.


When he was congratulated on Twitter by Michael Strickland, the senior associate commissioner for the ACC, Bamford figured he'd make a big request right away.



Of course, it's (very likely) a joke. But UMass is looking for a new football conference. While the Minutemen are members of the Atlantic 10 in men's basketball and other sports, they've been members of the MAC in football. However, the 2015 season is the final year for the arrangement. The ACC has 14 members in football and 15 in basketball with Notre Dame's conference affiliation.


The Minutemen's options seem limited too. UMass could go independent, which would mean having to find 12 games every season rather than having eight or nine conference games penciled in every year. Or it could join the Sun Belt, which at this point is a nationwide conference with teams stretching from Idaho to Georgia. The American may not be an option because with the addition of Navy as a football-only member, the conference has 12 football teams.


Or heck, maybe it will join the ACC.


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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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Bale’s £86m Real nightmare

Gareth Bale’s white Bentley was attacked as he left Madrid’s training complex in the early hours of Monday morning after the Clasico.


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When Gareth Bale scored in the final of the European Cup and the Spanish Cup in the same season last year, he did something for Real Madrid that only Raul and Ferenc Puskas had managed before him.


We can be fairly sure that no-one ever tried to kick Puskas’s 1959 Mercedes 180 as it pulled out of the club’s training ground.


The same cannot be said for Bale’s white Bentley, which was attacked as he left Madrid’s Valdebebas training complex in the early hours of Monday morning after the Clasico.


Bale would not expect to have earned the same level of respect as the ‘Galloping Major’, who won three European Cups and scored 156 league goals in 180 games, but he has four trophies in his first year and a half at the club, so the animosity he has encountered is impossible to justify and hard to understand.


‘He scored the winner in the Spanish Cup final; he scored the winner in the Champions League final. He is already a Real Madrid legend,’ gushed Madrid sports daily Marca when Bale won the European Cup in Lisbon last May.


Its rival publication in the Spanish capital, Diaro AS added: ‘Marcelo and Cristiano Ronaldo both scored afterwards but Bale’s was the winner because it was game-over after that.’ Those two publications have changed their tune 10 months on — dedicating pages to fan polls that call for the Welshman to be dropped.


Yesterday 70 per cent of 8,000 supporters responding to one online survey said they wanted Bale left out of the team.


There was no shortage of ammunition in the Madrid press, with statistics such as ‘he never set foot in the penalty area in the second half against Barca’ and ‘he only played seven passes after the break — just three more than Lucas Silva who came on three minutes from time’.


All this supposedly supports the theory that Bale is in decline. But behind the numbers the story is a little more complicated than his critics care to admit.


Bale came back to pre-season training in peak physical condition last summer and was comfortably the club’s best player on the tour of the US, scoring in friendlies against Manchester United and Inter Milan.


When Real Madrid went on a run of 22 straight wins, Bale scored in the 5-1 win over Basle that began that hot streak, he got two in the next game that saw them beat Deportivo 8-2 and netted again in the 5-1 win over Cordoba that followed.


But a thigh injury in October saw him miss three weeks of the season and in his absence Carlo Ancelotti fielded a midfield quartet of James Rodriguez, Toni Kroos, Luka Modric and Isco. And that is where many of his problems began.


The team kept winning and with the four passing midfielders the football resembled that played by Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona which many Madrid followers had spent so long envying. The purists loved it and they also loved the part played by Isco — a Malaga lad who felt like one of their own.


Bale came back into the team and his part in the club’s historic run picked up where it had left off. He scored in the 2-0 win over San Lorenzo that made Real Madrid world club champions in December.


But when the run came to an end in their next competitive game against Valencia, the season began to unravel and he became the scapegoat. In the defeat by Valencia he was blamed for squandering a late chance and ignoring Karim Benzema’s screams for a pass. The idea that he should make way for Isco now went hand in hand with the theory that he was selfish.


Ronaldo did him no favours in the next game when he very publicly chastised him for shooting instead of passing late in a match against Espanyol. ‘Puta!’ (f***!) shouted the Portuguese, throwing his arms down in disgust.


Bale’s every touch from there on in was whistled, despite the fact that he had scored direct from a free-kick earlier in the game — something that Ronaldo hasn’t done now in over 50 attempts.


The undercurrent of competition between Bale and Ronaldo is another factor. It is no secret that president Florentino Perez sees Bale as Ronaldo’s eventual successor on the pitch as a match winner and off it as a big-money contract winner.


Ronaldo is not enamoured with the idea of being replaced by anyone, and despite the fact that Bale lives in the same luxury neighbourhood as Ronaldo, there is not the closeness between the two that has developed at Barcelona between Neymar and Leo Messi.


When Ronaldo threw a party for his 30th birthday, Bale was invited but did not attend — perhaps wisely, considering the fallout that followed the festivities, coming as they did on the day of a 4-0 Madrid derby defeat.


Bale’s partner Emma Rhys-Jones lives with him in Madrid, although, with a young daughter Alba-Violet not yet three years of age, frequent trips can be made back to Wales. At some point in the future a decision will have to be made about schools. And he will need to be a sure that Madrid is the right city in which to put down deeper roots.


He says he barely noticed the thugs who tried to kick his car as he drove away from the training ground at 1.30am on Monday. But how long before the lack of respect from supporters, commentators and at times even team-mates begins to take its toll?


Yesterday was 10 months to the day since Madrid won the Champions League and Bale arrived back in the city at 4.30am to be greeted by an open-top bus that took him through streets filled with jubilant supporters.


The Madrid homecomings are not as pleasant as they used to be. – Daily Mail






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Bafana ready for Swazi test

Tonight Bafana Bafana play their first match since their failure to progress to the knockout stage of the Africa Cup of Nations.


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Tonight Bafana Bafana play their first match since their failure to progress to the knockout stage of the Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea when they take on Swaziland in a friendly at Somhlolo Stadium in Mbabane.


“We’re going to put up our best team against Swaziland,” coach Shakes Mashaba said before the squad left for the Swazi capital yesterday morning. “We need to first start by being champions in our region before we go out to conquer the continent. Swaziland was our first option for a friendly because we also need to contribute to the growth of the game in our region.”


Having previously coached Swaziland, Mashaba has some idea of what the opposition will be like. And without being condescending, the Bafana coach admitted that our neighbours do not pose too much of a threat.


“I’ve been in contact with their technical director and from our discussions and my experience I know they don’t have depth (like South Africa does) and they are very limited. But that does not mean we should under-estimate them.”


With the match to be played on an Astroturf pitch, Mashaba says the surface should not be an issue for his side.


“We told the boys that you’ve got to be ready to play on every surface, after all in a short time the rest of Africa will be playing on Astroturf (Fifa are installing these pitches all over the continent).


“These kind of fields are easy to maintain because they don’t need a lot of watering.”


Mashaba will once again persist with his policy of rotating the captaincy, the coach saying he would rather have more leaders on the pitch than just one.


With Dean Furman excused from the match due to commitment at his English Championship club Doncaster Rovers, his midfield partner Andile Jali might be given the leadership role.


Former captain Itumeleng Khune is also back in the squad and could also be considered although Mashaba hinted at Bidvest Wits’ Thulani Hlatshwayo.


“What is pleasing me is the fact that even the clubs are giving more players the chance to lead the teams. Look at Wits, they have now made Tyson (Hlatshwayo) the captaincy and that is good for us because we will have more players who are used to being leaders.


“You don’t want just one leader but rather more because they will push one another to perform better. If you have one captain you may find that behind the curtains the players do not respect him and that can create a problem. So we will rotate the captaincy.”


The match against Swaziland will be followed by a much tougher clash against Nigeria and Hlatshwayo is particularly looking ahead to taking on the Super Eagles having missed that second round qualifier in Uyo. “As a footballer, you want to play every game of the national team as long as you get a call up.


“So having to miss the in Uyo due to suspension was not a lovely thing – especially considering the fact that in the first leg I played very well and was denied a chance to score. It would be great to win, and not just win but also dominate them.” - The Star






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Van Gaal’s philosophy sinking in

There were signs all over the pitch at Anfield that Manchester United players are finally getting Louis Van Gaal’s philosophy.


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No audience with Louis van Gaal is complete without a mention of the Dutchman’s ‘philosophy’. He talked about it on his first day at Old Trafford and was still talking about it in the build-up to Manchester United’s win over Liverpool on Sunday.


‘It takes time,’ he said. ‘In Germany (at Bayern Munich), it took until December. And now (with United) until March.’


There were signs all over the pitch at Anfield that his players are finally getting the message. It was without doubt their best performance under Van Gaal: ‘one of the most important moments in my career,’ he later acknowledged.


The 63-year-old is ruthless in his pursuit of what he wants. No-one is exempt, and it was significant that Juan Mata and Ander Herrera, two of United’s best performers in the 2-1 win over their bitter rivals, have been made to sit on the sidelines for lengthy spells this season.


Two-goal hero Mata only returned against Tottenham in the previous game after a two-month absence from Van Gaal’s starting line-up in the Premier League.


His position at Anfield, described by Van Gaal as a ‘false right winger’, demonstrated once again how the manager places his team’s needs above an individual’s preference.


And Herrera spoke candidly yesterday about how upsetting Van Gaal contributed to him making just six league starts in his first six months at Old Trafford following a £29million move from Bilbao.


‘I keep my distance with Van Gaal, but he’s a good guy with a strong character,’ said Herrera, who was not seen for more than a month after being hooked at half-time against West Brom in October.


‘He likes discipline and does not believe in egos in the dressing room. Everybody is equal under his rule. He talks about what he wants from me. At the start he used to tell me off because I always looked for the ball. I always wanted to have it, and no, I must wait.


‘He loves possession and he doesn’t like being at risk of losing the ball. He wants long stretches of possession. He believes spaces are created that way because the team has the quality to find them.’


There have been many times in Van Gaal’s first season in England when his philosophy has not been altogether clear; when the constant chopping and changing of formation and shuffling of a rather expensive pack of players has left fans scratching their heads.


Nor are United close to being the finished article. An eight-point deficit on Chelsea is evidence of that, and they are still far from certain to achieve their target of Champions League qualification despite Sunday’s win opening up a five-point advantage over Liverpool.


But something seems to have clicked in the wins against Spurs and Liverpool, just when the FA Cup defeat by Arsenal looked to have raised major concerns over the club’s direction under Van Gaal.


Players who privately have questioned his methods look more comfortable, although Liverpool’s alarmingly lacklustre display at Anfield helped in that respect.


Michael Carrick’s return to anchor the midfield has been an important factor, so too Marouane Fellaini’s advanced role, which has given United’s attack a new dimension.


Even Chris Smalling and Phil Jones, United’s much-maligned England centre backs, look solid after being thrown back together by Marcos Rojo’s groin injury and Jonny Evans’s ban for spitting at Newcastle’s Papiss Cisse.


Surprisingly, Jones and Smalling have only started as a central defensive pairing on five occasions in the league, not including four games together as part of Van Gaal’s unpopular back three.


And Jones admitted that the expectations raised by succeeding Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic have not made it easy for them.


‘It has been difficult,’ he said. ‘It was well documented that me and Chris were going to be the next centre backs at United but it has not gone how we would have liked.


‘You cannot build a partnership on four games. Hopefully now we have had back-to-back games together we can keep it going. We complement each other well.’


It was also notable that United’s best 45 minutes of the season, according to Van Gaal, came with Angel di Maria and Radamel Falcao on the bench. Both came on to play their part in the victory and it was a reminder of the resources at his disposal, as well as the issues that still need to be ironed out in the remaining months of the season.


‘Those boys are top players but we have a number of players who the manager can choose from, which is great,’ said Carrick.


‘Different games throw up different scenarios and different systems maybe, but the last two games have gone very well for us.’


There is still room for improvement, but it appears Van Gaal’s philosophy is beginning to sink in.– Daily Mail






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Cech threatens Chelsea exit

Petr Cech will not accept another season as Chelsea’s second-choice goalkeeper.


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Petr Cech will not accept another season as Chelsea’s second-choice goalkeeper.


The 32-year-old Czech Republic No 1 has been displaced by Thibaut Courtois this campaign, making just four Premier League starts to the Belgian’s 25.


Cech said: ‘I don’t know what the club’s idea will be. It looks like it works well with me and Thibaut as a duo but that can only work for one season. I don’t want another one like this.


‘I’ll leave it for the summer. It will be important to sit down with the club and the manager to consider all the pros and cons. We will see what works out the best.’


Cech has been linked with Arsenal, Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain, and Jose Mourinho insisted this month he would not stand in the player’s way should he wish to leave.


But Cech’s contract does not expire until the end of next season and Chelsea’s manager says it will take ‘huge money’ to land him. – Daily Mail






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Platini re-elected Uefa boss

Michel Platini was re-elected unopposed for a third term as Uefa president at the annual Congress.


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Vienna - Michel Platini was re-elected unopposed for a third term as Uefa president at the annual Congress, proudly proclaiming European soccer's governing body to be “the best”.


Sepp Blatter sat through the day-long proceedings as a guest and had to endure some stinging criticism from his challengers for the Fifa presidency who were invited to make presentations to delegates.


In many ways, the day summed up the differing fortunes between the sport's European and world governing bodies.


While Uefa has basked in the financial success of the Champions League, Fifa has been hit by a wave of corruption scandals over the last few years.


“We're transparent, we're democratic and we're the best,” Platini told reporters. “We have shown that it is indeed possible to combine romanticism and realism, ideals and action.”


Uefa have said they will not back Blatter when he stands for a fifth mandate on May 29, where he faces opposition from Luis Figo, Michael van Praag and Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein.


Frenchman Platini said there were no hard feelings against soccer's governing body.


“I have to say, however, we do love Fifa dearly. Europe's entire football community loves Fifa dearly. It is precisely because we love and respect it that we want it to be perfect.”


However, that did not seem to be the case with Blatter's opponents.


“The current state of disarray asks for a change in leadership,” said Dutch FA president van Praag in a stinging attack.


“It is the responsibility of our generation to clean up the mess.


“The beautiful heritage of international football has been tarnished by ever continuing accusations of corruption, bribery, nepotism and waste of money.”


Blatter, who in his opening speech to the Congress had called for unity and reiterated that sport should not be used as a political tool, sat stony-faced throughout.


Despite the generally triumphant air, Platini warned that violence and racism were growing threats and European football risked a return to the dark days of the 1980s.


To make his point, Platini invoked the Heysel stadium disaster where 39 people, mostly Italians, were killed when a wall collapsed after Liverpool fans charged Juventus supporters before the 1985 European Cup Final.


Platini played for Juventus on that day.


“In recent months, we have all been struck by certain images that I thought were a thing of the past. Some of us experienced that past at first hand. In my case, it was exactly 30 years ago,” he said.


“I therefore renew my call for greater awareness of this issue among the public authorities, so that we can avoid reliving the dark days of a not-so-distant past - a past where hooligans and all manner of fanatics called the shots in certain European stadiums.”


In another move aimed at making Uefa more democratic, the Congress voted in principle to give seats on its executive committee to representatives of stakeholders such as players, clubs or leagues.


The details will be ironed out over the next year.


Former Croatia striker Davor Suker was among seven members elected to the executive committee where he will join three other ex-professionals including Platini. – Reuters






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News sport : Khris Middleton's buzzer-beating, game-winning 3 gives Bucks huge win over Heat

Hell, why should the college kids get to have all the fun? How about some pro-style March Madness, courtesy of Khris Middleton?


[DraftKings: FREE entry to huge cash Fantasy Basketball Contest with first deposit]





The Milwaukee Bucks entered Tuesday on a six-game losing streak that's dropped them below .500 and into a somewhat precarious position, as several other teams below them in the Eastern Conference standings start to show signs of life in pursuit of their own postseason spot. One of those teams, the Miami Heat, came calling at the BMO Harris Bradley Center, with designs on drawing within a mere half-game of the Bucks' No. 6 spot. It took a hellacious fourth-quarter comeback, but Jason Kidd's club was able to fend off their visitors, thanks to one remarkable bit of late-game shotmaking from a dude who'd gone 4-for-16 through the first 47-plus minutes of regulation.


But we've gotten ahead of ourselves. Let's reset.


With 10.8 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter and Miami clinging to an 88-86 lead — all that remained of the 16-point advantage Erik Spoelstra's team held early in the fourth, before the Bucks clamped down defensively — Heat forward Michael Beasley and Bucks guard Jerryd Bayless stood at the Milwaukee free-throw line, ready to contest a jump ball. Despite giving up a solid six inches to Beasley, Bayless came away with the ball, tapping it back to Middleton behind the arc. He kicked it right back to Bayless, who knifed through the paint against Beasley and scooped up a game-tying layup ... that came up empty.


But all was not lost! After the rebound was tapped out of the paint, Milwaukee center Zaza Pachulia raced to the corner to knock the loose ball away from Heat guard Goran Dragic, save it and chuck it back toward half-court as he fell out of bounds along the Bucks baseline. Pachulia's save landed smack dab in Middleton's shooting pocket with nine-tenths of a second left in the game. Plenty of time. Snap the wrist, watch the splash, feel the rain on your skin, let the cheers and the teammates wash over you.



After spending the night mostly swarmed by Heat defenders, Middleton was nails when it counted, drilling a buzzer-beating, game-winning 3-pointer — for the second time this season — to complete a 16-point fourth-quarter comeback and score an 89-88 victory that ended the Bucks' half-dozen-game skid.


After the game, FOX Sports Wisconsin's Telly Hughes asked Middleton to take him through the final possession. Middleton did about as well as you could have asked for, mere seconds removed from the insanity.


"Man, JB got a good look to the basket," said Middleton, who finished with 13 points on 5-for-17 shooting, four rebounds and two assists in the win. "They tipped it out. Z got a hand on it, just trying to make another play [...] I just tried to shoot it with time left."


And he did, snatching victory from the jaws of defeat on a night where the Bucks could have packed it in after falling behind 81-65 on a Dragic layup with 9:53 left in the fourth.


To that point, the Heat had largely imposed their will on the home team, weathering the loss of center Hassan Whiteside to a lacerated right hand in the first half that required 10 stitches and was numb after the game behind strong play from the star backcourt of Dragic and Wade, plus some off-the-bench punch from reserves Mario Chalmers and Henry Walker. From there, though, Milwaukee began walking Miami down.


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Khris Middleton prepares to let it fly. (Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports) A pair of buckets by Giannis Antetokounmpo cut the deficit to a dozen; a Pachulia steal and subsequent Bayless finish got it down to 10. From there, the defense started to pick up, as a big late-game Bucks lineup featuring Ersan Ilyasova up front alongside Pachulia and Antetokounmpo with Bayless and Middleton in the backcourt made life miserable on Miami, contesting the Heat into 1-for-7 shooting over the final 6 1/2 minutes while forcing four Heat turnovers that turned into 11 Bucks points.


"We just kept fighting," Middleton said after the game. "We knew we needed this one bad, especially with Miami right behind us. We got down late, but we didn't give up. We kept fighting."


Fueled by turnovers, hustle and a couple of big 3s, the Bucks ripped off a 14-0 run in the space of five minutes, capped by a shuffling-and-sliding Pachulia scoop layup that tied the game at 85 with 1:20 to go. They snuffed out the ensuing Miami possession, too, and forced a scramble for the ball, but Wade came up with it and hit a layup that ended Miami's drought with 1:03 remaining.


Wade had a chance to give Miami a two-possession lead with 17 seconds left, but he split a pair of free throws that kept the Heat lead at 88-85. A scant five seconds later, Ilyasova had a chance to cut the lead to one, but he split his pair, with Beasley rebounding the missed second freebie before a hard-charging and quick-thinking Bayless tied him up to force the jump ball that wound up leading to one of the more ridiculous endings we've seen this season.



Ilyasova led five Bucks in double-figures with 19 points on 7-for-15 shooting to go with 11 rebounds, three blocks, two assists and one steal in 28 1/2 minutes of work. He was one of three Bucks to post double-doubles, too, joined by Antetokounmpo (16 points, 10 rebounds, three blocks, two assists) and Pachulia (14 points and 11 rebounds, plus a team-high seven assists and five steals). Milwaukee improves to 35-36 with the win, giving them a 2 1/2-game cushion over seventh-seeded Miami ... and, more importantly, securing a 4-0 season-series sweep over the Heat, should playoff positioning wind up coming down to a head-to-head tiebreaker.


Wade had 21 points on 7-for-14 shooting with four assists, three steals and two rebounds to lead the Heat, who fell 32-38 after scoring just nine points as a team in the fourth quarter. Miami's lead over the eighth-seeded Boston Celtics is now just one game; as luck would have it, the Heat travel to Boston to face Brad Stevens' Celts on Wednesday.



They'll need to, since you'd expect the numb-handed Whiteside to be at least limited and perhaps entirely unavailable, leaving Miami awfully small up front — Beasley, Chris Andersen, Udonis Haslem and Luol Deng would be the only healthy Heat players measuring 6-foot-8 or taller — against a Celtics frontcourt featuring the likes of Tyler Zeller, Kelly Olynyk, Brandon Bass and Jonas Jerebko. The impetus will be on Wade and Dragic to carry the day if the Heat are to stem the tide; it ought to be lots of fun to see them lock horns with Boston's bulldog backcourt of Avery Bradley and Marcus Smart.


The Bucks' next test comes Thursday, when they take on an Indiana Pacers club that's riding a six-game losing streak of its own and will be desperate to try to use the Bucks as a stepping stool back into the playoff picture. A determined and focused Indy side could give Milwaukee problems — one bonkers last-second win doesn't necessarily mean an end to the struggleball the Bucks have been playing for the past month — but there's no need to dwell on the possibilities of a dire near-future when you can instead live wholly in a moment of pitch-perfect absurdity.


"The Milwaukee Bucks didn’t play very well on Tuesday night," wrote Jeremy Schmidt of Bucksketball. "But — for now — who cares?"


Not a blessed soul in Milwaukee, we'd wager, and hardly any in Miami, either.


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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 : Watch Carey Price rob Kevin Fiala with backwards skate save (Video)

Kevin Fiala of the Nashville Predators made his NHL debut Tuesday night, an evening that was made almost even more memorable in the second period..


Early in the second frame, Fiala nearly scored his first career goal after a fortunate bounce behind the Montreal Canadiens net, but Carey Price did a Carey Price thing with a fantastic stop:



Notice how in true Carey Price fashion there was no panic as he cooly slid across the crease to made the skate save.


The Predators would get the last laugh, however, winning 3-2 in overtime after Filip Forsberg's winner 1:54 into the extra frame. Despite the loss, the charity point makes Montreal the first team to reach 100 points this season.


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Sean Leahy is the associate editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!


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News sport : Michael Carter-Williams throws errant alley-oop pass off the top of the backboard

It can be difficult to establish a rapport and a rhythm with new teammates after a in-season trade, especially when you're a young point guard. Sure, some veterans seem to find their way pretty quickly — Goran Dragic's quick acclimation to pairing with Dwyane Wade in the Miami Heat backcourt seems a notable recent example — but when you're still learning the ropes, getting used to a new system and new running buddies can take time, practice and repetition.


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A month after joining the Milwaukee Bucks, it looks like former Philadelphia 76ers point man Michael Carter-Williams still seems to be working on getting the hang of where his new teammates want the ball on offense:



I think Jerryd Bayless tends to like the alley-oop a bit lower, MCW. Might want to take a little bit off that one next time. (Then again, maybe there was some moisture on the ball. Maybe a little dew, like in that scene from "Major League: Back to the Minors," which is a reference that everyone can enjoy.)


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Sure, this particular offensive trip didn't quite work out how Carter-Williams hoped, but let's look on the bright side instead. For one thing, this is the most creative the Bucks' offense has looked since before Brandon Knight left town, and for another, if Alexey Shved's any indication, MCW should go from missing everything to inexplicably putting up numbers in no time flat. It's only a matter of time.


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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 : Brock Lesnar shuns UFC, signs contract extension with WWE

Brock Lesnar announced Tuesday in a live appearance on SportsCenter that he had re-signed a contract with the WWE and would no longer compete in mixed martial arts. During an interview with Michelle Beadle, Lesnar said he signed the deal to remain in the WWE on Monday.


He will face Roman Reigns on Sunday in Santa Clara, Calif., at WrestleMania 31, the WWE's biggest event of the year. His contract was up on Monday and UFC CEO Lorenzo Fertitta and president Dana White both said they planned to speak with him when he was contractually free.


Lesnar, though, didn't think he could go through the grind of training again.


"It was just hard," Lesnar told Beadle. "It was hard for me and it is hard to talk about it, but the fighter inside of me wants to complete. The father, the husband ... You know, I'm an older caveman now. I make wiser caveman decisions. So I'm here to say my legacy in the Octagon is over. However, my legacy this Sunday at WrestleMania will not be my last. It will not be my last.


"That's why I wanted to come here. I wanted people to hear me. It was a hard decision to make. It took me a year. I've thought about this for a year. At the end of the day, it's all about me wanting to have fun."


Lesnar, whose appearance at UFC 184 in Los Angeles last month prompted speculation of a return, said he had been training for the last two months preparing to return to fighting.


But as he pondered it, his ability to work a limited schedule in the WWE was most appealing. Lesnar said he wasn't sure he could go through a full-time grind again and that making only limited appearances was ultimately what swayed him.


Brock Lesnar talks to UFC president Dana White at UFC 184. (Credit: @Sholler_UFC Twitter) White told Yahoo Sports he supported Lesnar's choice.


"I am very happy for him," White said. "He has been a stand-up guy from the day I met him and I think he made the right decision."


When Lesnar first fought in MMA in 2007, defeating Moon Soo Kim at the Los Angeles Coliseum on a Hero's MMA card, he spoke of his distaste for the rigorous travel professional wrestling required. But when he retired from the UFC after a loss to Alistair Overeem in Las Vegas in 2011 at UFC 141, largely because of health issues, he signed a deal with the WWE that allowed him to make considerably reduced appearances.


"This wasn't an overnight decision," Lesnar said. "This was a long and heartfelt decision. You weigh out the pros. You weigh out the cons. At the end of the day, last night, old Vince McMahon put the offer on the table that I couldn't refuse. That's really what it comes down to: Business and money and health and well-being.


"I've been on both sides of the spectrum. I've been in a bad position with my health. I've been in a bad position with my money. Now, I'm in a great position with both and I'm happy. I love what I'm doing. I work a limited schedule. I work part-time with full-time pay, like everybody wants, but which you can't have. Just me. So I'm happy."


Lesnar said he attended UFC 184 simply to recall the feeling of what it was like to be at a fight.


"I wanted to feel that energy [again]," he said.


But even after he felt it, he decided it wasn't for him. He said he will never compete in MMA again.


"I'm officially closing the door on MMA," Lesnar said.






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News sport : Dana White: Dillashaw-Barao rematch postponed again

When T.J. Dillashaw took the UFC bantamweight championship from Renan Barao in May 2014, most thought that Barao – who was undefeated for nearly 10 years prior to that loss – would receive an immediate rematch.


Dillashaw's quickness gave Barao trouble in their first bout. (Getty) A rematch was set for later in the summer at UFC 177. However, Barao suffered a medical issue related to his weight cut 24 hours before the fight and was subsequently removed from the card. Dillashaw instead faced journeyman Joe Soto in what was a showcase fight for the newly minted champ.


Most recently the rematch with Barao was booked for the main event of UFC 186 on April 25 in Montreal. Unfortunately, the Barao-Dillashaw 2 showdown has seen another setback. This time, it's the champion being forced to pull out, as Dillashaw fractured a rib during practice and will no longer be available to compete.


UFC President Dana White broke the unfortunate news during an interview with Los Angeles radio station KRRL-FM 92.3. earlier Tuesday. He also said no timetable has been set for the champion's return.


With Standard and Poor downgrading the UFC's credit rating last year – in large part due to their sub-par PPV performance (numbers that the UFC blamed on the slew of main event injuries over the past 24 months) – 2015 seemed to be on the upswing. Both UFC 183 and 184 were estimated to eclipse the coveted 500,000 buy rate.


The rematch between Barao and Dillashaw may not have been Jon Jones vs. Daniel Cormier or Ronda Rousey vs. Cat Zingano, but it is a fight that many fans and pundits have been looking forward to; both in terms of surefire, action-packed competition, and also for divisional clarity.


Before Dillashaw or Barao can move on in the bantamweight division, they first need to settle their blossoming rivalry, and that is becoming increasingly difficult to manage.






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