News sport : Timofey Mozgov, backward jersey and all, is a natural commercial pitchman

To be honest, I don't even know why a Cleveland-area business would try to get LeBron James, Kyrie Irving or Kevin Love to appear in its commercials. I mean, Timofey Mozgov is sitting right there, and he is so good at it, especially when "it" includes swatting a plate of food to the ground:



The full run of the Cleveland Cavaliers' hulking Russian center's dialogue in this ad for The Brew Garden:


[swats plate of food to the ground]

Get this weak stuff OUT OF HERE. I am hungry for The Brew Garden. Family food. Fine spirits. Fantastic people. My home away from home? The Brew Garden.

Now, granted, there are a couple of less-than-smooth elements of this production — Mozzy's eyes darting off-camera, presumably to revisit the cue cards, and, of course, the fact that he has to wear his jersey backward so that people know A) he is a basketball player on the local basketball team and B) which player he is — but generally speaking, I think we can agree that this [swats plate of food to the ground] is a slam dunk of a local commercial.


The production values might not quite be on par with the San Antonio Spurs' H-E-B spots, but the pure heart and spirit? That's all here, just like family food, fine spirits and fantastic people are at The Brew Garden. Go there, everyone. Tell them a gigantic Russian sent you.


Hat-tip to John Krolik.


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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!



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






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News sport : Tout Wars recap: Jose Abreu, Xander Bogaerts, Carlos Rodon and various other Sox

It would not be entirely accurate to say that I entered this year's A.L.-only Tout Wars auction with a highly detailed and thoroughly vetted plan.


No, plan is definitely the wrong term.


[Yahoo Sports Fantasy Baseball: Sign up and join a league today!]


Last year I had a well-rehearsed plan, executed it reasonably well, and then four of my players suffered season-ending injuries almost immediately. Mike Trout couldn't do it all by himself. My pitching staff was basically Yordano Ventura and five dudes who threw like Boof Bonser. That is to say, it was not a good pitching staff.


So this season, I suppose I'm trying to move beyond plan-making, beyond scripting. Still, I did enter the Tout auction with a set of guiding fantasy principles in mind (some of them disposable), plus I'd spent a good deal of prep time identifying players likely to be available for $1 (some of whom went for $7). When preparing for any auction or draft of unusual depth, my focus is generally on finding the best possible end-game targets. It's much easier to tweak your positional budgets mid-auction if you absolutely know that you can live with, say, the $1 outfielders or pitchers or catchers.


At a very basic level, of course, the idea in any fantasy auction is to use your $260 budget to purchase a group of players you believe will deliver far greater than $260 in value. And then you need to remember to address all statistical categories while simultaneously tracking the needs of your competitors ... and their dwindling auction resources, and their bidding habits.


And obviously you don't want to spend your way into a situation in which you're at the mercy of the room, desperately needing stats or positions you can no longer afford. And you need to react appropriately to unanticipated opportunities.


And you gotta know when to quick-bid, when to exceed your prices (ideally never), and when to simply shut up.


Auctions are hard, is what I'm saying. They're also the truest test of an owner's ability to forecast the season ahead, and, without question, an auction is the fairest method of player distribution — every manager gets a shot at every name in the pool. Basically, when the auction vs. draft debate erupts, I'm with Pianowski.


Before we review Tout rosters, I should note that this particular league is not exactly the standard-issue hometown fantasy setup. We select a total of 324 players, strictly from the A.L. Thus, it's inevitable that every manager will start a part-time player or two (hopefully not three). Also, the league is loaded with sharks — here's the lineup. If my back-of-the-envelope math is correct, the managers in this particular A.L.-only league have a combined 877 years of fantasy experience. (Hard to say with precision, because Lawr's true age is unknown. Lost in the mists of history.) Every owner knows every player. We've all won leagues. We're all paid by someone to know something about baseball. I have a pretty fair record as a fantasy ranker, just for the record. Bargains are hard to find in Tout — they only happen by accident, really. Tough league.


Don't let me down, Xander Bogaerts. (Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports) This year, for the first time, Tout unintentionally added a survivalist element to the auction by holding it in a room that was as cold as deep space. Serious, bone-chilling cold. Twenty minutes into the event, Chris Liss and I were huddled together, burning a stack of Rotowire draft guides for warmth.


But obviously we all made it through the auction safely, with minimal damage. You can find full results right here. Pick a winner, if that's your thing.


Here's a snapshot of my team and its salaries, beginning with the bats...


C: Jason Castro $13, Geovany Soto $2


1B/3B/CI: Jose Abreu $36, Xander Bogaerts $18, Albert Pujols $26


2B/SS/MI: Jonathan Schoop $4, Elvis Andrus $21, Asdrubal Cabrera $15


OF: Lorenzo Cain $16, Dalton Pompey $11, Seth Smith $5, Aaron Hicks $1


UT/SW: Mitch Moreland $2, Mike Aviles $1


RSV: Billy Burns, Delmon Young


Again, this is a 12-team only-league with 23 active roster spots and a $260 player acquisition budget. It's not possible to assemble a lineup of stars. In a standard mixed league, the quality of your draft or auction is usually determined by your best players; in an only-league, the relative strength of your roster has more to do with the worst names in your lineup. You won't need to mess with guys like Castro, Soto, Schoop, Aviles or Hicks in a 10 or 12-team mixer, obviously. But they all have value in a deep A.L.-only league, because all will see at-bats. Schoop just hit 16 homers in his age-22 season. Aviles carries eligibility at 2B, SS, 3B, OF, CI and MI, plus he's likely to see another 300-400 plate appearances.


Dalton Pompey, an $11 Blue Jay (Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports) Hicks is ... well, OK, he's coming off a rough season, hitting just .215. He also hasn't yet locked down a starting job. He could be a problem. But let's not forget that Hicks has the top-prospect pedigree, and he's demonstrated on-base skills at every level — even in a crummy 2014 season, he still reached base at a .341 clip. Tout replaced AVG with OBP last year, shifting away from traditional scoring.


As mentioned above, my preparations for this year's auction were really all about the end-game names, the $1 to $3 players. Going in, I was comfortable with the depth of the outfield player pool, so I expected to spend sometihng in the $30-$35 range to fill four OF spots, plus UTIL. I would have been substantially below that range, too, if it weren't for a bidding skirmish with Liss on Pompey. No question, I paid full retail price for the Jays presumptive starting center-fielder, but he's a 22-year-old with legit 30-steal speed, and he slashed .317/.392/.471 last year in the minors.


If you need more hype on Pompey (and Burns), I urge you to click here.


Moreland was a prime end-game target of mine, and I nominated him at $2 when no one with an open hitting spot could outbid me. He was an injury-related bust last year, but he's a player with no-doubt power, having a solid spring (10-for-30, 2 HR). Moreland figures to serve as Texas' primary DH this season, so he should have little trouble earning a profit. Unless of course he gets shelved again.


Bogaerts might very well be the make-or-break buy for my team, the player who needs to make a value leap. He's just entering his age-22 season and hitting in a ridiculously loaded lineup, so I'm somewhat optimistic. The kid hit .297/.388/.477 in the high minors back in 2013, when he was only 20 years old, so he remains a high-ceiling young hitter, eligible at premium positions (SS, 3B).


It should go without saying that I'll need Jose Abreu to perform like the 2014 version of himself, when he was one of only two major league sluggers to deliver a 30-100-.300 season. (V-Mart was the other). Abreu was the auction's third most expensive player, behind only Trout ($46) and Jose Bautista ($37), tied with Miguel Cabrera. He's having a silly spring, to no one's surprise, going 18-for-40 with four extra-base hits and seven RBIs. On Tuesday, he hit a ball that didn't land until Wednesday . No, I'm not expecting any sort of catastrophic dip in production in his second big league season.


[Want to join a league and live draft right now? Go to the Yahoo Draft Lobby ]


And now for the arms...


SP: Hisashi Iwakuma $19, Phil Hughes $14, Anibal Sanchez $13, Danny Duffy $8, Carlos Rodon $2, Tommy Milone $1


RP: David Robertson $20, Neftali Feliz $11, Ryan Cook $1


RSV: Junichi Tazawa, Ricky Nolasco


Carlos Rodon, dealer of pure un-hittable filth. (Photo by Lisa Blumenfeld/Getty Images) It feels as if I've worked Phil Hughes into pretty much every video and blog post I've produced this spring, so by now you should know that I'm bullish. His Yahoo ADP remains insane (139.5), considering last year's stellar numbers: 16-10, 3.52 ERA, 2.65 FIP, 1.13 WHIP, 7.98 K/). Hughes has found a park that suits his tendencies, and his control of the strike-zone is, at this point, beyond ridiculous. I seem to own him everywhere. Duffy is a hard-throwing lefty coming off an excellent season (1.11 WHIP), having a solid spring. Assuming good health, he's a good bet to return more than $8 in value.


Rodon was the purchase that pleased me most, however — and I felt that way before Wednesday's four-inning, nine-K performance. At his best, his stuff is pure magic. Almost invisible. Check the tape . There's a very good chance Rodon will arrive in May, if not before. I'm in. He was another end-of-auction target. When Rodon was nominated for a buck, I blurted "TWO!" as quickly and emphatically as possible. So deeply satisfying.


Owning two closers in an only-league is a clear luxury, a move that should guarantee 10 or 12 roto points in at least one category. It should also spare me the agony of season-long saves speculation, which burns through FAAB like nothing else. Of course when you spend $31 on a pair of closers, there's an opportunity cost. If I lose a starter anytime soon, I'll likely regret not using Robertson's salary slot on an upper-tier starter. So it goes.


If you've made it this far ... well, wow. That's a lot of time to devote to another person's fantasy team. You've certainly earned the right to ridicule my roster in comments.


As Dock would have said, let's do the do...






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News sport : Courtroom evacuated after bomb threat at Aaron Hernandez trial

The ongoing Aaron Hernandez trial was interrupted when a bomb threat was made on Thursday.


The courtroom was evacuated. The Boston Globe said the bomb threat was called in to the Fall River (Mass.) Justice Center. Hernandez, the former New England Patriots tight end, is on trial for the murder of semipro football player Odin Lloyd in 2013.


Another bomb threat was called in to Superior Court in Taunton, which is less than 20 miles from the Fall River Justice Center, according to the Taunton Gazette.


According to the Twitter feeds of Bob McGovern of the Boston Herald and Brian Fraga of the Herald News of Fall River, jurors in the Hernandez trial went to the UMass Dartmouth building nearby, with the doors protected by two court officers, while Lloyd's family and Hernandez's lawyers waited out the bomb threat at coffee shops near the courthouse.


Judge E. Susan Garsh admonished the media for possibly taking pictures of the jurors, McGovern said.



Law enforcement were brought in to investigate the threat and clear the area.



McGovern said in similar cases, defendants are put into the transport van in which they arrived to the courthouse.


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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 : Swinney: Watson healthier now than during South Carolina win

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney concurs with quarterback Deshaun Watson that Watson's rehab is going well. And it's apparently going well enough for Swinney to invoke his team's win over South Carolina.


"His rehab has gone tremendous," Swinney told ESPN. "He's probably about 80 percent right now. Most people would be 50 or 60, but he's not most people. He's a uniquely wired individual. He's great. He's healthier now than he was when he beat South Carolina."


Is it a matter of fact statement? Likely, yes, but given the verbal back and forth between Swinney and South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier, there's a good chance there's a dash of trolling intention in bringing up the game. It was the first win in the series for Clemson since 2008. Spurrier was happy to talk about his team's win streak during its duration.


Watson played the game on a torn ACL. He had initially sustained what the team termed a torn LCL and bone bruise in his left knee. According to Swinney, he sustained the ACL during practice a week later. Watson wore a brace on the knee for the South Carolina game.


He had surgery before Clemson's blowout of Oklahoma in the Russell Athletic Bowl and said earlier in March that he was a month ahead of schedule in his rehab. But since he's so close to surgery he's not practicing this spring. Nick Schuessler, the third-string quarterback in 2014 behind Watson and Cole Stoudt, is getting the majority of the playing time.


For more Clemson news, visit TigerIllustrated.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 : Ole Miss WR Laquon Treadwell says he's '80 percent' recovered from broken leg

Ole Miss receiver Laquon Treadwell said he’s about 80 percent recovered from a broken leg he suffered against Auburn on Nov. 1.


Last month, Treadwell posted a video on Instagram showing him running with Rebels’ linebacker Denzel Nkemdiche, who broke his ankle against LSU on Oct. 25.


“It was not even a month ago when I got to jumping around and moving and being mobile, working out with the guys,” Treadwell said on Tuesday. “It kept me focused and wanting to get back out there.


"There's a little hesitation. I'm about 80 percent, but you know it's getting better everyday.”


Treadwell was headed toward the goal line for what would have been the game-winning score against the Tigers when he was tackled awkwardly resulting in a fractured fibula, a dislocated ankle and a game-losing fumble. The loss knocked the Rebels out of the top four of the College Football Playoff standings and left the Rebels reeling.


However, Treadwell's speedy recovery has been encouraging.


"It was such a gruesome injury," redshirt sophomore quarterback Ryan Buchanan told RebelGrove.com. "Most people said there was no way he could come back in the spring. This is our third week in it and he's already running around and stuff. It's really remarkable to see how fast he's come back."


While Treadwell is progressing quickly, coach Hugh Freeze said Treadwell probably won't participate in football drills until the summer.


“I’m no doctor, but everybody who has any wisdom in that tells me everything looks great,” Freeze said. “Laquon says he feels good. I think when he gets into summer workouts he’ll get to feeling more confident when he starts to run and jump and move more. He’s not doing a lot of that right now.”


For more Ole Miss news, visit RebelGrove.com.


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!


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






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News sport : Did Michigan send a handwritten note to recruit's girlfriend?

Prom request re-creations and now handwritten notes to girlfriends? Michigan is sure looking like the 2015 masters of recruiting creativity.


The girlfriend of four-star recruit Naseir Upshur posted a handwritten note to Twitter with Michigan assistant Jay Harbaugh's name on it. Harbaugh, the son of Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh, is Michigan's new tight ends coach. Upshur is the No. 3 tight end in the country in the class of 2016 according to Rivals and the No. 2 prospect in the state of Pennsylvania.



Sending letters to the girlfriends of recruits is a bold ploy, though you can't go wrong underlining "very" when describing how a guy speaks of his girlfriend. You can never gain enough brownie points.


In addition to being bold, should it be considered an acceptable recruiting practice? Mind you, we don't think Michigan is the first school to employ the tactic if the letter is legit, but it can certainly be seen as occupying a bit of a recruiting gray area.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.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 : Baylor OL-turned-TE LaQuan McGowan's hands are massive (Video)

Yes, this is a full-size football.


We've written previously about the awesomeness of 410-pound LaQuan McGowan's pass-catching ability and athleticism and we now have an even better idea of why McGowan can be an effective red-zone target. Look at those hands.



McGowan had a catch in Baylor's spring scrimmage Friday night as well as a touchdown in the Bears' Cotton Bowl loss to Michigan State.


Maybe we can get him to re-enact Odell Beckham Jr.'s catch? Or even better, he could do it during a game, given the team's plan of using him as a tight end this season.


For more Baylor news, visit SicEmSports.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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How big is your club?

Manchester United and Liverpool are England’s most successful teams. But, what about the rest?


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Ask most football fans if theirs is a ‘big’ club and they will tell you with conviction: of course. ‘Giants’ from the North West to the North East, from Yorkshire to the Midlands to London and across the South will point to historic titles, cup glories, bumper crowds or modern TV riches and insist: ‘We are a huge club.’


Manchester United and Liverpool, with 38 English league titles between them, might reasonably point to last Sunday’s match and argue it was a contest between England’s two biggest teams.


Certainly over the years they have enjoyed serial trophy successes, global adulation, showcased generations of stars and both have rich, stirring histories in more than one sense.


Then again, supporters of Chelsea, Arsenal and Manchester City might reasonably scoff at that, arguing that at least their teams are likely to play at the highest European level next season.


They’re not scrapping around merely to squeeze into the top four.And then there are fans from all points on the map who will, with different levels of justification, swear their club is up there with all those names above, or getting closer by the day, or merely enduring a painful blip, perhaps of decades, but they will be back.


Yes, that’s you, fans of Leeds. And Tottenham. And Everton. And Newcastle, Wolves, Aston Villa, Sunderland, both Sheffield clubs, West Ham, Blackburn... and on and on and on.


So who, objectively, are the biggest clubs in England? That’s the question Sportsmail answers today.


We’ve used no opinion, just hard evidence to determine the answers. The outcome might surprise you. It will certainly provoke debate.


The starting point, to cast the net of candidates as widely as possible, was to narrow the field to ‘big’ clubs who are currently among the 92 in the Premier League or Football League and who have played in England’s top division for at least one season, ever.


That gives us 59 contenders, from all those named above down to clubs who once spent just a few seasons, perhaps only one, at the highest level a long time ago.


We’ve ranked the top 50, with Brentford, Carlisle, Northampton, Wimbledon, Oxford, Swindon, Leyton Orient, Luton and Oldham just missing out.


We ranked each of those 59 teams in six categories to assess how ‘big’ they are in each of them. We’ve considered trophies, all-time league performance by average finish since 1888-89, crowds (for this season, and historically), calibre of players over time (counting England internationals, and World Cup stars), modern global popularity (using social media followings) and money, measuring income.


‘Big’ clubs, by definition, win things, perform consistently at a high level over a long time, attract big gates to see star names, are widely followed within these shores and beyond, and have money, to buy and pay the best players.


Manchester United come out top by some distance. Nobody beats United’s pulling power in terms of attendance, considering both contemporary and historic seasons, and no club is as globally popular as them, or as rich in terms of revenue.


It is who comes second that might cause most debate. Despite their incredible trophy record, Liverpool are pipped to second place by Arsenal, the London club edging them out because of their huge crowds, global appeal and income.


Chelsea in fourth place are catching Liverpool. Manchester City are fifth, then Everton, Tottenham, Aston Villa, Newcastle and Sunderland round out the top 10, in that order.


West Brom in 11th are ahead of West Ham, famously never winners of the English title but also famously providers of three key players for England’s greatest triumph, the 1966 World Cup win featuring Bobby Moore, Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters.


Generations of Hammers fans will have their club fixed in their minds as bone fide giants partly because of the richness of that Sixties summer. Yet they have as much major silverware in their 120-year history as Bolton: four cups, and the last one was 35 years ago.Southampton, in 15th place, and Stoke, in 16th, are the other current Premier League teams in the top 20 biggest clubs.


Nine of the top 20 clubs ranked by trophies alone play outside the Premier League. One of those, Portsmouth, are in League Two, and another two, Sheffield United and Preston, are in League One.


Six of the biggest 20 clubs — Wolves, Leeds, Blackburn, Sheffield Wednesday, Bolton and Nottingham Forest — play outside the top division.


It may surprise many that Wolves are tied with Leeds but their nine major trophies to Leeds’ seven gives them the edge. The six Premier League clubs outside the top 20 could all be argued to be punching above their weight to be there.


They are Leicester (21st), Burnley (26th), Crystal Palace (30th), QPR (31st), Hull (32nd) and Swansea (34th). Yet there are clubs vying for promotion like Derby (22nd overall), Norwich (23rd) and Middlesbrough (29th) who would inevitably leap up the rankings by joining the Premier League, moving from ‘middling’ to quite big very quickly. They still have some way to go to catch United though.


Here’s how it was worked out:


Crowds:


We ranked all clubs on the size of their average gates during this season to reflect contemporary pull. Then we ranked each club by the size of their biggest historic gates. Their overall crowd rank is an aggregate of current pull and also potential based on past highs.


Global Fanbase:


We added up the total number of fans and followers for each club on Facebook and Twitter ? by far the most popular global social media platforms. Every club has official accounts.


Trophies:


We counted ?major’ trophies won by each club, giving points for each; 10pts for each European Cup/Champions League win, 8pts for each top-division English title, 5pts for each FA Cup or other European trophy win, and 3pts for each League Cup win. No ?one-off’ trophies such as the Charity Shield are considered because they are not the product of multi-match competitions. And being a losing finalist does not count for points either ? here at Sportsmail, winning is everything, second is nowhere.


Average league finish:


The average league finish position for each of the clubs since 1888-89.


Player quality:


We counted the number of players from each club who have played for England, all-time, ranking the clubs by total. This reflects historic ?bigness’. We then ranked the clubs by the number of players provided to the 2014 World Cup ? a measure of modern ?bigness’. The overall ranking is an aggregate of these two.


Income:


We ranked the clubs by their income for the most recent season available.


SPORTSMAIL’S exclusive table ranks the top 50 teams from the 59 who have played in the top flight for six categories: crowds, global fanbase, trophies, league finish, player quality and income. Their ranks are then added up for a final score ? the lower the score, the better the club.


Club


Rank


1 Man Utd 1 1 2 4 1 1 10


2 Arsenal 4 3 3 2 3 4 19


3 Liverpool 10 4 1 1 1 5 22


4 Chelsea 3 2 5 7 5 3 25


5 Man City 2 5 8 9 5 2 31


6= Everton 6 8 6 3 5 8 36


6= Tottenham 8 6 7 6 3 6 36


8 Aston Villa 9 7 4 5 8 10 43


9 Newcastle 7 9 9 8 9 7 49


10 Sunderland 5 13 10 10 16 12 66


11 West brom 11 20 16 11 10 17 85


12 West Ham 22 10 24 13 12 9 90


13= Wolves 15 26 13 16 21 24 115


13= Leeds 14 23 15 12 25 26 115


15 Southampton 34 11 30 26 10 11 122


16 Stoke 17 17 40 22 14 14 124


17 Blackburn 31 30 11 14 16 25 127


18 Sheff Wed 12 34 14 19 18 35 132


19 Bolton 23 29 23 18 19 23 135


20 Nottm Forest 24 28 12 23 14 36 137


21 Leicester 21 22 27 24 25 30 149


22 Derby 28 33 21 15 20 33 150


23 Norwich 25 18 28 35 29 18 153


24 Sheff Utd 13 39 18 20 24 45 159


25 Birmingham 26 27 28 21 31 28 161


26 Burnley 27 31 21 25 27 34 165


27= Charlton 16 14 30 31 35 40 166


27= Fulham 32 15 47 32 21 19 166


29 Middlesbrough 29 32 40 17 13 37 168


30 Crystal Palace 18 19 47 45 29 15 173


31 QPR 36 16 40 40 21 21 174


32 Hull 19 14 47 39 42 16 177


33 Cardiff 20 21 30 37 50 20 178


34 Swansea 39 12 40 49 40 13 193


35 Portsmouth 35 36 19 29 33 43 195


36 Huddersfield 30 53 17 30 31 41 202


37 Ipswich 37 44 25 27 38 38 209


38 Wigan 54 24 30 46 37 22 213


39 Preston 45 51 19 28 27 47 217


40 Blackpool 48 38 30 33 38 32 219


41 Coventry 38 43 30 34 42 51 238


42 Notts County 46 41 30 36 33 53 239


43 Reading 42 25 56 53 42 27 245


44= Brighton 33 37 47 54 49 29 249


44= Watford 43 40 47 52 36 31 249


46 Barnsley 50 47 30 38 51 44 260


47= Bradford 44 45 30 47 47 49 262


47= Bristol City 41 46 47 44 42 42 262


49 Millwall 40 54 47 48 41 39 269


50 Bury 51 55 26 43 42 56 – Daily Mail






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‘Racist’ Chelsea fans fight ban

Five Chelsea fans accused of racially abusing a black man and preventing him from boarding an underground train in Paris will fight applications to impose football banning orders.


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Five Chelsea fans accused of racially abusing a black man and preventing him from boarding an underground train in Paris will fight applications to impose football banning orders.


The supporters attended a magistrates’ court in London yesterday for a preliminary hearing after being served with summonses by police, who are applying for banning orders to be imposed.


Prosecutor Ian Rees Phillips told the court that the five men opposed the banning orders, which would prevent them from travelling to matches at home and abroad.


A full hearing will take place on July 15-16.


The incident on the Metro occurred before the Champions League last-16 first-leg tie between Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain.


Social network sites posted clips in which several Chelsea supporters were filmed on the train blocking the man from boarding and chanting: ‘We’re racist, we’re racist and that’s the way we like it.’ – Daily Mail






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Forster loss motivates Saints

Southampton will be more motivated than ever to stay “miserly” at the back after losing England goalkeeper Fraser Forster to a knee injury for the rest of the season.


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London - Southampton will be more motivated than ever to stay “miserly” at the back after losing England goalkeeper Fraser Forster to a knee injury for the rest of the season, the Premier League club's director of football said.


Still pushing for an improbable Champions League spot, the loss of Forster is a major blow to the south coast club sitting sixth in the standings.


Saints have conceded just 21 goals all season, fewer than any club in the top four flights of English soccer, thanks in large part to the 2.01 metre frame of stopper Forster.


But the 27-year-old damaged his left patellar tendon in Saturday's win over Burnley, leaving Southampton to rely on veteran goalkeeper Kelvin Davis for the run-in.


Davis came on for Forster against Burnley, in what was his first appearance in more than a year.


“No one will be any sadder than Kelvin Davis, who did an outstanding job replacing Fraser in such circumstances,” director of football Les Reed said of the 38-year-old.


“Nobody could be better to step into the fray in terms of experience and ability.


“I am sure the team will now be even more motivated to ensure we stay miserly in front of our goal and ruthless at the other end.”


The club said its medical staff were confident Forster will make a full recovery. However injuries of this type can generally take up to a year to heal fully.


Davis told local media he credits Southampton's goalkeeping coach with keeping him in top shape, and that despite being out of action for so long he would be ready to “flick the switch”.


It is what Southampton need, being unable to recall their former number one choice goalkeeper Artur Boruc. The Pole is on loan at Championship (second tier) leaders and south coast neighbours Bournemouth.


With eight matches remaining, Southampton trail fourth-placed Manchester United by six points and leaders Chelsea by 14.– Reuters






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Messi is highest-paid footballer

Lionel Messi is the highest-paid footballer on the planet, banking nearly £1million a week last year in wages and sponsorship deals.


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Lionel Messi is the highest-paid footballer on the planet, banking nearly £1million a week last year in wages and sponsorship deals.


The Argentina and Barcelona favourite earned an eye-watering £47.8m in 2014, his salary of £26m being topped up by endorsements with the likes of adidas, Fifa 15 and Turkish Airlines.


It puts him well ahead of his arch-rival Cristiano Ronaldo, of Real madrid and Portugal, who brought in £39.7m, according to the latest France Football magazine rich list.


Messi’s Barcelona colleague Neymar comes in third on £26.8m, highlighting the gulf between the two leading players and the rest.


Manchester United striker Robin van Persie is the highest-ranked Premier League player, earning £18.8m in 2014 — £11.8m in basic salary, topped up by £5m bonuses and £2m from sponsorship deals.


Real Madrid’s world-record signing Gareth Bale comes in sixth with £17.5m, followed by United and England captain Wayne Rooney on £16.5m. The top 10 is completed by Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Sergio Aguero and Robert Lewandowski.


Jose Mourinho of Chelsea is the highest-paid manager with a £10m salary and £3.2m in commercial revenue. – Daily Mail






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Premier League clubs show profit

English Premier League's clubs have recorded the first combined pre-tax profit for 15 years thanks to the soaring value of television deals.


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London - English Premier League's clubs have recorded the first combined pre-tax profit for 15 years thanks to the soaring value of television deals and a slowdown in players' salaries.


While on-field performances of England's top teams against Europe's elite have regressed in the Champions League and Europa League, their bank accounts are bulging, according to business advisory firm Deloitte.


In 2013-14, Premier League clubs generated a combined pre-tax profit of 190 million pounds ($283.21 million) - four times greater than the previous record of 49 million in 1997-98.


The figures are in sharp contrast to the previous decade when Premier League clubs accumulated combined pre-tax losses of 2.6 billion pounds.


Deloitte analyst Dan Jones said clubs were now spending less of their income on players' salaries.


“Last season was the first in the Premier League's current three-year broadcast deal, which was a record breaker when it was struck,” Jones said.


“Despite this extra income clubs showed relative restraint in wage costs, which grew by six percent.


“With the recent announcement of another record Premier League broadcast deal, the revenue increases show no sign of ending and should make this season's profit a regular outcome.”


The report said that, excluding player trading, net interest charges and the amortisation of contracts, top flight clubs recorded a 620 million pounds operating profit last season.


However the percentage of revenue spent on player salaries had fallen from a record of 71 percent in 2012-13 to 58 percent in 2013-14 - the lowest since 1998-99.


With television revenues set to rise to eye-watering levels from the 2016-17 season thanks to a 5.13 billion pounds rights deal, the Premier League now enjoys a huge advantage over other top European leagues, said Deloitte analyst Andy Bull.


“The current broadcast deal has given Premier League clubs such a large revenue advantage over the vast majority of European clubs that they can attract the top playing talent without over stretching themselves financially,” he said. – Reuters






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Podolski rescues Germans

Germany looked to be heading for a stunning defeat against Australia when substitute Lukas Podolski equalised to become their third highest goalscorer.


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KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany - Lukas Podolski has been out of favour since joining Inter Milan on loan in January but the former Arsenal forward could afford a smile after becoming Germany's third highest goalscorer.


Just when the world champions looked to be heading for a surprise defeat in their friendly against Australia, up popped substitute Podolski to grab an 81st-minute equaliser that allowed his side to escape with a 2-2 draw.


The 29-year-old now has 48 international goals, behind only Miroslav Klose (71) and Gerd Mueller (68).


“Lukas has great qualities and I know it,” said Germany coach Joachim Loew this week as he defended his decision to call up the experienced player.


“He is always capable of making use of his potential. We are behind him.”


Podolski has spent a lot of time on Inter's bench and was also a fringe player at Arsenal for the first half of the season.


Loew picked him for Wednesday's game and Sunday's Euro 2016 qualifier in Georgia but hinted his patience would not last long, saying the forward needed more playing time.


It was only fitting that Podolski bailed out Germany in the stadium where he played the first of his 122 internationals in 2004.


The substitute struck from close range with his favoured left foot after captain Mile Jedinak had given Australia a 2-1 lead with a curling free kick from 20 metres.


Earlier, Marco Reus put the Germans in front before James Troisi levelled with a bullet header. – Reuters






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Bafana ease past Swaziland

Thabo Mnyamane scored on debut as Bafana Bafana eased past Swaziland 3-1 in an international friendly in Mbabane.


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Johannesburg – Thabo Mnyamane scored on debut as Bafana Bafana eased past Swaziland 3-1 in an international friendly in Mbabane.


Mnyamane added to Thulani Hlatshwayo's opener after half-time, before Mandla Masango added the third and final nail in the coffin as South Africa cruised past their hosts in what was their first game since their failed 2015 Africa Cup of Nations campaign in January.


Despite Felix Badenhorst pulling a goal back for the home side, Mnyamane capitalised on a fine pass from Ajax Amsterdam star, Thulani Serero, netting his first ever national goal to cap a hugely successful domestic season with the University of Pretoria. – Sapa






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News sport : The Crying Game: Looking back at the UCLA-Gonzaga Sweet 16 classic


An inconsolable Adam Morrison after Gonzaga's 2006 loss to UCLA (AP)

Gonzaga had just finished shredding Iowa to secure a spot in the Sweet 16 on Sunday night when former Zags big man David Pendergraft took out his phone and tapped out a text message to one of Mark Few's assistant coaches.


"Congrats," he wrote. "Now please go get some revenge."


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Watching Gonzaga eliminate UCLA on Friday would be cathartic for Pendergraft because the Bruins are responsible for by far the most agonizing loss he has ever endured. On March 24, 2006, UCLA scored the final 11 points of its Sweet 16 showdown with the Zags to emerge with a 73-71 victory in a game it trailed by 17 in the first half and never led until the final 8.6 seconds.


UCLA's stunning comeback paved the way for the first of three straight Final Four appearances under Ben Howland and signaled that the Bruins had reclaimed their spot among college basketball's elite. Gonzaga's collapse squandered maybe the program's best chance at a Final Four and left star Adam Morrison so heartbroken that he openly wept with time still on the clock and crumpled to the floor in tears at the final buzzer.


"The rest of us weren't like that on the court, but afterward in the locker room we were just as devastated, every single one of us," Pendergraft said. "We believed we had a Final Four-caliber team, we were looking forward to facing Memphis in the Elite Eight, and then in a few seconds, it was gone. To get something ripped away that that suddenly or unexpectedly, it definitely hurt."


The 2006 regional semifinal between Gonzaga and UCLA is one of the most memorable NCAA tournament games in recent memory. What follows is an oral history of that game featuring many key participants or witnesses, each of whom are listed by their 2006 title.




David Pendergraft and the Gonzaga Bulldogs bench look on during the final moments of the third round game of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament against the UCLA Bruins at the Arena in Oakland on March 23, 2006 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

One of the consequences of Gonzaga's blown lead against UCLA is we tend to overlook how good the 2006 Zags really were.


They defeated nationally ranked Maryland and Michigan State at the Maui Invitational, they rolled through the WCC with an unbeaten record and they entered the postseason with just three losses against UConn, Memphis and Washington, two of which went on to earn No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament.


The floppy-haired, mustachioed face of Gonzaga was Morrison, who led the nation in scoring at 28.4 points per game and waged a memorable battle for national player of the year honors with Duke sharpshooter J.J. Redick. Morrison's supporting cast included 6-foot-9 Brazilian double-double machine J.P. Batista, fearless point guard Derek Raivio, blue-collar big men Pendergraft and Sean Mallon and promising freshmen Jeremy Pargo and Josh Heyfeldt.


Derek Raivio (point guard, Gonzaga): In my four years at Gonzaga, I believe that the 2006 team was the deepest and most talented team I was part of.


Leon Rice (assistant coach, Gonzaga): Everyone talks about this year's team being Mark Few's best, but that group might have been able to beat any of them. You had a guy who could score against anybody. You had a big guy who was great. You had really good young guys. You had all the pieces. That team could have won it all.


Tom Hudson (radio play-by-play announcer, Gonzaga): It was maybe our first team people took seriously. Those other Gonzaga teams that came before it were viewed as plucky little underdogs. That team elevated Gonzaga from that Cinderella mold.


Rice: We knew had to get better defensively after the previous season. Adam was actually putting a lot of effort into that. I remember before we went to Maui, Few said to us in a staff meeting that he thought Morrison might have lost some of his scoring ability because he was working so hard on defense. The next game he goes out and gets 43 on Michigan State. We were like, 'Well, looks like he can still can score a little bit.'


David Pendergraft (forward, Gonzaga): Adam was phenomenally good that whole year. The battle between him and J.J. Redick was the first thing to hit SportsCenter every day we had a game. Even at road games, there were hundreds of people waiting to see him when we got off the bus. It was the closest thing to a rock star that I've ever experienced.


Hudson: It was almost like traveling with the Beatles. There were people at the airport or in the hotel lobby waiting to have stuff signed. I remember we flew into Portland, we get to baggage claim and there were three guys standing there with garbage bags of basketballs they wanted signed.


Hudson: The game at San Francisco that year, everyone was booing Adam. He was the villain and then he hits his first eight or nine shots, pull-up jumpers, post-ups, mid-range shots. All of a sudden the fans go from booing him to actually cheering. They were mesmerized. They knew they were seeing a special performance.


Pendergraft: Sometimes you caught yourself watching Adam and wondering how in the world did he do that?




OAKLAND, CA - MARCH 23: Ryan Hollins #15 and Cedric Bozeman #21 of the UCLA Bruins block out J.P. Batista #13 of the Gonzaga Bulldogs during the third round game of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament at the Arena in Oakland on March 23, 2006 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)

Whereas UCLA didn't have any players scoring at a ridiculous pace and drawing Larry Bird comparisons, the Bruins still entered their Sweet 16 matchup with Gonzaga as slight favorites because of their stifling defense.


Howland's third UCLA team held opponents to 58.7 points per game, sweeping the Pac-12 regular season and conference tournament titles and earning a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament. It was Howland's breakthrough season after taking over a team lacking toughness or discipline, enduring a losing season his first year and barely slipping into the NCAA tournament in year two.


One of the keys to UCLA's ascendance was the development of sophomore guards Jordan Farmar and Arron Afflalo, both Los Angeles natives and former top 100 prospects who were the centerpieces of Howland's initial recruiting class. The Bruins also benefited from the return of do-it-all senior Cedric Bozeman from a torn ACL, the improvement of late-blooming center Ryan Hollins and the arrival of an outstanding freshman class that included point guard Darren Collison and Cameroonians Luc Richard Mbah a Moute and Alfred Aboya.


Brian Dohn (UCLA beat writer, Los Angeles Daily News): I remember going into the season thinking they were a year away from a big-time run.


Kerry Keating (assistant coach, UCLA): We'd lost in the first round of the NCAA tournament to Texas Tech the year before and brought all those young kids back. We thought we could be pretty good that next year, but I don't really remember thinking at the beginning of that season, 'Oh s---, we could go to a Final Four.'


Dohn: Afflalo and Farmar had so much success in high school that they didn't get they weren't supposed to win. I remember Afflalo telling me when he was a senior in high school that he couldn't wait to get to UCLA to turn around the program. It was brash for a high school kid to be telling his future teammates they needed to be tougher, but he didn't mean it in a cocky way.


Keating: One of the reasons we got better was Ryan Hollins. When we first got there, we weren't sure about Hollins and what we were going to do with him. We tried him at the four that first year, and it really didn't work out very well. But he got tougher and he got better. By the end of that year, he really started to figure out defensively how he could impact a game.


Dohn: That team took on Ben's identity. It started the year before, but they just didn't have enough players and enough experience. I really think the ones who made that happen were Aboya and Mbah a Moute. They were tough kids. They were mature kids. These were kids from Africa who had lived on their own already. They were able to grind through everything, and it helped the others.


Donny Daniels (assistant coach, UCLA): We had a good team with good players, but that team wasn't Kentucky. I wasn't sure we were a Final Four team until the clock was winding down to zero against Memphis in the Elite Eight.




The Gonzaga Bulldogs Erroll Knight (22) against the UCLA Bruins Luc Richard Mbah a Moute (23) during regionals of the NCAA playoffs in Oakland, Calif. Thursday March 23, 2006. The Bruins won 73-71. MANDATORY CREDIT:(Jay Drowns/Sporting News) DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPH

When Gonzaga overcame an off shooting night from Morrison to beat sixth-seeded Indiana and UCLA survived seven late missed free throws to edge 10th-seeded Indiana, it set the stage for a Sweet 16 showdown between the two best teams in the West.


It was Morrison and the vaunted Gonzaga offense against Howland's formidable defense with a trip to the Elite Eight at stake.


Overeager on offense and overmatched defensively, UCLA missed its first eight shots from the field, fell behind by double digits after eight minutes and trailed by 17 late in the first half.With Morrison and Batista scoring with ease at one end and Farmar and Afflalo clanking jump shots at the other, Gus Johnson politely noted on the CBS broadcast that the Bruins were looking "shaky."


"Shaky?" color analyst Len Elmore responded. "I think they should be embarrassed. Not only are they not able to score, they're not even able to hold onto the ball."


Keating: We kind of weren't ourselves early on.


Daniels: Adam was such a prolific scorer, he had so much size and he had such a high release point. We didn't have anyone that could guard him. Arron was our best defender, and Adam was too big for him.


Gus Johnson (play-by-play announcer, CBS): Watching Adam Morrison play that night, you thought you were watching the next Larry Bird. He had the floppy hair, the floppy socks, an incredible jump shot. I thought Adam Morrison was the best player in America and I thought Gonzaga had a chance to make a serious run.


Pendergraft: Coach Few did a good job keeping us focused at halftime. One of his lines I'll always remember was, 'One more half and you're the greatest team in Gonzaga history, no questions asked.' That was kind of the edge and approach we had the second half. And we kept a similar lead most of the game.


Dohn: I remember thinking, 'Man, I get to go home a few days early because I won't have to stay for the Elite Eight game.'


Hudson: I don't think I thought Gonzaga was going to beat UCLA by 40, but I wasn't really thinking that in an hour I was going to be sitting there speechless thinking, 'What just happened?'




UCLA rallied from nine down with three-plus minutes to go to advance to the Elite Eight (AP)

Gonzaga still had a firm grip on the game when Morrison sank two foul shots to increase the Zags' lead to nine with 3:27 remaining.


Only the brilliance of UCLA and the blunders of Gonzaga enabled the Bruins to wrest control away.


In the last three-plus minutes, Pargo had a ball slip through his hands and out of bounds, Morrison missed three jumpers he sank numerous times that season, Raivio had a wide-open corner three rim out and Batista blew a put-back in traffic. UCLA made some gutsy plays too, most notably an off-balance runner by Farmar to slice Gonzaga's lead to three and a pair of high-pressure free throws from Hollins to cut the deficit to one.


The game's decisive sequence began with Gonzaga clinging to a one-point lead with 20 seconds to go and inbounding the ball against full-court pressure from UCLA.


Farmar and Bozeman trapped Batista and swiped the ball from him in the corner. Farmar fed Mbah a Moute with a pinpoint pass for the go-ahead layup. Then Mbah a Moute displayed uncanny presence of mind for a freshman, racing back on defense instead of celebrating his basket and poking the ball away from Raivio from behind to seal the most improbable of UCLA victories.


Johnson: Nobody in the building thought UCLA had a chance to come back. Down by 17? It was over. Then slowly but surely they kept whittling away, whittling away, whittling away. All of a sudden you look up, and 'Oh my goodness, they're close.'


Raivio: Things went wrong when we tried to run the clock down each offensive possession. We got away from what was working for us, which led to forced and contested shots at the end of the shot clock. It spiraled from there. UCLA then sped us up, forced some turnovers and then it was a different ball game.


Rice: It was almost the perfect storm. Morrison drives, gets to the rim almost and it rattles in and out. That goes in, we win. Raivio had a wide-open three from the corner. That goes in, we win. Then there's a foul call on Batista that you're like, well that was a goofy call. Everything that had to go right for them went right. Everything that had to go wrong for us went wrong.


Pendergraft: There were just random things that happened like Hollins making those two free throws to cut it to one. I'm not taking anything away from Ryan Hollins, but he was a 60 percent foul shooter and he knocked both down under pressure.


Dohn: You would have picked 97 other people in that arena that you wanted on the line at that time before Hollins.


Keating: If you go back and watch the video of the steal that led to Luc's layup, you'll see them come out four across. This is how good Ben was scouting. We knew Pargo would go long, so Darren backs off Pargo instead of denying him and the other guys never got screened.


*Farmar: We were going to foul if they got past halfcourt. We trapped Adam in the corner. When he passed the ball to Batista. It was myself and Ced. We were both swiping at the ball. We didn't want to foul that early. We wanted to create pressure and get a steal. Keating: We probably got away with a foul on Batista at the end.


*Batista: I thought he fouled me. But, hey, they didn't call it, so you just got to keep going.


Daniels: They inbound the ball really quickly to Raivio and I just know he's going to pull up and make a jump shot.


Keating: The biggest play that nobody talks about was Luc's presence of mind after he scored to track down the ball, tap it away from Raivio from behind and then dive on it. Unbelievable play on Luc's part. You could tell he had an unbelievable presence.


Rice: That was the most painful loss in all of our careers. At least it was for me. We had played Memphis at Memphis and it was a close game. You never know how that would go the second time, but we had a great group. I think we were all confident we were going to beat Memphis.



Arron Afflalo of the UCLA Bruins of the Gonzaga Bulldogs during the third round game of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament at the Arena in Oakland on March 23, 2006 in Oakland, California. While the details of UCLA's comeback have become hazy for all but the most fanatical Bruins supporters, the image from the game that remains iconic nine years later is the sight of Morrison seated on the floor with tears flowing down his cheeks.


It appears in CBS highlight montages every March. It's a popular meme on social media. There's even a Kentucky fan with the Twitter handle @MorrisonCrying.


Morrison declined an interview request from Yahoo Sports through a Gonzaga spokesman, but his former teammates and coaches universally praised his character and competitiveness and chastise those who make fun of him for crying. They each insisted they would rather have a teammate who bursts into tears after a heartbreaking loss than one apathetic enough to shrug it off in a matter of minutes.


The interest in Morrison's sorrow overshadowed the most heartwarming moment of the game. As the rest of the UCLA team was celebrating one of the program's greatest victories since the Wooden era, Afflalo took the time to approach Morrison, help him up and try to console him.


*Afflalo: I saw him laying there in tears a little bit. I just felt for him a little bit. He's a great player. There's really no reason for him -- outside of the fact he's a competitor and wanted to win, he has no reason to cry. He's a great player. He's going to have a great career.


*Morrison: That's just a sign of obviously a great program, you know, great people as far as they're concerned. They had enough guts as a man to come over in their moment of victory, pick somebody up off the floor. If I could thank them, I would.


Keating: For Arron to do what he did and show respect, that's just the type of kid Arron is. Everyone is out there going nuts, and he was over there like, 'This kid is out here suffering.' That kind of sums up Arron. He's just a great kid.


Dohn: Morrison was a trash talker and the whole game was going at him. To me, it just spoke about the character of Afflalo and that team.


Hudson: Adam hadn't announced it was his last collegiate game, but he knew it was over. So it was the combination of him realizing it was his last game and the way that it ended.


Johnson: I just applaud the kid so much for being able to show emotion like that on the court. He cared so much. He loved that school. That's where my "Heartbreak City" call came from. I saw Adam crying like his heart was broken.


Daniels: For Adam to feel so bad after a loss that he would collapse on the ground, that's a testament to him being a competitor. I really believe that. We respected Adam Morrison. That was the first time we had played against someone who competed like him. I mean, he was relentless.


Rice: Adam put it all out there every game. I'd rather have someone who cared about it like that than someone who could shake it off quickly and be like 'Oh well, we lost.'


Hudson: Last year, we were in San Diego for the NCAA tournament and there were some UCLA fans at the hotel. A couple of them came up and started giving Adam a hard time, telling him, 'We made you cry." Adam just looked at them, and said, 'No, you didn't make me cry. You had nothing to do with it.' I thought he handled that really well. I can't imagine having people remind me constantly of a moment like that.



The legacy of Gonzaga-UCLA depends entirely on your perspective.


For UCLA, it's the most memorable win of the Howland era and the springboard to three straight Final Fours. For Gonzaga, it's a painful memory made worse by the program's inability to advance past the Sweet 16 since then. For neutral observers, it's one of the most memorable NCAA tournament games of its era.


Johnson: I had lunch with Ben Howland the other day, and every time I see him, he always says, 'Man, that was my greatest moment as a coach.'


Dohn: Out of everything Howland did there, that run and that game was the most fun. The next two years, they had been there before so it was all about whether they could win it all. That first year, they lost in the championship game, but people were like, 'We're in the championship game? How great is this?'


Keating: I think our guys came out of the Gonzaga game even more confident than they were before. I do remember being in the locker room and we were all like, 'There's no way we're losing the next game. We're going to the Final Four.'


Dohn: It also gave a couple of key recruits — mainly Kevin Love — the vision that you can be successful at UCLA. Kevin used to do a lot of his interviews via email. I remember sitting in my hotel room in Indianapolis emailing him to get some thoughts on UCLA going to the Final Four. He was telling me that it showed they were a national program.


Raivio: I don't dwell on it. It happened, and it's over. If anything, I took some good lessons and apply those to when I play now. It doesn't bother me to discuss the game. Many of the teammates I've had in Europe will bring it up, especially around this time. The part that's tough, is knowing we worked so hard and positioned ourselves great and didn't close it out. We had a great group and didn't reach our full potential.


Pendergraft: Living in Spokane, just being a former Gonzaga player, you run into a lot of fans. Fans always ask you, 'What's your most memorable game?' Well, if you're not going to be a liar that's easily your most memorable game of your career. It's like, 'Oh, that would be the UCLA game.' You can't avoid it.


Hudson: I think the guys on that 2006 team would love to see this Gonzaga team win Friday and would love to see this Gonzaga team make a Final Four. That's the one thing that could get them out of the spotlight a little bit.


Pendergraft: There's pride in being part of that team, but the memory of that game isn't something I enjoy reliving. If Friday comes out in our favor, it will help a little bit.


* Quotes are from the postgame press conference in 2006


Full video of the 2006 UCLA-Gonzaga game:



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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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