SA’s best humbled in Africa

Brazilians and Amakhosi out of Africa's premier club competition following defeats to TP Mazembe and Raja Casablanca


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So much for this being the year when South African football reclaims its status as one of the continental giants! Mamelodi Sundowns and Kaizer Chiefs’ exit from the CAF Champions League at the weekend has served to illustrate just how long we still have to go before we can return to those heady heights of the late 1990s.


The Brazilians and Amakhosi were dumped out of Africa’s premier club competition following defeats to TP Mazembe and Raja Casablanca on Sunday, losses that undermine our assertion that the Absa Premiership is one of Africa’s top leagues.


In a year when all our national teams qualified for their continental competitions and the national Under-17s actually made it to the World Cup, there was a huge excitement that our game is finally getting back on track following many years of failure.


And the hope was that this semblance of success will also be experienced at club level on the continent.


But with reigning champions Sundowns coming a cropper in Lubumbashi after having won their first leg at home and champions-elect Chiefs expectedly going down in Casablanca following defeat on home soil, it is back to square one.


Of course Orlando Pirates – who else given the Buccaneers’ torch-bearing feats of previous years? – are still in the race after progressing to the second round of the lesser CAF Confederation Cup.


All this though is simply not good enough for a country with so much in the way of resources, and a claim to having the best administered and most financially stable league on the continent.


And while they will likely point to the tough conditions they faced on their trips as well as the renowned blatantly biased officiating in favour of the home teams as defence for their failures, both Sundowns and Chiefs essentially lost their ties in the first leg. Their failure to emphatically win at home, Chiefs actually lost, was always going to make things mighty difficult for them in the second leg.


And this is one big lesson our teams just continue to refuse to heed despite our having returned to the continental game way back in 1992. What is very clear is that CAF are not going to do anything to improve the situation for teams visiting the north, western and to some extent the central parts of the continent.


So to circumvent those issues, our clubs need to learn to take advantage of the home matches and win well. Take Chiefs for example. When they hosted Raja – in Durban because they wrongly thought they’d get a bigger crowd and make more money – they played in a near empty stadium that hardly helped their cause.


On Sunday they walked onto a near capacity arena teeming with a hostile crowed that jeered their every move while acting as a 12th man for Raja.


And just as in the first leg, Chiefs’ failure to convert chances proved their undoing.


It is going to take a while before we get to the top echelon of the continental game.


And while it is always easy to point the finger of blame at the national coach when Bafana Bafana fail, those who criticise the man in charge of the country’s team must also look back to see what it is he has to work with. Until our clubs succeed on the continent, it will be unrealistic to expect our country to be dominant in Africa. - The Star






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News sport : Jimbo Fisher says Florida State needs to 'grow up'

Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher was not impressed with his team's play during the second scrimmage of the spring Monday.


He said many players were simply trying to "endure" the scrimmage rather than playing hard throughout it's entirety. And then he said his team needed to grow up and it was a bit soft.


"Need to grow up," Fisher said via Warchant.com. "A bunch of young guys think they're real good and they're not close. Got ability, got to learn to play with intangibles. A little bit soft as a team overall, both sides."


There's likely a both truth and motivation involved in Fisher's statements. After seven players were selected in the 2014 NFL draft following FSU's national title over Auburn, five players declared early for the 2015 NFL draft. And coupled with players who had exhausted their eligibility, FSU is having to replace half of its 2014 starting lineup in 2015.


The turnover is a side effect of success, certainly, but many players may be learning this spring just how much effort it takes to have the opportunity to play for the national title two years in a row.


"This team has to get tougher, mentally," defensive back Jalen Ramsey said. "That's the honest truth. This team has to get tougher mentally. We're soft right now. Not always physically soft, just mentally soft. I just don't understand it. It'll come along."


The Seminoles' spring game is Saturday. A good performance there makes Monday seem like a distant memory. But if Fisher doesn't like his team's effort then as well, the Seminoles may be entering fall practice with a storyline to rival the departure of Jameis Winston. And, via Warchant, Ramsey warned of what could happen if the Seminoles don't improve from Monday.


"If they're going to settle for what we just did out there, nobody's going to enjoy the season," he said. "We're not going to enjoy the season, coaches aren't going to enjoy the season, fans aren't going to enjoy the season."


For more Florida State news, visit Warchant.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 : Florida has 6 healthy scholarship offensive linemen

With another injury, Florida will only have enough scholarship offensive lineman to fill out one unit.


The Gators are down to six healthy scholarship linemen after Roderick Johnson suffered what coach Jim McElwain termed a "stinger-ish type of deal" during practice on Friday and is out indefinitely.


McElwain said Johnson lost feeling in the fingers of one of his hands. Johnson played in all 12 of Florida's games last season and started three.


"You know, he got banged up and kind of felt you know his fingers kind of went numb," McElwain said via InsidetheGators.com. "I still don't know quite what exactly that is other than you know those are things that you're always very cautious with and we'll get that thing looked at by a lot of different people.



"They went in and found out there were some things that he might have had well before from that area. And, if they had shown me the X-ray, I wouldn't have been able to tell what the heck it was anyway. We'll do, obviously, what's in his best interest. In moving forward, we'll make sure we do what's best there."


Offensive lineman Trip Thurman is also out because of a shoulder injury. If the injuries were happening during the regular season, you couldn't blame Florida fans for having flashbacks to 2013. Two years ago, the Gators had an incredible injury plague. Eight players were lost for the season before the end of September and the injuries didn't stop in October and November.


Johnson is likely out of the Gators' spring game on Saturday, and McElwain also said his absence likely affects what the school will be doing in it. Florida had already decided not to go with a team format for the game because of numbers at certain positions and the decision is now supported even more with four walk-on players on the offensive line's second team.


Instead, McElwain said the spring game will be positioned as offense vs. defense with a special scoring system that will focus on specific in-game scenarios. He also said Will Grier was ahead of Treon Harris in the Gators' quarterback competition simply because he's had more time in practice. Harris missed time during spring practice after his 16-year-old cousin was shot and killed.


For more Florida news, visit InsideTheGators.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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Deja vu for City fans

Manchester City supporters who have seen their team's Premier League title challenge disintegrate before their eyes in recent weeks could be forgiven a nagging feeling of deja vu.


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Manchester City supporters who have seen their team's Premier League title challenge disintegrate before their eyes in recent weeks could be forgiven a nagging feeling of deja vu.


City plundered 102 goals as they streaked past a faltering Liverpool in last season's title race, but Monday's 2-1 loss at Crystal Palace left their defence of the trophy in pieces.


Nine points behind leaders Chelsea having played a game more, Manuel Pellegrini's side need a minor miracle to retain the title and now face a fight to avoid a place in next season's Champions League play-off round.


The club's previous title triumph, in 2012, was followed by a similar slump.


Having snatched the crown from Manchester United's grasp on the final day of the 2011-12 campaign, City stagnated and finished the following season 11 points adrift of their derby rivals in second place.


Manager Roberto Mancini paid the price with his job, sacked two days after a shock defeat by Wigan Athletic in the FA Cup final, and a similar fate may lie in store for Pellegrini.


Heralded as the antithesis to the spiky and combative Mancini, the urbane Chilean steered the club to a league and League Cup double in his first season.


But Pellegrini's position now appears under serious threat, with British bookmakers offering odds of 2/7 that he will no longer be at the helm on the opening day of next season.


Former United manager Alex Ferguson accused City of slackening off after their 2012 league success in his autobiography and it is a charge that his former captain Gary Neville repeated on Monday.


“They have got a mentality problem, there is no doubt about that. This team cannot sustain success, and I think that is a terrible thing to have levelled at you,” said Neville, now a television pundit.


“When you win championships, you have got to be able to come back again with hunger and they do not. They get to the top of the mountain and drop off it.”


The club's failure to reach the Champions League quarter-finals also counts against Pellegrini, even if there was no disgrace in succumbing to the genius of Barcelona's Lionel Messi as City did in the last 16.


But while Pellegrini is expected to carry the can for City's failure to kick on, fingers are also being pointed at figures higher up in the Etihad Stadium hierarchy.


It is CEO Ferran Soriano and director of football Txiki Begiristain who are responsible for the club's transfer activity, not Pellegrini, and the club's close-season dealings left much to be desired.


Despite Financial Fair Play restrictions, City splurged £32 million ($47.6 million, 43.8 million euros) on Eliaquim Mangala, but the French centre-back has been unable to hold down a first-team place.


Fernando, Bacary Sagna and Willy Caballero have added little beyond squad depth and it says much that it was 36-year-old Frank Lampard, supposedly on the brink of semi-retirement in Major League Soccer, who had made the biggest impact by the time Wilfried Bony arrived from Swansea City in a £25 million deal in January.


“I think it is so poor from those at the top of the club,” said former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher, Neville's fellow pundit on Sky Sports. “It is mismanagement from them.”


Compounding matters, City's stalwarts have struggled to recapture the heights of last season.


While Joe Hart has impressed, Sergio Aguero has scored only three league goals in 2015, the influence of Yaya Toure and David Silva has diminished and captain Vincent Kompany appears to be in terminal decline.


Arsenal and United have both exploited City's difficulties to surge past them and on Sunday the champions face a potentially chastening trip to Old Trafford.


With a seven-point advantage over Liverpool, a top-four place does not appear to be in jeopardy, but a fourth-place finish would represent another damning fall from grace. – AFP






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News sport : Army getting new unis, reportedly changing nickname to Cadets

Army will reportedly be known as the Cadets instead of the Black Knights next season.


The school is announcing a uniform makeover and a nickname change on Monday, April 13. The uniform changes are part of Army's agreement with its uniform supplier, Nike.



From Army's site, which will broadcast the rebrand at 8 p.m. ET Monday:



With the goal of developing an innovative and consistent athletic identity that pays tribute to the Academy's legacy and tradition, Army Athletics, U.S. Army and Academy leadership, Nike, current and former cadet-athletes, coaches, historians and West Point graduates, collaborated on a nearly 18-month brand evolution program.



Will the team no longer have its fantastic gold helmets with a black stripe? We hope not.




The name change to Cadets isn't a new one. The Black Knights nickname has only been official since 1999.


"We really want to make sure we have something that identifies regionally, nationally and internationally," Army athletic director Boo Corrigan said to the Army Times in November.


According to the Army Times, the Black Knights nickname took off as an alternative moniker for the school during the football team's heyday in the 1940s. From 1944-1946 Army went undefeated. The time period was also during running back Glenn Davis' record-setting success. Davis has the careeer yards-per-carry record in college football, the record that was challenged in 2014 by Wisconsin running back Melvin Gordon.


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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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SA football mourns Henyekane

Minister of Sport Fikile Mbalula expressed his sadness at the death of footballer Richard Henyekane, who died in a car accident.


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Johannesburg – South Africa’s Minister of Sport, Fikile Mbalula, expressed his sadness at the death of South African soccer player Richard Henyekane who died in a car accident in in the early hours of Tuesday morning.


Striker Henyekane made nine official appearances for the national team, Bafana Bafana.


“Henyekane’s passing is a great loss for our country and to the entire football fraternity,” Mbalula said. “He comes from a family of soccer players as his brother, Joseph Henyekane was also a professional footballer. Football in South Africa is poorer without him. On behalf of the government of South Africa, we send our deepest condolences to his family, to his other family, Free State stars and to all the football loving people of our country.”


Henyekane was currently a player for Free State Stars and the club broke the news of his death.


In a statement the club said: “Free State Stars hereby expresses its heartfelt condolences on the passing of star striker Richard Henyekane in the early hours of this morning.”


Henyekane was travelling with four other passengers when the accident happened.


“We wish to say to the Henyekane family that they must know that we are with them at all times, and trust that they will put all their sorrows in the hands of God the Almighty in this hard period,’ the club said. “‘To the Stars family of fans, sponsors, supporters and others we believe that this is a period in which you will remain steadfast in praying for Henyekane’s teammates as they come to terms with this sad moment.”


Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Sport and Recreation also sent its condolences to the family, saying: “South Africa’s football community is poorer with the loss of this talented star.” – ANA






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Bafana to play Mauritius in Chan qualifier

Bafana Bafana have been drawn against Mauritius in the preliminary stage of the Orange African Nations Championship Rwanda 2016 qualifiers.


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Egypt – Bafana Bafana have been drawn against Mauritius in the preliminary stage of the Orange African Nations Championship (Chan) Rwanda 2016 qualifiers.


The draw was conducted at the Caf Headquarters in Cairo, Egypt.


Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba said on Tuesday his charges would not underestimate their opposition.


“Some may be thinking we are playing Mauritius so it will be a walk in the park, but there are no easy teams anymore in international football,” said Mashaba.


“Every team wants to do well and if they believe you are a powerhouse they come to you firing on all cylinders, so we must prepare well and work hard for our success.”


South Africa are among 42 teams that will be taking part in the qualifiers – these will produce 15 finalists who will join hosts Rwanda at the tournament scheduled to take place from January 16 to February 7 2016.


Bafana will host Mauritius on the weekend of June 19-21, while the return leg will be held two weeks later.


Should South Africa proceed to the next stage, the First Round, they will then face the winner between Swaziland and Angola with the first leg scheduled for weekend of October 16-18. The second leg will be played a fortnight later.


“The last time, we did not do well at home in the Chan tournament and many will still be making reference to that so we have to improve on that,” said Mashaba.


“We need to pick a strong team that will represent this country well because we have many capable players who are home-based and can hold their own against other nations. I am confident we will succeed.” - ANA






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Reds looking for FA Cup boost

Liverpool will hoping for a lift in the FA Cup having seen their challenge for a Champions League spot all but disappear.


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Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers is looking to avoid an FA Cup upset at Blackburn as his side try to ease the disappointment of their fading challenge for a place in the Champions League.


A run of eight wins from nine Premier League games up to the middle of March had put Liverpool in a strong position to secure a top four finish.


But successive defeats against Manchester United and Arsenal either side of the international break have left Liverpool in fifth place, well adrift of the top four.


Rodgers's team were out-played in both games and their sudden downturn in fortunes has been compounded by suspensions to Emre Can, who was sent off in last Saturday's crushing 4-1 loss at Arsenal, as well as captain Steven Gerrard and defender Martin Skrtel.


The fall-out from Raheem Sterling's decision to halt contract negotiations has also proved a distraction.


Yet Rodgers is still hoping to finish the season on a high by bringing silverware back to Anfield for the first time since Liverpool won the League Cup in 2012.


If the Reds can see off Championship club Blackburn in their quarter-final replay at Ewood Park, they will be through to a semi-final against Aston Villa at Wembley later this month.


But Rodgers won't underestimate Gary Bowyer's team, who have already knocked out top-flight sides Swansea and Stoke this season.


“There's no doubt there is disappointment at losing those games having put ourselves in a great position. We'd worked very hard to get ourselves into the position we were in before the Manchester United game,” Rodgers said.


“We're honest enough as a group to focus and analyse that we did not perform well enough, and when you don't against top-quality squads then unfortunately you can lose. But it's gone now. We need to focus on doing the very best we can.


“The group is very committed to winning this trophy, but in order to do that you have to qualify and we know Blackburn will be a difficult game for us.


“It's something we want to do as a group. We've made steady progress over a couple of seasons and arrived in a Champions League place last year and nearly won the league.


“A trophy this season will mark another step forward for us. Of course, it's a difficult game for us but getting to a final and winning a trophy is what we want.


“We made that a real strong objective for us this season, to do well in the cups, and this is an opportunity to get to another semi-final.”


Like Rodgers, Liverpool's Brazil midfielder Philippe Coutinho stressed the need to make amends by going all the way in the FA Cup, with either Arsenal or Reading waiting as potential final opponents.


“Winning the cup would save our season. It is very important for us to have that as an objective,” Coutinho said.


Blackburn held Liverpool to a 0-0 draw in the first meeting at Anfield last month.


Rovers famously won the Premier League title at Anfield 20 years ago and after recent troubled times, including relegation in 2012 and the imposition of a transfer embargo due to financial issues, manager Bowyer is delighted to be giving the club's supporters another glimpse of glory.


“I am really pleased for them more than anybody else to have that opportunity to bring Liverpool back to Ewood Park and get Ewood Park rocking and remind us of the Premier League days,” Bowyer said.


“It will bring back fond memories, it's where everybody wants to be, and this will be a little taster for us.


“You've only got to look at our home form against Premier League teams in the FA Cup and we've done particularly well.” – AFP






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Blatter wants harsher sanctions for racism

Fifa president Sepp Blatter called for tougher punishment for teams and associations found guilty of racism and discrimination.


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Cairo - Fifa president Sepp Blatter called for tougher punishment for teams and associations found guilty of racism and discrimination and said monetary sanctions were increasingly ineffective.


Statutes allowed for stiffer sanctions which now had to be implemented as the battle against 'the scourge of racism and discrimination is not being won', he told the Confederation of African Football congress.


“We have to punish not only through fines and stadium closures but we have to use our rules to suspend teams, to take away their points or even to relegate them if racism continues,” Blatter said.


Blatter reminded African countries of extensive financial support to the continent's football associations from world football's governing body as he opened the congress in a Cairo hotel on Tuesday.


Blatter, who is expected to get extensive support from the continent's 54 countries when he stands for re-election next month, said Fifa had spent some $700 million on various programmes across Africa.


“We should maybe spend more to prepare a better future for the children,” he added, mirroring the promises of his three rivals in the Fifa election for more financial assistance for member countries.


Blatter was met with a warm ovation from the African delegates in contrast to having to sit through stinging criticism when he attended the Uefa congress in Vienna last month.


Tuesday's Caf congress was also attended by Prince Ali bin Al Hussein of Jordan, Dutch Football Association President Michael van Praag and former Portugal international Luis Figo, who are all standing against Blatter, but they were not permitted to address the assembly.


Caf president Issa Hayatou, who last year pledged his members' support to Blatter's bid for another term in office, repeated his call for Africa to back the incumbent.


“He has been a faithful partner and in Africa we acknowledge our friends and offer them that they deserve,” added Hayatou. – Reuters






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Stars player dies in accident

Free State Stars player Richard Henyekane has died in a vehicle accident, the Premier Soccer League club said.


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Johannesburg – Free State Stars player Richard Henyekane has died in a vehicle accident, the Premier Soccer League club said.


Free State Stars hereby expresses its heartfelt condolences on the passing of star striker Richard Henyekane in the early hours of this morning, [Tuesday],” the club said in a statement.


”He was, unfortunately the only one to lose his life in this incident.”


Henyekane was travelling with four other passengers when the accident happened.


The club sent condolences to his teammates and supporters.


”We wish to say to the Henyekane family that they must know that we are with them at all times, and trust that they will put


all their sorrows in the hands of God the Almighty in this hard period.”


”To the Stars family of fans, sponsors, supporters and others we believe that this is a period in which you will remain steadfast in


praying for Henyekane’s teammates as they come to terms with this sad moment.” – ANA






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News sport : Duke's forgotten freshman helps carry the Blue Devils to a title

INDIANAPOLIS — One month into his debut season at Duke, freshman guard Grayson Allen could feel himself slipping into what he calls spectator mode.


He was only playing a handful of minutes in most games and twice he hadn't even gotten off the bench at all. As a result, the former McDonald's All-American spent long stretches of games sulking on the bench instead of concentrating on how he could contribute in limited minutes.


"I did get down on myself and I think that hurt me," Allen said. "I wasn't expecting to get in and I was acting like I wasn't part of the team on the bench. I was just watching. Eventually [Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski] sat down with me and told me not to just work toward next year. He told me to stay ready because my time was this year."


Never has Krzyzewski spoken truer words than those. This season indeed was Allen's time, even if the phenomenally talented freshman had to wait until Duke's very last game to have his breakout performance.


With Duke trailing Wisconsin by nine points early in the second half of Monday's title game and stars Jahlil Okafor and Justise Winslow saddled in foul trouble, Allen entered the game and provided a spark. He scored eight of his 16 points in the next two minutes, a one-man surge that lifted the Blue Devils back into striking distance and enabled them to capture Krzyzewski's fifth national championship with a 68-63 victory.


Allen's first big shot was a 3-pointer in which he made his defender pay for helping off him too far. He scored Duke's next five points attacking Wisconsin's slower defenders off the dribble, blowing by a flat-footed Sam Dekker for a 3-point play on one possession and drawing a foul on Duje Dukan on the next.


"He put us on his back and he put us in position to win," Okafor said. "We all knew how good he is. He's always one of our best players and our hardest workers and he proved it today."


That it was Allen who sank some of Monday's biggest shots has to be galling for Wisconsin because the Badgers probably didn't spend much time preparing for him. On a Duke team that features this June's potential No. 1 overall draft pick in Okafor and two other elite first-year stars in Winslow and Tyus Jones, Allen is truly the forgotten freshman.


Although Allen received scholarship offers from the likes of Florida, Florida State, Texas and Miami before committing to Duke late in his junior year, he has been forced to wait his turn while his classmates have flourished. Allen had only scored 16 or more points twice all season before Monday night and had gone scoreless in 14 of Duke's games.


What was frustrating sometimes for Allen was that his lack of playing time wasn't a product of anything he was doing wrong. He drew praise from the coaching staff for his work ethic and intensity in practice, but he was stuck behind the likes of Tyus Jones, Quinn Cook, Matt Jones and initially Rasheed Sulaimon in a crowded Duke backcourt rotation.


"We'd been riding those other horses," Duke assistant Nate James said. "It wasn't that coach didn't believe in him. It was just Quinn, Tyus, Matt, they had been playing great for us."


Had it not been for Sulaimon's Jan. 30 dismissal from the team, Allen might never have cracked Duke's rotation this season. He hadn't logged double-digit minutes in any ACC game prior to that, but he received at least 10 minutes in eight of the Blue Devils' 13 remaining regular season games thereafter.


Allen was still the last player in Duke's eight-man rotation, but he showed enough burst off the dribble and enough confidence as a shooter for Krzyzewski to trust him in big postseason games. He also benefited from a chat with assistant coach Jon Scheyer after an 0-for-3 shooting effort in Duke's opening-round NCAA tournament win over Robert Morris.


"What he had done so well up until that point was next game, next play, and that during that game he got a little frustrated," Scheyer said. "We just had a little talk about moving on to the next game, and every game since he has been great."


Though Allen had nine points in the national semifinals against Michigan State including a big baseline dunk, it was Monday's title game that proved to be his breakthrough.


On the biggest stage in college basketball, in front of more than 70,000 fans, Allen logged 21 minutes, sank 5 of 8 shots and kept his team in the game long enough for Tyus Jones and Okafor to deliver the daggers in the final minutes. Duke's freshmen scored every one of the team's 37 second-half points, and Allen accounted 10 of them.


In December, Allen admits he might not have been prepared to make that kind of impact off the bench. On Monday night, he was focused, attentive and a long way from spectator mode.


"I knew I might never get another chance to win a championship, so I figured I might as well go out there, be aggressive and give it my all," Allen said. "I dreamed about this ever since I saw Duke win a championship in 2010 over Butler. To finally be here and to have this actually happen my freshman year, it's amazing."


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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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Blame strikers, not tactics - Rodgers

Brendan Rodgers argued that Liverpool's players rather than his tactical system were responsible for the defeats that have all but extinguished their Champions League ambitions.


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Brendan Rodgers argued that Liverpool's players rather than his tactical system were responsible for the defeats that have all but extinguished their Champions League ambitions.


The Liverpool manager pointed out that his top scorer this season had found the net only six times in the Premier League, while in the games against Manchester United and Arsenal, the play had been far too sluggish. He added that “solutions needed to be found” for Liverpool's lack of bite in attack ahead of tomorrow's FA Cup tie with Blackburn.


In Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge, Liverpool possessed the Premier League's top two goalscorers last season with 52 between them. This time around the five strikers on Liverpool's books - Sturridge, Raheem Sterling, Mario Balotelli, Rickie Lambert and Fabio Borini have managed 14 between them.


“We are still trying to find solutions at the top end of the field,” said Rodgers. “Our top goalscorer has six goals - we have three players on six - so we have to find a solution to that but when everyone is fit and available we are able to compete with this squad.”


Rodgers also denied that managers like Arsène Wenger and Louis van Gaal had worked out the radical 3-4-3 formation that propelled his side to within touching distance of the Champions League places with 10 wins in 13 games before defeats by United and Arsenal.


“Our possession just hasn't been good enough; that has been the key to it,” he said. “We have to build the game quickly and there is no excuse for not doing so at the Emirates because the pitch is so wonderful. It was the same against Manchester United and in the first half at Swansea - the speed of our game hasn't been there and nor has the speed of our passing.


“Against Arsenal, we didn't start well, got back into it, and then defended poorly. I don't think it was anything to do with the system; we just didn't pass the ball quickly enough.”


However, as Rodgers knows too well, Sturridge is rarely fit and available for a whole season and with Martin Skrtel and Emre Can suspended for tomorrow's FA Cup quarter-final with Blackburn, he has as many worries in defence.


Dejan Lovren, who for £20m was supposed to be the centrepiece of a rebuilt defence, was not considered good enough to replace the suspended Skrtel at Arsenal but will play at Ewood Park.


Should Liverpool finish with the FA Cup, which would be only their second piece of silverware in nine years, the season could be counted a success.


However, the Liverpool manager knows that once it is over, the club will have to address the question of how an organisation that is fifth in the Premier League in terms of wages and turnover regularly breaks into the top four in the table.


“That is not the attitude we want at the club,” said Rodgers when asked whether fifth was Liverpool's natural position. “We have to fight to get in there and, whatever the barriers that are in front of us, we have to do everything we can to break them down.”


Liverpool spent more than £100m in the summer to bolster a squad that had to compete for the title and in Europe. However, too many players have failed to make an instant impact.


“You bring in players with the intention of them all doing well,” said Rodgers. “What you cannot vouch for when they come to a club of this size is how long that adaption process is going to take.


“You can be a very good player and not hit it off for some reason, or it just takes time like [it did with with midfielder] Lucas Leiva. It didn't happen for him early on in his Liverpool career but he ended up doing well and the supporters appreciate the role he plays.


“It is just unfortunate that these players need time, and you don't get that in modern football.”


Rodgers was adamant that, despite reports to the contrary, the team meeting at Melwood on Easter Sunday did not turn into a slanging match as to who was responsible for Liverpool's recent failings.


The meeting, he said, was routine. “This was no different to a whole host of meetings we have had here all year. Those meetings helped us to recover from a bad start and win 10 games out of 13.” – The Independent






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City title hopes in tatters after defeat

Crystal Palace left Manchester City's hopes of retaining their Premier League crown in tatters after a 2-1 win at Selhurst Park.


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London - Crystal Palace left Manchester City's hopes of retaining their Premier League crown in tatters after a 2-1 win at Selhurst Park to leave Manuel Pellegrini's side trailing a distant fourth in the title race.


The defeat kept City nine points behind leaders Chelsea and seemingly now in a battle to finish above Arsenal and Manchester United.


Chelsea, who have eight matches to play, have 70 points, followed by Arsenal on 63, Manchester United on 62 and City on 61. That trio all have seven matches remaining.


Impressive Palace defended resolutely to withstand early City pressure before taking the lead through Glenn Murray after 34 minutes.


He swept in from close range after Scott Dann's shot bounced off goalkeeper Joe Hart's leg into his path.


The goal stood despite City claiming Palace had been offside in the build-up, but there was no argument about Palace's second three minutes into the second half.


Fernandinho brought down the outstanding Murray 20 metres from goal and Jason Puncheon swept his curling free kick over the wall and past Hart into the corner of the goal.


Yaya Toure gave City some hope with a thunderous drive after 78 minutes but although Palace dealt his team what could be a fatal blow to their title hopes, Pellegrini was not conceding the race was over yet.


“We lost to an offside goal and a beautiful free kick and we did not take our chances,” he told Sky Sports.


“We are not talking about the title now, or Chelsea. We are just trying to win our games. We have seven games left they are all very important, there are 21 points and all we must do is win our games.”


City came to Palace after a run of patchy form with only four wins in their last 13 matches in all competitions and were almost dealt an early blow in the second minute when Wilfried Zaha blasted his angled drive over.


City soon settled with David Silva and Sergio Aguero combining well up front, and Aguero came close to opening the scoring after 19 minutes but saw his shot cannon away off the foot of Julian Speroni's right-hand post.


The match also had echoes of Liverpool's visit to Selhurst Park 11 months ago when they were leading 3-0 with 11 minutes to play, only for Palace to end their title hopes by drawing 3-3.


Palace manager Alan Pardew told Sky: “We showed diligence, character and resilience tonight. We had two quality moments for the goals - it was a shame we did not have more offensive moments tonight, but we will have other games when that happens.” – Reuters






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News sport : Ohio State WR Devin Smith jokes about Wisconsin's losses at Lucas Oil Stadium

Wisconsin's Frank Kaminsky, left, reacts with teammate Josh Gasser (21) after their 68-63 loss to Duke in the NCAA Final Four college basketball tournament championship game Monday, April 6, 2015, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) Lucas Oil Stadium has been unkind to Wisconsin in the past five months.


Not only did the Badgers drop the national title game to Duke in men’s basketball on Monday night, the Badgers’ football team was demolished 59-0 by Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship game back in December.


Ohio State wide receiver Devin Smith, who had four catches for 137 yards and three touchdowns in the win, couldn’t resist cracking a joke at Wisconsin’s expense on Twitter.



Yes, Devin, the Badgers put up 63 points this time around at Lucas Oil, but still couldn’t pull out the win this time around.


Don’t get too mad at Smith, Wisconsin fans. He made sure to let you know he has respect for UW’s run to the final.




Even though he was joking, that still has to sting for Wisconsin fans.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : The Marlins aren't a joke anymore, but they're still hilarious


If you were to sum up Miami Marlins opening day in one word, it would be ... oof.


By now, you might have heard about the Marlins getting stuck in a rain delay because a storm came and their retractable roof was open. That's brilliant right here. Your knee-jerk might be to say, "Oh well, Marlins gonna Marlin," but the fact of the matter is, the Marlins aren't the joke that they were in years past.


They had a really good offseason, including signing Giancarlo Stanton, to the richest contract in baseball history. The Marlins could make the postseason this year, and that's not "Back to the Future II" silliness. They actually might be a playoff team.


They dropped their opener 2-1 to the Atlanta Braves. It was hardly a laugher, but the Marlins showed us they're still hilarious. Take into consideration these two glorious moments:


• Marcell Ozuna thought he made a diving catch in the outfield, but the ball was sitting right behind him. We all laughed, because we could see what he couldn't — the ball sitting there. Ozuna, to his credit, tried his best to act like he had caught the ball. Good try, man.




• Then Dee Gordon, one of the Marlins' new addition, laid down a very nice bunt in the bottom of the eighth, trying to help his team close that one-run deficit. With Gordon's speed, it looked like a bunt base hit until ... oof ... he fell flat on his face. Maybe the rain was to blame there because the dirt was wet. Or maybe Gordon just stumbled.




Either way, we're chuckling at the Marlins on opening day. But unlike years past, we wholeheartedly believe they could be a contender come September.


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Mike Oz is the editor of Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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