News sport : Brewers minor-league team sets off on 55-game road trip

Johnny Cash has got nothing on the Biloxi Shuckers. The Double-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brwers is about to embark on a 55-game road trip through the Southern League, and by the end of it each of the players will be able to confidently say “I’ve Been Everywhere.”


Road trips are a part of life in the minor leagues but the first-year team is being forced to take to the road for 60 days because their brand new stadium is not done being built. Even the proposed June 6 home opener is not a sure thing.



The franchise moved from Huntsville to Biloxi in the offseason, lured partly by the promise of a $36 million stadium. It is expected to a beautiful facility -- eventually.


Due to various issues, including construction delays, it probably won't be ready for two more months.


In the meantime, there will be a lot of bus rides, hotels and trips to Applebee's. The expected toll: 60 straight nights in a hotel, 55 games, nine different cities and some frayed nerves.



The trip through the Southeast reads like the lyrics to the famous Cash song. Over the course of the trip the Shuckers will go to Pensacola, Mobile, Jacksonville, Pensacola, Huntsville, Jackson, Miss., Jackson, Tenn., Huntsville, Chattanooga, and Birmingham.


The trip dwarfs the longest known modern-day major league road trips. Both the 1991 Montreal Expos and 1992 Houston Astros went on 26-game road swings. The Expos took off because a beam collapsed at Olympic Stadium, and the Astros because the Astrodome was hosting the Republican National Convention. In 1899 the Cleveland Spiders went on a 50-game road trip, part of a season in which they set a major-league futility record by going 20-134, including 101 road losses. The Spiders were contracted out of the National League the next year.


More recently, the 2012 Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees played their entire 144-game schedule away from home. The New York Yankees’ Triple-A affiliate was forced to leave home due to stadium renovations but played 37 “home games” in Rochester, NY.


The Shuckers started the road trip with a 4-0 win in Pensacola on Thursday night.



You can catch a glimpse of the stadium construction in Biloxi with the live web cam on their website. Spoiler alert: June 6 seems like an ambitious date for the home opener. Good luck, Shuckers.


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Ian Denomme is an editor and writer for Yahoo Sports. Email him at denomme@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter.






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News sport : Daily Dime: Stacking Cubs at Coors, trusting Taijuan Walker on the road

By now you should all know the Daily Dime drill. We examine daily prices for ten players, looking for bargains and busts. Let's get to work...


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Eight to play


Dexter Fowler, OF, at Col (Matzek), $3100 at FanDuel: Fowler is a career .299/.391/.433 hitter against left-handed pitching, and Rockies starter Tyler Matzek shouldn't scare anyone away. Matzek has been dominant against LHBs, but righty hitters have hammered him (.306/.374/.474 in 386 PAs). I'm using a multi-Cub formation in multiple lineups on Friday, featuring Fowler and Jorge Soler ($3700).


Taijuan Walker, SP, at Oak (Pomeranz), $7400: After a brilliant spring (27.0 IP, 2 ER, 26 Ks), Walker takes his first turn of the regular season in a friendly road park. The A's have hit well enough to open the year, but they don't field the game's most intimidating lineup. Walker is just the ninth-most expensive pitcher on Friday's slate, but he's a serious talent.


Wilson Ramos, C, at Phi (Williams), $3100: With Jerome Williams on the hill on Friday, it feels like a decent time to roster a batch of Nats. Ramos sat against Matt Harvey on Thursday afternoon, so he should be good to go in this one. It's always nice to find a catcher who does his hitting in the middle of the lineup.


Drew Stubbs, OF, vs. Chc (Wood), $3100: Cubs starter Travis Wood can't really be trusted at sea level, so he definitely can't be trusted at altitude. I'm assuming Stubbs will draw the start in this one; he's 5-for-12 in his career against the lefty Wood. (Not a meaningful sample, still a nice talking point.)


Joe Mauer, 1B, at CWS (Noesi), $3200: OK, so the Twins are off to a hilariously poor start, having scored only a single run over three games. But when Hector Noesi takes the hill, I'm always going to roster someone who gets to face him. That's just one of my guiding principles.


Jose Reyes, SS, at Bal (Norris), $3700: Fun fact about Reyes' history against O's starter Bud Norris: In 30 career plate appearances against the righty, Reyes has never struck out. Not once. He's 10-for-28 against Bud, for what it's worth.


C.J. Cron, 1B, vs. KC (Vargas), $2500: Cron is hitless in six at-bats to start the season, sure, but his history against the left-handed Vargas is tremendous, if limited (2-for-5, 2 HR, 2 BB). And yup, that's another way-too-small sample. If you need an extra-cheap option to sketch in a lineup, consider Cron, assuming he plays.


Pablo Sandoval, 3B, at NYY (Eovaldi), $3000: Panda has absolutely owned Eovaldi (8-for-11, 4 XBHs), and I'm expecting plenty of stats on both sides in this one. Sandoval is a heart-of-the-order hitter in a terrific lineup, and the price is right.


A pair to fear


Chase Utley, 2B, vs. Was (Gonzalez), $3400: This could be any Phillies regular, really, with the possible exception of Darin Ruf ($2400), if he plays. Philadelphia is facing Friday's most expensive pitcher, Gio Gonzalez ($9400); Utley has had almost no success against the Washington lefty (3-for-17, all singles).


Wilmer Flores, SS, at Atl (Stults), $2500: It seems as if a soft-tossing lefty should be a decent matchup for Flores, but he's done nearly all his damage against RHPs to this point in his career. When facing southpaws, Flores is just 13-for-91 with no homers and 24 Ks (0-for-2 vs. Stults). Stay away.






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News sport : Augusta National is trademarking "Tradition unlike any other"

When Jim Nantz calls the Masters a "tradition unlike any other," he's now using a phrase trademarked by Augusta National Golf Club.


The home of the Masters filed in September for a pair of trademarks related to the phrase, according to an ESPN.com report. Nantz is believed to have concocted the phrase in the run-up to his first Masters in 1986. One of the filings claims the club first used it in 1989.


Not only has the club filed a trademark for the phrase, but also the use case of putting the phrase on merchandise. Augusta National is selling Masters shirts this year printed with that phrase.


You might be wondering why Nantz has never trademarked the phrase himself. After all, everyone has adopted it; he could make millions like ring announcer Michael Buffer has with "Let's get ready to rumble." Not so fast. As part of the contracts arranged between Augusta National and its broadcast partners for the Masters, Augusta National retains ownership of the broadcasts and what's said on the air. In other words, it owns the rights to whatever Nantz -- or any other Masters broadcaster -- says during the tournament.


A club official said Nantz would not be prohibited from using the phrase. However, it's unclear what permission Nantz would have to use it during speaking engagements and other public appearances.




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







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News sport : Could Minnesota's top receiving threat in 2015 be Jeff Jones?

When Minnesota landed Jeff Jones, the top recruit in the state of Minnesota in the class of 2014, it was easy to see how he would become the focal point of the Gophers' offense in the near future.


However, the four-star running back may not be the heir apparent to David Cobb at running back in 2015. Instead, he may be Minnesota's top receiver.


Jones has been spending time at wide receiver during spring practice and has apparently looked like a natural in the slot. Coach Jerry Kill said he knew Jones had the ability to transition to wide receiver while recruiting him.


“I spend a lot of time when we’re recruiting people watching them play basketball games because you can tell if they’re athletic and those kinds of things,” Kill said via the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.


While Cobb and his 1,600+ rushing yards in 2014 are off to the NFL, don't expect Minnesota's offense to change too much from its run-heavy attack in 2015. However, if Jones can present a mismatch in the slot, he'll be a receiving option that, quite frankly, the Gophers didn't have in 2014.


Tight end Maxx Williams was the team's leading receiver in 2014. He's off to the NFL as well and had 36 catches for 569 yards and eight touchdowns. No Gophers wide receiver had more than 18 catches or two touchdowns.


Just think of how effective Minnesota's rushing game could be with a big-time receiving threat.


“He’s looking real good, and I think all the [defensive] backs agree,” quarterback Mitch Leidner said. “He runs some of the best routes on the team, and he’s relatively raw. He catches the ball real well.”


For more Minnesota news, visit GopherIllustrated.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 : Closing Time: Miguel Castro takes the ninth, Trevor Bauer piles up Ks

Brett Cecil blew a save opportunity in a loss to the Yankees on Wednesday, delivering a messy stat line along the way: 0.1 IP, H, BB, K, WP.


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On Thursday, Toronto's closer became an ex-closer:



Apparently John Gibbons maintains a zero-tolerance policy regarding the blowing of saves, which of course is his prerogative. Seems harsh, but our role here is merely to react to various moves, not judge them. Cecil was dinged this spring (shoulder) and his velocity has dipped, so the flip isn't completely out of nowhere.


The advice here is simple enough: Go add Miguel Castro. Everything else can wait. Go. Do it.


Done? Great.


Castro currently owns the ninth for the Jays. He's a hard-throwing 20-year-old coming off an excellent spring, and he was terrific in the low minors last year (2.69 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, 8.7 K/9). He definitely has the traditional closing arsenal, with the 96-98 mph heat included. He earned an easy save on Thursday night in New York, tossing a 1-2-3 inning (Drew-Gregorius-Ellsbury) while protecting a three-run lead. After reaching the backstop with an errant slider, Castro was pretty much all fastballs.


Cecil actually set up Castro on Thursday, striking out two in a relatively quiet eighth. (Chris Young drew a two-out walk, then advanced on a wild pitch.) It sure seems weird that Toronto doesn't trust Cecil in ninth-inning save situations, yet he's approved to face an opponent's 4-5-6 hitters with a slim lead in the eighth. But, again, we're not here to judge. For the moment, Cecil is out of our fantasy plans, except in deep formats where you need to hold next-men-up.


It feels like we've been hyping and un-hyping and re-hyping Trevor Bauer for the better part of a decade, but he's actually still only 24 years old. On Thursday afternoon, Bauer spun 6.0 no-hit innings against the Astros, piling up 11 Ks. Highlights here .


Not a bad call, Pianowski.


Trevor Bauer, missing bats. (Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images) Terry Francona understandably lifted Bauer after the sixth with the no-hitter still in play, because the kid was headed for an obscene pitch-count. He issued five walks on Thursday, throwing just 65 strikes on 111 pitches. It may not have been the most efficient six innings you'll ever see, but it was impressive nonetheless.


If I had shares of Bauer, I'd probably try to cash-in right now, taking his strong outing (and excellent spring) to the trade market. I wouldn't simply give him away, mind you — this is clearly a talented young starter, figuring things out. But this time of year, we have plenty of fantasy managers with us who routinely overreact to huge single-game performances. Those folks generally aren't paying attention later in the season. If you can extract an ace-level price for Bauer today, do it.


A big part of the story for Trevor on Thursday, we should note, was the K-prone opposing lineup. Houston hitters fanned 16 times, raising the team total to 36 through just three games. This is what you get with Gattis, Carter, Springer and Co. If you're streaming in the days ahead, the Astros are scheduled to face Derek Holland, Yovani Gallardo and Colby Lewis over the weekend.


Please note the productive line delivered by Detroit lead-off man Anthony Gose: 3-for-5, 3 R, double, SB. He earned his at-bats with a strong spring, and he's off to a respectable start in April. (True, he's making noise against guys like Ricky Nolasco and Kyle Gibson, but there are no degree-of-difficulty points in fantasy.)


Nobody seems to own Mitch Moreland in Yahoo leagues, but he's got plenty of power and he'll be an almost-everyday presence in the Rangers lineup. Moreland homered off spring hero Kendall Graveman on Wednesday, finishing with three RBIs. He has an unobstructed path to playing time this season, which should lead to 25-or-so home runs.


Matt Harvey made most Nats look silly on Thursday, including lead-off hitter Michael Taylor. But Taylor still managed to finish his afternoon with two hits in five plate appearances, driving in two runs. The kid is now 4-for-13, playing reasonably well in relief of Denard Span (abdomen). Taylor should prove useful as a short-term play. He slashed .304/.390/.526 in the high minors last year, clearing the fence 23 times and swiping 37 bags.






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News sport : Michael Bennett on new Seahawks teammate Jimmy Graham: still overrated

Seattle Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett appeared on 710 ESPN Seattle’s “Justin and Gee” show on Thursday to address the trade rumors that he reportedly made to the team last month.


Bennett denied the rumors, but it turns out that he actually had something more interesting to say later in the interview. When asked about the Seahawks’ biggest acquisition this offseason, tight end Jimmy Graham, Bennett said he hasn’t changed his view of the former New Orleans Saints rival.


See, Bennett and Graham have some history, with Bennett calling Graham “soft” and “overrated” and saying that he didn’t like Graham “as a person or as a player.”



The fact that they are not teammates apparently has not changed much in Bennett’s mind.



"I still feel the same way. I mean, just because he's on my team I don't stop feeling that way," Bennett said.



Guess Bennett won’t be taking Graham around to his favorite oyster spots in town anytime soon.


The outspoken Bennett did say he’d try to soften his stance a bit because the two players would be sharing a locker room this season.



"Obviously, I'm going to be a better teammate to him because he's on my team. I can't do the things I was doing to him when we were playing him," Bennett said. "When he comes to our team, he's a part of our team. We have a different philosophy than they have with the Saints so the things that he was expected to do [with] the Saints are going to be different when he comes here. Obviously, we're a running team, so he's going to have to block and do all those things.




"I don't feel as harsh as I did at the time because he's my teammate now, but at the time he was on the opposite team, a team that we played that was pretty good and we battled with them a couple times, and I didn't really like that team."



Bennett and Graham are going to have to make it work, and though the fact they won't be sharing a huddle or a meeting room all that often will help keep a little distance between them, there's no doubt that they'll be locking horns at some point on the field during training camp practices.


And that's where the genesis of Bennett's overrated talk — that Graham isn't a great blocker for the position — might be proven or disproven. Head coach Pete Carroll likes to ride the razor's edge with his team, and it mostly has worked so far.


Right now, you'd have to think the majority of the Seahawks are on Bennett's side until further notice. Other teammates, including Bruce Irvin, have spoken out about Graham in the past, so the new tight end will have to do his best to endear himself to his fellow players there.


This will be a small but interesting test to his chemistry experiment in Seattle. Is there enough room in the petri dish for both players? The Seahawks are counting on it, having traded their starting center and first-round pick to land Graham, and Bennett apparently has no interest in being traded.


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






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Bayern’s injury situation ‘very critical’

Bayern Munich coach Pep Guardiola described his club's injury situation “very critical” after central defender Medhi Benatia became the latest casualty.


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Berlin - Bayern Munich coach Pep Guardiola described his club's injury situation “very critical” after central defender Medhi Benatia became the latest casualty.


The Morocco international could miss both legs of the Champions League quarter-final against Porto this month due to a muscle injury picked up in Wednesday's German Cup quarter-final win over Bayer Leverkusen.


“We had problems and now we have more problems. Our situation is very critical, very critical,” Guardiola told reporters.


“I never had a situation with so many injuries. But we are here. We will fight until the end for our goals, our club.”


Bayern, top of the Bundesliga with a 10-point lead, are chasing a treble of titles, hoping to repeat their 2013 achievement. They travel to Porto next week for the first leg of the last-eight tie.


But Benatia's injury, which could sideline him for up to a month, is a further blow with Bastian Schweinsteiger, David Alaba, Arjen Robben, Javi Martinez and reserve keeper Tom Starke already on the injury list.


Franck Ribery, who has been out for five weeks with an ankle injury, returned to training this week but Guardiola said he was doubtful for the game in Porto.


“I still do not know if he can travel on Monday with us to Porto,” he said.


Thiago Alcantara has only just returned to action after a year out injured.


“I have full confidence in my team. I have learned a lot about my players in the last two games. They showed a lot of passion and when you show that then you can win a lot of things,” Guardiola said. – Reuters






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Ex-Bafana star on hijacking rap

A former Bafana star is due to appear in court for planning to rob a truck carrying cigarettes.


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A former Bafana Bafana star, who seems to have fallen on hard times, has been arrested with nine other men for planning to rob a truck carrying cigarettes.


The 45-year-old man and the gang had allegedly planned to rob the truck travelling from Mpumalanga to Gauteng. However, police pounced while the men were meeting prior to the robbery.


Provincial police spokesman Lieutenant Kay Makhubela said this morning they had received a tip-off about the robbery and gone to a parking lot in Boksburg where the men were meeting at 5pm.


They arrested 10 men, including the former PSL player, who he refused to name.


“Two of the men were in metro police uniforms. We also found them in the possession of a truck jammer device.”


Makhubela said while they did not find weapons in the vehicles, they believed they may have been in another vehicle whose driver sped off as soon as he saw the police. The men were expected to appear in the Boksburg Magistrate’s Court on Friday, he said.


The former soccer star’s arrest comes two months after the arrest of former Jomo Cosmos and Bafana Bafana player Lebogang Morula. He and five other men allegedly overpowered guards in Ogies, Mpumalanga, while they were loading money into an ATM, and made off with cash. While the robbery was in progress, a Hawks team – who had information the heist would take place – pounced.


At the time, Morula was out on bail for attempted murder in Brits, North West.


In October 2011, it was reported that Morula and four Zimbabweans were arrested after they were allegedly found in possession of stolen goods worth R4.2 million. Morula was out on bail for a similar incident at the time.


In 2010, more than 500 stolen computers were found at a storeroom owned by Morula in GaRankuwa, north of Pretoria. They had been stolen from a hijacked truck. Metro police uniforms were also found. - The Star






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United will punish sloppy City

Manchester United head into the Manchester derby against champions Manchester City as favourites. But are they really?


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When Manchester City won the title in May and their neighbours United finished seventh, it seemed that their famous rivalry was going to be one-sided for a long time to come.


But it is United who go into Sunday’s derby as favourites, full of confidence. City’s title defence has been a shambles. Sportsmail asked United’s former captain Bryan Robson, City legend Dennis Tueart and our resident experts Jamie Redknapp and Martin Keown how Manchester has been turned on its head.


Why has the pendulum swung back in United’s favour?


Jamie Redknapp: After losing to Arsenal in the FA Cup, I couldn’t see United going anywhere. Things changed at Liverpool. They gained confidence and now they aren’t just winning, they’re playing well. With City, there is a mental issue and they have lost three away games on the bounce. That’s not good enough.


Martin Keown: It looked like City had conquered this rivalry. Not anymore. When I saw them lose the Community Shield I already had my suspicions. True champions forget the past and go for the next challenge. City seemed complacent. For United, Louis van Gaal’s experiments are finally producing results.


Byan Robson: City’s slip surprises me. The initial dip coincided with Yaya Toure going off to the Africa Cup of Nations. Prior to that City were dominating defences. United took time to settle in to Van Gaal’s ways but they’ve timed it well.


Dennis Tueart: United’s absence from cup competitions and Europe has allowed Van Gaal to spend hours on training. City have lost confidence and I am not sure the players are comfortable with the system.


What has happened to Vincent Kompany?


Tueart: One of the challenges Sir Alex Ferguson always met at United was to have a settled spine. City haven’t had that this season and Kompany has suffered. He hasn’t had a regular partner and the two guys playing immediately in front of him are always changing too. That has unsettled him and he has responded by trying to do too much. Kompany is a terrific player and I am sure he will recover. But he needs to concentrate on his own play and hope others follow his lead.


Robson: You can’t be outstanding every year. Last year people were even questioning whether Lionel Messi was on the slide. Kompany’s still a top defender but he’s had some injuries and as you get older you have to learn to look after your body differently. The criticism can affect you. We’re not all as thick skinned as we like to make out and it’s a first for him to be examined this way.


Redknapp: Last season he was colossal but this has been his worst in a City shirt. He’s struggled with injuries and it looks like he doesn’t trust his body. Every decision he makes seems to be the wrong one.


Keown: His recovery from injury took longer than he might have expected and he looked uncoordinated when he returned.


Is Van Gaal brilliant or lucky?


Keown: It has been a combination of both. Injuries forced him to play Wayne Rooney up front and it took him a long time to ditch the back three and go for the four the fans wanted. But he has made far better use of David Moyes’ signings.


Robson: Look at his record, that’s not luck. He has unswerving confidence in himself. I’ve witnessed at first hand the way he tells players bluntly what he wants. It’s not meant in a rude way but it helps. As a player if you’re told sharply what’s required there’s no grey area, you prefer that. He’s made subtle changes, like Juan Mata no longer being exposed for pace due to where he plays.


Tueart: Napoleon said he would rather have lucky generals than good ones and with Van Gaal I think there has been a bit of both. In a way things have fallen nicely for him in that injuries to people like Angel di Maria and Robin van Persie have forced his hand in terms of including Mata and Marouane Fellaini in recent games. However, you don’t beat Liverpool at Anfield by being lucky.


Redknapp: People are excited by what he’s done but this is exactly where United should be. I’ll reserve judgment because he has always said he needed time. Tactically at Liverpool he was spot on and he is showing his qualities but it’s funny that has happened now players are in their right position.


If you were Aguero and De Gea, would you leave in the summer?


Robson: If you’re Spanish it must be very difficult to ignore Real Madrid when they are chasing you but David de Gea must realise he could have everything he wants at United. For Sergio Aguero, he knows at City he is the main man and that he is loved but that wouldn’t be the case with Real Madrid or Barcelona.


Redknapp: I’m his biggest fan but I get the feeling there’s something up with Aguero. He’s playing like an individual and not showing the team ethic we normally see. If a player does not want to be somewhere, it’s hard to keep them. With De Gea, it would be a dream to play for Real Madrid. If a deal involved Gareth Bale going the other way, I’d snap your hand off.


Keown: No, it would be wrong for both to leave. Manchester United is an institution and De Gea can play a huge part in any future success. With Aguero I’d be very surprised if he leaves. He is a fantastic professional and the club is building for the future.


Tueart: They both want Champions League football, of course, so their clubs have to ensure they have that next season. I never thought I would be wondering about whether City will be in it, I must admit!


Should City stick with Manuel Pellegrini?


Redknapp: It might be harsh and the owners don’t want a reputation for hiring and firing but I don’t think they’ll keep him. The problem is who can replace him?


Tueart: I would hope so but he needs to improve. I am concerned about the system. All the European clubs play 4-3-3 when they have the ball and 4-5-1 when they don’t. But with Pellegrini playing 4-4-2 City tend to get overrun in midfield. He seems unwilling to change. Against Palace on Monday, City had 74 per cent of possession but lost 2-1. Having the ball is no good if it’s in the wrong areas.


Robson: Definitely. He has shown he can win trophies, the Champions League will be a concern but he probably only needs to change three players. The key for supporting him is City’s scouting system and making sure they identify the right players to buy in the summer.


Keown: There is a loyalty at that club and it would go against their philosophy to sack him. Yes, they sacked Roberto Mancini but he was an abrasive character. Pellegrini is a better fit.


Who is the best player in either squad?


Keown: It’s a difficult one but I’d go for Aguero over Rooney. Both are match-winners but Aguero needs two defenders to stop him. If it’s a one-on-one, it’s game over.


Robson: Michael Carrick is probably the unsung hero but Wayne Rooney is United’s star. He’s a special talent who can change a game and lift the team with one movement. For City, Yaya Toure is still the man that makes them tick. If he wants to play then City are difficult to stop.


Tueart: David Silva and Wayne Rooney. They are both players who put their shift in, create chances and score goals. I thought Rooney’s attitude earlier in the season when he played in midfield was excellent. While Van Gaal was trying to find solutions, Rooney’s approach was: ‘Just give me the shirt, tell me where to play and I will go and do it’. That kind of approach is priceless.


Redknapp: Even though he’s not at his best right now, it still has to be Aguero. Silva and Rooney are fantastic but Aguero is devastating.


Who has made worse signings?


Robson: Players from both squads have struggled with the expectation and the scrutiny. Nemanja Vidic and Patrice Evra struggled when they joined United but they became seasoned players. Fellaini needed a year of adjustment and he was already in the Premier League. Falcao needs more games. For Di Maria, Eliaquim Mangala and Fernando it’s too early to judge.


Tueart: They are probably both on a par here! Players like Di Maria, Falcao, Mangala and Fernando really have not come in and done well. It is harder to get the right players and tricky to get people to live in Manchester, sadly.


Redknapp: United’s were marginally better. Di Maria made a fine start and though he’s faded, few of City’s players have shone at all. I never thought I’d say it but Chelsea lead the way right now. They sell high and invest wisely.


Keown: Neither manager will have endeared themselves to the money men but I think City did a better job, particularly with Frank Lampard and Bacary Sagna on frees. Though they did waste a lot of money on Mangala when Micah Richards could have been given a chance.


Who will win the match?


Redknapp: United, 2-1. The momentum has shifted and all the belief is with them. City’s confidence is low and they are struggling on the road. I don’t see them turning it round.


Keown: United. Van Gaal has finally worked out his system and selections. This is a game to focus City minds but they could have done with it a few weeks ago.


Robson: City have handed out some tonkings over recent years but United will make a closer fight of it this time. I’m going to sit on the fence and say it will be a draw.


Tueart: Team selection will be crucial. City have discovered how to win at Old Trafford in recent times and that will help them. If they play their best — and it’s a big if — I fancy them to edge it.– Daily Mail






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Zlatan cops four game ban for outburst

Paris Saint-Germain striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic has been suspended for four French Ligue 1 matches for offensive remarks captured on television.


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Paris – Paris Saint-Germain striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic has been suspended for four French Ligue 1 matches for offensive remarks captured on television.


The Sweden international lost his temper, insulted the referee and one of his assistants and then used an expletive to describe France


after his side’s 3-2 defeat to Bordeaux last month.


Ibrahimovic, 33, later apologised, saying his remarks “were not aimed at France or the French people.”


The ban imposed late Thursday by the league’s disciplinary panel means Ibrahimovic will miss four of his side’s seven remaining league games.


The panel said the punishment reflected “the offensive nature and rudeness of his words.”


Ibrahimovic is also suspended for the first leg of PSG’s Champions League quarter-final against Barcelona after a red card against


Chelsea in the last round.


He is eligible to play in Saturday’s League Cup final against Bastia. – ANA-DPA






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Harry though he got England job

Harry Redknapp says he was convinced he was going to be named England manager before Roy Hodgson was given the job.


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London – Harry Redknapp says he was convinced he was going to be named England manager before Roy Hodgson was


given the job.


In an interview with the BBC’s Football Focus, Redknapp, who stepped down as Queens Park Rangers manager in February, said he believed it was a done deal in May 2012.


“I thought it was a certainty in all honesty,” Redknapp said.


“I’d be a liar if I sat here and said anything else. Even Roy thought I was a certainty. But it didn’t happen and that’s life and I didn’t lose any sleep over it. He’s a top-class manager without a doubt.” But Redknapp said in hindsight, Hodgson may have been a better fit for the particular demands of the job.


“I think maybe Roy was more suited to the job than I was,” he said.“Maybe he was more suited in going to St George’s Park and spending more time with the FA. I always think he is perhaps more organised than me in that respect.


“I thought he would spend more time in the office than I would.


“I’d have hated that, going up to Soho or wherever the offices are. Going to St George’s Park wasn’t for me. I could have managed


England, but I couldn’t sit in an office and say I’d win a tournament.”


Redknapp said he believes England have more talented players than most other nations and that they can win Euro 2016.


The 68-year-old cited knee problems when he stepped down as QPR manager in February but told the BBC that goings-on behind the scenes were also a huge factor in his decision.


“I always thought I had everyone pulling with me and suddenly I felt some were and some weren’t,” he said.


“Behind the scenes, I always thought there were one or two people with their own agendas.


“There was talk about Tim Sherwood coming in. QPR was in the paper every day. I’ve been at lots of other clubs, big clubs as well where you didn’t get that.


“That got on my nerves. That was the big problem for me.


“As soon as we lost a few games, it would begin. I always thought there was someone mischievous causing it. I’d never had that before at any club I’d been at.


“I didn’t see the teams below us getting the same sort of headlines every other week. It wore me down a little bit.” - ANA-DPA






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Balotelli set for Anfield exit

Brendan Rodgers will admit he ignored the warnings about Mario Balotelli. He knew Jose Mourinho considered him ‘unmanageable’.


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The thermometer reading Mario Balotelli shared on social media to prove he was too ill to play against Blackburn on Wednesday night will make no difference to Brendan Rodgers.


Liverpool’s manager had already gone cold on the Italian, concluding some time ago that he has no future at Anfield.


The striker’s illness followed his decision to rule himself out of the Premier League game at Arsenal last Saturday after taking what Rodgers described as a ‘slight knock to his knee in training’.


Rodgers will admit he ignored the warnings about Balotelli. He knew Jose Mourinho considered him ‘unmanageable’ and he listened to the anecdotal evidence he received from the members of his staff who had encountered the striker during their time at Manchester City.


But Rodgers hoped Balotelli might mature with age, and he made the mistake of thinking he could succeed where others had failed.


Liverpool’s manager was desperate too, of course. Attempts to recruit other strikers, in particular Alexis Sanchez, had proved unsuccessful last summer and he was concerned that Rickie Lambert would not provide adequate cover if Daniel Sturridge suffered further injury problems. He was right to worry about Sturridge’s fragility but wrong, he would probably now concede, to spend £16million on Balotelli.


For three hours in his office at Melwood he attempted to lessen the risk before asking his employers to part with the money. He spoke both to Balotelli and his agent, explaining what was expected of every Liverpool player and sharing his philosophy on the power of the collective.


Over the years his C.O.R.E principles speech — Commitment, Ownership, Responsibilities, Excellence — had worked with players. He would use a flip-chart to deliver his lecture on the standards he demands and, for the most part, players had responded accordingly.


But not Balotelli. Not the player who already had a reputation for having no respect for authority, for his considerable talent or for the clubs he represents.


Rodgers is saddened that Balotelli appears to have no respect for Liverpool, and no apparent willingness to follow the simplest instructions.


In Sturridge’s absence Rodgers told Balotelli he needed a striker who would ‘press’ at the point of Liverpool’s attack; who would play high up the field and in so doing set the pattern of Liverpool’s play. Balotelli, much to his manager’s frustration, just wouldn’t do it, in the misguided belief that he knew better.


On the training field there have been similar issues — a situation that has offended team-mates who do buy into Rodgers’ methods and want to build on the success they enjoyed last season.


So there will be no second chance for Balotelli at Liverpool next season. Rodgers is continuing to use him when absolutely necessary but he is at the very top of a list of players he will put up for sale this summer.


He has to get him out and put what money he can recover for him to better use, if only to improve morale in a dressing room that probably lost patience with the guy before he did. – Daily Mail






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Mourinho slams Ballon d’Or

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has criticised Fifa's Ballon d'Or award given to the world's best player for glorifying the individual at the expense of the team.


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London - Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has criticised Fifa's Ballon d'Or award given to the world's best player for glorifying the individual at the expense of the team.


The Portuguese coach found rare common ground with Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger, another critic of the award which has been dominated in recent seasons by Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo and Barcelona's Lionel Messi.


“I think Wenger said something that is interesting,” Mourinho said in an interview on the Telegraph website.


“He is against the Ballon d'Or, and I think he's right, because in this moment football is losing a little bit the concept of the team to focus more on the individual.


“We are always looking at the individual performance, the individual stat, the player that runs more. Because you run 11km in a game and I run nine you did a better job than I did? Maybe not. Maybe my 9km were more important than your 11.


“For me, football is collective. The individual is welcome if you want to make our group better. But you have to work for us, not we have to work for you.


“When the top player arrives, the team is already there. It's not him who comes to discover the team, like Columbus discovering America. No, no, you are coming now to help us be better.”


Messi and Ronaldo have hogged the award, formerly known as World Player of the Year, since 2008 and the last non-striker to take the honour was Italian defender Fabio Cannavaro in 2006.


Mourinho also spoke about his first job, teaching children with Down's syndrome and severe mental disabilities.


“I wasn't technically ready to help these kids,” he said.


“And I had success only because of one thing, the emotional relation that was established with them.


“I did little miracles only because of the relationship. Affection, touch, empathy - only because of that. There was one kid that refused all his life to walk up stairs.


“Another one that couldn't coordinate the simplest movement - all these different problems, and we had success in many, many of these cases only based on that empathy.”


Mourinho's Chelsea hold a seven-point lead over Arsenal at the top of the Premier League and are eight points clear of Manchester United in third, with a game in hand over both their title rivals.


They are away to west London rivals Queens Park Rangers on Sunday. – Reuters






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News sport : Watch Marc Gasol make a young Grizzlies fan extraordinarily happy

I missed this in the avalanche of stuff happening during Wednesday's 13-game slate, but I'm highlighting it now, because it's never too late to share something awesome:


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After the Memphis Grizzlies finished off their 110-74 pasting of the New Orleans Pelicans at FedEx Forum on Wednesday, center Marc Gasol took the opportunity to make one young Grizzlies fan's night, sharing a post-game chat and high five. If that thrilled young man looks familiar to you, it's probably because you remember him sharing a similar interaction with Gasol's frontcourt partner, Zach Randolph, early last season, with Z-Bo literally giving the young fan the shirt off his back.


Stuff like this makes it easy to understand why Memphis loves Gasol enough to throw up two-story murals of his likeness:



Watching the sheer joy the young man felt at having gotten to hang with Big Spain provided a pretty perfect capper to a night where the Grizzlies — who have struggled with consistency in recent weeks, going 14-11 since the All-Star break with some bad losses to good opposition — had everything going en route to one of their most impressive wins of the season.


“The effort was there, the communication, the ball sharing,” said Gasol, who finished with 15 points, eight rebounds, six assists and two blocks in the win, according to Michael Cohen of the Memphis Commercial Appeal. “We did a good job. That’s how it’s supposed to be.”


And what happened after the final buzzer? That's how it's supposed to be, too.


Video via Pasión Por El Baloncesto. Hat-tip to Spencer Lund at Dime.


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Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



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