Wenger slams ‘nightmare’ tours

Arsene Wenger has branded post-season tours a ‘nightmare’ after revealing Arsenal declined an extended pre-season trip.


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Arsene Wenger has branded post-season tours a ‘nightmare’ after revealing Arsenal declined an extended pre-season trip.


Arsenal were exploring the idea of playing matches in either India or Malaysia after their initial trip to Singapore in July but have decided against it — a decision that Wenger is happy with. ‘I am pleased with that because pre-season is always difficult if you cannot prepare well,’ said the Arsenal boss.


‘Let’s not forget they voted to start early in August next season.


‘Some players play until June 21 in the Copa America, some in the European Under 21 Championship play until June 14.After a season where we have no winter break, I don’t see where you go from there to give players a proper rest. It’s impossible.


‘It is difficult because of the commercial aspect but you want to find a compromise.’


On the prospect of Arsenal emulating Tottenham and Chelsea by organising a post-season tour Wenger, who takes his side to Burnley today, added: ‘Post-season tours are a nightmare — I will never do it.


‘I always feel people come along to watch but the players are half on their holidays.


‘From a purely football point of view, there is not much meaning — let’s be honest.’ – Daily Mail






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Kompany doubtful for United clash

Captain Vincent Kompany is a doubt for Manchester City as they prepare for the derby at Manchester United seeking to halt an alarming dip in form.


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London - Captain Vincent Kompany is a doubt for Manchester City as they prepare for the derby at Manchester United seeking to halt an alarming dip in form.


Kompany, who turned 29 on Friday, sustained a hamstring injury in the Premier League defeat to Crystal Palace on Monday.


“Vincent will be assessed for a problem he got last week,” manager Manuel Pellegrini told a news conference on Friday.


“We will see tomorrow if he will play or not. It is always better to play with Kompany, but if he can't play, we have a squad.”


City have lost three out of five Premier League games since the beginning of March, and have fallen to fourth in the table, nine points behind leaders Chelsea and one behind third-placed United.


It is the first time this season that City have been lower in the table than their neighbours.


Pellegrini - whose job is under threat, according to British media reports - would not say whether he believes his team can still overhaul Chelsea in the race for the title.


“All that is in my mind is just to think about winning the next game you play, and that is the derby against United,” the Chilean told reporters.


“Never is a draw a good result. I understand we are not having the away results we want. 2015 is not a good year for us for this, but the motivation is to win, always.”


He said he was not surprised that United have improved significantly under manager Louis van Gaal.


“Louis van Gaal's teams are offensive teams who try to win titles,” Pellegrini said. “United bought a lot of very good players in the summer: (Angel) Di Maria, (Ander) Herrera, (Radamel) Falcao, (Juan) Mata the season before and (Daley) Blind.


“They bought a lot of very good players - the strange thing was why they weren't doing it before, but it's no surprise (they have improved).


“I don't like to compare - always when you make these comparisons, there are a lot of things you don't analyse.”


Pellegrini confirmed that striker Wilfried Bony will miss the derby at Old Trafford with ankle and knee injuries. – Reuters






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RVP ‘not fit enough’ for derby

Manchester United striker Robin van Persie has failed in his bid to be fit for the derby against Manchester City, manager Louis van Gaal said.


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London - Manchester United striker Robin van Persie has failed in his bid to be fit for Sunday's Premier League derby against Manchester City, manager Louis van Gaal said.


Van Persie scored the winner the last time United beat City - a 3-2 away victory in December 2012.


The Netherlands international has returned to training after suffering an ankle injury in United's defeat by Swansea City in February, but Van Gaal said the game against City at Old Trafford had come too soon for his compatriot.


“Van Persie is not fit enough to play,” the Dutchman told a news conference.


“I don't think (defender) Luke Shaw is fit enough to play. But I cannot say they are not fit. In my opinion, they are not fit to play.”


United's recent fine form - they have won their last five Premier League games - has lifted them to third in the table, eight points behind leaders Chelsea but one ahead of City.


Van Gaal has found success by using Wayne Rooney further forward, Juan Mata on the right, and Marouane Fellaini as a deep-lying target man, anchored by a midfield combination of Michael Carrick and Ander Herrera.


But Van Gaal, asked whether club record signing Angel Di Maria had done enough to force his way into the team against City, said he was not afraid to tinker with his line-up.


“'Never change a winning team' is an English expression, but I always have my eyes open,” he said.


“It's also an obligation to the substitutes that you have, to compare players. You have to see also the quality of your opponent and you make a decision with the staff I have.


“Not only Angel (is pushing for a starting place), but every player who is training in the first squad are pushing because they want to do their utmost.


“I played 11 v 11 today (in training) and the team in white was very good - the white team was not the basic line-up, so they are pushing always, and I like that. I said that to all of them, that I like the fighting spirit of every one of them.” – Reuters






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Injured Costa could miss four games

Chelsea's leading scorer Diego Costa is likely to miss the next four games as his club attempt to regain the Premier League title, manager Jose Mourinho said.


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Chelsea's leading scorer Diego Costa is likely to miss the next four games as his club attempt to regain the Premier League title, manager Jose Mourinho said.


That means sitting out key matches against title rivals Arsenal and Manchester United as well as relegation strugglers Queens Park Rangers and Leicester.


The Brazilian-born Spain international, who has scored 19 league goals in his first season in English football, injured a hamstring soon after coming on as a halftime substitute in last weekend's home game against Stoke City.


Mourinho said it would be “normal” to miss the next four games, which would mean Costa returning against Crystal Palace at the start of May.


With a seven-point lead, Chelsea need 15 more from eight games to regain the title they last won under Carlo Ancelotti in 2010.


Mourinho told a news conference that he would not leave out midfielders Cesc Fabregas or Nemanja Matic from Sunday's west London derby away to QPR, although both are only one yellow card away from suspension.


“The game is a three-point game,” he said. “It doesn't make any sense to think about some matches and not about others. We have to play with our maximum power.


“Nobody is expecting an easy match. Last weekend we played against a team that is very stable in the middle of the table and they were fantastic in their approach, their commitment, trying to win the match or not lose it.”


Chelsea have been top of the table since the third game of the season, which their manager said shows “consistency, stability, dominance”.


He would not be drawn, however, on transfer speculation involving Japanese striker Yoshinori Muto of FC Tokyo, whom Chelsea are reported to have made a bid for. – Reuters






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News sport : NHL Three Stars: Isles lock series Caps; CBJ ensures Buffalo's last place finish

No. 1 Star: Jaroslav Halak, New York Islanders


The Penguins needed this game to punch their ticket to the playoffs. Halak and the rest of the Islanders would have none of that. The netminder made 37 saves in the Isles 3-1 victory over Pittsburgh.


No. 2 Star: John Tavares, New York Islanders


The captain tied Sidney Crosby for tops in the league in scoring with his 37th goal of the season. (Should they remain tied, the trophy would go to Tavares because he has more goals.) Here's Tavares' game winner off a massive rebound from Marc-Andre Fleury:





No. 3 Star: Jack Johnson, Columbus Blue Jackets


Johnson registered 2 assists, was a plus-3 and was second on the team in TOI at 21:34 in the Jackets 4-2 win against Buffalo. His first assist came on CBJ's second goal after great passing by Johnson and his teammates:





Honorable Mention: Nick Foligno and Brandon Dubinsky connected for the first goal of the game just 14-seconds in:





Cam Atkinson netted the game winner for Columbus midway through the third. The score could have been much more lopsided if it weren't for the 36 saves put up by Anders Lindback ... Rob Scuderi scored his first goal in his current run with the Penguins. The last time he scored, he was on the Kings and it was January 19, 2013. With Casey Cizikas's shorty, the Islanders tied the Lightning for most SHGs in the league at 10. Here's the goal:





Did You Know: The Penguins have not won a game in the month of April (0-4-1).


Dishonorable Mention: With the loss, Buffalo secures the first spot in the draft lottery ... Travis Hamonic left the game with 3:46 remaining in the first due to an undisclosed injury. Jack Capuono said he'd be re-evaluated on Saturday. Evgeni Malkin was a team worst minus-3.


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Jen Neale is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow her on Twitter!










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News sport : Buffalo Sabres lose game, win last place in league

Congratulations, Buffalo Sabres! You're the worst ... team in the league!


Normally this wouldn't be something to celebrate, but as we've been hearing alllllllll season, the upcoming draft is a special one with Jaconnor McEichel (Connor McDavid + Jack Eichel) on the line.


Last place doesn't guarantee the Sabres the top pick, but it gives them a better chance at getting it with 20-percent of magic beans (or whatever they use) in the draft bucket. (I like to assume it's a giant ball pit like those at Chuck E. Cheese and Bill Daly has to dive in, blindfolded, and pick a ball.)


The NHL instituted new draft odds this year. When they were first announced, Sabres GM Tim Murray was not the least bit pleased with their adoption. The odds were spread out to give the other teams in the lottery more of a fighting chance at the top pick. Here's a refresher, if you've forgotten:



Draft Odds

His mind can be eased a bit now that his team has locked up the first position; however, as the new format goes, the other bottom 8 teams have an increased shot at the pick. As of Friday night, those 8 teams, from worst to not completely terrible, are: Arizona, Edmonton, Toronto, Carolina, New Jersey, Philadelphia, Columbus, and Colorado. (Statistics nerd alert: The difference between spots 9 and 10 is 2.5-percent, which is significant, when the difference between 10 and 11 is 0.5-percent.)


Don't forget, they're no longer hampered by the rule that a team can only move up so many spots. Which makes things even more interesting considering that teams that aren't in a playoff spot: Los Angeles, San Jose, Boston (for now), and even the slim possibility of Pittsburgh joining the party. Granted, they have a small amount of magic beans in the bucket, but it's still a possibility one of them could end up with CoJack.


Just for giggles, I ran the NHL Draft Simulator and look who won...



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At least the Sabres would get Eichel in this scenario.


I ran it a second time and Edmonton won. For the love of all things holy, that cannot happen in real life. Don't send another top draft pick into the Pit of Despair.


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Jen Neale is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow her on Twitter!










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News sport : Kurt Busch wins second pole of the season at Texas

Friday was a good day to be a Hendrick-powered Chevy.


Kurt Busch won the pole for Saturday's Sprint Cup Series race at Texas as three Hendrick Motorsports cars, three Stewart-Haas Racing cars and both Chip Ganassi Racing cars made the final round of 12 during qualifying.


It's Busch's second pole of the year. He won the pole for his first race of the season at Phoenix International Raceway.


His teammate Kevin Harvick starts second while Brad Keselowski broke up the Hendrick brigade in third. Hendrick-powered cars driven by Kasey Kahne and Jimmie Johnson rounded out the top five.


Joey Logano, Ryan Newman, Paul Menard, Kyle Larson and Jamie McMurray round out the top 10. Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart rounded out the top 12.


We're going to go out on a sturdy limb and say one of the drivers in the top 10 will win the race. You have to go back to Denny Hamlin's win in the fall race in 2010 to find a driver who has won starting outside the top 10 at Texas.


The one SHR car to miss the final round was Danica Patrick. She starts 24th. Dale Earnhardt Jr., the only Hendrick Motorsports car not in the final round, starts 25th. Jeb Burton and Brendan Gaughan missed the race.


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







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News sport : Rory McIlroy fights back from the abyss, though career slam likely must wait

Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, hits out of a bunker on the second hole during the second round of the Masters golf tournament Friday, April 10, 2015, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings) AUGUSTA, Ga. - Rory McIlroy and Camellia, the 10th hole at Augusta, have a strange relationship.


The hole starts up by the putting green, in the shadow of the Augusta National clubhouse, then drops off steeply. Cabins overlook the left side of the hole; on the right is a large expanse of round-destroying trees. It was at this hole in 2011 that McIlroy, who had up until that point been throttling the field (this is an important point we'll return to later) saw his lead evaporate after a disastrous tee shot.


And it was on this hole, four years later, that McIlroy found some measure of redemption, kicking off a five-under back nine that may not have saved his Masters, but certainly saved his sanity. McIlroy had played the opening nine at +3, and stood on the cusp of elimination.


That would have been an ugly way indeed to close out his first attempt at a career slam. He's almost certainly lost this chance at a "McIlslam" or a "Slamilroy" or whatever the heck we would call it if he held all four majors at once, but at least he'll play the weekend and won't face an early ride home. But he can take comfort in the fact that he played the back 9 at -5, an exceptional series of holes that gives him the tiniest measure of confidence heading into the weekend.


"If I can strigh together four more nines like that, I'll have a chance," he said shortly after the round.


The back-nine run is key for McIlroy, who has often fallen completely apart when his chances of victory fade away. It's all part of a growing process for McIlroy, who's still relatively young but is finding himself upstaged by someone even younger.


"I thought 10-under would be enough to win the entire tournament," McIlroy said. "I never thought someone would be there after the second day."


As for Jordan Spieth, whom McIlroy was trailing by 7 when he left the course and 13 when he returned? "I know better than most what can happen with a big lead," McIlroy said, before adding with a wry smile, "A few guys could catch him. It would take something exceptional for me to do that."


___


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News sport : Jeff Gordon is an advocate for a consistent pit road speed limit

Jeff Gordon has a novel idea for pit road: a consistent speed limit.


NASCAR pit roads have a posted speed limit, but the limit is enforced via timing lines. Pit road is divided into multiple timing segments and the time it would take you to travel the pit road speed in a designated segment is the speed limit.


So when a driver pits, he can drive faster than the posted speed limit in the segment his stall is located in. The time spent pitting will outweigh the time gained by speeding the rest of the segment.


It's how Brad Keselowski once gained a ton of spots on pit road at Bristol throughout a race (much to others' chagrin) and why you see drivers speeding up and slowing down during a cycle of pit stops.


Now that NASCAR has a new pit road officiating system that uses cameras and replays to more accurately officiate pit stops, Gordon, who sped on pit road two weeks ago at Martinsville while leading and had to fight back for a top 10, says it's time for a consistent speed limit.


“That was just us trying to take advantage of speed lines," Gordon said. "I think that’s the next step. We’ve got to get rid of these speed lines. It doesn’t make any sense. The speed limit is the speed limit. You should never be able to break the speed limit. You should carry the speed limit all the way down pit road. What we do is find pit stalls to try to get around that. So we’re ramping up and slowing down and that’s what got us in Martinsville. We were just too aggressive with it.”


For a series that once timed pit road speed by hand, electronic timing on pit road is quite the technological advancement. However, the pit road officiating system is clearly a much larger one, and proof that NASCAR is capable of developing a system that tracks cars' speed throughout the entirety of pit road, either through radar, GPS, a combination of both or a different technology altogether.


And our guess is that it'll happen sometime in the near future. Though not near enough for Gordon, who's set to end driving full-time in the Cup Series after the 2015 season.


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







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News sport : Blazers' Arron Afflalo out 1 to 2 weeks with right shoulder strain

Portland Trail Blazers guard Arron Afflalo is expected to miss one to two weeks after suffering a right shoulder strain during Thursday's loss to the Golden State Warriors, the Blazers announced Friday.


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Afflalo appeared to suffer the injury midway through the fourth quarter, with Portland trailing by five:



Afflalo worked to establish position on the block against Warriors guard Stephen Curry, looking to go to work against the smaller point man with the low-post game that Afflalo has honed into one of his primary offensive weapons over the years. As he held the ball, Golden State power forward Draymond Green slid across the baseline toward Afflalo; sensing the coming double-team, Afflalo kicked the ball back out so that Portland could swing it to the weak side and try to find a more advantageous means of attacking the Warriors' stout defense.


After he passed it, though, he instantly began favoring his right arm, slumping over and holding his right shoulder. He kept working, tracking back on defense for one possession, but after Curry splashed through a jumper, Afflalo signaled to coach Terry Stotts on the Blazers' bench to call a timeout so that he could exit the game and visit with the training staff. Afflalo exited at the 4:35 mark of the fourth quarter and would not return, finishing his night with eght points on 4-for-6 shooting to go with one rebound and one steal in 27 minutes.


Soon after his exit, TNT sideline reporter Lewis Johnson reported that Afflalo told him he "tore something" on the back of his shoulder. The eight-year vet tried to tough it out after the game, but could only hide the injury so much, according to Joe Freeman of the Oregonian:


He downplayed the injury, saying he was "not really worried" about its long-term impact, but he sure seemed to be in pain Thursday in the visiting locker room at Oracle Arena.

Afflalo dressed gingerly, struggling to slip on his shirt over his right arm, and he said his arm was so tender and sore he couldn't lift it in the air above his shoulder to mimic a shooting motion.

"I can't really lift my arm at the moment," he said. "We'll see. Maybe it'll feel better [Friday]. I'm not even quite sure what's wrong. We'll see."

Instead of Afflalo feeling fit and ready to resume active duty, though, he becomes the third Blazers wing in the last five weeks, joining starting shooting guard Wesley Matthews (out for the season with a torn Achilles tendon) and reserve forward Dorell Wright (out another three to five weeks after breaking his left hand) on the sideline.


The Blazers acquired Afflalo from the Denver Nuggets at the February trade deadline with designs on adding 3-point shooting, defensive versatility, depth, experience and a proven commodity on the wing to their bench, which has been a sore spot for the past couple of seasons. He was soon thrust into a larger role by Matthews' injury, though, serving as a somewhat uneven replacement.


Afflalo has come through on the floor spacing, making just under 41 percent of his 3-pointers as a starter in Portland, and the Blazers have scored at a scorching clip — 110.4 points per 100 possessions, which would rank No. 1 in the NBA over the course of the full season — with Afflalo on the floor. But a Blazers' defense that ranked third in the NBA in points allowed per possession prior to Matthews' injury has cratered since, giving up 106.8 points-per-100, 10th worst in the league since March 6.


Portland's preferred starting five (Matthews, Damian Lillard, LaMarcus Aldridge, Robin Lopez and Nicolas Batum) outscored opponents by 10.7 points-per-100 this season, which would be the second-best "net rating" in the league this year, behind only the historically dominant Warriors. The other four starters plus Afflalo, however, has been outscored by 3.5 points-per-100, a bottom-10 mark that would slot between the Brooklyn Nets and Denver Nuggets' full-season marks, and virtually the entire difference has come on the defensive end.


Some of that is due to Afflalo's lack of familiarity with the other Blazers' starters — you can't just replace the kind of continuity that Matthews had built up with those guys as starters over the past few years — and some of it is due to, well, Matthews being a better defensive player than Afflalo. But while Portland might not have worked flawlessly with Afflalo in the mix, his absence will still take one more quality healthy veteran out of the mix for a team that can ill afford more injuries, more uncertainty and a shorter bench as it prepares, in all likelihood, to open up the playoffs on the road.


If Afflalo comes back on the early end of his timeline, he'll likely miss the Blazers' final three regular-season games, but could be available for the playoffs. The full two weeks, though, would compromise his availability for an opening-round series that figures to be tough enough sledding as it is, with the likes of the Memphis Grizzlies, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Clippers and San Antonio Spurs all looming as potential opponents.


With Afflalo sidelined, Stotts will likely turn to second-year guards C.J. McCollum — who has begun to come on of late, especially on the offensive end — and Allen Crabbe to take on the bulk of his duties down the stretch.


- - - - - - -


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



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News sport : Rickie Fowler on Masters prep, social media, and Tiger Woods: podcast


Welcome back to another episode of Grandstanding, friends. We've got two very different episodes here slapped together in one, but we think you deserve the very best.


Rickie Fowler. First off, this is Masters week, and we've got an interview with Rickie Fowler, he of the outrageous fashion and highly competent golf game. Fowler comes to us courtesy of Mercedes Benz Golf, and he talks of Masters preparation, Tiger Woods, and much more.


After that, we speculate a bit on the Masters, but we've got other, more pressing pimento cheese sandwiches to craft. See, Kaduk's beloved Wisconsin Badgers lost in the NCAA final on Monday, and Kaduk was there to watch it all unfold. We spend quite some time discussing how it is that teams can break our hearts this way. And right when we've got Kaduk feeling better, here comes Yahoo Sports' Frank Schwab, our compatriot on the Shutdown Corner Podcast and a fellow Badger, to rip the scars off again. Anyway, it's therapeutic for them, and when your team loses, we'll be there for you, too.


Thanks for listening to the Grandstanding podcast with Jay Busbee and Kevin Kaduk. Subscribe via iTunes and leave a review right here. Hit us up on Twitter (@kevinkaduk and @jaybusbee) Facebook (Kaduk here, Busbee here) or via the hashtag #grandstanding. See you next ep!


[Music by Chris Salmon and Tobin Summerfield]






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News sport : Blazers' Arron Afflalo out 1 to 2 weeks with right shoulder strain

Portland Trail Blazers guard Arron Afflalo is expected to miss one to two weeks after suffering a right shoulder strain during Thursday's loss to the Golden State Warriors, the Blazers announced Friday.


[Follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr: The best slams from all of basketball]


Afflalo appeared to suffer the injury midway through the fourth quarter, with Portland trailing by five:



Afflalo worked to establish position on the block against Warriors guard Stephen Curry, looking to go to work against the smaller point man with the low-post game that Afflalo has honed into one of his primary offensive weapons over the years. As he held the ball, Golden State power forward Draymond Green slid across the baseline toward Afflalo; sensing the coming double-team, Afflalo kicked the ball back out so that Portland could swing it to the weak side and try to find a more advantageous means of attacking the Warriors' stout defense.


After he passed it, though, he instantly began favoring his right arm, slumping over and holding his right shoulder. He kept working, tracking back on defense for one possession, but after Curry splashed through a jumper, Afflalo signaled to coach Terry Stotts on the Blazers' bench to call a timeout so that he could exit the game and visit with the training staff. Afflalo exited at the 4:35 mark of the fourth quarter and would not return, finishing his night with eght points on 4-for-6 shooting to go with one rebound and one steal in 27 minutes.


Soon after his exit, TNT sideline reporter Lewis Johnson reported that Afflalo told him he "tore something" on the back of his shoulder. The eight-year vet tried to tough it out after the game, but could only hide the injury so much, according to Joe Freeman of the Oregonian:


He downplayed the injury, saying he was "not really worried" about its long-term impact, but he sure seemed to be in pain Thursday in the visiting locker room at Oracle Arena.

Afflalo dressed gingerly, struggling to slip on his shirt over his right arm, and he said his arm was so tender and sore he couldn't lift it in the air above his shoulder to mimic a shooting motion.

"I can't really lift my arm at the moment," he said. "We'll see. Maybe it'll feel better [Friday]. I'm not even quite sure what's wrong. We'll see."

Instead of Afflalo feeling fit and ready to resume active duty, though, he becomes the third Blazers wing in the last five weeks, joining starting shooting guard Wesley Matthews (out for the season with a torn Achilles tendon) and reserve forward Dorell Wright (out another three to five weeks after breaking his left hand) on the sideline.


The Blazers acquired Afflalo from the Denver Nuggets at the February trade deadline with designs on adding 3-point shooting, defensive versatility, depth, experience and a proven commodity on the wing to their bench, which has been a sore spot for the past couple of seasons. He was soon thrust into a larger role by Matthews' injury, though, serving as a somewhat uneven replacement.


Afflalo has come through on the floor spacing, making just under 41 percent of his 3-pointers as a starter in Portland, and the Blazers have scored at a scorching clip — 110.4 points per 100 possessions, which would rank No. 1 in the NBA over the course of the full season — with Afflalo on the floor. But a Blazers' defense that ranked third in the NBA in points allowed per possession prior to Matthews' injury has cratered since, giving up 106.8 points-per-100, 10th worst in the league since March 6.


Portland's preferred starting five (Matthews, Damian Lillard, LaMarcus Aldridge, Robin Lopez and Nicolas Batum) outscored opponents by 10.7 points-per-100 this season, which would be the second-best "net rating" in the league this year, behind only the historically dominant Warriors. The other four starters plus Afflalo, however, has been outscored by 3.5 points-per-100, a bottom-10 mark that would slot between the Brooklyn Nets and Denver Nuggets' full-season marks, and virtually the entire difference has come on the defensive end.


Some of that is due to Afflalo's lack of familiarity with the other Blazers' starters — you can't just replace the kind of continuity that Matthews had built up with those guys as starters over the past few years — and some of it is due to, well, Matthews being a better defensive player than Afflalo. But while Portland might not have worked flawlessly with Afflalo in the mix, his absence will still take one more quality healthy veteran out of the mix for a team that can ill afford more injuries, more uncertainty and a shorter bench as it prepares, in all likelihood, to open up the playoffs on the road.


If Afflalo comes back on the early end of his timeline, he'll likely miss the Blazers' final three regular-season games, but could be available for the playoffs. The full two weeks, though, would compromise his availability for an opening-round series that figures to be tough enough sledding as it is, with the likes of the Memphis Grizzlies, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Clippers and San Antonio Spurs all looming as potential opponents.


With Afflalo sidelined, Stotts will likely turn to second-year guards C.J. McCollum — who has begun to come on of late, especially on the offensive end — and Allen Crabbe to take on the bulk of his duties down the stretch.


- - - - - - -


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 : Tiger Woods slides quietly into the weekend, and there's nothing wrong with that

Tiger Woods reacts to his missed putt on the 15th hole during the second round of the Masters golf tournament Friday, April 10, 2015, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum) AUGUSTA, Ga. - Let's just put this out there, shall we? Once Tiger Woods announced he'd be returning from a long layoff at this week's Masters, the Tiger Woods Hating Brigade believed Woods would miss the cut so badly that the gallery would simply point and laugh, shaming him right out of the game altogether. The Tiger Woods Sanctification Society believed Woods would drop birdies like grenades, detonating the greens and the leaderboard en route to another green jacket.


Both contingents are equally delusional, and both were equally wrong, as Woods finished the second day of the Masters at 2-under and safe for the weekend. Sure, he's 12 strokes behind leader Jordan Spieth, but that's not the point. Woods, both because of recent injury and an extended period of poor play, was even money, at best, to make the cut ... and that's one hell of a fall. "Tiger vs. the Field" has become "Tiger vs. the Early Departure."


"To basically change an entire pattern," Woods said immediately after the round, "and put it togehter and put it in a position where I can compete in a major championship like this is something I'm very proud [of]."


Woods played Friday's round exactly the way he needed to: taking advantage of good breaks and minimizing mistakes. He birdied the first, then bogeyed the sixth, but got back that stroke and one more with birdies on the next two holes. He had but a single birdie on the back nine, but managed several long par saves, including a 14-footer on 17 that he used to make routinely and now cards only rarely.


We're five years to the days that Woods returned to Augusta following his hydrant-and-scandal-induced layoff. That year, Woods shut out distractions of every stripe, like planes flying mocking signs, to finish in a tie for fourth. For a guy who basically rolled up to the course with virtually no prep, having not played a competitive round in months, Woods' performance on that week was perhaps the most impressive non-winning tournament of his career.


"I'm still right there," Woods said, displaying that optimism that borders on delusion. "I'm 12 back, bt there's not a lot of guys ahead of me. And with 36 holes here to go, anything can happen." Woods then referenced 1996, the infamous Masters in which Greg Norman coughed up a six-stroke Sunday lead. He won't be the last to do so.


We've still got a ways to go, but if Woods can craft another couple of quality rounds this week, the 2015 Masters will rank up there in the annals of "quality non-wins." There's no way Woods will be in anything close to contention; there's just too much ground to make up and too many players ahead of him. But if he's able to bring home a top-five finish, that will quiet the Bag-It-Tiger contingent, and give hope that better times lie ahead for Woods.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter.



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News sport : The 10-man rotation, starring the San Antonio Spurs, explained

A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


C: San Antonio Express-News. Via Dan McCarney, after Wednesday's blowout win over the Houston Rockets, Tony Parker succinctly and remarkably explains in one quote how and why the San Antonio Spurs have been, and continue to be, the Spurs for all these years.


PF: Project Spurs. The Spurs have been decimating all comers (well, nearly all, anyway) over the past couple of months, thanks in part to the job they've done of holding down the opposition's top scorers, like they did to Houston Rockets MVP candidate James Harden on Wednesday night.


SF: USA TODAY Sports. Sam Amick talks to Andrew Bogut about his often-overlooked role in transforming the Golden State Warriors from go-go also-rans to hard-nosed contenders.


SG: The New York Times Magazine. Michael Sokolove goes long on the Philadelphia 76ers' rebuilding project and how it hinges, to some degree, on what head coach Brett Brown calls his own naiveté.


PG: Vantage Sports. Bryan Toporek goes deep inside the numbers to consider which defensive-minded big man would make the best building block for a team — the Sixers' Nerlens Noel or Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz.


6th: BrewHoop. The good news: Michael Carter-Williams is taking better shots since joining the Milwaukee Bucks. The bad news: He's not shooting any better. Dan Sinclar takes a look at the offensive struggles of the former Rookie of the Year, and whether it's likely that things will get better.


7th: Blog-a-Bull. Chris Terzic with a cold cup of coffee on Joakim Noah, who just might not be what he used to be.


8th: FOX Sports. Michael Pina makes the Rookie of the Year case for Elfrid Payton, the fantastic Orlando Magic rookie point guard who can do everything ... except this one glaringly obvious thing. (As a sidebar, here's Evan Dunlap at Orlando Pinstriped Post on the strides Payton has made in curbing his turnovers as his freshman year has progressed.)


9th: ESPN.com. David Thorpe explains why Andrew Wiggins' post-rookie-season summer workouts ought to include an awful lot of studying James Harden's game tape.


10th: The Nation. Dave Zirin puts the arrest of two Atlanta Hawks for allegedly resisting arrest and the subsequent season-ending leg injury sustained by Thabo Sefolosha in the process into broader societal context: "Let’s not 'bury the lead' here. At a moment when people across the country are reckoning with the deadly reality of police violence and the terror it imposes on black communities, the New York Police Department fractured the leg of a player in the National Basketball Association."


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



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News sport : Matt Barnes' time with the 76ers sounds like it was pretty interesting

Matt Barnes drives on Allen Iverson. (Garrett Ellwood/NBAE/Getty Images) Sports Illustrated just a pretty great feature story by Chris Ballard — as if Chris Ballard writes anything other than great feature stories — on Los Angeles Clippers swingman Matt Barnes, who has spent the better part of the last dozen years developing a reputation as one of the NBA's foremost pot-stirrers and enforcers, the kind of guy you love when he's on your favorite team, and hate when he's not.


Despite having a set of tools that would seem to fit in just about everywhere — a 6-foot-7 frame and the athleticism to guard multiple perimeter positions, a nose for the ball and an ability to run the floor, a willingness to do dirty work and check anybody, inarguable toughness, etc. — Barnes hasn't ever really been able to stick around anywhere, bouncing around to eight teams in 12 years (including a pair of stints with the Clips) with no stay lasting longer than two seasons until this current stay in L.A.


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You learn a lot in becoming a journeyman, though, and one of the earliest NBA lessons Barnes relates came from his 2005-06 tenure with the Philadelphia 76ers. When Barnes got to Pennsylvania, the legendary Allen Iverson — still regarded by some as "pound for pound" the best scorer ever to lace 'em up — was several years removed from that magical 2000-01 MVP season, coming off two straight losing seasons and only about a year away from a trade to the Denver Nuggets, which would represent the beginning of a long, slow, somewhat sad end to Iverson's playing career. That would come later, though; at the time, A.I. was A.I., and A.I. wanted to party:


“Allen was the first guy that showed me how NBA players spend money in strip clubs,” Barnes says. “That guy went. HARD. He’d throw so much money, and this was when I was first in the league, that I used to take my foot and scoop the s--- under my chair and either re-throw it or put some in my pocket. He’d throw $30,000, $40,000 every time we went. I’m like, ‘You realize what I can do with this money?’”

There are a lot of possible answers here, but I'm going to go with "get more tattoos."


In all seriousness, I can't at all fault Barnes — who at that point had yet to make anything more than the NBA minimum salary after spending his first couple of professional seasons in the D-League, the ABA and on a low-money deal with the Clips — for perhaps taking advantage of Iverson's largesse every now and again during a trip to the gentlemen's club. After all, not only was "The Answer" banking eight figures a year in those salad days, but he also had a sweet shoe deal with Reebok; if A.I. was feeling like he could make it monsoon to the tune of $30,000 to $40,000 in a single storm, then there's no reason he couldn't also set a 12th man up with some extra meal or shopping money, right? And it's not like he had a crystal ball to foresee the eventual financial troubles that would crop up — to whatever extent they big-picture matter — after Iverson's playing days ended. (To say nothing of the myriad other off-court issues.)


But while Iverson wound up being Barnes' unwitting benefactor, then-Sixers coach Maurice Cheeks wound up being the young wing's unwelcome motivator. More from Ballard:


Philly is also where Barnes learned that it’s a star’s league. At the time, he was the 12th man, clinging to a job. As Barnes tells it, he was working with shooting coach Buzz Braman after practice, hoping to smooth out a hitch in his shot, when Sixers head coach Mo Cheeks walked by. “I don’t see why you’re working on your shot,” Cheeks said. “You’re not going to get to shoot here.” Barnes fumed, but said nothing.

A week later, in practice, things came to a head. “I came down on a 3-on-1 and hit pull-up 15-footer off the glass and [Cheeks] stopped practice,” says Barnes. “He yells, ‘What are you doing? What are you shooting the ball for? You know that’s not your job, you gotta pass the ball!’”

Barnes was shocked. “What? But I made the shot.”

Said Cheeks: “That’s why you don’t play.’”

And then, Barnes says, he lost it. “I was going to chase him down and whoop his ass, so I took off after him and AI grabbed me and I got through him and Chris [Webber] grabbed me and bearhugged me and I said to Mo, ‘You’re lucky.’”

Says Barnes now: “I hated Mo Cheeks. He was a dick.” [...]

While Barnes never found his footing under Cheeks in Philadelphia, he'd later catch on with the Golden State Warriors, where noted chaos-bringing coach Don Nelson had a much higher comfort level with letting the mercurial Barnes try stuff and play through mistakes. As a result, Barnes would soon be able to put an emphatic exclamation point on the end of his time with Mo:


By late December, when the Sixers came to town, Barnes was a starter, the perfect hybrid athlete for the run-and-gun, position-less style of Nellieball. Before the game, he told his coach how much he hated Cheeks. Nellie smiled and laughed that Nellie laugh. “Alright,” he said. “Do your thing tonight.’”

That evening, at Oracle arena, Barnes scored 25 points while hitting seven three-pointers. To this day, it remains perhaps the best shooting night of his life. And every time he sank a jumper, he turned and let Cheeks hear it. Colorfully.

"Colorfully" seems as good a word as any to describe Ballard's engaging look behind the curtain of one of the NBA's longstanding premier role players; the whole piece is worth your time. Maybe not "$30,000 to $40,000" worth it, but still: pretty good.


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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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