News sport : Six ways of looking at the Masters Sunday's back nine


Jordan Spieth tees off on the 11th hole during the fourth round of the Masters golf tournament Sunday, April 12, 2015, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

AUGUSTA, Ga. – This is the story of a broken tee, an unexpected handshake, and a sideways grin that, together, sum up Augusta National and the 2015 Masters.


You know how it ends, with Jordan Spieth winning a green jacket. Here’s what happened in the final hours before it happened.


You have to work hard to find a location at Augusta National Golf Club that doesn’t feature spectacular vistas of one of the world’s great golf courses. The greens at 16 and 18 are particularly popular, and the view of Amen Corner is so impressive that you’re willing to crowd amongst thousands of fellow patrons for a chance to cheer a shot you can’t even see.


So you’ve got to dig a bit to find a spot that’s both critical and sparsely populated. One such spot is the 11th tee, a tiny elevated plateau just up from the 10th green, a peninsula of green cut into the pine straw and azaleas. And it’s here that our little odyssey starts.


HOLE 11, White Dogwood


You know the old line about the Masters not beginning until the back nine on Sunday. This particular Masters was over right around 1:15 on Thursday afternoon, when Spieth first teed off. But you don’t often get a leaderboard like we had on Sunday, with the golf world’s four most fascinating characters holding down the top six spots. (Nothing but love for you too, Charley Hoffman and Justin Rose.)


Knowing full well I’m about to see either a coronation or a historic collapse, and that either would make a damn good story, I post up on the right side of the 11th tee. I watch Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson, Hoffman, Rose, and Spieth work their way through this hole, the 15th, and the 18th, all close enough to touch them.


I don’t, of course. You can get in real trouble with Augusta for far smaller offenses, as we’ll see in a bit.


But first: the 11th. A note on how this hole is set up: Augusta National is an incredibly hilly course, something that’s not obvious from TV. So you come off the 10th green, meet up with the 11th hole about a third of the way down the fairway, and then must walk back up another hill to get to the tee box. For this reason, many caddies don’t haul the 50-pound bag all the way up to the tee, instead shoving a driver in their player’s hands and saying, “Go hit it a long way, or something.”


Tiger Woods, right, walks with Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, and their caddies. (AP) Rory and Tiger are our first guests, and they walk up the fairway chatting. At this point, I don’t realize that Tiger has apparently done some kind of fairway surgery on himself, popping a wrist bone back into place, but I can say that Woods doesn’t appear to be showing any ill effects. His demeanor is relentless, while McIlroy has that little bouncy strut he gets when everything’s going exactly his way.


McIlroy tees off first, striping a 347-yard drive. He then makes an immediate beeline for the players-only Porta-John, tucked discreetly out of camera view behind a hedge. While McIlroy is taking care of business, Woods smacks his tee shot into the pine straw to the right of the fairway. He leaves his tee on the tee box and immediately sets off walking alone down the vast expanse.


There’s a lot of time to think in golf. Woods is, at this moment, 13 strokes behind Spieth. We don’t know what he’s thinking, but “so this is what it feels like” is a reasonable guess.


McIlroy, meanwhile, bounds out of the bathroom and – in violation of all codes of behavior at Augusta – begins running down the fairway to catch up to Woods. I mean a full-on, knees-high sprint. This would get a patron and their descendants keelhauled, but when you’re a four-time major winner, the rules are a bit different.


The broken tee still sits there on the tee box as Mickelson and Hoffman, both smiling broadly, make their own way up the hill. Mickelson has just birdied 10 and is loving life, and Hoffman appears relaxed and, honestly, just happy to be here. He grabs a water bottle from a players-only cooler as Mickelson picks up Woods’ discarded tee and tosses it to the side.


Hoffman’s first tee shot drifts wide, and he growls a “No, Charley!” as it flew. Mickelson, at this point five strokes back of Spieth, keeps his grin as he walks back down the fairway.


And then it’s time for the leaders. Rose and Spieth walk up 11 with their caddies in tow, not speaking but not dismissive of each other, either. They know that Amen Corner waits just a few hundred yards away; they know their professional lives could be defined by what awaits them in the next 8 holes.


Rose’s drive is workmanlike, but Spieth hits his and immediately points hard right. “That’s a bogey,” someone in the gallery says, and like most things said in the gallery, it’s both stupid and wrong. Both Spieth and Rose par that hole, and at this point Spieth’s lead is six.


Woods’ broken tee rests there as patrons pack up their chairs and leave. Finally, only a father and son stand there at the ropes’ edge, trying to get the attention of a course marshal. A member of the private security team that patrols Augusta ambles over, and he tosses the tee to the kid. He grins, turning it over and over in his hands.


Off to 15.


HOLE 15, Firethorn


The 15th is the final par 5 on the Augusta docket, and thus the last realistic chance for a leaderboard-altering eagle. If someone’s going to make a move with four holes to go, going low at 15 is an absolute must.


We’ll go in reverse order here, for reasons that will become obvious. As Rose and Spieth walk up, Rose points at a young kid sitting cross-legged on the right side of the fairway, and rolls him his ball. It seems a noble gesture; I only find out later that Rose has just bogeyed the 14th, and thus he surely wants to get rid of that underperforming ball with all due speed. He and Spieth tee off without incident.


Preceding them came Mickelson and Hoffman, and it’s clear that Amen Corner has worked over both men. Phil’s smile has a lot less zip on it, but Hoffman – lord, Hoffman looks like a man who’s been told the date and manner of his own death. He walks stiff-backed, all traces of a smile gone from his face, his eyes locked somewhere over the pines in the distance. Both of them tee up and off easily enough; Mickelson, though he doesn’t know it yet, has an eagle just a few minutes in his future.


These four are anticlimactic to our first pairing, however. McIlroy arrives on 15 with about 43 percent less pep in his step. Woods has gone from arrogant to merely businesslike. And when he tees off, following McIlroy, well, that’s when the real action on 15 begins.


“LIGHT THE CANDLE!” some backwards-hatted bro bellows, and before Woods has even picked up his tee (he cleans up after himself this time) a Richmond County deputy – armed, unbelievably enough – has taken hold of the bro’s arm and is leading him over to another member of the security team.


Up strides a course marshal sporting a blue (not green!) jacket, a white Masters baseball cap, an orange GALLERY ribbon and the folksy accent of a man who knows his way around both an SEC tailgate and a boardroom. He takes the bro’s badge and begins calling in the number, summoning transport to rid the club of the bro’s presence. He then hands the badge to the officer, who tucks it in a breast pocket.


“I can’t believe you would do something like that,” the marshal says in a disappointed-father tone. “I cannot believe it.”


The bro begins protesting that this is his grandparents’ badge, and when bro’s friend comes up and tries to intervene, the marshal says, “Yes, I’m kicking him out. You want me to kick you out too?”


So it looks bad for our bro, but then peak Augusta kicks in. Our bro notes that he’s a student at a notable Southern university – surprise – and manages to drop a few names that catch the marshal’s interest – double surprise. A little back-and-forth later, some proper obsequiousness from the bro, and the badge is returned with a classic let’s-not-let-this-happen-again handshake. The golf cart that has been summoned to politely but firmly bum-rush our bro to the front gates is sent off, and all is as it should be at Augusta.


HOLE 18, Holly


And here we are, the end of the line. It’s all been decided now, everyone except Rose knowing this is a done deal. When Tiger and Rory approach the tee, they do so with the resigned air of men who know their cause is lost, but march forward into oblivion. Both of these guys can walk out of here with some measure of pride, Woods because nobody expected him to be still playing in Augusta with the Sunday sun setting, McIlroy because he’d played so poorly earlier in the week that no one believed he could make any kind of run.


Behind them come Mickelson and Hoffman, and both of them appear to have accepted their fates. Phil has been here, of course, coming in second in roughly 700 majors over the last decade. Hoffman looks like he’s just watched his car get towed away, which is a step up from the haunted demeanor he had before.


And then comes our leader and his playing partner. Rose has his jaw set hard; five strokes back, he knows his only hope at this point is to kneecap Spieth, and that probably wouldn’t result in a green jacket for him either. So he sends his final tee shot into the night, breaking a chunk off the tee as he swings, and then it’s all up to Spieth.


It’s here, the moment this kid has dreamed of for his whole life, even if that’s a period of time that’s a lot shorter than most of us reading this would believe. But he’s worked so long, so hard to get to this point, putting in hour after hour of thankless practice, and today, it’s paid off. He’s maintained a stern, reserved face every time I’ve seen him this round, but today, at long last, after hitting his final tee shot of the Masters, he finally cracks.


Jordan Spieth leaves the last tee box at Augusta National and takes the final steps of his old life, grinning all the way.


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



And keep up with Jay over on Facebook, too.







from Yahoo Sports https://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/golf-devil-ball-golf/six-ways-of-looking-at-the-masters--sunday-back-nine-013344366.html

News sport : Jaromir Jagr inks one-year deal to return to Panthers

It was the last day of school for the Florida Panthers. As his teammates were cleaning out their lockers, signing yearbooks, and doing exit interviews, Jaromir Jagr was signing something else – a new contract.


A round of Ensures for everyone as the NHL’s favorite old-guy will be returning to South Florida for another season. Per TSN, the one-year contract is worth $3.5-million.


Jagr was traded to Florida mid-season from New Jersey. His impact was felt instantly. Not just on the young Panthers group, but by Jagr himself. From the Miami-Herald:



"First off, I'm glad I got traded here. I didn't really know how good this team is,'' Jagr said at BB&T Center … "I had a chance to play the last 20 games here ... a lot of people thought I was done. Those young guys gave me extra energy, extra life. I'm glad to be coming back next year.''



Skating with Aleksander Barkov and Jonathan Huberdeau, Jagr had 18-points in those 20 games.


If you needed the reminder at how incredible Jagr’s 21-year NHL career has been, the Panthers published just some of his all-time stats:



Jagr, 43, ranks first among active National Hockey League leaders in points (1,802), games played (1,550), assists (1,080), goals (722), plus/minus (+291) and power play goals (204). Among all-time NHL leaders, he ranks first in game-winning goals (129), fourth in points, fifth in goals, sixth in assists and 11th in games played.



Imagine where he’d be if he didn’t leave the NHL for a couple years.


The team missed the playoffs by 7-points. The young group was in the hunt until the end of the season when goaltending injuries derailed their race. This is remarkable considering how little people thought of the Panthers when season began. The general consensus was they'd be better with Roberto Luongo, but not good enough just yet. So much for that idea. If Jagr can continue to contribute like he has, and Lu stays healthy, consider the Cats a playoff bound team next season.


The best part about this signing is Jagr’s commitment to growing the awareness of Panthers hockey in South Florida.


From TSN:



... Jagr is already a fan favourite, in a market where hockey is still trying to grow. "Let's change it," Jagr said. "People can see it. It's a different team. It's a different Florida Panthers."




"This team's got a big future," Jagr said. "Hopefully I can be part of it."



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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!










from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nhl-puck-daddy/jaromir-jagr-inks-one-year-deal-to-return-to-panthers-213105625.html

News sport : Danica Patrick: I'd say yes if Ricky Stenhouse proposed


If Ricky Stenhouse Jr. popped the question to Danica Patrick, he's not going to get a "no" answer.


In a taped interview with Darrell Waltrip during Fox's prerace coverage of Saturday's Sprint Cup Series race at Texas, Waltrip asked about the answer to a possible proposal. And then when his brother, Michael, did his usual insipid tour of pit road before the race, he told Stenhouse what Danica's answer would be.


Yes, writing about Danica Patrick and a future wedding is a pretty popular story. We're fully aware of that. But we also want to take the opportunity to say that it's juuuuust a bit awkward to ask a question about a potential marriage proposal response in a nationally televised interview.


Of course Patrick is going to say yes. While she may be polarizing, she's very polished and she's not going to admit to Darrell freaking Waltrip and the NASCAR viewing audience if she didn't see a long-term future with her boyfriend of over two years. She's fully aware of the reaction she'd cause with an answer opposite of the one she gave.


We also guess Patrick told Stenhouse about the interview so he wasn't blindsided when told by Michael Waltrip before the race. Talk about an unneeded distraction.


We wish Patrick and Stenhouse well and they truly seem to be happy with each other. It takes a special couple to not break up over the growing of a mullet. We just also wish no one asks her about her answer to a wedding proposal until after the proposal has happened.


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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!







from Yahoo Sports http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar-from-the-marbles/danica-patrick--i-d-say-yes-if-ricky-stenhouse-proposed-191138840.html

United end derby jinx

Manchester United ended their recent poor derby form with an emphatic win over Manchester City at Old Trafford.


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Manchester United dealt Manchester City's Champions League qualification hopes another blow by storming back from behind to trounce their derby rivals 4-2 in the Premier League.


Sergio Aguero gave City an eighth-minute lead at a blustery Old Trafford, but United hit back through Ashley Young, Marouane Fellaini, Juan Mata and Chris Smalling to register a sixth successive league win.


Aguero claimed another goal at the death -- his 100th in City's colours -- but it was too late to prevent United ending a sequence of four consecutive defeats against their neighbours.


The win gave United a four-point cushion over City in third place -- the last automatic Champions League qualifying spot -- and took them back to within a point of Arsenal ahead of next weekend's home game with leaders Chelsea.


City have now lost six of their last eight games in all competitions and manager Manuel Pellegrini is likely to face renewed questioning about his ability to revive the team he steered to the title a year ago.


It was a fourth successive away league defeat for City -- their worst run since 2006 -- and hammered another nail in their title defence, leaving them 12 points behind Chelsea having played a game more.


While they retain a five-point lead over fifth-place Southampton, Liverpool can close to within four points by beating Newcastle United on Monday.


On City's last visit to Old Trafford, a 3-0 win in March 2014, it had taken less than a minute for Edin Dzeko to put the visitors ahead, and they again attacked United with an intensity that took the hosts aback.


David de Gea had to save at his near post after Martin Demichelis's pass set Jesus Navas scampering through and with United appearing bewildered, it came as no surprise when City made the breakthrough.


James Milner's pass down the inside-left channel found David Silva, who squared for Aguero to tap in his sixth goal in seven league games against his team's cross-town foes.


Having revelled in City's recent misfortunes, United's fans were dismayed to see the script veer off in an unanticipated direction.


A back-pass to De Gea from Phil Jones in the 14th minute drew a barrage of boos from the home fans, but it was to prove the precursor to the equaliser.


The Spaniard's hoof downfield found its way, via Fellaini, to Ander Herrera on the left and his cross was turned in at the second attempt by Young, after Gael Clichy had made an initial block.


Young and Fellaini have been symbols of United's recent resurgence and they combined for the 27th-minute goal that put the hosts ahead.


Daley Blind reached the byline on the left and cut the ball back for Young, whose trademark in-swinging cross was nodded in at the far post by the unmistakeable frizzy-haired head of Fellaini.


It was a brilliant response from Van Gaal's men and City's frustration almost cost them dearly when captain Vincent Kompany flew in on Blind, for which he escaped with a booking.


Kompany had been a doubt for the game with a hamstring injury and he gave way at half-time, with Eliaquim Mangala coming on.


There was a swagger to United's play - Michael Carrick flummoxing Yaya Toure with a swish of the hips on the edge of his own box - and they continued to force City back.


Joe Hart parried a free-kick from England colleague Wayne Rooney and then saved from Carrick in the penalty-area stramash that ensued, but the home side would not be deterred.


They extended their lead mid-way through the second half, with Mata running onto Rooney's pass and tucking the ball between Hart's legs despite replays showing he had been offside.


Smalling meted out further punishment in the 73rd minute when he headed in a Young's free-kick and after Carrick had gone off injured, Aguero reduced the damage by bundling in a cross from Pablo Zabaleta. – AFP






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/united-end-derby-jinx-1.1843914

Fabregas winner extends Chelsea lead

Chelsea extended their Premier League lead with a late Cesc Fabregas winner at QPR on Sunday.


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London – Cesc Fabregas scored an 88th-minute winner as Chelsea extended their lead at the top of the Premier League to seven points with an unconvincing 1-0 win against a spirited Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road on Sunday.


Spain international Fabregas, criticised for his drop in form since Christmas, burst into the box before cooly dispatching Eden Hazard’s lay-off to seal an undeserved victory in the west London derby.


QPR, embroiled in relegation battle, were the more dangerous team throughout and created a number of chances but were thwarted by visiting goalkeeper Thibault Courtois.


Chelsea dominated possession but, in the absence of injured forwards Diego Costa and Loic Remy, failed to register a shot on target before Fabregas’s intervention.


Chelsea have 73 points from 31 games but have a game in hand of second-placed Arsenal, whom they play on April 26.


QPR remain 18th, two points behind Hull City – the side immediately above the relegation zone.


Third-placed Manchester United host rivals Man City, in fourth, in the day’s late match. – Reuters






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/fabregas-winner-extends-chelsea-lead-1.1843912

Villarreal held by Getafe

Villarreal’s slide continued as a Diego Castro header gave Getafe a 1-1 draw on Sunday.


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Barcelona – Villarreal’s slide continued as a Diego Castro header gave Getafe a 1-1 draw in La Liga on Sunday but the match was overshadowed by a serious-looking injury to Mateo Musacchio.


The Villarreal defender was carried off on a stretcher with 13 minutes to go after his ankle appeared to buckle when he was on his own running for the ball.


An Ikechukwu Uche penalty, after he himself was fouled by Medhi Lacen with 52 minutes played, was Villarreal’s first goal in five league games but it was not enough to give them their first La Liga away win of the year.


In a scrappy game Getafe deservedly drew level with a fine header from Castro after 64 minutes and Pedro Leon had the chance to win the game but his shot following a breakaway was parried by Villarreal keeper Sergio Asenjo.


Villarreal have failed to win in seven games in all competitions and are sixth on 51 points.


Getafe are 13th on 36 points.


Barcelona lead the way at the top of the table on 75 points but their advantage was cut to two points following a 2-2 draw with Sevilla on Saturday.


An 18-match unbeaten run up until February saw Villarreal alive on three fronts but in the last couple of months the wheels have come off.


They were knocked out of the King’s Cup and the Europa League while their dreams of a Champions League spot have faded.


Injuries have taken their toll with Bruno Soriano and Denis Cheryshev among the key players that have missed games and now the likely loss of Musacchio, who also spent a lengthy spell in the treatment room earlier in the season, would be a big blow. – Reuters






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/villarreal-held-by-getafe-1.1843901

Kompany cries foul over FFA rules

Uefa’s Financial Fair Play rules are designed to subdue teams. Manchester City’s Vincent Kompany says.


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London – Manchester City captain Vincent Kompany believes Uefa’s Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules are designed to subdue teams with recent investment, such as his club, and prevent them from competing with the long-established giants of European football.


Since Sheikh Mansour bought the club in 2008, City have invested heavily in an attempt to break into the European hierarchy – winning the Premier League in 2012 and last year – but have since been punished for failing to comply with the regulations.


Uefa said their FFP regulations were designed to limit reckless spending and ensure clubs operated within their means.


Last May, City were handed a fine of e60 million (about R760m) and had restrictions placed on their European squad and transfer dealings and Kompany said the rules only serve to maintain the status quo.


“That’s how I look at it anyway,” he told the Sunday Telegraph.


“If you go into the business world you can’t say to anyone they cannot invest. I understand the fans have to be protected, the clubs have to be protected but plans need to be accepted.


“You win things; you get more fans. You get more fans; you create more revenue. That’s not a stupid way of thinking of investing in a business.


“I do understand there needs to be regulation but I just wonder what is going to change at the top? When I came to England it was just four clubs at the top. Four. The same top four all the time and that’s changed now.”


UEFA denied claims the regulations were a method of limiting “new” investment and said the measures were designed to protect clubs long-term.


“What you do is actually protect the few who already have the things geared up to create enough revenue for them to invest more than anyone else,” Kompany added.


“I think there needs to be a format that people respect. When you get into a club you need to subscribe to be in there for a number of years, you need to maybe commit to a certain number of regulations but in this case who are you protecting?”


In December, Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho said the FFP rules were a contradiction and designed to protect large clubs with a long history of success. – Reuters






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/kompany-cries-foul-over-ffa-rules-1.1843897

Hunt on for title-winning sides

Former Cape player Gavin Hunt, now in charge of Wits, knows how to bag the silverware.


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Cape Town – Any reflection about the Mother City and the sport of football is invariably dominated by a discussion on the many top players to have emerged from the shadow of Table Mountain.


While such rumination would be appropriate and correct, often it is forgotten that one of South Africa’s most successful coaches is also a Capetonian – Gavin Hunt.


Hunt’s achievements speak for itself – winning the Premier Soccer League title three years in a row with SuperSport United (2008, 2009 and 2010), the Nedbank Cup with SuperSport in 2012, the Absa Cup with Moroka Swallows in 2004, and even the regional First Division championship with Seven Stars in 1998. In addition, he was named as Coach of the Year on four occasions (2002, 2008, 2009 and 2010).


Now, at Wits, Hunt is again hard at work, doing what he does best. The Joburg club, in the past, was always seen as a development club. But now, backed by big money from its sponsor, it has changed its ambitions. Now, the Students want to win titles and trophies. And, as soon as they made that decision, as soon as they had shifted focus, they hired Hunt to steer them to success.


It hasn’t come as yet. But he’s got them close… On Friday night, they lost out 2-1 to Ajax Cape Town at Athlone Stadium in the quarter-finals of the Nedbank Cup. Hunt’s men were very unfortunate, though, as they hit the woodwork on three occasions.


But, with his knowledge and experience of winning trophies in South Africa, it’s probably a no-brainer that Wits will be the team to watch next season.


Now 50 years old, Hunt has trod a long path in South African football. It all started in the most unlikeliest of surroundings in Simon’s Town, the naval village where Hunt was born. A pugnacious right-back, he started his career at Defence in Simon’s Town before joining Rygersdal in Rondebosch. It was there that, as a promising 16-year-old, he was spotted and signed by Hellenic coach Johnny “Budgie” Byrne.


The late Byrne, an England international, was a charismatic figure in Cape football. He arrived here in 1969, and would go on to nurture and coach many a successful Hellenic squad.


Injury, though, was to steer Hunt the player into becoming Hunt the coach.


“In 1994, while still playing for Hellenic, in fact we had just played a Cup final, I tore my Achilles,” said Hunt. “That was it for my playing career, so it was on to coaching… I had already been coaching when I was still playing. I coached the WP Schoolboys, and I remember Craig Rosslee was in that team (Rosslee played for Hellenic and Cape Town Spurs, and is the current head coach of Moroka Swallows). I then spent three months coaching at Vasco da Gama before taking up the position at Seven Stars.”


It was at Seven Stars, then a Gugulethu-based team in the First Division, that Hunt was to first catch the eye as a coach. It was there that he was responsible for giving a 16-year-old Benni McCarthy his first introduction to top-flight, senior football. And we all know what Benni went on to achieve…


Hunt then spent three years coaching his former club Hellenic and when, in 2001, he found himself unwanted and unemployed in the Cape, he took the plunge and headed for Venda in Limpopo to coach Black Leopards.


It was to be an inspired decision. Hunt transformed Leopards, an unknown club at the time, into a side to be respected, steering them to a position in the top eight of the PSL. His work at Lidoda Duvha quickly captured attention and the next year he was hired by Swallows. There, he had a five-year stint before the successful move to SuperSport in Pretoria.


And Hunt’s philosophy of coaching is simple.


“As far as I am concerned, as a coach, I believe that you have to make the best of what you have,” he said. “Everybody wants to play like Real Madrid and Barcelona, but you can’t do that… because you don’t have the players to play like that. So you have to look at your squad, assess their strengths, and then create something successful with what you have. If you want a word to describe me as a coach it would be ‘consistent’.


“The game has changed so much now. Yes, players are fitter, quicker and stronger, but they are not better than the players back when I was playing. Most importantly, the quality of the final ball is absent. Players today don’t pass, cross or shoot as well as back then. And, heading, that’s almost non-existent today.


“We just don’t have the quality. The basic skills of the players aren’t what they should be. Yes, as a PSL coach you do such drills every day at training, but these are aspects that should be seen to at youth development level… and that’s another topic of discussion altogether.”


Hunt, despite his success at domestic level, has never been given an opportunity with the national team, Bafana Bafana. It’s not something that bothers him too much – he just gets on with the job he is employed to do.


But he does have a few thoughts on the country’s inability to progress at national level.


“I definitely think that we are not picking the right type of players for the national team,” said Hunt. “Under Shakes (Mashaba), I think there has been a bit of a change for the better. At least he has given another core of players an opportunity, and they have some of the attributes like the hunger and mental strength needed to succeed at a higher level.


“But more needs to be done, and more thought needs to be given in terms of the type of player used by Bafana. For example, when Clive Barker was in charge, he had a great mix of players. He had men like Eric Tinkler, because at that level you don’t just need skill and flair, you need desire, courage, mentality and the right attitude. As far as I’m concerned, at national level it’s not always about ability, you need players with heart.” – Weekend Argus






from Soccer Soccer Extended RSS http://www.iol.co.za/hunt-on-for-title-winning-sides-1.1843887

Timely return to form for Foxes

Successive last-gasp wins have reignited struggling Leicester’s Premier League survival bid.


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London – Successive last-gasp victories have reignited struggling Leicester City’s Premier League survival bid and manager Nigel Pearson said his side’s fate is back in their own hands.


Late goals from Robert Huth and Jamie Vardy sealed a dramatic 3-2 victory against West Bromwich Albion on Saturday, a week after Andy King’s late goal secured a 2-1 win against West Ham United.


The Foxes had look buried two weeks ago, seven points adrift of the relative safety of 17th place, but are now just three points behind Hull City, the side immediately above the relegation trapdoor.


Crucially Leicester, who have discovered an attacking potency with eight goals in three games, have a game in hand over their survival rivals and play five of their final seven fixtures at home.


“One thing we’ve spoken about recently is we want to keep (our fate) in our own hands for as long as possible,” Pearson told the BBC.


“While it’s in our own hands you know that the responsibility is solely with ourselves. In many ways that’s the driving force for us but we’ve still got an awful lot to do.


“It’s more congested (at the bottom of the table) but because of the gap there has been for such a long time we don’t have any chances of getting away with a disappointing result.


“We’ve got to try and force the issue between now and the end of the season.”


Leicester have been rooted to the foot of the table since November but are slowly building much-needed momentum as the battle to avoid the drop intensifies.


“I hope (we’ve got momentum). Back-to-back wins are difficult to achieve, especially for a side like ourselves who have been struggling for vast parts of the season in terms of results,” he said.


“It’s going to be tough but we’ll give it a good shot.”


Leicester have a relatively manageable run-in and play host to Swansea City in their next game on Saturday.


Their season concludes with a home fixture against fellow strugglers Queens Park Rangers. – Reuters






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Pique error blow for Barca

Barcelona need to rediscover the defensive solidity that has underpinned their charge this season.


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Barcelona – Barcelona need to rediscover the defensive solidity that has underpinned their championship charge alongside their sharp attack after an error by Gerard Pique in the drawn match against Sevilla reduced their lead to two points at the top of La Liga.


Pique has looked assured and led from the back over recent months as the defence has provided the foundations for Barca’s assault on three trophies this season.


The attacking trident of Lionel Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez may capture the headlines but Barca’s rearguard have looked more composed and cut out the basic mistakes that led to their struggle earlier in the season and put coach Luis Enrique’s position under threat.


The turnaround has been most noticeable for Pique who was dropped for below-par performances and a lack of professionalism.


He has been looking more like the defensive stalwart that along with Carles Puyol gave the defensive security during Barca’s golden era with Pep Guardiola at the helm.


Amply supported by either Jeremy Mathieu and Javier Mascherano the defence played their part as Barca overtook Real Madrid at the top of La Liga, swept into the quarter-finals of the Champions League and reached the final of the King’s Cup.


However, against Sevilla on Saturday, facing a spirited attack they once again made mistakes and in particular an error by Pique on the halfway line led to a breakaway and the late equaliser for the Andalusians who drew 2-2.


Luis Enrique was angry at the way they surrendered a two-goal lead but refused to single out any players.


“When we concede I don’t like it, however it comes,” Luis Enrique told a news conference.


“If it is due to a mistake then it is the same.”


Midfielder Sergio Busquets also backed Pique.


“It wasn’t his mistake but that of the team. It is not a case of blaming anybody,” he said.


“It is disappointing to draw having been ahead but we are still leaders and on the right path.”


Sevilla coach Unai Emery said before the game that this Barca side was the most similar he had seen to that of Pep Guardiola’s but they are still a long way from controlling the game as well as the team that won three La Liga titles and two Champions Leagues between 2008 and 2012. – Reuters






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News sport : The Knicks and Magic set an NBA record for fewest combined points in a quarter

The New York Knicks and Orlando Magic are trying to lose games, as the 2014-15 NBA season limps to an end, in order to better their NBA draft outlook.


It should be noted that the Knicks and the Magic are doing a fabulous job.


An otherwise forgettable New York/Orlando game took a turn for the historic on Saturday when the Knicks and Magic combined for just 15 points in the second quarter – an NBA record for the fewest amount of combined points in a quarter. The contest ended with a 80-79 score in New York’s favor, with the Knicks actually missing out on that needed loss – the Magic topped New York by one point.


As a result, the Knicks will have to watch as Minnesota enters its predicted Saturday thrashing at the hands of the Golden State Warriors with just a half-game deficit between the Timberwolves and New York. In the race for the league’s worst record, the Knicks still have the edge, despite managing just eight second quarter points on Saturday.


Yeah, this was some quarter:



(Courtesy NBA.com via SBNation.com)

From the Associated Press:



The Knicks scored eight points, shooting 3 for 20 from the field with a pair of turnovers. The Magic had seven points and were 3 for 19 from the field, with seven turnovers. Orlando went the better part of 10 minutes in the second quarter with just one field goal and a free throw before getting two late baskets by Victor Oladipo.



The previous NBA record of 18 combined points had been established three times. Neither team came into Saturday night wielding a defensive powerhouse: Orlando is the third-worst defensive team in the NBA, while the Knicks rank sixth to the bottom.


Of course, because of the race to the dregs, the Knicks couldn’t even make their fans happy with the win:




It’s hard to tell who to root for.






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News sport : Final tee time bodes well for Spieth, Rose

If history serves as any guide at the Masters, Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose should feel very good about their chances to slip on their first green jacket on Sunday evening.


Spieth, who is at 16-under 200 through 54 holes of the Masters, will be paired for the final round with 2013 U.S. Open champion Justin Rose, who is four shots behind the 21-year-old Texan. So what's the big deal? In the last 24 Masters, 20 champions have come from the final group on Sunday.


However, until Bubba Watson won his second Masters title last year from the final group -- playing alongside Spieth, who was vying to become youngest-ever Masters winner -- the prior three Masters winner had come from outside the final group.


In 2011, Charl Schwartzel was tied for second place after three rounds, four shots behind Rory McIlroy. However, he wasn't in the final group with Rory McIlroy. The South African was one of nine players to hold at least a share of the lead on Sunday, but Schwartzel birdied the final four holes of the tournament -- a Masters record -- to win by two shots over Aussies Jason Day and Adam Scott.


A year later, Bubba Watson wasn't in the final group at Augusta National but the penultimate group with Louis Oosthuizen, who wound up meeting Watson in a sudden-death playoff for the green jacket. Watson shot 68, while Oosthuizen shot 69. Then on the second extra hole, Watson's curved wedge from the pine straw led to a Masters-clinching par.


When Adam Scott ended the Aussie Masters curse in 2013, he did it from outside the final pairing as well. Like Watson the year prior, Scott was in the next-to-last group, a shot behind 54-hole co-leaders Angel Cabrera and Brandt Snedeker. Scott's 69 was good enough to tie Cabrera, who shot 70, and head to a playoff that again went two holes. This time, Scott made birdie to beat the 2009 champion and take his first major title.


Of course, like with investments, past results are not indicative of future performance -- especially with the familiar Sunday hole locations at the Masters.




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







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News sport : Who will win the 2015 Masters?

AUGUSTA, GA - APRIL 09: The clubhouse is seen before the start of the first round of the 2015 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 9, 2015 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) AUGUSTA, Ga. - For 50 holes, Justin Speith turned the Masters from a tournament into a coronation. But a late double-bogey put a crack in his previously impenetrable foundation, and suddenly a few challengers are within a handful of strokes of Spieth's lead. It'll be a challenge for them to catch him, but it'll be just as much of a challenge for Spieth to remain within himself and close out a wire-to-wire Masters.


With all due respect to Rory McIlroy, Tiger Woods, Dustin Johnson and others 10 strokes back or more, it will take both a titanic effort on their part and a total collapse atop the leaderboard for them to have a hope of contending. So we'll wish them well and keep our attention on the four men with the best chance to win on Sunday. In descending order down the leaderboard, they are:


Jordan Spieth (Leader, -16)

The case for: Spieth's chip on 18, a tricky up-and-down just minutes after he'd double-bogeyed, was his most critical shot of the tournament. He gently nestled the ball up near the flag and parred the hole; a bogey could have been disastrous for his confidence. That shot righted the ship and kept Spieth four shots clear of the field. If he keeps playing as well as he has so far, this Masters is his in a walk. Mild jog, at best.


The case against: Spieth is still just 21, and he's never played a bigger round than he will on Sunday. How will he handle adversity, and there will be adversity? He surrendered a Sunday lead last year. Is he able to put that out of his mind?


Justin Rose (-12)

The case for: Rose is a major winner, with the 2013 U.S. Open already his. He won that coming from behind on Sunday, albeit only from two strokes down. He played the back nine in five-under on Saturday, which bodes well as long as he doesn't let Spieth get too far ahead.


The case against: Rose, and all the others behind Spieth, must overcome a substantial deficit, and Rose took a whle to get started on Saturday. If he gives Spieth any room to run on Sunday, the young Texan might be too far away to catch.


Phil Mickelson (-11)

The case for: Phil's the most decorated and veteran golfer of this quartet, and he's been here plenty of times before. (He's fallen short plenty of times from this position before, but let's not focus on that.) Mickelson has the ability to roll in some long beauties, and usually is good for at least one how-the-hell-did-he-do-that shot on major Sundays. He'll need help, but another green jacket isn't out of the question.


The case against: Phil generally plays about 16 good holes every round, but he has no margin for such errors this time around. He'll have to do even better than his 67 to catch Spieth, and he'll have to eliminate any of the wiggly putts that always seem to show up at the worst possible time.


Charley Hoffman (-10)

The case for: Steadiness. Hoffman has lurked within sight of Spieth ever since teeing off in the very first group on Thursday. Plus, he's the subject of the greatest improv rap ever written about the Masters.


The case against: This is only Hoffman's second Masters, so the pressure of the moment could get to him. He tied for 27th in his only other visit to Augusta, in 2011. He wasn't able to capitalize on a decent scoring day, only picking up a single stroke. Plus, he cut his luxurious locks.


Play begins at 10 a.m. ET on Sunday at Augusta, and the Mickelson-Hoffman pairing tees off at 2:40 p.m., with the others to follow 10 minutes later. Not much longer now.


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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 : Spieth expands Masters lead as green jacket awaits

There's doubt now.


Just when it seemed like Sunday would be a celebratory parade for Jordan Spieth, the 21-year-old Texan made double-bogey 6 on the 17th hole in the third round of the Masters.


Instead of carrying a nearly insurmountable lead in the final round, Spieth's 2-under 70 reduced his five-shot overnight edge to four heading into Sunday. Spieth is still on pace to topple Tiger Woods' 72-hole tournament record of 18-under 270, but, at 16 under through three rounds, a win is not a certainty.


Instead of having a tee time with journeyman Charley Hoffman as he did Saturday, Spieth now has to play with 2013 U.S. Open champion Justin Rose. Rose birdied five of his last six holes to shoot 67 and get to 12 under par.


Three-time Masters winner Phil Mickelson, who also shot a Saturday 67, is a shot behind Rose.






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News sport : Tiger's back, and the gallery is loving him for it

Tiger Woods watches his shot on the second fairway during the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 11, 2015, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel) AUGUSTA, Ga. - It wasn't a particularly tough putt, as these things go, a little six-footer on the 8th hole. But when Tiger Woods drained it for a birdie, the YEAHHH that erupted from the crowd hit with physical force.


Whatever woes ailed Woods earlier this year, he's proven he's still got quality golf left to play, and his gallery proved on Saturday that they're ready to cheer if given the slightest opportunity. Saurday's four-under round, which left him at -6 for the tournament. He's double-digits behind Jordan Spieth and won't come close to winning, but this weekend, that's not the point.


For so many majors of late, following Woods has been like seeing the Rolling Stones in concert: you know exactly what you're going to get, and the rush comes from nostalgia rather than appreciation. But here in 2015, against all expectations and assumptions, Woods has returned to ... well, not to championship form, but to a level of golf that's put him on the leaderboard. Saturday marked Woods' first sub-70 round in a major on the weekend since the final round of the 2011 Masters. For a guy who didn't appear to know which end of the club to hold in stumbling out of tournaments earlier this year, this renaissance qualifies as a minor miracle.


Woods still commands a large gallery, but there was something special about Saturday's. It grew and swelled, tidelike, as the round went on. Woods began his day with birdies in three of the first four holes, and that was enough to attract the patrons to his pairing. The gallery grew and grew, to the point that it was 15 people deep at places, and the only way to figure out whether he made a putt, even standing 20 feet away, was to listen for the roar.


Augusta has always been a powerful draw for Woods, a place where he's felt at home and at ease. The challenge now will be for him to translate his success here to other venues. But it's clear from Saturday at Augusta that many thousands of his fans are still around.


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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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