News sport : Daily Dime: Bryce Harper, Christian Yelich, Shane Greene, various O's and Mets

Below, you'll find ten strong plays for the Tuesday slate. Be sure to give the Jays, Fish, O's and M's plenty of attention, if you're stacking. Also, as always, please check the weather reports and hawk the lineups before finalizing your selections. Now let's do the do...


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Bryce Harper, OF, at Bos (Masterson), $4100 at FanDuel: Justin Masterson's history of struggles against left-handed hitters is of course well-known and thoroughly documented. LHBs have slashed .287/.366/.426 against him in his career, and .320/.408/.502 last season. So yeah, I'm betting on Bryce today.


Everth Cabrera, SS, vs. NYY (Sabathia), $2400: Even in his best seasons, Sabathia often struggled early in April. I'm thinking the O's can do some damage against the 2015 version of CC. Cabrera is a perfect 4-for-4 against Sabathia in his career, for what it's worth (not much). True, Everth is a bottom-of-the-order hitter, but that's somewhat less terrifying in the A.L. If you find yourself in need of a true bargain bin starter, give him a look.


Steve Pearce, 1B, vs. NYY (Sabathia), $3900: Did I mention that Sabathia averaged 88.4 mph on his fastball in his first start? Well, he did. Pearce can do bad things to 88 mph fastballs, I'm thinking.


Michael Cuddyer, OF, vs. Phi (Buchanan), $3000: Phillies starter David Buchanan is a pitch-to-contact right-hander who was rocked last week (3.0 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 4 BB. He's a reverse-split guy, too. RHBs have hit .301/.346/.491 against Buchanan to this point in his career. I'm deploying multiple Mets against him.


Shane Greene, SP, at Pit (Burnett), $7900: Generally speaking, I'll start only aces in daily, looking for my bargains among the bats. But I'm particularly bullish on Greene after his impressive season debut (8.0 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 5 Ks, 85 pitches). Detroit's lineup should offer respectable run support facing A.J. Burnett, and it's nice to get Greene against a National League opponent.


Jose Reyes, SS, vs. TB (Andriese), $3900: This could be any Jays starter, really. Toronto's lineup is open for business on Tuesday, with meh right-hander Matt Andriese on the hill for the Rays. I like the brand-name Blue Jays, and I like the prices on guys like Pillar ($2700) and Travis ($2500) as well.


Mike Zunino, C, at LAD (Huff), $2500: David Huff is getting a spot-start for the Dodgers, so I'm gonna go ahead and roll out a few Mariners. Honestly, I'm not sure I'd actually drill down deep enough to reach Zunino, but I rarely buy a luxury catcher in these games. Also, this certainly feels like a game where Zunino could leave the yard. He's been much better against lefties than righties in his brief career (but lousy against almost everyone). Anyway, the real point is this: Seattle hitters are in play today.


Christian Yelich, OF, at Atl (Cahill), $3600: Trevor Cahill shouldn't scare anyone away from the Marlins on Tuesday. Left-handed hitters slashed a ridiculous .346/.411/.519 against Cahill last season, so I don't feel bad doubling-down on Fish in this one. Gimme Yelich and gimme this guy...


Dee Gordon, 2B, at Atl (Cahill), $4000: Yeah, sure, Dee is a bit pricey. But he's 6-for-15 with three walks and just one K in his career against Cahill. He's also red-hot at the moment (.345/.387/.483, 4 SB). It's tough for me to imagine Atlanta keeping him off-base in this one.


Ender Inciarte, OF, at SD (Despaigne), $2800: Here's a low-dollar outfield flier, for those who've blown the budget elsewhere. No need to fear the matchup, certainly. Inciarte has three mutli-hit games in his last four, and he'll be facing a right-hander who gives up plenty of contact.






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News sport : Power Rankings: The Texas top 2 is reversed

Our Power Rankings are far from a scientific formula. In fact, it's the perfect blend of analytics and bias against your favorite driver. And you think we dislike your favorite driver, so it makes sense, right? Direct all your complaints to us at happyhourmailbag@yahoo.com.



1. Kevin Harvick (LW: 1): Why wasn't Harvick's wall-brush as he was chasing Jimmie Johnson a caution? Yes, we ask that with tongue-planted-firmly-in-cheek, but with every sarcastic remark there's a grain of truth, right? Matt Kenseth was apparent cause of two cautions, one after he slid (and saved his car), producing tire smoke, and another caution came after he brushed the wall. If you wanted to use the Kenseth basis to advocate for a late yellow, well, crazier cases have been made for things in NASCAR. Anyway, Harvick finished second. Ho-hum.



2. Jimmie Johnson (LW: 10): For as good as Harvick has been on 1.5 mile tracks (and overall), it's nice that he's got a stout intermediate track competitor in the No. 48 team. And yes, we just said it was glad that the 48 had emerged as competition for another driver. Someone check our temperature. Johnson has now won three of the last five races at 1.5 mile tracks. Harvick has won the other two. There's clearly a Hendrick secret here that's being fully utilized by two cars. Can others in and outside of Hendrick equipment find it?



3. Joey Logano (LW: 2): Anyone else incredibly happy that a mountain wasn't made out of a molehill in the episdoe between Logano and Harvick? Logano knew he had to stay ahead of Harvick and Harvick moved Logano out of the way without being dirty about it. As Logano said after the race, it was simply racing, and it was nothing to have an overly dramatic pit road scene about. And Logano's move may also open up an interesting debate about blocking in the Cup Series. While it's not an accepted practice throughout the entirety of a race, given the difficulty of passing near the front of the field, at what point does it become acceptable, or at least tolerated, at the end of a race?



4. Martin Truex Jr. (LW: 3): Another top 10 for Truex, who has finished there in every Sprint Cup race this season. It's a hell of an accomplishment, especially for a team that was so far off last season. But it's also put into 2015 perspective when you look at the standings. Truex is already 40 points out of the lead, meaning if the Texas results repeated themselves at Bristol, he'd be more than a full race out of the top spot. With eight top 10s in eight races. Crazy.



5. Brad Keselowski (LW: 5): Keselowski had a better recovery than his teammate. While Logano moved from eighth to fourth in the waning laps after he was moved out of the way by Harvick (and incredibly saved his car), Keselowski had a tire vibration, lost a lap and also committed coneslaughter. The sentencing for the coneslaughter put Keselowski at the tail end of the field for the next restart but he ended up finishing fifth, one spot behind his teammate.



6. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (LW: 9): That secret we talked about in the Johnson paragraph? Maybe the No. 88 team found it. While they weren't too fast at all in qualifying, the team was exceptionally quick in race trim and Junior was near the front pretty quickly. He didn't lead any laps but spent most of the race in the top 10 and was within spitting distance of the lead as he battled with Kevin Harvick for the rights to finish second to Johnson.



7. Kasey Kahne (LW: 8): If we're going to give Keselowski and Logano props for their comebacks, we need to mention Kahne's as well. Kahne had an exceptionally fast car all weekend and an unscheduled stop put him a lap down for a potential loose wheel. He got a fortuitiously-timed caution after green flag pit stops to cycle back towards the lead lap and stayed near the front of the field the rest of the way. He finished 8th.



8. Denny Hamlin (LW: 7): Denny Hamlin finished 11th? Denny Hamlin finished 11th. The No. 11 was flat out to lunch early in the race but they kept working on the car and got back near the top 10. Good points racing for that bunch despite the fact they don't have to points race any longer because Hamlin won at Martinsville to essentially qualify for the Chase. What? You mean teams want to do as best as they can even on bad days? We'll be damned.



9. Jeff Gordon (LW: 12): Gordon finished sixth and after his horrible start to the season is 13th in the standings. That's what happens when you counter three bad races with four consecutive top 10s. And while the results have gotten better for Gordon, his fastest non-Martinsville car has been his Atlanta car. As you know, that race ended in a crash against a bare concrete wall. Gordon will win a race, and probably soon. We're going to go with a Kansas repeat.



10. Kurt Busch (LW: 4): Yes, this seems awfully harsh for Busch, it's just that we couldn't justify keeping him above the drivers who finished ahead of him. Busch was incredibly fast at the beginning of the race but the handling disappeared on his car as the race went on and he scrapped towards a 14th place finish. Through four of seven races in 2014, Busch is now just 17 points outside the top 20.



11. Ryan Newman (LW: 11): For the second week after his team was found to have been poking holes in tires, Newman finished outside the top 10. Though we'll clarify and say it wasn't nearly as bad as his Martinsville debacle, where he fell like an anchor through the field after starting second. Rather he finished 12th, which was pretty typical in his 2014 season. We're anxiously awaiting what emerges from the No. 31 team's appeal on Thursday.



12. Aric Almirola (LW: NR): All hail the wonders of the NASCAR points system. Almirola is 10th in the standings despite not having any top-10 finishes in 2015. He's done it by finishing 11th (twice) and not finishing any lower than 26th. Six of his seven finishes are between 11th and 19th. Is it a run that's going to get him in the Chase again? Probably not. But it's a lesser imitation of Ryan Newman's 2014 so far and we saw how well that worked out last year.


Lucky Dog: The dude who got hit by Francesco Dracone's car on pit road in the IndyCar race and didn't have major injuries.


Dropped Out: Matt Kenseth


The DNF: HScott Motorsports teammates Justin Allagaier and Michael Annett both had apparent tire issues that led to crashes.


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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 : Power rankings: RBC Heritage

The year's first men's major is in the books, and the PGA Tour moves on from Augusta National and the Masters to Harbour Town Golf Links and the RBC Heritage. The Hilton Head Island tournament is a relaxed, well-run tournament with a solid field.


Masters champion Jordan Spieth will keep his commitment to this tournament, headlining the field, along with the likes of Zach Johnson, Patrick Reed and defending champion Matt Kuchar.


Here's a look at our top five this week.


1. Zach Johnson — The 2007 Masters winner was joint runner-up here in 2012, Johnson has been on the bottom of the weekend leaderboard the last two years at Harbour Town. However, a very nice T-9 at the Masters is his third top 20 in a row.


2. Jordan Spieth — Yes, he’s the best player in the world right now, but a player hasn’t won the Masters and Harbour Town back-to-back since Bernhard Langer in 1985. He was T-12 here last year, so he likes the place. He'll just be exhausted.


3. Russell Henley — Henley came out of the gate hot at the Masters, but cooled off to a 21st-place finish. Was not good here last year, but was T-6 in 2013. He's been making a lot of cuts.


4. Kevin Streelman — Karma is on Streelman’s side, winning the Masters Par 3 Contest partnering with a Make-A-Wish teen on the bag. He finished T-12 at the Masters. He was T-3 at Harbour Town in 2013.


5. Ian Poulter — Poulter is 4-for-4 in making cuts here, but has never been in the top 25. However, he was T-6 at the Masters and closed strongly.




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News sport : Masters champ Jordan Spieth does Letterman


New Masters champion Jordan Spieth has been making the rounds in New York since becoming the second-youngest green jacket winner. He got on a private jet and made his way to the Big Apple for a whirlwind tour of media appearances, including a stop at CBS's "Late Show" with David Letterman.


Spieth spoke with the outgoing late-night host about the motivation he had to win the Masters a year after watching Bubba Watson earn a second green jacket in three years.


"Last year, I watched Bubba Watson, a deserving champion, walk up that 18th green with the win, watching him walk up to the patrons giving him a standing ovation, and that was tough," Spieth said. "I definitely had a chip on my shoulder and wanted to experience that myself."


Letterman expounded on Spieth's point, asking if Spieth couldn't wait until the next year -- this year -- to try again.


"I wanted to come back the next day (and try again), but I had to wait a year," Spieth said to laughter.


Letterman imagined what that might be like before Spieth joked, "Wouldn't be as special."


Spieth warmed up for the appearance with a Ron Burgundy-inspired voice exercise.





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







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Tuks ready for Chiefs challenge

University of Pretoria focused on staying out of relegation battle as they prepare to face runaway log leaders Kaizer Chiefs


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In a crucial showdown, Kaizer Chiefs will battle for supremacy while the University of Pretoria will fight for survival and Mamelodi Sundowns will pray for favour.


Though Sundowns won’t be taking part, they will be crossing their fingers that AmaTuks can be a banana skin for Chiefs when the two sides square off at the Tuks Stadium in Pretoria (7.30 kick-off).


Chiefs, who are at the summit of the league with 57 points, are en route to winning the title and only need nine points to secure the Absa Premiership trophy.


Sundowns, who are trailing Chiefs by 10 points, have an outside chance of snatching it away from them but need favours from other teams to derail Amakhosi.


Tuks coach Sammy Troughton is determined to guide Tuks to victory but doesn’t see the league title slithering from Chiefs’ gasp.


He says only a miracle can stop Stuart Baxter’s men from romping to the coveted trophy.


“It would be a big surprise if Sundowns catch Chiefs at this stage. Chiefs are a very experienced team. For them to slip up in three games is almost impossible.


“I would like to see Tuks at least try and change things by upsetting them tonight. Maybe it may give Sundowns hope. From a professional point of view, it will take a miracle. Miracles do happen but I have my money on Chiefs to lift the title,” said Troughton.


The former Sundowns player says his men will be out to do themselves a favour as they are desperate for points to stay clear of the relegation zone. Though Tuks are 10th with 30 points, Troughton feels they could potentially be in trouble.


“We are not going there to hold back against Chiefs. We have got to be brave.


“We have got to give them problems and win the game. We must stay away from the dark side of the bottom of the table. We don’t want to be drawn into relegation problems.


“We are not clear yet but we need a minimum of six points. We are going to take it one game at a time.


“Until we are mathematically safe from relegation, we will not celebrate. There’s work to be done,” said the former Mpumalanga Black Aces coach.


With the league title not far off, Chiefs players are set to be psyched up when they play at the Tuks Stadium for the first time. Troughton is expecting Baxter’s side to charge at them with everything they have.


“Chiefs want to win games. They don’t want any slip up. They will be coming all out,” said Troughton.


Tuks have not been doing well in recent matches. In their last three outings, they have lost twice and drawn once.


Troughton says his attackers Geofrey Massa, Atusaye Nyondo, Thabo Mnyamane, Thabo Mosadi and Denver Mukamba have to step up in order to see off the challenge of Chiefs.


Troughton says Tuks will attack Chiefs throughout the 90 minutes.


“We are going to have to play well. We need our players to come to the party. We have got to be clever in our play. We have got to perform to the best of our ability if we want to get something because Chiefs are a quality side.


“That’s why they are top of the league,” said Troughton.


“We have got to go for a win and hopefully it will come. I can’t change the team and put in defensive players. They have got to come the party.


“We are not going to sit back and defend. We need goals. We have to get forward and we have to be brave and attack. Sitting back is not the way to approach the game.


“We need to do the business. We can’t sit back.” - The Star






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News sport : Ike Taylor's retirement another sign of big changes with the Steelers


In the 2003 NFL draft, the Pittsburgh Steelers took safety Troy Polamalu in the first round. Three rounds later, they took a lesser-known, lanky, fast cornerback out of Louisiana-Lafayette, Ike Taylor.


Teams who bring their cards to the podium at this year's draft hope to be as lucky as the Steelers were that year. Polamalu and Taylor became mainstays in the Steelers' secondary, coached from 2004 on by defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau, for the next 12 years. They won a lot of games and two Super Bowls together. And, within a week of each other, they both retired with the only team they ever played in the NFL for.


Taylor followed Polamalu's retirement by stepping away himself. Taylor was a free agent, but decided instead to walk away. It was announced via a statement on the Steelers website.


“Other than having my son, playing for the Steelers has been the best experience in my entire lifetime,” Taylor said. “It is rare, in this day of free agency that is super rare to play for one team. For me to have this opportunity says a lot about how they felt about me, what I gave back to the organization.


“I wasn’t cut, I wasn’t released. It was just my contract was up and it was time to retire. If you want to have pride, well that is the kind of pride I have, being able to play my contract out."


Taylor won't be remembered as fondly as Polamalu, who will go to the Pro Football Hall of Fame some day. But he was a good starter at a tough position, and was a key member of a defense that ranked at or near the top of the league just about every season he and Polamalu played together.


It's a time of change in Pittsburgh. Polamalu and Taylor are gone, and so is LeBeau. The longtime coordinator will be replaced after he resigned. Keith Butler will take his spot.


Pittsburgh wasn't totally unprepared for Taylor and Polamalu to leave. Polamalu missed four games last season and Taylor missed 11 due to injuries. Both players were free agents and the Steelers hadn't shown any signs of wanting to re-sign them. But it'll be a much different look without those two. It'll be the first time since 2002 the Steelers haven't had either Taylor or Polamalu in the secondary.


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Frank Schwab is the editor of Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shutdowncorner@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : NCAA: committee members received threats after McNair docs release

The NCAA said members of its infractions committee have received threats following the release of the Todd McNair documents.


The NCAA made the comment in the footnote of a court filing. From the Los Angeles Times:



The mention came in a footnote in the NCAA’s seven-page opposition filed Friday in California’s 2nd Court of Appeal to McNair’s motion to dismiss the organization’s appeal.




“As a result of filing these documents, some Committee on Infractions members received violent threats directed at them, including in their homes,” the NCAA motion said.




The nature of the alleged threats or committee members involved weren’t detailed.



The Times also said committee members contacted didn't respond to comment.


McNair is suing for defamation after he lost his job following a show-cause penalty in the scandal surrounding Reggie Bush and O.J. Mayo at USC. After a California appeals court ruled NCAA documents should be unsealed in the case, comments made about USC by members of the infractions committee were readily available.


Rodey Uphoff, a lawyer who represented a convicted accomplice in the Oklahoma City bombing trial, said the evidence against USC was greater than the evidence in the bombing. He, along with Roscoe Howard, also poked USC's hiring of Lane Kiffin. The Trojans hired Kiffin after Pete Carroll left for the Seattle Seahawks.


Another, Shep Cooper, called McNair lying and bankrupt.


After the documents were made public, USC even issued a statement about the bias shown in them. Last week, Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott said the NCAA's enforcement process was not fair.


The documents mentioning the unspecific threats were filed on Friday. McNair's attorneys are asking for the NCAA's appeal to be dismissed because the governing body didn't unseal all of the documents related to the case, per the Times. The NCAA counters by saying it wasn't required to unseal everything.


For more USC news visit TrojanSports.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 : Farm Report: Enjoy Kris Bryant while you can, Des Moines

Kris Bryant was the top amateur player in baseball in 2013, then he won the Arizona Fall League MVP the same year. He was the consensus minor league player of the year in 2014, and he was, without question, the most dominant hitter in the Cactus League this spring.


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Thus, no one should be surprised to see him doing stuff like this at Triple-A...



That's an opposite-field missile right there.


Bryant homered in back-to-back games over the weekend for the Iowa Cubs, driving in six runs along the way. We're five games into the season, and he's 8-for-21 with three extra-base hits and one steal (and two errors at third base). The service-time hurdle will be cleared on Friday, so there's a chance we'll see Bryant at Wrigley by the weekend.


If that happens ... well, we assume you know what to do. Prepare to activate.


Addison Russell, Bryant's Iowa teammate, has been raking as well, carrying his excellent spring performance (.317/.349/.488) into the regular season. Russell is currently 7-for-22 with five runs scored, one homer and zero strikeouts. Whenever the Bryant Watch ends, Russell Watch begins. The shortstop seems more likely to be a mid/late-summer add for Chicago, however, assuming he isn't a trade chip.


And while we're talking about baseball's elite prospects...


Byron Buxton just had a 4-for-6 day at Double-A, with a double and triple included. Buxton presumably isn't as close to the bigs as Bryant, as he played only 31 games last season due to injury. If you intend to stash-and-hold with Buxton, it could be quite a wait before he reaches Minnesota. But he has plenty of speed and respectable pop, and he's a career .299/.387/.486 hitter in the minors. Buxton absolutely destroyed the Midwest League at age 19, slashing .341/.431/.559 with 32 steals and 33 XBHs in 270 at-bats. He's not blocked by anyone intimidating in the majors, obviously.


White Sox pitching prospect Carlos Rodon struck out nine batters over five frames for Triple-A Charlotte on Saturday, mixing his high-90s fastball with an evil slider and change. Check the tape . Rodon won't be stewing in the minors terribly long, in all likelihood; the Sox expect to compete this year, and he'd be a significant upgrade over the arms at the back of their rotation.


A's first base prospect Matt Olson went 3-for-5 on Monday, swatting his second homer of the season for Double-A Midland. At a time when power is down, Olson offers an uncommon blend of pop and on-base ability. He cleared the fence 37 times last season at Single-A, drawing 117 walks and scoring 111 runs. So far this year, he has as many walks as Ks (4). Nice long-term option for dynasty gamers.


Andrew Heaney was excellent in his first start at Triple-A Salt Lake, striking out eight over 7.0 innings, issuing no walks and allowing just two hits. Heaney had a mostly miserable spring for the Angels, but he closed with 5.1 no-hit innings against the Dodgers' varsity roster on April 3.






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News sport : Here's Army new logo and football uniforms

Army unveiled its new logo and unforms Monday night as part of a rebrand that also includes a different name.


The school now calls itself "Army West Point." Here's the reasoning why:



The United States Army and West Point are indivisible. To separate the Army from West Point is to take away the purpose of the United States Military Academy. Since its founding in 1802, West Point has produced soldier scholars for America. The best education in the nation hones the intellect, while the tough physical and military training creates the warrior. The Army West Point primary mark perfectly portrays the soldier scholar ideal. Athena's helmet symbolizes wisdom while the sword represents the warrior ready for battle. Soldier Scholar. Army West Point.




The new logo utilizes the same color scheme that Army has used previously. And while the football uniforms are noticeably different, they aren't an incredible departure from 2014's uniforms.



2014's football uniforms are below.




A report last week said the school was going to drop its "Black Knights" nickname in favor of "Cadets." Instead, both will be used and are showcased on the wordmarks on the redesign website.



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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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Arsenal streak surprises Wenger

Arsenal's eight-match winning streak in the Premier League has taken even manager Arsene Wenger by surprise.


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London - Arsenal's eight-match winning streak in the Premier League has taken even manager Arsene Wenger by surprise, according to the Frenchman whose side retain an outside chance of winning the title.


“I always hope to get the best out of my team, but no manager in the world if he is serious can predict a run like this,” Wenger told Arsenal's website (www.arsenal.com).


“In the Premier League it's very difficult to predict.”


Wenger has once again come under fire this season, with fans frustrated by Arsenal's failure to mount a serious title challenge and another last-16 exit in the Champions League.


However, with an FA Cup semi-final this weekend and still the chance to chase down Chelsea in the table, Wenger's position at Arsenal is again looking secure.


Arsenal have won 16 of 18 games in all competitions and Wenger believes the change in fortune is down to him finally having a relatively injury-free squad.


“It's down to the quality and the attitude of the team, the quality of the spirit we have in the side,” he said.


“We prepare (well), we prepare and contribute to our success, that is for sure. What people forgot is that we had big players out for four months this season.


“Six or seven players from the squad completely out. So that made a big difference.


“We have a better balance in the team and some players have made it like (Francis) Coquelin, who contributes to the balance of the team. Hector Bellerin as well has come into the team.


“And big players like (Laurent) Koscielny, like (Mesut) Ozil, like (Olivier) Giroud have been out four months in the season - four months the three together!


“I have a quality bench and we even have quality players at home like Chamberlain, Arteta, Wilshere. I didn't even try to play Debuchy. We have a big squad and I think we have quality.


“Let's see how we finish the season and after see how we do next season.”


Arsenal face Championship side Reading in the FA Cup semi-final this weekend and host Chelsea the following week. – Reuters






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Downs not giving up on PSL title

Mamelodi Sundowns still believe the league title is within their grasp ahead of their Premiership clash with Bloemfontein Celtic.


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Johannesburg – Fresh off their Nedbank Cup quarterfinal win, Mamelodi Sundowns still believe the league title is within their grasp ahead of their Premiership clash with Bloemfontein Celtic at Lucas Moripe Stadium, in Atteridgeville.


Going into the new week, Sundowns were 10 points behind the table-topping Kaizer Chiefs, but with a game in hand allowing the Brazilians the chance to keep the pressure on the Soweto giants.


Lively 20-year-old midfielder Percy Tau, who played a key role in Sundowns’ 2-0 win over Mpumalanga Black Aces in their cup match on Sunday, believed the league was still up for grabs.


“We can see we’re going to catch up now, we still want the league and we have the Nedbank in our hands,” said Tau.


Tau was given time to complete his studies last year, but now coach Pitso Mosimane has given the player better opportunities to showcase his abilities.


“Last year the coach gave me time to focus on my studies, now it’s all about football,” said Tau.


“The coach always wants us to work hard, and all we need to do is keep working hard and the rewards will come.”


Mosimane said his team had been producing performances in recent weeks which would make other teams take serious notice.


“We have been very dominant and offensive (in our last few games),” said Mosimane.


“When we are patient and playing a passing game, it’s no laugh.”


Also with a win against their Free State opposition, Sundowns would go six points ahead of third-placed Orlando Pirates. Nothing but Premiership top-honours, however, were on the radar for the outspoken Mosimane.


“The league (championship race) has a heart beat,” said Mosimane.


“I can feel that heart beat. It’s beating. We have to put ourselves in a situation where we don’t say we should have, we could have. We have to go all the way and we still believe.”


On Wednesday evening, there are eight other teams in action as AmaZulu welcome Polokwane City to Princess Magogo Stadium, SuperSport United travel to Royal Bafokeng Stadium to take on Platinum Stars and Black Aces are at home to Maritzburg United at Mbombela Stadium. In the final match on the night, Chippa United host Moroka Swallows at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium. – ANA






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Sterling, you reckless boy!

Raheem Sterling is at the centre of a second drugs controversy after the Liverpool forward was videoed passing out after allegedly inhaling nitrous oxide.


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Raheem Sterling is at the centre of a second drugs controversy after the Liverpool forward was videoed passing out after allegedly inhaling nitrous oxide.


The England forward, who was exposed after he was caught puffing on a shisha pipe, will face a club investigation over why he was taking the legal high, which is also known as ‘hippy crack’.


In footage obtained by The Sun, Sterling is seen sucking on an orange balloon then laughing and giggling before he asks one of his friends to give him another hit. When the camera pans back to the 20-year-old, he is either unconscious or has fallen asleep.It is claimed that the video was taken at his Southport home days before a game. Nitrous oxide starves the brain of oxygen and makes users feel light-headed and dizzy.


Sterling scored in the 2-0 victory over Newcastle but could face disciplinary action after his second indiscretion in 24 hours.


Liverpool said: ‘We are aware of the story and intend to speak to the player. Any subsequent action will be taken internally.’


Sportsmail contacted Sterling’s agent, Aidy Ward, last night. He refused to comment but did not deny the story was about his client.


Nitrous oxide has been nicknamed laughing gas due to the euphoria and relaxed feeling people who inhale it sometimes experience.


Official figures show 460,000 16-24-year-olds took it last year but it has also been the cause of 17 deaths since 2006.


The past two months have been a tempestuous period in Sterling’s fledgling career. He has turned down a new deal at Liverpool worth about £100,000 a week but does not want to resume talks until the end of the season.


His contract stand-off has created tension and he was heckled at the club’s new kit launch last week.


Possession of nitrous oxide, which costs about £2, is not illegal. Nor would Sterling be the first footballer to indulge.


Tottenham’s Kyle Walker was pictured inhaling from a balloon in 2013, while last year Saido Berahino was photographed doing it at the wheel of his car.


It is an increasingly popular recreational drug, which has also been used by Prince Harry, Michelle Keegan and Ricky Hatton.


A pocket of fans on the Kop vented their frustrations last night, chanting ‘Raheem Sterling, your agent’s a k***’ during the first half and were widely applauded.


Sterling infuriated Liverpool at the start of the month when he gave an interview to the BBC — without permission — to talk about his contract wrangle and why he did not want to be perceived as a ‘greedy 20-year-old’.


He has been linked with a summer move to Arsenal — something he said was ‘quite flattering’.


Sterling was excellent in last week’s 1-0 win over Blackburn in the FA Cup, with manager Brendan Rodgers describing his display as outstanding.


And last night Sterling’s speed and trickery caused Newcastle’s defenders plenty of problems but he still wasted two glorious opportunities in the second half.


Asked on Saturday about the prospect of some fans turning on Sterling, Rodgers said: ‘I’m here to talk about football. ‘That’s my focus, he has got a strong character, the kid, and he loves playing here. That’s my only focus.’ – Daily Mail






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Bayern confident ahead of Porto game

Bayern Munich are confident they have enough firepwer to overcome Porto in their Champions League quarter-final first leg clash.


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Berlin - Bayern Munich may be missing some of their biggest names when they travel to Porto for the first leg of their Champions League last eight but the Germans are confident they have enough firepower to defend their favourites tag.


Chasing a second treble after 2013, Bayern will be without Arjen Robben, Franck Ribery and Bastian Schweinsteiger among others but they know their season will not be a success if they do not advance in the Champions League.


Bayern left a day earlier than usual, arriving in the Portuguese city on Monday for Wednesday's game as coach Pep Guardiola shifts the focus away from injuries to their dominant domestic season.


Porto beat them in a memorable European Cup final in 1987 - their only win in five matches against Bayern.


But the only thing on the Germans' mind is taking an advantage back to Munich for the return leg and then qualify as they did on two previous occasions against Porto in the quarter-finals.


“We know that it will not be an easy game at Porto,” said club CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge. “We are being given the favourites tag but we have no problem with that.”


Five-time winners Bayern are looking for a fourth successive semi-final appearance but will also be without injured defenders David Alaba and Medhi Benatia.


Coach Guardiola, however, will have central defender Jerome Boateng, rested in Saturday's 3-0 win over Eintracht Frankfurt, back in the squad.


Porto, looking for their first semi-final appearance since winning the trophy in 2004, also enjoyed a successful dress rehearsal, beating Rio Ave 3-1 on Saturday.


Winger Ricardo Quaresma was again on target for them taking his tally to three goals in two matches.


The two-times European champions are also in the running for more than just one title this season, three points off leaders Benfica ahead of the derby in two weeks.


“The team did many things right and they had a pretty good game, overall,” coach Julen Lopetegui, a former team mate of Pep Guardiola at Barcelona and Spain, told reporters after Saturday's league win.


Lopetegui, who is in unchartered territory in his short club coaching career, said his team was hitting top form at just the right time and his players were dreaming of an upset.


“We are prepared for this time of the season,” he said.


“Playing the quarter-finals of a competition as big as this one is a reward for everyone and the only thing on our mind is dream and ambition, there is nothing else to take to that game.” – Reuters






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News sport : NBA Playoff Picture Update: Pelicans, Thunder take West's No. 8 race to season's final day


With just two days remaining in the NBA regular season, every night impacts the standings. The NBA Playoff Picture Update keeps you up to date on all the most important news for all 16 berths and seeds.


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


It all comes down to this: It'll take all 82 games to decide which team gets the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference, as both the Oklahoma City Thunder and New Orleans Pelicans won on Monday night to keep their postseason hopes alive.


Minnesota showed some spark in the early going — hello, there, Mr. Wiggins — but New Orleans led for the lion's share of Monday night, clamping down on the young Wolves in the second quarter (15 points on 6-for-20 shooting) on the way to a 100-88 win. Anthony Davis led the way with 24 points on 8-for-14 shooting, 11 rebounds, five assists and two steals in 36 minutes. The All-Star power forward also added six blocks, getting a measure of revenge for his frontcourt partner Omer Asik by shutting down Wiggins:



... and later snuffing this Adreian Payne attempt with extreme prejudice:



Guards Eric Gordon and Tyreke Evans chipped in 22 points apiece for the Pelicans, who bounced back from a tough loss Sunday to maintain control of their own destiny in the playoff race.


The Oklahoma City Thunder don't have that kind of control, thanks in part to a game-winning 3-pointer by Davis back in early February. They took care of their business on Monday, though, toppling the Portland Trail Blazers, 101-90, in a game that saw the already-injury-plagued Blazers lose key wing contributors Nicolas Batum and C.J. McCollum, as well as reserve center Chris Kaman, to injuries.


Russell Westbrook made the most of the second chance granted to him by the league office, scoring a game-high 36 points on 13-for-27 shooting to go with 11 rebounds, seven assists and two steals in 38 minutes. And lest you think Russ would be tired after popping for a career-high 54 on Sunday, he still had more than enough gas in the tank to explode for this phenomenal one-handed alley-oop layup:



... and enough juice off the bounce to be willing to take and make Dirk Nowitzki-style one-legged fadeaways in the lane:



Enes Kanter added 27 points on 13-for-20 shooting and 13 rebounds against the Blazers' depleted front line for the Thunder, who now sit at 44-37, level with New Orleans. And so it all comes down to Wednesday, when the Thunder travel to the Twin Cities to take on the Wolves and the Pelicans welcome the red-hot San Antonio Spurs to the Smoothie King Center.


Due to that head-to-head tiebreaker, if the Pelicans and Thunder finish with the same record, New Orleans will head to the postseason for the first time since 2011. The Thunder must finish one game ahead of the Pelicans to make the playoffs for the sixth straight year; they need to beat Minnesota, and they need San Antonio to beat New Orleans. So that means Westbrook will be rooting on the silver and black on Wednesday, right?



As if we'd expect anything else.


Brooklyn bounced? After spending the better part of the last month scratching and clawing their way back into playoff position in the East, the Brooklyn Nets have put themselves on the outside looking in heading into their final game of the season with a pair of dismal performances at the absolute worst juncture.


Hot on the heels of Sunday's 23-point loss to former coach Jason Kidd and the Milwaukee Bucks, Brooklyn coughed up another hairball on Monday, dropping a 113-86 decision to the visiting Chicago Bulls at Barclays Center. Playing without Joakim Noah, who sat out with left hamstring tendinitis, the Bulls bigs still bullied Brooklyn, with Pau Gasol (22 points, 11 rebounds, four assists, two blocks), Taj Gibson (15 points on six shots, nine rebounds, four blocks) and reserve Nikola Mirotic (a game-high 26 points in 24 1/2 minutes off the bench, 6-for-11 from 3-point land) combining to overwhelm the Nets.


When you watch Bulls games nowadays, though, you tend to focus less on the interior and more on the backcourt. Derrick Rose's stat line didn't look quite as shiny as it did in Saturday's win over the Philadelphia 76ers, but he did show more signs of regaining his pace, showcasing his capacity to maintain his own balance while hitting the gas while keeping the defense off theirs:



Rose finished with 13 points and seven dimes against two turnovers in 23 minutes in the win, which nudged Chicago into third place in the East at 49-32, a half-game ahead of the idle Toronto Raptors. The Bulls might not stay there — Toronto finishes up against a Boston Celtics club that's already punched its ticket (more on that in a sec) and the Charlotte Hornets, while Chicago will face the East-leading Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday, and the Raptors hold the tiebreaker over the Bulls by virtue of winning the Atlantic Division.


Even if they don't, though, they'll still open the playoffs at the United Center, as Monday's win ensured that Tom Thibodeau's team will finish with more wins than the fifth-seeded Washington Wizards (46-34). And when they get there, for the first time since the first game of the 2012 playoffs, they'll have No. 1 on the ball.


"Derrick playing in the playoffs is going to mean a lot to more than just him," said a smiling Noah after the win, according to K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune.


There are fewer reasons to smile in Brooklyn.



After having a fairly firm hold on the No. 7 spot just one week ago, the 37-44 Nets have now fallen out of the top eight entirely. They'll enter Tuesday in ninth place, 1 1/2 games behind the 38-42 Celtics, who now sit seventh and, somewhat amazingly, clinched their playoff berth with Brooklyn's loss, and the idle 37-43 Indiana Pacers, who nudged a half-game ahead of Brooklyn into eighth place.


As a result, Brooklyn no longer controls its own fate. Lionel Hollins' team holds the head-to-head tiebreaker over the Pacers, beating Indiana twice in three tries this season. For that to matter, though, they'll need some help.


If the Nets beat the Orlando Magic in their finale on Wednesday, they still need the Pacers to lose one of their last two games, either against the Wizards on Tuesday or the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday, to get in. If the Nets lose to Orlando — which we can't rule out, what with them losing their last two by a combined 50 points and all — they'll need Indy to drop both of their remaining games to get in. Not the spot you want to be in with a playoff berth on the line in the final week of the season.


“It’s our fault,” point guard Deron Williams (nine points on 3-for-13 shooting, seven rebounds, five assists) said after the loss, according to Devin Kharpertian of The Brooklyn Game. “We put ourselves in this position. A week ago it was looking really good for us. Everybody was happy. Now it’s kind of the opposite.”


Western scramble: The Memphis Grizzlies' 111-107 loss to the Golden State Warriors dropped them from contention for the West's No. 2 seed. For that, they can thank Klay Thompson, who scored 26 points in the second quarter and 37 total in the first half. Thompson finished the game with 42, helping the Warriors take a 32-point lead before their reserves squandered most of it.



The Spurs can lock up the second seed by beating the Pelicans on Wednesday. The Houston Rockets can win it if they beat the Utah Jazz on Wednesday and the Spurs lose to the Pelicans. The Los Angeles Clippers will take the No. 2 seed if they win their regular-season finale against the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday and the Spurs and Rockets both lose the following night.


The Spurs can still fall all the way to the six seed if they lose to the Pelicans, and the Rockets, Clippers and Grizzlies all win their final game.


Flame still flickers: With Boston clinching, Indy rising and Brooklyn waning, the Miami Heat stayed alive in the quest for the East's final playoff berth, beating the Orlando Magic, 100-93, behind a stellar night from center Hassan Whiteside.


The 7-foot marvel came through when Erik Spoelstra needed him most, scoring a team-high 24 points on 10-for-14 shooting to go with 13 rebounds and five blocks, including this emphatic rejection of Magic rookie Aaron Gordon:



Miami (36-45) remains 1 1/2 games back of the Pacers, who beat the Heat in their head-to-head season series, three games to one. Miami swept its four-game set with the Nets, though. Factor in Brooklyn's aforementioned 2-1 season-series win over Indy, and the Heat do have one way of coming out on top here.


If Indiana loses to Memphis on Tuesday ... and Miami beats the 76ers on Wednesday ... and both Brooklyn and Indy lose on Wednesday ... then all three teams finish with 37-45 records. In that scenario, the relevant tiebreaker would be better winning percentage in all games among the tied teams. And there, Miami (5-3, .625 winning percentage) tops Indy (4-3, .571), earning the No. 8 spot.


It's not a particularly likely scenario — Indy can blow it up by beating the Grizzlies on Tuesday night — but it's still on the table, which is something, at least.



I mean, not a big one, but definitely still bigger than the chance of me catching "Dumb and Dumber To."


Quickly: News and notes from other playoff-related games of less immediate consequence:


• The second-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Detroit Pistons, 109-97, thanks to J.R. Smith going nuts from beyond the arc (8-for-13 from deep for a game-high 28 points) and LeBron James notching his second triple-double in eight days with 21 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists, including this fantastic behind-the-back bounce pass to center Timofey Mozgov:



I think it's safe to say LeBron's pretty ready for the playoffs to start. Perhaps less so, though: star point guard Kyrie Irving, who left at halftime after the right hip tightness that kept him out of the past two games flared up in the first half. That seems like it might bear watching.


• The sixth-seeded Milwaukee Bucks beat the 76ers, 107-97, to clinch their first .500-or-better finish since 2010 and only their second since 2004. Michael Carter-Williams was the star of the evening, tying a season-high with 30 points on 11-for-17 shooting, five rebounds, five assists and three steals in 30 minutes against his former club.


As is so often the case, though, it was sophomore sensation Giannis Antetokounmpo who drew the most oohs and aahs with plays like this driving spin move and two-handed flush right in Jerami Grant's mug:



You guys, we get to see Giannis in the playoffs. This is very, very exciting news.


• The Dallas Mavericks are locked into the No. 7 seed in the West, waiting for the second-seed situation to shake out, so the rest of their games don't mean a whole heck of a lot. As a result, they rested Dirk, Monta Ellis, Tyson Chandler and Chandler Parsons, and lost to the Utah Jazz, 109-92.


The only reason I am telling you about this game is holy cow look at little Bryce Cotton KISS THE SKY:



That is a diminutive undrafted point guard — listed at 6-foot-1, measured at just under 6 feet in sneakers — catching a well-behind-the-3-point-arc alley-oop pass from teammate Rodney Hood with his left hand (he shoots righty) over the top of Mavericks defenders Dwight Powell and Devin Harris, and absolutely tomahawking it. These grace notes, these unexpected bits of brilliance — this is the reason to watch 'em all, gang.


Cotton finished with 21 points on 8-for-15 shooting, four assists, two rebounds and a steal in 26 minutes off the bench for the Jazz, who have the league's fifth-best record since the All-Star break, and its best defense since Jan. 1. Very good things are happening in Utah under Quin Snyder. Here's hoping they carry over to next season.


• The East-worst New York Knicks beat the East-best Atlanta Hawks because the Knicks can't even tank right. Figures.


Tuesday's Most Important Games


Raptors at Celtics, 7:30 p.m. ET: The Raptors can move back ahead of the Bulls into the No. 3 seed with a win over the Celtics, who seem poised for a Round 1 getting ready for their date with the King ...


Wizards at Pacers, 8 p.m. ET: ... then again, if Boston loses out and Indy wins out, the Pacers can still climb up to No. 7. An Indy win eliminates Miami and puts Brooklyn on the brink. The Wizards are locked into the fifth seed, so we'll see what kind of lineup/minutes distribution Randy Wittman has in mind.


Clippers at Suns, 10:30 p.m. ET: As detailed above, L.A.'s got to keep winning and hope for some help to sew up the No. 2 seed. Can the deflated and degraded Suns get passionate enough to play spoiler?


- - - - - - -


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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Reds will fight to the end - Rodgers

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers stressed that his team would give everything to qualify for the Champions League.


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Liverpool, England - Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers stressed that his team would give everything to qualify for the Champions League after a 2-0 victory over Newcastle United on Monday left them four points behind Manchester City in the Premier League.


With fourth-placed City reeling after defeat by Manchester United continued a torrid run in which the champions have lost six of their last eight games, Liverpool needed a win over Newcastle to retain hope of a Champions League spot.


Liverpool fans would have been excused for feeling a little jittery after back-to-back league defeats, but Raheem Sterling set Rodgers's side on their way before Joe Allen scored a late second to close the gap on struggling City with six games left.


“We are going to fight till the very end,” Rodgers told reporters.


“There is always a price when you lose big games. We are a group that's learning. We knew we had to respond to those defeats.


“I still think there will be changes and points dropped. The players are very motivated and we've shown we can put wins together.


“I thought we showed attacking intent in the game, won the ball back quickly and controlled the game until the last five six minutes in the first half, when we started to give the ball away too cheaply.”


If Liverpool are to qualify for the Champions League then Rodgers hopes his attacking duo of Philippe Coutinho and England international Sterling can continue to torment defences.


“I think Philippe Coutinho was incredible, sensational,” Rodgers said.


“He played in that hole between the midfield and their defence and was outstanding. He showed why he is one of the best players in the best league in the world.


“He is very valuable. He is a kid who's non-stop, he wants to learn and improve himself. I thought he was outstanding tonight. Wonderful skill and ability for his goal.” – Reuters






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