Suarez double lifts Barcelona

Neymar and Luis Suarez have helped Barcelona take a big step towards the Champions League semi-finals.


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Paris - Barcelona took a big step towards the Champions League semi-finals on Wednesday as a goal from Neymar and a Luis Suarez double ended Paris St Germain's 33-game unbeaten home run in Europe with a 3-1 win at the Parc des Princes.


PSG, who were without Zlatan Ibrahimovic, suspended for one game after picking up a red card in the last-16 second leg at Chelsea, fell behind when Neymar netted from close range at the end of a quick counter attack in the 18th minute.


Suarez doubled the tally in the 67th after slaloming through the PSG defence, who lost captain Thiago Silva to a possible hamstring injury after 21 minutes, and wrapped it up 11 minutes from time with a curling shot into the top corner.


The hosts reduced the deficit in the 82nd minute when Jeremy Mathieu deflected Gregory van der Wiel's shot into his own goal as PSG suffered their first loss at home in Europe since 2006 ahead of the return leg at the Nou Camp next Tuesday.


In the absence of the injured Thiago Motta and the suspended Marco Verratti, Yohan Cabaye and Adrien Rabiot were fielded alongside Blaise Matuidi in the PSG midfield and the trio's collective lack of Champions League experience showed.


PSG started confidently with the classy Javier Pastore delighting the crowd with delicate twists and turns, but after 18 minutes, the home side were 1-0 down and they had lost centre back Silva.


Lionel Messi almost opened the scoring in the 13th minute when his beautifully curled shot from just outside the area smashed Salvatore Sirigu's right post, but he was more accurate seven minutes later when he set up Neymar for the opener.


Rabiot lost the ball near the touchline to Sergio Busquets, who found Messi in midfield. The Argentine played Neymar through and the Brazil striker coolly finished from close range.


Four minutes into the second half, Pastore combined with Matuidi before Barcelona keeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen parried away his fierce shot from 18m.


Suarez then danced past substitute David Luiz and Marquinhos before poking the ball past Sirigu to make it 2-0 to Barca, who had lost 3-2 in Paris in the group stage earlier in the season.


In the 79th minute, Suarez ran unchallenged through the middle and curled a shot into the top corner, only for Van der Wiel to reduce the arrears three minutes later when his low shot was deflected into the net by Mathieu.


Reuters






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News sport : Kyle Busch knew instantly his leg was broken after Daytona crash


Kyle Busch said there wasn't much trial and error involved when figuring out he had broken a leg and a foot in his grisly crash at Daytona in February.


Here's part of his lengthy explanation of what happened during the Xfinity race. Busch spoke to reporters for an hour on Wednesday, the first time he's met with the media since the crash that's forced him to miss all of the 2015 Sprint Cup Series season so far with a broken right leg and a broken left foot.


The detail with which he describes the wreck is jarring. He said his head-on hit was 90 Gs.


"Obviously, it was a huge hit and as soon as it hit, I was awake the whole time, but there was a moment when everything compressed back and I pressed forward – I came through the seat into the seatbelts, into the restraints, all the air in my body escaped ... " Busch said. "It was just pushed out and there is a mark on my helmet – my helmet hit the steering wheel, my chest hit the steering wheel – and when everything from in front of me, the engine, all the chassis works, everything came back to me. As it came back to me, I went forward. The engine hit the one-by-two piece of tubing in the chassis, which then hit the gas pedal and then hit the throttle-stop, which then forced the throttle-stop back towards me three inches farther than what it would normally be at zero percent throttle.


"When it came back to me and I went to it, just the pure smack of my right leg, that's what broke my right leg. Obviously, being in a car accident with your left foot being on the brake pedal, that's what broke my mid foot, my foot being on the brake. As soon as the wreck happened, as soon as I hit, I knew instantly that my right leg broke, I could feel it. It was a sharp pain. It wasn't like – even after the car came to a stop and the crash was over and I was just sitting there – at first I was like, 'Okay, I'm just going to sit here for a minute and take a breath,' but a flash fire came through the air box and I was like, 'Nope, never mind, I have to get out.'"



After figuring his right leg was broken, he wanted to try to use his left leg to get out of the car. When he put pressure on his left foot he knew it was injured too. Upon being pulled from the car, Busch was immediately transported to a Daytona-area hospital before being flown home to North Carolina a few days later.


"I was like how is this going to work, me getting out of the car, so I pulled the steering wheel off, pulled my belts off and I knew my right leg was broke, so I pushed with my left foot to see if I could get out with my left foot," Busch said. "Nope, I couldn't push with my left foot because it was instant pain, sharp pain. So I said, 'Okay, push with the heel,' so I pushed with the heel, pushed with my left heel and my left heel was fine. I grabbed the roll bars that I normally grab when I get out and pushed with my left foot and I knew if I could just get to the door hopefully the wreckers would be there, the safety crews would be there in time in order to help me get out and pull me out ... The guy was going to help me back up, but I'm like nope, we're not doing that. I had to flip my visor up and talk to him. So I flip my visor open and I turn to him and tell him my right leg is broke and my left foot is broke. I don't know if he couldn't hear or if he was shocked, but I told him four times over again so he could hear me. A couple of the guys grabbed me and got me out and when they got me to the ground, obviously I felt somewhat safe at least and ready to go on my ambulance ride."


Busch spoke for an hour about all aspects of the crash and his recovery, and said he's still not sure when he'll be back in a Sprint Cup Series car. David Ragan has been filling in for him on loan from Front Row Motorsports.


"[Medical staff] say my recovery is going faster than they expected, but I've even asked – they won't release a timetable – I'm not lying to you," Busch said. "They're like, 'Now you're released to stand up in both boots. Now you're released to walk. Now you're released to walk without a boot on your right.' It's week-by-week and it's what I can show them and what I can do and what my physical therapist says I'm capable of. As far as a timetable, that's still not set yet for me to get back. As long as my strength continues to improve and I can continue to show the doctor and the NASCAR folks that I'm able to do the things necessary for me to get back in the race car, then that time will be determined as I get better."


The wall Busch hit wasn't covered with a SAFER barrier. Since his accident, many tracks have taken steps to fortify bare concrete walls with SAFER barrier or tires and other forms of protection. Bristol, the site of Sunday's Sprint Cup Series race, has added extra SAFER barrier.


"Obviously, with the reaction to everything – I'm not going to say I'm happy about what I hit not being protected," Busch said. "I can't – that's just not being honest. I was disappointed that the wall wasn't covered, but I am encouraged by the acts that the race tracks have taken and the steps they've taken in order to get things going and in the right direction for driver safety."


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News sport : Chauncey Billups could have been the Timberwolves' coach, and declined

Around the time Chauncey Billups led the Detroit Pistons to the 2004 NBA title, because he was a heady point guard and because this is the NBA, he was unofficially anointed as The NBA’s Next Great Coach. Billups, who was the lead guard on a Pistons team that would make the next four Eastern Conference finals following that championship, parlayed his knack for getting everything right into a lasting NBA career that ended last season at age 37.


Chauncey’s lain low since then, but according to a report from the Denver Post, the 2004 Finals MVP could have had a choice seat on the Minnesota Timberwolves bench this season, with the assurance that he’d be able to lead those same Timberwolves as head coach starting in 2015-16.


One problem. The Timberwolves were expected to have the NBA’s worst record this season by most prior to the campaign, and they’ll finish 2014-15 with that designation. Billups didn’t want to be the scapegoat for that expecting lashing. From Mark Kiszla at the Denver Post:



If his goal was the daunting task of coaching a bad NBA team, Billups told me Tuesday he could already be set as the lead man on the Minnesota bench for next season. Flip Saunders tried to entice Billups to join the Timberwolves last year as the team's associate head coach, with the understanding Billups would take over the No. 1 job for the 2015-16 season, after a 12-month apprenticeship under Saunders.




[…]




"In any rebuilding process, I feel like there's probably going to be two or three coaches. And I don't want to be that guy," said the 38-year-old Billups, while standing in the Nuggets' arena, where he served as the keynote speaker at the 39th annual Boy Scouts Sports Breakfast. "I don't want to be fired after two seasons and risk never getting another opportunity to coach."



The Timberwolves are 16-65 heading into the last night of the regular season, and in spite of the team’s potential to add the third consecutive top overall NBA draft pick this June, they most certainly will figure to be another lottery participant in 2016. This is what happens with young, rebuilding rosters.


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Flip Saunders (who coached Billups in Minnesota and Detroit) infamously hired himself as Wolves coach last year after what many rightfully felt to be a less-than-exhaustive coaching search. Soon after he dealt All-Star Kevin Love to Cleveland for Andrew Wiggins (this year’s Rookie of the Year favorite) and Andrew Bennett (perhaps the worst top overall draft pick in history, a shocking bit of knowledge considering the modern era that most NBA general managers work in), becoming younger and more financially pliable along the way.


The team also became far worse along that same way, with Wiggins having to learn on the fly and Bennett barely topping what was a miserable rookie season. Minnesota will add yet another youngster in June, the team can’t fall out of the top three in this year’s draft, but the road back to the postseason (which Minnesota hasn’t participated in since making the Western Conference finals in 2004) is a long run.


This is why Billups took a pass. Assuming, as Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr did, that he’d even want to take on a primo coaching gig in his rookie year on the sidelines. From the Post:



As for coaching, Billups admits, "I'd never say never, but it's really never been my thing."



That’s a somewhat-surprising statement given the respect the league has for Billups’ intelligence and leadership abilities, but it’s something to remember when we consider the fact that all 6-4 and under NBA point guards aren’t created the same.


Kerr, Mark Jackson, Doc Rivers, Jason Kidd and Derek Fisher were all given head coaching gigs despite no coaching experience prior to their turn, with varying results. Though Kerr (writing for two different websites, front office work, television work), Rivers (standout television work), and Jackson (ugh) took disparate roads to their hires, Kidd and Fisher jumped straight to the top gig. Kidd has done fantastic work after an iffy first half-season, and there’s no telling if Derek Fisher can’t turn into a Coach of the Year candidate after being outfitted with an actual NBA team.


Billups would have had a year on the sidelines to acclimate himself to the rhythm, as if he’s unaware of how this league works in the first place. This would presumably put him ahead of the former point guard crop, despite the misgivings we may have about Flip Saunders – Chauncey Billups made a potentially Hall of Fame career out of cruelly efficient offensive basketball.


Or, after immersing himself in the NBA from 1997 through 2014, playing for eight (technically nine) teams along the way, Billups may want to take a break. Following that break, he may not want to be a coach. Point guards are allowed to make their own decisions, y’know?


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Troy Smith to compete in contest at Ohio State spring game

Troy Smith is going to participate in Ohio State's spring game.


No, he won't be taking part in the game itself, but he'll be involved at halftime. Ohio State announced Tuesday that the former Heisman winner would compete against current quarterbacks J.T. Barrett and Cardale Jones in a passing skills competition at halftime of the Buckeyes' spring game on Saturday.



The school hasn't given any details of what the competition will entail, but it's likely that it won't have a big mobility component to it. Barrett has been rehabilitating his broken ankle this spring and isn't scheduled to play in the game. Braxton Miller, the third quarterback vying for Ohio State's starting job, presumably isn't in the competition because of his recovery from shoulder surgery.


Smith won the 2006 Heisman Trophy and recently was in Ohio State's pro day as the designated quarterback. He hasn't played in the NFL since the 2010 season and had his number retired in a ceremony in November at Ohio Stadium.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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News sport : The awful 2014-15 New York Knicks, set to 'One Shining Moment' (Video)

The 2014-15 New York Knicks, thankfully, play their last game of the season on Wednesday night. In tribute, a Twitter user by the handle of “World_Wide_Wob” has decided to cobble together a series of Knick highlights from this season, set to the tune of “One Shining Moment.”


It is both very sad and very funny. This video is not hi-definition. As no 2014-15 Knick highlight video should be:



Sigh.


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As you know, the Knicks entered the 2014 offseason with plenty of questions pulling on their cuff, and they started the season with playoff aspirations despite Michael Jordan’s death knell of an endorsement. Within hours of the team’s opening night loss to the Chicago Bulls, a team that at one point had the Knicks down by 33 points, team president Phil Jackson described the team with a weird amalgamation of both New York and Los Angeles-ese.


Later in the season, with his (mostly) inherited team falling apart, Jackson outright admitted to initial failure. Carmelo Anthony was lost for the season following his dutiful All-Star Game appointment. Alexey Shved took a shot (?) that nobody quite understood. Phil Jackson defended his offense against the barbs of the NBA’s lead office. Jackson didn’t seem to mind going on the record, with that $60 million contract in place, in tampering with college underclassmen. The Knicks gave the basketball gods heartburn, people.


And they may not even finish with the worst record in the NBA. Bloody hell.


(Hat-tip to Matt Moore at CBS Sports for making us giggle.)


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News sport : Oregon coaches leading scholarship drive for in-state students

Oregon's coaching staff is involved in a fundraising drive to help one of the school's scholarship programs.


PathwayOregon is a program that gives in-state students the opportunity to go to college if they may not be able to afford it. Oregon coach Mark Helfrich and his coaching staff are pledging up to $250,000 in matching gifts given to PathwayOregon before the Ducks' spring game on May 2.


“Our coaching staff is very excited to join two powerful forces – the passion of our great fans and educational opportunities for Oregonians in need,” Helfrich, an Oregon native, said in a statement. “We benefit every day from the support of the people of Oregon. With a donation to PathwayOregon now, and our match, we all get together for a fantastic cause.”


In case you were wondering, Helfrich's salary in 2014 was $2 million and his assistants' combined salary was over $3.2 million per USA Today's database.


According to the school, 1,700 students benefit from PathwayOregon, which provides tuition, fees and advisment. 63 percent of students in the program are the first in their family to get a degree.


To qualify for the program, students must qualify for the Pell Grant, be a graduate of an Oregon high school within two years, admitted to Oregon as a freshman and have at least a 3.4 GPA in high school.


For more Oregon news, visit DuckSportsAuthority.com.


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News sport : The Washington Wizards' new logo comes without a Wizard in it

The Washington Wizards are attempting to distance themselves with what is pictured above. The Washington Wizards new logo, as pictured below, does not figure an actual Wizard:



(Courtesy Washington Wizards)

The team admitted as much in a press release on Wednesday:



The new primary logo incorporates the "monument ball" design that has been in place since 2011 in combination with the iconic striping from the team's uniforms, the three stars that represent D.C., Maryland and Virginia (which are also featured on the apron of center court at Verizon Center) and the team's wordmarks.




The Wizards will continue to prominently use both the monument ball and "DC hands" logos in all collateral materials and will discontinue the use of the "wizard/partial moon" logo that was introduced in 1997 and revamped in 2011.



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This is the former logo:



(Courtesy Washington Wizards)

So, the ‘Zards (copyright, KDonhoops, 1997) will join the Nets, Cavaliers, Nuggets, Pistons, Warriors, Pacers, Clippers, Lakers, Knicks, Thunder, 76ers, Trail Blazers, Kings, and Jazz in not having their nicknames directly placed in a logo. Add the Heat, Magic and potentially the Celtics if you want to get pedantic about it.


That’s over half the league. So why are things different with Washington?


It’s because everyone hates the “Wizards” nickname, and though we’re well aware that gun culture and gun violence is a terrible thing, the team’s previous “Bullets” nickname is far superior. Washington made its first strike to return to the red, white and blue lining of the former Washington Bullets in 2011, and as a result they currently sport some of the best uniforms in the NBA.


Could a return to the “Bullets” be in order? Per the late Abe Pollin’s orders, the legacy of the former owner will probably prevent such a re-branding. This appears to be a happy medium, in the interim.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : NFL figures on Twitter have varying reactions to Aaron Hernandez verdict


When the news came down that former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was found guilty of first-degree murder, there was plenty of reaction from the NFL world.


Cleveland Browns cornerback Joe Haden, a college teammate of Hernandez at University of Florida, summed it up simply with a tweet right as the verdict was read:



Vikings receiver Mike Wallace (like many other NFL players) had a similar, simple reaction right after the verdict:



The tweet that caused the most reaction probably came from former Patriots linebacker Brandon Spikes:



Spikes finally got tired of all the critical messages his way:



Maurice Clarett, the former Ohio State running back who was drafted by the Denver Broncos in 2005 before he got in some legal trouble that landed him in prison, shared his own perspective:






Redskins defensive tackle Chris Baker used the moment to get his message across:





David Nelson, a former Jets receiver who was also a college teammate of Hernandez, was in disbelief:





NFL tight end Tom Crabtree summed up the day visually:



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News sport : Video shows EKU player's brutal punch to Kentucky QB Drew Barker

(Spruce Derden - USA TODAY Sports) Almost three months after news emerged that an Eastern Kentucky player was involved in a bar fight with three Kentucky players, police in Richmond, Ky., released its investigative report related to the incident.


In the report, per Kentucky.com, police concluded that EKU’s Colton Scurry threw the first punch in the Jan. 25 incident. Surveillance footage from the bar shows that “Mr. Scurry was the primary aggressor in the altercation. He entered into a crowd willingly (without any physical altercation) and threw a punch at an unidentified male,” the police report says.


A grand jury declined last week to indict the three UK players – quarterback Drew Barker, wide receiver Dorian Baker, and defensive tackle Tymere Dubose. Scurry, an offensive lineman, “suffered a broken nose and other facial fractures” in the incident.


The report said video showed that Scurry was talking with a woman and "appeared to be visibly upset at the female and was yelling or speaking passionately at/to her” when a man walked by Scurry. Though it is unclear if the man said something or just bumped into Scurry, there was a “change in disposition of Mr. Scurry and he (turned) his attention from the female to the male,” the report says.


At that point, the report says, Scurry “charges into a crowd of people and throws a punch at an unidentified person,” sparking the fracas.


Here is video of the bar incident:



Later that night, Barker, Baker and Dubose were at Telford Hall on EKU’s campus when Barker was violently punched by EKU defensive lineman Patrick Graffree, who transferred from UK.



At the 25-second mark of the video, you can see Graffree enter the building, remove his sweatshirt, and deliver a blow to the side of Barker’s head. Barker falls to the floor and Graffree leaves the area. After Barker returns to his feet, the three Kentucky players leave the building.


According to reports, Graffree has not been charged with a crime.


On top of all that, Kentucky hosts EKU in Lexington on Oct. 3. That one could get interesting to say the least.


For more Kentucky news, CatsIllustrated.com.


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Sterling doing himself no favours

Between the bad behaviour and the bad advice, Raheem Sterling is not exactly endearing himself to potential suitors right now.


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Between the bad behaviour and the bad advice, Raheem Sterling is not exactly endearing himself to potential suitors right now.


But the evidence is sure to be a concern when the world’s richest clubs assess the character as much as the class of an individual before parting with the £40million upwards Liverpool will demand to secure the services of a player like Sterling.


English football would appear to have yet another flawed talent, another player seemingly lacking the wit to make best use of the ability he has been blessed with. There is a reason why we rarely see the finest players on the planet caught in as compromising a position as Sterling found himself on Monday night. Becoming as good as Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo — Gareth Bale even — requires more than ability alone. It requires the kind of professionalism and dedication that seems to be absent in English players too often photographed smoking or indulging in legal highs.


As the latest photographs show, this is not an isolated incident and he will be lectured on the dangers of nitrous oxide when he meets with Brendan Rodgers tomorrow.


It is more of a health issue than an image issue for Liverpool’s manager, as Sterling did at least opt for the privacy of his own home to suck on a balloon filled with nitrous oxide — unlike Tottenham’s Kyle Walker, for instance.


But Rodgers will also suggest to the unsettled 20-year-old that he needs to select his friends more carefully given the emergence of the video in the first place.


He should also heed the warnings of other talented players who have run into such trouble, like Jack Wilshere and Ravel Morrison.


Of course, it will not be the first time Rodgers has questioned Sterling over the company he keeps. He has publicly criticised the player’s agent for his role in the England international’s ongoing contract saga — and with some justification given how badly things have been handled.


But Rodgers’ criticism of Aidy Ward is limited to the issues over the contract because he recognises the agent as someone who, at times, has had a positive influence on a young man whose life has not been without its problems.


Ward is credited to some extent with the fact that Sterling actually gives his manager few concerns when he is at work. He is said to be polite and courteous to the staff, is always punctual and applies himself in training and matches and generally has a smile on his face.


For all the uncertainty over his future, Rodgers and the player have managed to maintain a healthy working relationship.


The relationship between Ward and Sterling is more personal than the typical agent-player dynamic.


They appear to be business partners judging by the company details of Trinity Goals Limited. While Ward has 80 per cent of the equity, the remaining 20 per cent is divided between Sterling and Arsenal’s Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain.


But Ward has an almost paternal relationship with Sterling, with the player affectionately addressing him as ‘Uncle Aidy’.


Clearly, Sterling needs that kind of guidance. His team-mates might joke that he has ‘more kids than caps’ when he admits to one daughter — he occasionally brings two-year-old Melody Rose into training — but denies a second child.


But Sterling’s own childhood was a difficult one. Born in Jamaica and raised for the first five years of his life in one of the more deprived districts of Kingston, he would eventually leave with his mother to live on one of the toughest estates in north London in the shadow of Wembley Stadium.


Back in Jamaica, when he was still only nine, the father he claims never to have known was murdered, reportedly shot dead in some kind of gangland ambush.


In London, Sterling had to leave his primary school to attend Vernon House, a school in Neasden for children with behavioural problems. ‘As a young kid I had anger issues,’ Sterling admitted in a recent interview, although teachers at the school could not speak highly enough of him. While Chris Beschi once had to warn Sterling he could end up ‘in prison’ if he failed to change his ways, he remembers someone who was ‘amazingly intelligent in so many ways; a brilliant thinker’.


Beschi told the Mail on Sunday two years ago that he would walk Sterling and his classmates to look at the building site that would soon become the new Wembley. It proved a source of inspiration, with QPR recruiting him when he was 10.


Steve Gallen, academy director during Sterling’s time at QPR, remembers a young player whose ‘mentality’ was ‘his strongest attribute’. He also described him as ‘a coach’s dream’. Gallen also praised Sterling’s mother — Nadine is a nurse — for her positive influence.


When Sterling moved to Liverpool at 15 he lived in digs with the couple he warmly refers to as his ‘house parents’. Eventually, however, Nadine moved to Merseyside, living with her son until around a year ago. Judging by recent events, she might need to move back in.


Ward should think very carefully before he makes his next move, because the last few weeks have amounted to a PR disaster.


There is nothing wrong with trying to secure the best deal possible for a player. Particularly when Ward can point to the fact that, right now, a player of Sterling’s value to Liverpool is earning roughly £6m-a- year less than Daniel Sturridge; £35,000-a-week compared with £150,000-a-week.


There was also nothing wrong with activating the trigger clause in Sterling’s contract, which entitled him to renegotiate his deal after a number of appearances.


By the end of last year, Liverpool actually thought they had reached an agreement at just shy of £100,000-a-week. And if Sterling looks at Sturridge and questions why there is still such a significant shortfall, he probably has a point.


Such a reaction would be no different to other marquee players at top clubs when news emerges of a colleague landing a big deal. Managers even joke of a queue forming at their office door.


Sterling has cause for complaint because he is a wonderful footballer. The academy staff at Liverpool consider him the most exciting winger to have come through the club’s system and Rodgers has described him as the finest young player in Europe.


Roy Hodgson was so impressed he unleashed him at last summer’s World Cup in Brazil, aged just 19.


It is simply the way Ward and Sterling have gone about their business off the field that has been so unpalatable. The unauthorised interview with the BBC; an article in the Sunday Times magazine when he said it was an ambition to have his own song ‘from the Kop’.


The Kop duly obliged on Monday night against Newcastle, informing the scorer of their opening goal that his ‘agent is a ****’. Sterling says it is not about the money, that it is about playing Champions League football and winning trophies. But don’t activate that trigger clause and make out you want a new contract if the real intention is to move to Manchester City, Chelsea or Arsenal.


Don’t take the dispute into the public arena if it’s not a pay rise you’re after, but a transfer.


If Ward’s intention is to take Sterling away from Liverpool this summer, the player is not making his job easy right now. Alarmed by recent events, Arsenal are already thought to be going cold on the idea. The agent will tell potential suitors not to read too much into the photographs, that Sterling is a good Christian boy who says his prayers every night and rarely, if ever, touches alcohol.


He drives a Range Rover; an expensive but sensible car. He was bright enough to buy a house when he was only 18 and generous enough to buy his mother a ‘beautiful house’ back in Jamaica.


Ward might also point out that the mistakes he has made are typical of any other 20-year-old.


Trouble is, Sterling is not like any other 20-year-old. He is a gifted footballer who needs to ask himself a couple of important questions.


Does he want to be the best? And if so, is he prepared to make the sacrifices? – Daily Mail






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News sport : Stephen Curry reportedly made 77 three-pointers in a row at practice, natch

Sometimes, after watching these guys play for so long, you forget that it’s pretty tough to throw a round ball into a flat goal that is perched ten feet off the ground. It’s even tougher to toss it in from around 24 feet away, just inches past the NBA’s three-point line.


For Golden State Warrior guard and MVP candidate Stephen Curry, apparently this is no such trifle. From the Associated Press:



ESPN reports that Curry made 77 consecutive 3-pointers following Tuesday's practice. Curry says it's the most 3s in a row he has ever made. He also says he made 94 of 100 shots during the session.



After most practices, Curry rotates around the perimeter as assistant Bruce Fraser feeds him the ball. He typically takes 10 shots from several spots and often goes around the arc twice.

Curry, a leading candidate for league MVP, already has surpassed his own NBA record for most 3-pointers in a season. He enters Wednesday night's regular-season finale against Denver with 284 3-pointers.

Via Pro Basketball Talk, here is a bit of video:



From ESPN:



Teammate Klay Thompson, who is second in the NBA with 234 made 3s, told ESPN he couldn't believe Curry had made 77 straight and that his own record streak is 36.



That’s Klay Thompson, the guy who scored 37 points in a quarter, and his personal best is less than half of Curry’s top mark.


Mind you, we’re in April. Stephen Curry played for Team USA last July and August, his season started in October, and he’ll likely play in his 80th game of the season on Wednesday night as the Warriors finish their regular season, vaulting past 2600 minutes on the season along the way. Of course, because the Curry-led Warriors are so fantastic, he’ll probably skip on playing the entire fourth quarter for the 20th time this season.


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Curry is guaranteed to lead the NBA in three-point makes and attempts for the third straight season. He’s currently shooting 44 percent from long range, right in line with his career mark, in a league where the average (even in these perimeter-heavy times) is 35 percent. Unless something goes awry, he will finish his career as the best shooter in NBA history. At his current rate, his combination of volume and efficiency won’t even make it much of a close race.


Ankle injuries hamstrung Curry’s postseason production two seasons ago, and knocked him out of over half of 2011-12; which is why it was somewhat alarming to see Curry working relatively big minutes in games for the Warriors this month – as the W’s long ago wrapped up their Conference’s best record, and the top record in the NBA. Still, rookie coach Steve Kerr has done well to monitor his point guard’s minutes, and a healthy Stephen Curry entering the playoffs working in an offense that isn’t muddled with outmoded isolation sets is going to be a wonderful thing.


The Warriors have endured some odd hiccups this month, nearly blowing a game to the Memphis Grizzlies on Monday and actually watching as the league-worst Minnesota Timberwolves competed well against the squad a few days before, but this is what tends to happen when you lap the competition. The Warriors currently rank first in defensive efficiency and second in offensive efficiency heading into the final game of the season, one that could see them finish with 67 wins – tied for the fifth-best mark in NBA history.


Curry, the best player on the best team and likely 2014-15 MVP, clearly has his stroke down. And the NBA is about to do some wonderful things in the upcoming playoffs, mostly from 24 feet away.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : The NBA prepares to tank one final time in 2014-15

There we were, thinking that we were done with talking about tanking for a while. Ready for the playoffs. Ready for spring. Ready for the NBA’s draft lottery to remind us that there are no guarantees after losing games on purpose.


Then Joseph Goodman had to go and remind us of this on Tuesday night:



Thanks a lot, pal.


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In 2010, Heat president Pat Riley happily sent a future first-round pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers for in the sign-and-trade deal for LeBron James. Riley didn’t have to, but the move made it easier for James to make a specific amount of money and for Cleveland to earn a trade exemption. LeBron helped gift Miami with four straight Finals trips, four seasons of MVP-level play, and two NBA titles before leaving the adoring thousands that bothered to show up for the first quarter high and dry in his return to Cleveland.


The Heat, besotted by injury and illness, are now out of the playoff picture in the team’s first post-LeBron season. On Wednesday night, they’ll take on the Philadelphia 76ers. The 76ers picked up the rights to Miami’s future first-rounder last August because the Minnesota Timberwolves, for some reason, wanted Thaddeus Young as part of the return for Kevin Love – whom the Cavaliers badly wanted to acquire. Cleveland sent the future pick to the Sixers in the three-way deal.


Philadelphia wants to lose on Wednesday in order to bump up its own lottery odds. If they fall to Miami and New York wins, the Sixers will have tied the Knicks for the second-worst record in the NBA. Wednesday really is no different from any other game the Sixers have played since October, 2013.


Miami? They went into this season with legitimate playoff aspirations. They’ll now be forced into chucking a game so as to finish with the 11th-worst record in the NBA, as the pick they owe Philadelphia is protected through the top ten picks. If the Heat win and the Brooklyn Nets lose (don’t put anything past that embarrassing franchise) to Orlando, there will be a coin flip to determine who will receive the “10th” designation when it comes to lottery odds.


If the Heat lose that 50/50 coin flip, they will fall to 11th. If lottery odds hold up, the Heat’s pick will then go to the 76ers, a 37-win season gone to waste. And if the Lakers’ lottery luck doesn’t go their way, the Sixers will also pick up Los Angeles’ pick if it falls out of the top five. The Lakers are currently working with the fourth-worst record in the NBA, four games “up” on fifth placed Orlando. The Lakers could actually try to win on Wednesday!


Of course, because these are the Philadelphia 76ers, there is even more incentive to want to lose to Miami on Wednesday.


Again, there are no guarantees with the lottery – Miami could end up with the top pick in this year’s draft or drop down to 14th (sending the pick to Philly along the way) regardless of what happens on Wednesday night – but the 76ers might prefer Miami keeps the selection this season. The pick is protected through the top ten picks again in 2016, but unprotected in 2017. Miami’s potential 2015-16 starting lineup looks rather fearsome right now, but Dwyane Wade will turn 35 midway through 2016-17; with Goran Dragic and Chris Bosh all in their early-to-mid-30s that season. If Luol Deng stays a Heat, he will be the oldest 32-year old in NBA history in 2017.


A bounce-back year for Wade this season, typically-sound work from Deng, a third of the year with Dragic and a mostly-healthy first half of the season from Chris Bosh wasn’t enough to put the Heat in the playoffs in 2015, and the East can’t help but improve between now and 2017. The Sixers might prefer to take a chance on the Heat being even worse than 11th in 2017.


Or, the Sixers could glom onto it now, take in the Lakers’ pick, and enter 2016-17 (because they’re most assuredly missing the postseason next year) with seven stout lottery picks (Nerlens Noel, Joel Embiid, Dario Saric, their own next two lottery picks, plus Miami and Los Angeles’ selections) dotting the roster. A tank in full.


Meanwhile, New York is hoping to lose on Wednesday to Detroit, as rumors about Greg Monroe’s seemingly inevitable Knick future swirl. From Marc Berman of the New York Post:



“We are well aware the Knicks have cap space and we will sit down with them at the appropriate time,’’ [Monroe’s agent David] Falk told The Post in a 25-minute phone interview from his Washington office. “Now is not the appropriate time.’’




Falk’s sentiment suggested the Knicks have a legitimate shot.




League executives told The Post in February that of all the free agents on the Knicks’ radar, Monroe has the best chance of coming to New York. Subsequently, an unnamed NBA executive was quoted in a recent published report saying it’s “about as close to a done deal as you can get.”



The Knicks are hoping Minnesota loses to the desperate Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday so it can tie the Wolves for the worst record in the NBA. The Pistons are also hoping to lose to New York while pining for a Denver win over what could be a resting Golden State team in order to tie for the seventh-worst record in the league this season.


Charlotte? They can win without hurting lottery odds, so heads-up on the spoiler alert as they take on the Toronto Raptors (who are hoping for the East’s third seed), even though significant members of the Hornets’ rotation will sit due to legitimate injury. Sacramento and Los Angeles, secure in their suckiness and in no danger of hurting lottery odds, will actually attempt to play competitive basketball against each other on Wednesday, though nobody wants to see that.


No, we’d rather watch the 76ers and Heat try to figure things out new and creative ways of screwing things up in the final game of their season. Pat Riley’s probably going to make his guys wear jai alai scoops.


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Kelly Dwyer is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at KDonhoops@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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News sport : Charges dropped against Florida's Thompson, Tennessee's Thomas

(Kim Klement - USA TODAY Sports) Charges were dropped in legal cases against two SEC players – Florida’s Chris Thompson and Tennessee’s Coleman Thomas.


The misdemeanor simple battery charge against Thompson, a junior wide receiver, was dropped Wednesday due to a lack of evidence. According to the Gainesville Sun, the State District Attorney’s Office said the alleged victim decided “not to prosecute the case.”


Thompson charged April 1 after being accused of scratching his girlfriend on the arms and neck while attempting to get his cell phone from her. Thompson’s attorney said he had the right to get his phone back after his girlfriend “found a text message” from another woman.


“He was legally entitled to make what is called defense of his property, which in this case was his phone,” said State Attorney Bill Cervone. “That’s what he was doing, and the injuries that resulted were inconsequential.”


Thompson, who had been competing for a starting role, did not play in the team’s spring game on Saturday. The program has not confirmed if or when Thompson will rejoin the team.


(Kevin Jairaj - USA TODAY Sports) Elsewhere, Thomas, a sophomore lineman who started five games for the Vols at right tackle last season, was hit with a felony theft charge on March 13. He was accused of stealing an Xbox and three video games from a dorm room, but the charge was dropped Wednesday morning.


"Since obtaining the arrest warrant in this case, (the University of Tennessee Police Department) conducted additional investigation into the matter," Knox County district attorney general Kyle Hixson said, per The Tennessean. "This investigation included discussions with Mr. Thomas and with other witnesses. Following this additional investigation, UTPD concluded that there was a lack of evidence that Mr. Thomas knew that the item was stolen at the time he possessed it."


Thomas’ attorney, Don Bosch, said the felony charge against Thomas was a “rush to judgment.”


"Mr. Thomas did not commit any crime and was unaware that the Xbox and three video games in question had been stolen,” Bosch said in a press release. “He fully cooperated from the first minute he was notified by law enforcement, and it was unfortunate that such a hasty decision to charge Mr. Thomas was made solely by the University of Tennessee Police Department."


According to a police warrant, Thomas, 19, took the Xbox and three games and “sold them at a GameStop store in Knoxville.” Thomas said he did not know the items were stolen when he sold it to the store.


Thomas was suspended from team activities following his arrest. The program has yet to comment on his status with the team moving forward.


For more Florida news, visit InsideTheGators.com.


For more Tennessee news, visit VolQuest.com.


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







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News sport : Mike Mitchell says it was 'right decision' to leave Ohio State

Mike Mitchell could have been there with Ohio State as it celebrated the national championship, but a year earlier, he made a decision to leave the program and play for Texas Tech. He didn’t do it because of a coach or because of playing time; he did it to be closer to his family in Texas.


Mitchell’s father, former NFL linebacker Ken Mitchell, suffers from cluster headaches, a syndrome that affects approximately 0.2 percent of the population. There is no known cure.


From ESPN.com:



Ken, 66, suffers from cluster headaches, a rare syndrome that affects an estimated 0.2 percent of the population. He’s tortured three to nine times daily by the condition. Each one feels like a knife to the left side of his brain. Some hit for 30 minutes, some for eight hours. He thought he might die during the worst episode, a 19-hour headache.




"I can be talking to you right here and be fine," he said, "and then five seconds from now, I’m writhing on the floor."



Ken told ESPN that he tried to convince Mike, an expected starter at linebacker, to stay at Ohio State. Mike had other priorities.


“I said, ‘Mike, c’mon, we can get through this.’ But he said this was something he had to do. He said, ‘This is more important to me,’” Ken said.


Ken began having headaches in 2012 and currently documents each one. The worst was a four-month span when he “experienced 736 headaches.” He described the headaches as “having brain surgery without anesthesia.” Despite the debilitating pain, Mike says his dad keeps it to himself as to not be a burden to the family.


“He hasn’t told me much about it. He keeps to himself and doesn’t like to worry me. He keeps stuff to himself. He’s a real tough guy,” Mike said.


Despite the success at Ohio State, Mike, a five-star recruit in the 2013 class, doesn’t regret his decision to leave. He said he’s found a “niche” within the Texas Tech program and is ready to make an impact after redshirting at Ohio State and sitting out last season due to the NCAA’s transfer rules.


“I think I made the right decision. I’ve kind of found my niche. I’m in a good situation.”


For more Texas Tech news, visit RedRaiderSports.com.


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







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News sport : Random Recap: The 2004 Food City 500


Welcome to Random Recaps, our new weekly feature at From The Marbles. In this space, we'll recap a race from the past at the track the where Sprint Cup Series is racing next.


This week's race is the 2004 Food City 500. Need to know how Random Recap works? Click here. And yes, we realize this is the second straight week of a 2004 recap. Blame the number generator that popped up 87.


Kurt Busch sprinted away from Rusty Wallace on a green-white-checker restart to win the Food City 500.


The race was red flagged with seven laps to go after Dale Jarrett got into the wall. Jarrett had an apparent flat tire after contact with Ward Burton. Since NASCAR had said it'd red flag any caution in the late laps before lap 295 to ensure an attempt at a green-flag finish, the race was halted so the mess could be cleaned up.


If you watch the video above and fast-forward to just after 2.5 hours, the time between Jarrett's car hitting the wall and the throwing of the caution is interesting.


Wallace's best opportunity to make a pass came as soon as the green flag flew on the restart. He got to Busch's bumper entering turn one, but as soon as Busch powered off turn two and created some space between the two cars, Wallace's chances were toast.


Kevin Harvick finished third and Sterling Marlin was fourth. Points leader Matt Kenseth finished fifth and has a 21-point lead over Busch in the points standings.


It's Busch's ninth career win and his first of 2004. After staring 13th, he didn't take the lead until lap 382. However, once he did, he was unbeatable. Busch wasn't passed for the lead over the final 119 laps and maintained the lead through five restarts.


Ken Schrader finished sixth, his highest finish in a Sprint Cup Series race since he finished sixth at Talladega in 1999 while driving for Andy Petree.






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