Twelve SA referees sanctioned

Twelve referees have been sanctioned across the three top-tier leagues in South African the Referees’ Review Committee announced.


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Johannesburg – Twelve referees have been sanctioned across the three top-tier leagues in South African the Referees’ Review Committee announced.


The Premier Soccer League (PSL), National First Division (NFD) and the ABC Motsepe League issued varying sanctions with immediate effect and all respective officials have been informed of the outcomes.


SA Football Association Head of Referees, Peter Sejake said the job of match officials was indeed a difficult task, but mistakes had to be corrected.


“True, mistakes do happen but that occurs the world over because unlike rugby and cricket, we don’t have video technology and match officials have a split second to make a decision. But we always attempt to minimise those mistakes,” said Sejake.


NFD referees Kamohelo Ramotsindela and Shane Chuma will not be appointed for any National Soccer League matches for eight weeks for their handling of the Nedbank Cup match between Orlando Pirates and Tornado FC.


Arthur Gabela will also not be appointed to handle any National Soccer League matches for four weeks, following matches involving Ajax FC and Supersport United and then the match between Supersport and University of Pretoria.


Buyisile Ngqambiyane will not referee any National Soccer League matches for eight weeks for his handling of the match between Kaizer Chiefs and Black Leopards in the Nedbank Cup.


Zolile Mthetho and Sandile Dilikane who handled the match between Polokwane FC and Wits will not be appointed to any National Soccer League matches for four weeks.


Stevens Khumalo received an eight week non-appointment period following his handling of the match between Pirates and SuperSport United.


Moses Phale and Thando Ndzandzeka forfeit 50 percent of their stipend for late arrival in the match between Mamelodi Sundowns and Chippa.


Patrick Japhta will have no appointments for eight weeks for his handling of the match between Santos FC and FC Cape Town.


Peter Rabophara will have no appointments until he appears before the Review Committee or


submit the required documents.


Similarly Daniel Bennett may not be appointed to handle games until he appears before the Review Committee, or he submits the required documents. – ANA






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United to make move for Ings?

Louis Van Gaal wants Danny Ings to form a central part of his Manchester United rebuilding this summer.


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Louis Van Gaal wants Danny Ings to form a central part of his Manchester United rebuilding this summer.


High-placed sources at Old Trafford have confirmed United’s interest in the striker, who is also being strongly pursued by Liverpool.


The futures of Robin van Persie and Radamel Falcao are uncertain and Van Gaal has put the Englishman on his list of targets.


United have held talks with Burnley and, through a loophole in Premier League regulations, can agree a fee and pre-contract to ensure a transfer in the summer.


Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers tried to sign the 22-year-old in January, but Burnley were intent on keeping him until the end of the campaign.


Ings is out of contract in the summer but, due to his age, Burnley would be owed a fee set by a tribunal of around £5million if he joined an English club.


Under Premier League Rule U8 domestic clubs are able to agree terms with the club and player, who would then move when their contract expires.


Ings has scored nine goals this season and David Moyes’ Real Sociedad, Tottenham and Manchester City are also interested.– Daily Mail






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Celtic humiliate Sundowns

Bloemfontein Celtic demolished Mamelodi Sundowns 5-0 in their Premiership match at Lucas Moripe Stadium.


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Pretoria – Bloemfontein Celtic demolished Mamelodi Sundowns 5-0 in their Premiership match at Lucas Moripe Stadium, in Atteridgeville.


The result equalled the biggest margin of defeat in the history of Sundowns football, but the real blow came with the dropped points in their slim title challenge.


Sundowns remain on 47 points, 13 behind the table-topping Kaizer Chiefs with five games left for the Brazilians. The huge margin means Chiefs need only three points from their four games remaining this season to secure top-honours.


For Celtic, the massive result moves them to 37 points as they strengthen their fifth spot on the log.


Earlier, the Sundowns defence gave the ball away carelessly within the first minute, and Celtic midfielder Musa Nyatama burst through into the area on the left hand side and his cross was parried away by keeper Dennis Onyango. Lerato Lamola was on hand to snap up the rebound and deposited the ball into the back of the net for a 1-0 lead.


Celtic had their second with just nine minutes gone. The Sundowns defence were caught napping again as the perfect pass from Keagan Buchanan drew out the keeper, but Gabadinho Mhango got the first touch away from Nyango before turning and lofting the ball into an open net for a 2-0 lead for the visitors.


Teko Modise attempted to pull a goal back in the 14th minute. His free kick drew the attention of Celtic keeper Patrick Tignyemb who made the save.


To compound the woes of Sundowns, Onyango was forced to come out of the box when Lamola broke away from the home defence and the keeper, as the last man, took out the player. The referee had no choice but to give Onyango a red card to reduce the hosts to 10 men in just the 24th minute.


With a man down, Sundowns had to resort to speculative efforts. One such occasion was in the 39th minute when Hlompho Kekana reeled off a shot from way out, and his well struck attempt was only inches over the target.


Celtic started the second period the same as the first, and had their third goal of the evening in the 49th minute. Keegan Ritchie made a fine run down the left, and he produced a stunning pass to Thapelo Morena who was unmarked in the right hand side of the area and made no mistake to make it 3-0 to Celtic.


Five minutes later, it was 4-0 to Celtic as the defending champions league aspirations were left in tatters. The pass came in from Mukuka Mulenga for Musa Nyatama who produced a good strike from the edge of the area to find the left hand side of goal.


In the 57th minute, the massacre was complete as Celtic smashed in their fifth. The cross came in, and with three Sundowns defenders simply watching, Mhango picked his spot as headed the ball in for a 5-0 scoreline. – ANA






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Reading take aim at Arsenal

Championship strugglers Reading will have to produce one of the great FA Cup upsets to beat holders Arsenal in their semi-final at Wembley.


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London - Championship strugglers Reading will have to produce one of the great FA Cup upsets to beat holders Arsenal in their semi-final at Wembley and reach the final for the first time.


Arsenal, winners of 16 of their last 18 matches in all competitions and victorious over Reading in all 12 competitive meetings, will be overwhelming favourites to face Liverpool or Aston Villa in an all-Premier League final on May 30.


Arsenal's run of eight successive wins, which has surprised even manager Arsene Wenger, has opened up an outside chance of the League and Cup double as they have climbed to second in the table, albeit still seven points behind Chelsea.


About the only thing in Reading's favour is the FA Cup's enduring capacity to deliver the most unlikely upsets, as illustrated by third tier Bradford City's stunning 4-2 fourth-round win at Chelsea in January after trailing 2-0.


Reading's task is just as daunting as Steve Clarke's men have dropped to 18th in the second tier Championship and are without a win in their last five league matches.


Arsenal not only have form on their side but history and tradition. This will be their record-equalling 27th semi-final, while it is Reading's first since their sole appearance in the last four 88 years ago.


The nearest Reading ever came to beating the Gunners was in an amazing League Cup tie in October 2012 when Arsenal came from 4-0 down to make it 4-4 with two goals in the last two minutes and went on to win 7-5 after extra time.


The history between Liverpool and Aston Villa is far more complex, stretching back over 188 matches to 1894 with Liverpool winning almost half their games and Villa only victorious in one of their eight FA Cup meetings.


All of Liverpool's seven FA Cup triumphs have come since the last of Villa's successes in 1957, but Sunday's semi looks a closer call than it did a few weeks ago.


Liverpool's league aspirations were derailed by recent successive defeats to Manchester United and Arsenal while the off-field antics of striker Raheem Sterling, videoed using laughing gas and pictured with a shisha pipe, cannot have helped manager Brendan Rodgers' peace of mind either.


In contrast, Villa have been rejuvenated since Tim Sherwood took over as manager from Paul Lambert in February and, although they are still in a relegation fight, their 1-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur last week was self-assured and well-deserved.


Christian Benteke has rediscovered his scoring form with eight goals in six games since Sherwood arrived, and although Liverpool are fifth and still chasing a Champions League place, they will have to play well to book a second final appearance in four seasons. – Reuters






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Amazulu’s great escape gathers pace

Well-taken goals from Goodman Dlamini and Bonginkosi Ntuli lifted AmaZulu off the foot of the league table when they ran out 2-0 winners over Polokwane City 2-0.


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Kwamashu, KZN – Well-taken goals from Goodman Dlamini and Bonginkosi Ntuli lifted AmaZulu off the foot of the league table when they ran out 2-0 winners over Polokwane City 2-0 at the Princess Magogo Stadium in the PSL Absa Premiership match on Wednesday night.


Steve Barker’s AmaZulu side opened the scoring in the 29th minute, as Mbulelo Mabizela’s header knockdown rolled tamely in the path of Goodman Dlamini, who rifled home a low effort into the far corner.


The home side continued to search for second goal in the second half and they scored the insurance goal in the 83rd minute when Ntuli steered the ball past City’s Botswana-born goalkeeper Modiri Marumo with a right-footed effort, after being set up by Robyn Johannes. – ANA






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Quaresma’s double sinks Bayern

Porto completed a stunning home victory over a sloppy Bayern Munich in their Champions League quarter-final first leg.


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Porto, Portugal - Ricardo Quaresma's two early goals and a second-half strike from Jackson Martinez helped a slick Porto complete a stunning 3-1 home victory over a sloppy Bayern Munich in their Champions League quarter-final first leg on Wednesday.


The Portuguese side exploded into action with two goals in the opening 10 minutes, with Quaresma converting from the penalty spot and finishing neatly as Bayern's sluggish defending was punished.


Five-times champions Bayern, decimated by injuries, clawed their way back into the tie when midfielder Thiago Alcantara steered home at the far post after 28 minutes.


But Martinez pounced on an error by Jerome Boateng after 65 minutes and rounded Bayern keeper Manuel Neuer to re-establish Porto's two-goal advantage heading into the return leg on April 21.


Bayern came into the game, a repeat of the 1987 European Cup final which Porto won 2-1, ravaged by injuries and robbed of the services of Arjen Robben, Franck Ribery, Bastian Schweinsteiger and David Alaba among others.


It was, however, a different story for Porto, who welcomed back Martinez from a hamstring injury.


The Colombia striker wasted little time in making his mark, robbing a dawdling Xabi Alonso of the ball on the edge of the Bayern box before being felled by Neuer's outstretched leg.


The Bayern keeper was perhaps lucky to receive just a yellow card, but his punishment was swiftly increased as Quaresma stepped up to stroke the penalty into the bottom corner.


There was no time for the visitors' nerves to settle as Quaresma pounced on another mistake, robbing Dante before dashing through and beating Neuer with an expertly-taken finish with the outside of his boot to make it 2-0 after 10 minutes.


It looked like Bayern could be on the end of an embarrassing scoreline as the hosts' slick passing was cutting through at will.


But the Germans clawed a goal back on 28 minutes when Boateng's low cross from the right escaped both Danilo and Bruno Martins Indi to reach Alcantara, who slotted home coolly past Porto keeper Fabiano.


As the excitement rose in the second half, Porto managed to maintain their impressive energy levels and took the game to Bayern once again.


The visitors were grateful to Neuer for pulling off a stunning fingertip save early in the second half to prevent Boateng scoring an own goal, before Porto took a well-deserved and potentially decisive 3-1 lead.


Bayern's dismal defending cost them again when Boateng failed to deal with a high ball and Martinez stole in to round Neuer and sidefoot home.


An increasingly fraught second half was littered with yellow cards and bookings for Porto's first-choice full backs Danilo and Alex Sandro ruled them out of the second leg in Munich. – Reuters






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News sport : Anthony Davis soars, shuts door on Spurs to push Pelicans past Thunder into playoffs

The New Orleans Pelicans entered Wednesday night with a simple mission: win on the final night of the regular season and you're in the 2015 NBA playoffs. But even the simple's pretty complicated in the Western Conference.


In this case, "win and you're in" meant taking down the defending champion San Antonio Spurs, who have been carving up the NBA over the past three months, entered Smoothie King Center having won 11 straight games, and had something to play for — a chance at the No. 2 seed in the Western bracket, which would mean home-court advantage in the first two rounds and a line to avoiding the league-leading Golden State Warriors until the Western Confeference Finals.


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


Beating a team that good, that poised, with that kind of motivation is a pretty tough problem. Luckily for the New Orleans faithful, the Pelicans employ one hell of a problem solver.



With 39.6 seconds left in the fourth quarter on Wednesday, the Pelicans were clinging to a seven-point lead after fending off a Spurs comeback. They needed one more stop to slam the door, one more play to punch their postseason ticket. So, naturally, they called on the man who has made play after play for them all season long — All-Star power forward Anthony Davis — and the ascendant star delivered.


Davis turned away Spurs big man Boris Diaw's attempt at a layup that would have made it a two-possession game. Not only that, but Davis swatted the ball off the backboard, kept it in play, and grabbed the rebound to secure possession, ensuring no scramble-drill second-chance opportunities for the Spurs, and sending the Smoothie King crowd into hysterics.


This, of course, came on the heels of Davis making a remarkably similar momentum-saving rejection on Spurs linchpin Kawhi Leonard a scant 15 seconds earlier:



... so it wasn't exactly stunning, though that didn't make it any less remarkable.


Davis' block didn't end the game, of course — again, nothing's simple out West — but it did turn the final half-minute of the game into a free-throw contest. Fittingly, it ended with Davis himself at the line after corralling a last-gasp 3-point try by Spurs reserve Patty Mills.


As he stepped to the stripe, the fans showered him with well-deserved "M-V-P!" chants; he calmly drained them both, putting a cap on the Pelicans' scoring in a 108-103 win that clinched New Orleans' first playoff berth since 2011, before Chris Paul was traded to Los Angeles, and puts Davis in the postseason for the first time in his beyond-exciting young career.


The Pelicans' reward for securing the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference? A trip to the Bay Area and a date with Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and the best team in the NBA.


"We 'bout to go get Golden State," Davis said with a laugh during a postgame interview with FOX Sports' Jen Hale. "Man, this was an unbelievable win, you know, for us to come out and play the way we played, play hard, against a tough Spurs team who was battling for something as well. You know, Coach just told us to come out with a lot of energy, and that's what we did in the first half. But basketball's a game of runs. They came out and made runs, and we knew that we had to sustain their run and make a run ourselves, and that's what we did. Everybody stepped up and played well tonight."


The Pelicans win eliminated the Oklahoma City Thunder, who pushed ,a href="http://ift.tt/1FEdS4I">the race for the eighth seed to the very last day of the season despite losing reigning MVP Kevin Durant and top interior defender Serge Ibaka to injuries, and having to rely almost solely on All-Star point guard Russell Westbrook to carry them past the finish line.


Oklahoma City blew out the Minnesota Timberwolves, 138-113, behind another rampaging performance by Westbrook — 37 points on 11-for-20 shooting, eight rebounds, seven assists and two steals in 32 minutes, with nearly all of that damage done in a remarkable first half, to best former teammate James Harden for the first scoring title of his career — to finish the season at 45-37, the same record as the Pelicans.


New Orleans held the head-to-head tiebreaker, though, winning three of four meetings against OKC this season, with the third and tie-breaker-clinching victory coming courtesy of — who else? — Davis, with this insane double-clutch game-winning 3-point buzzer-beater back in February:



... which, as it turns out, was a pretty big shot.


Davis has made plenty of those for the Pelicans this season, and made more on Wednesday. The still-just-22-year-old star scored a game-high 31 points on 12-for-26 shooting to go with 13 rebounds, three blocks, two steals and two assists, coming through with a monster performance in the biggest game of the season against a defending NBA champion in which he spent much of the night squaring off against the immortal Tim Duncan. Decent night.



Embracing the challenge of controlling their own destiny, the Pelicans came out of the gate enthusiastic — a little tight, but definitely eager, matching the Spurs blow for blow and ripping off a 16-3 run over the final 3 1/2 minutes of the first quarter to take control of the contest. They pushed their lead as high as 23 in the second quarter, but saw their advantage whittled down to four points, 86-82, with 7:38 left in the fourth as San Antonio determinedly walked them down, with Spurs coach Gregg Popovich even resorting to intentionally fouling Pelicans center Omer Asik, a 59 percent free-throw shooter, to try to get back into the game.


"We just stayed together," Davis said when asked how the Pelicans withstood the Spurs' surge. "We've been in tough situations all year. We've played tough games all year. We knew what we had to do. We knew they were going to make a run; they've been in this position plenty of times. Five championships between some of those players. So we just had to make sure that we stayed focused, stayed locked in, mentally strong. Before we started, we said we had to have mental toughness. We knew that they wasn't going to go away."


No, it would be up to the Pelicans to put them away, which they did by stringing together some defensive stops and getting layups from guards Tyreke Evans and Eric Gordon to push the lead back to nine. Every time the Spurs made a push, New Orleans responded, keeping the champs at bay until the long arms of the league's MVP-in-waiting could finish the job.


In the process, Davis and company returned Monty Williams to the playoffs, lightening the load on the embattled head coach for whom Davis expresses such significant support.


"I love him, man. I love him," Davis said. "He's done a lot for this team. He takes a lot of criticism, and he deals with it. He envisioned that we were going to make the playoffs. He told us like three weeks ago, when we were three games out and everybody counted us out. He said, 'I've been around too long. Anything can happen.' We came here tonight and got it done against a tough Spurs team — a great coach, great players, Hall of Famers. We had to put everything out on the line. We weren't banking on OKC losing or anything like that. We said, 'We've got to go take this game,' and we did that tonight."


Davis took care to emphasize the "we," crediting hits mates not only for their contributions on Wednesday — the 19 points, 11 assists and three steals from Evans; the 14 points and two big 3-pointers from Gordon; the 11 points, four assists and tough defense from recently returned point guard Jrue Holiday — but for what they've done for him throughout the season.


"All these guys helped me through everything. When I was down, and now when I'm up, they're right here by my side," Davis said. "You can see Norris [Cole] calling my name. That's what it's all about — having fun, sharing it with your teammates. I just love these guys. We worked our tails off all year, the past three years I've been here, and it's finally paid off.


"I don't know if people know — I dislocated my pinkie finger. And [Tyreke] told me, 'You wanna go home or you wanna be here?' I want to be here. And he said, 'All right, then go tape it up and let's play. Let's go. We not stoppin' at no stores. Straight gas. That's what we do, just keep going.'"


The Pelicans will keep going, rolling all the way to Oakland, to take on the very dangerous basketball team that lives there. We'll find out soon enough just how much New Orleans has left in the tank once they get there, but one thing's for sure: when the Pelicans arrives, they'll be bringing one hell of a difference-maker with them.


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



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow Dunks Don't Lie on Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






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News sport : The first round of the 2015 NBA Playoffs is set

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 31: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors throws a pass over Chris Paul #3 of the Los Angeles Clippers at Staples Center on March 31, 2015 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Getty Images) After six months and 82 games each for 30 teams, the field and seeds of the 2015 NBA Playoffs are in place. Need to know which teams are facing off and when they play? Check out our list of the matchups and schedules for the first round.


WESTERN CONFERENCE


No. 1 Golden State Warriors vs. No. 8 New Orleans Pelicans


The Warriors sprinted to a franchise-best regular season and homecourt advantage throughout the playoffs with the deepest roster in the league, an MVP candidate Stephen Curry, and a point differential that only a handful of teams in history have ever matched. Steve Kerr has never coached in a playoff series and no player on the roster has appeared in the NBA Finals, but this squad is the favorite to come out of the West in June.


New Orleans exceeded expectations behind a historically great season from 22-year-old superstar Anthony Davis and a strong finish to overtake the Oklahoma City Thunder for the West's final playoff spot. They will be considerable underdogs, but Davis's first playoff series could prove meaningful as a step towards greater success in the future.


No. 4 Portland Trail Blazes vs. No. 5 Memphis Grizzlies


The Blazers hold their seed because they won the Northwest Division, but they will not have homecourt advantage after finishing with a worse record than that of the Grizzlies. They are limping into the playoffs both literally and figuratively — late-season injuries to Wesley Matthews (torn Achilles tendon, out for the season and longer) and Arron Afflalo (likely out for part of this series) have put lots of pressure on stars Damian Lillard and LaMarcus Aldridge.


Memphis catch a break in opening the playoffs at the Grindhouse instead of having to travel across the country, although they are not heading into things playing their best ball of the season. The grit-and-grind outfit became more finesse-focused with the mid-season addition of forward Jeff Green but still identifies itself around the interior talent of Marc Gasol and Zach Randolph, the defense of Tony Allen, and the no-nonsense excellence of Mike Conley.


No. 3 Los Angeles Clippers vs. No. 6 San Antonio Spurs


Superstar point guard Chris Paul guided the Clippers through mid-season injuries to Blake Griffin and Jamal Crawford (both now healthy) in advance of a strong finish that has positioned them as contenders to win the conference. A lot will ride on highlight-ready center DeAndre Jordan, who will need to make enough free throws to deter Gregg Popovich from intentionally sending him to the line roughly 20 times per game.


The defending champion Spurs worked past mid-season struggles to become arguably the scariest non-Warriors team in the postseason. They would have clinched the No. 2 seed if they'd beaten the Pelicans on the season's final day and enter the playoffs with Kawhi Leonard thriving as the linchpin of the squad at both ends. This series looks to be the most competitive of the first round, at least on paper.


HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 15: James Harden #13 of the Houston Rockets handles the ball against the Utah Jazz on April 15, 2015 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Bill Baptist/NBAE via Getty Images) No. 2 Houston Rockets vs. No. 7 Dallas Mavericks


The Rockets emerged from a crowded field to grab the No. 2 seed and Midwest Division title despite key injuries to Dwight Howard (who missed two months), tenacious point guard Patrick Beverley, and underrated scorer Donatas Motiejunas. The latter two of that trio figure to miss the entire postseason, but Houston has proven resilient and boasts one of the NBA's top offensive weapons in MVP candidate James Harden.


The Mavericks saw their league-best offense dip in form following the December acquisition of enigmatic point guard Rajon Rondo, but he has always saved his best play for the postseason. The Mavericks have a ton of experience all over the roster and coaching staff and could very well out-perform their seed against their in-state rivals.


EASTERN CONFERENCE


No. 1 Atlanta Hawks vs. No. 8 Brooklyn Nets


The Hawks surprised everyone by using the Spurs-influenced system of head coach Mike Budenholzer to sprint out to the East's best record and a No. 1 seed. The loss of Thabo Sefolosha to a controversial broken leg could affect the team in later series (particularly against LeBron James), but this ultra-balanced, professional squad will be heavy favorites to advance.


The disappointing Nets saved face with a late-season push to emerge from a questionable group of contenders and take the East's final seed. They are significant underdogs vs. Atlanta but have a potential advantage in center Brook Lopez, a quality low-post scorer who will face a team that sometimes struggles to protect the rim.


No. 4 Toronto Raptors vs. No. 5 Washington Wizards


The Atlantic Division champion Raptors won just 13 of their 29 games after the All-Star break as star point guard Kyle Lowry lost time and struggled due to a back injury. However, DeMar DeRozan has been a very good crunchtime scorer lately and could lift Toronto to its first series win since 2001.


The Wizards ran into their own second-half difficulties and were often kept afloat largely via the talent and will of star point guard John Wall. After a strong playoff showing last season and regular struggles this year, it's possible that head coach Randy Wittmann needs to beat the Raptors to keep his job.


CHICAGO, IL - APRIL 15: Derrick Rose #1 of the Chicago Bulls brings the ball up the court against the Atlanta Hawks at the United Center on April 15, 2015 in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images) No. 3 Chicago Bulls vs. No. 6 Milwaukee Bucks


Derrick Rose missed considerable time yet again due to knee surgery, but he's back to join a Bulls squad that took advantage of others' struggles to finish in third place. Despite the name recognition of Rose and All-Star guard Jimmy Butler, Chicago's strengths lie up front, where Joakim Noah, Pau Gasol, European-import rookie Nikola Mirotic, and Taj Gibson present considerable matchup problems and give the team its defensive identity.


The Bucks went from the worst record in the NBA in 2013-14 to a solid playoff position this season, although they struggled down the stretch. The loss of No. 2-overall pick Jabari Parker to an ACL tear hurt the team's offense, but they feature one of the NBA's rangiest defenses and a budding star in Giannis Antetokounmpo.


No. 2 Cleveland Cavaliers vs. No. 7 Boston Celtics


Cleveland started slower than many anticipated after bringing back LeBron James and trading for Kevin Love to team with Kyrie Irving this summer, but righted the ship after a two-week rest for LeBron and a pair of lineup-changing trades. They've been one of the league's best teams for three months, securing their first playoff appearance, 50-win season, and division title since LeBron joined the Miami Heat in 2010.


The Celtics lack star power, but rising-star head coach Brad Stevens has gotten the most out of a piecemeal roster that now features a legitimate scoring threat in trade-deadline acquisition Isaiah Thomas. Boston will be a heavy underdog in a matchup of the teams with the East's best records since the All-Star break.


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Eric Freeman is a writer for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at efreeman_ysports@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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News sport : Manny Pacquiao given speed bag with Floyd Mayweather's face on it

Any great athlete will tell you that visualization is key to success.


But with Manny Pacquiao's megafight against pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather just two weeks away, "Pacman" is taking the art of visualization to a whole new level.


Robert Shapiro – yes, that Robert Shapiro – recently gave Pacquiao a speed bag with Mayweather's face emblazoned on the front.


The bag is quite detailed and resembles Mayweather with striking similarity.



No word on where Shapiro got the bag, or who made it, but it is hanging inside Freddie Roach's Wild Card Gym in Hollywood. The gift was on full display for Wednesday's media day as Pacquiao continues preparing for the May 2 showdown in Las Vegas.


Shapiro or Team Pacquiao should look into mass-producing these. After all, Pacquiao can’t be the only one wanting to pop Mayweather.






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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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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 : 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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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 : 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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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 : 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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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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