News sport : Watch this college baseball player tumble over the fence to steal a homer

It's been a good week for MLB home-run thievery, between the amazing catches by Kevin Pillar and George Springer. But a college baseball might have them both beat.


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This is Josh Jyawook from the University of Evansville and during Wednesday's game against in-state rival Indiana University, Jyawook pulled off this fantastic catch:



Yes, we've been baseball players fall over fences before to catch home runs. No, we never get tired of it.


Here's what makes Jyawook's catch even better: His team won the game 2-1 in 14 innings, so stealing a home run in such a manner was quite important to the outcome of the game.


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Mike Oz is the editor of Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at mikeozstew@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Safa condemns xenophobic attacks

Johannesburg - The South African Football Association (Safa) has condemned in the strongest terms the xenophobic attacks on foreign nationals being perpetrated by what it called criminal elements.


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Johannesburg - The South African Football Association (Safa) has condemned in the strongest terms the xenophobic attacks on foreign nationals being perpetrated by what it called criminal elements.


“What is happening in certain parts of the country whereby fellow Africans are being subjected to all sorts of hate and abuse is quite unacceptable.


“This is not what the 2010 Fifa World Cup Legacy was all about. When we hosted the 2010 showpiece, it was an African World Cup, to unite the continent, speak and relate as a united family,” said Safa President, Dr Danny Jordaan who was the CEO of the 2010 Fifa World Cup.


“What is happening now in some parts of the country is quite the opposite. It is like undoing all the good work and legacy of the 2010 Fifa World Cup. South Africa is part of this great continent and we should not alienate ourselves with these regrettable and barbaric actions.”


The Safa President said after years of isolation, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) had played a critical role in South Africa being readmitted into the Fifa family.


“CAF and the entire continent were at the forefront of telling the world that apartheid had no place in the sport and that unless it was abolished, South Africa should remain isolated. If it was not for them, it could probably have taken many more years for this country to enjoy the fruits of the abolition of apartheid.


“So instead of embracing our brothers from across the continent as part of us, we are making them feel unwelcome. This is unfortunate and unacceptable. It must stop. Everyone must say no to xenophobia (where fellow Africans are being attacked) because it is some sort of apartheid in reverse. It has no place in modern society,” added the Safa President.


South African national teams and clubs participate in various competitions on the continent and the Safa President warned those who promote xenophobia that they risk putting our teams in a very risky position when they play away from home.


“It is like saying to Africa it is us versus you. Such actions only help to isolate us from the rest of the continent. It goes against the spirit of the 2010 Fifa World Cup.


“We as Safa are saying these barbaric actions must end; and end now. We fought against apartheid because it segregated society and xenophobia has the same apartheid tendencies.”


Dr Jordaan concluded by saying that during the fight against apartheid, most of our freedom fighters sought refuge across the continent and around the world.


“As a country, we should never forget where we come from. During the days of the struggle, who took us in and accommodated us? Why are we today turning against the very same people who were vital in the fight against apartheid? Our leaders fled to Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique, Ethiopia and Angola, among other countries and were treated well. We are humans before we are South Africans, and that must be in the forefront of our existence,” concluded Dr Jordaan.


ANA






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News sport : Rogers Centre’s new turf has the attention of Major League Baseball

It’s only been three games, but already there are concerns about the new artificial turf at the Rogers Centre, the home of the Toronto Blue Jays. In the 26 years since its opening, the Rogers Centre, neé SkyDome, has gone through five different kinds of turf – from the original AstroTurf that looked like a billiards table to the new AstroTurf 3D Xtreme, which was installed this past offseason.


But the early returns have not been overly positive. The new turf looks a little bit more like real grass, but it is noticeably softer, is slowing down ground balls, and has seen some unpredictable bounces. According to Jon Morosi of Fox Sports, Major League Baseball is keeping an eye on it.




It’s very unlikely that anything would come of the “monitoring” but it’s interesting that this has become one of the most talked about issues early in the year. There’s little that can be done anyway given that the purchase and installation of the new turf is an elaborate and costly endeavor.


It’s hard to say just how much slower the ball rolls on the new turf, but it has the attention of players, as well as the league.


“There were a couple balls hit that might have scooted through on the old turf,” Blue Jays pitcher R.A. Dickey said after Monday’s home opener. “If anything I think it’s going to allow the infielders to make more plays this year. It will impact the game.”


An AstroTurf official told the National Post that the turf will firm up over time, but that may take a few more months.



“The complicated process of removing the artificial grass between Blue Jays homestands might also help to make the field play faster, he said.



The removal machinery applies “extreme pressure” to the turf when it is rolled up, helping to stabilize the rubber pellets that form the infill and flatten the synthetic blades of grass, [Kenny] Gilman said. Over time, playing on it will do the same thing.


“I think both AstroTurf and the Blue Jays feel it’s a little slower than we thought it would play,” he said. “But it’s brand new and it will definitely speed up.”


Those rubber pellets themselves have already been an additional nuisance for players. On Monday, Rays shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera took a grounder on a hop and got the pellets in his eye. While officials think it’s all much ado about nothing, it’s also just another temporary solution for the Rogers Centre.


The Blue Jays have entered a research project agreement with the University of Guelph aimed at getting natural grass into the stadium. The team aims to have grass in the stadium in time for the 2018 stadium. Until then, you might see some players put Brett Cecil’s fashion sense to a more practical use.


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Ian Denomme is an editor and writer for Yahoo Sports. Email him at denomme@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter.






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News sport : Commissioner John Swofford has no plans to split ACC into three divisions

The ACC has no plans to move to three divisions if the NCAA passes conference championship deregulation.


CBSSports.com reported last week that deregulation was expected to pass by 2016 and the site quoted Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby as stating that he thought the ACC would use the opportunity to move to three divisions.


ACC commissioner John Swofford told ESPN.com that there’s no truth to those rumors.


"Our purpose behind initiating that discussion was really not about anything specific we would necessarily do, but based on the whole deregulation of a number of NCAA issues in recent years," Swofford told ESPN.com. "We said over and over again that doesn't mean we would necessarily change anything within our own league.


"We just feel conferences should have the opportunity to do that both in terms of the number of teams in a league and whether you can have a championship as well as how you determine which teams play in that championship game. During these conversations, we haven't had any real discussion about a three-division ACC. That has never had any legs in our discussions and so far, any change to what we're doing now has not had any real legs."


The ACC and the Big 12 submitted the legislation last year to change the rule that requires conferences to have 12 teams to host a conference championship game. The Big 12’s motive is obvious. It has only 10 teams and has maintained that it didn’t need a championship game since every team plays every other team throughout the season. However, the lack of a conference title game came back to bite the Big 12 when the College Football Playoff committee cited that as one of the reasons the Big 12 was shut out of the inaugural College Football Playoff. Since then, Bowlsby has said his conference has discussed multiple options, from this new regulation to expansion, as a way to rectify the problem.


The ACC’s decision to join the deregulation plight was a little baffling. The conference has 14 teams and a conference title game that has served it well in past seasons.


Swofford told ESPN.com that he’s pushing for this legislation as a matter of principle, not to enact some radical change to his conference.


"I think the fact that we were supporting this in principle and felt it was the right route to go, it gives people the impression that we have a specific direction we would take things in in our league that's different than what we're currently doing," Swofford told ESPN.com. "That's just not the case."


The new legislation will be discussed at an NCAA Football Oversight Committee meeting later this month. Bowlsby is the chairman of that committee. Final approval would come from the NCAA Council.


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News sport : Oakland University unveils new blacktop-esque floor


Oakland's new blacktop court (via Oakland Athletics)

Of the legion of college basketball programs who have tried to bolster their brand by installing distinctive new floors, only a few have actually managed to improve the look of their court.


Count Oakland University among those.


The new blacktop-style court that the Golden Grizzlies unveiled this week manages to successfully straddle the line between memorable and garish. All that's missing is a chain-link fence around the court and chains instead of nets.


"It’s branding our program," Coach Greg Kampe told the Oakland Press. I know that when our games are on TV, no matter where you are in the country, when you turn that game on, you’re going to know it’s Oakland University immediately when you see the floor. I’m really excited about that.”


The trend toward distinctive court designs began in 2010 when Oregon unveiled a new fir-tree lined court. More schools seem to follow suit every offseason, from Long Beach State's palm trees, to George Washington's D.C. monuments, to Florida International's beach theme.


Amazingly, Oakland isn't even the first Division I program to go with the blacktop-style look. Central Florida did it to mixed reviews two years ago.


So what Oakland lacks in originality it makes up for with a nice design. It's atypical, but it's an improvement.


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Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Title almost certainly Chiefs’

Table-topping Kaizer Chiefs need just one win from their four remaining matches to clinch the Premiership title.


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Johannesburg – Following the 5-0 drubbing of Mamelodi Sundowns at the hands of Bloemfontein Celtic, the table-topping Kaizer Chiefs need just one win from their four remaining matches to clinch the Premiership title.


Going into half-time with a 2-0 deficit and a man down after keeper Denis Onyango had been red-carded, Sundowns had to push hard for an equaliser – a tactic that backfired as they were repeatedly caught out at the back.


The result left Sundowns 13 points adrift of the AmaKhosi on 60 points, and if the Brazilians win their final five games they can only finish on 62 points.


Coach Pitso Mosimane made no excuses for his side’s humbling result.


“It was a complete day off. It was two terrible mistakes in the first half. The sending off of Denis Onyango …” said Mosimane.


“Either you opt to take the 2-0, but we are Sundowns – we have to play, it’s in our culture.”


The coach said the result reflected badly on the defending league champions.


“We have to apologise to our people for this performance, 5-0 is not good for the image of the club. But even Real Madrid has got it, Man United got it, Arsenal got it, Man City got it. So who are we not to get it? But it’s unacceptable. We have to take the pain.”


Realistically the title has just about been decided, but the scramble for second place could prove interesting.


Orlando Pirates in third and Wits in fourth are separated only by goal difference, three points behind Sundowns on 44 points. Both Wits and Sundowns have five games remaining, while Pirates have four. – ANA






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Ajax out to cement top eight spot

Top eight ambitions will be on the line when Ajax Cape Town welcome University of Pretoria in their Premiership clash at Cape Town stadium.


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Johannesburg – Top eight ambitions will be on the line when Ajax Cape Town welcome University of Pretoria in their Premiership clash at Cape Town stadium.


The Cape side occupy seventh spot on the log with 34 points from their 24 games, while AmaTuks are further back in tenth position on 30 points from 25 outings.


A win for Tuks could close the gap to one point, and based on their narrow loss to Kaizer Chiefs who have one hand on the Premiership trophy in their previous fixture, the match could be a closely contested affair.


Roger de Sa’s Ajax have also recently added Ruzaigh Gamildien and Ndiviwe Mdabuka to their squad of players in a bid to boost their chances of finishing further up the league table at the business end of the competition.


“Ruzaigh is a typical Ajax player who will complement the team. We expect him to regain his form which elevated him into the Bafana squad a few seasons ago,” said Ajax CEO Ari Efstathiou on the club’s website.


Ajax come into the match off the back of their 2-1 Nedbank Cup quarterfinal victory over Wits last week, and would be looking to transfer that form to their league outings. – ANA






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News sport : BDL's 2014-15 NBA Playoff Previews: Atlanta Hawks vs. Brooklyn Nets

How They Got Here


Atlanta: Well, in 2012, the Atlanta Hawks traded Joe Johnson to the Brooklyn Nets for …


If you think that’s a bit of snark, you’re right, but Atlanta’s startling turnaround began then. It needed a season in purgatory under Larry Drew in 2012-13 to expire a few contracts, a meet and greet session with then-rookie coach Mike Budenholzer in 2013-14 to iron out the kinks, and the franchise had to withstand the (ongoing) controversy regarding current general manager Danny Ferry’s pointless relaying of insensitive comments about potential Hawk Luol Deng over the 2014 offseason.


Deng didn’t sign with Atlanta, and Ferry is on paid leave, and the lack of major additions left most considering the Hawks to be just another solid enough team in the so-so East entering 2014-15. Budenholzer was respected enough, the return of Al Horford from a separated shoulder was to be acknowledged, and the team’s 2014 playoff showing was certainly impressive, but this squad screamed (well, muttered, probably) “mid-tier.” A 7-6 start to the season seemed to confirm as much.


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Then the team started winning – a nine, then five, then 19-game winning streak dotted the winter months, as the Hawks raced out to a 40-8 record. Suddenly, what was thought to be an anonymous midseason League Pass game against Golden State on a Friday night turned out to be a Finals preview of (literal) historic proportions. All five Hawks won the Eastern Conference Player of the Month award in February, Paul Millsap, Al Horford, Kyle Korver (who seemingly could not miss this year) and Jeff Teague made the All-Star team, and despite a somewhat-worrying 20-14 end to the season, the Hawks have earned the East’s top seed.


Brooklyn: Brooklyn barely earned anything this year. The team entered the season with Lionel Hollins as its fourth coach in three years running the show after Jason Kidd’s attempt at a front office coup fell short at Waterloo, it boasted a payroll that spun past $100 million in player salaries once luxury taxes were considered, it paid three different players eight figures this year and neither of them sniffed an All-Star berth. Teams wouldn’t even sniff at the Nets’ “stars” at the trade deadline, due to their onerous salaries and lacking production, save for one. In a February surprise, Kevin Garnett was dealt back to Minnesota on the trade deadline for scoring forward Thaddeus Young, who provided solid play for the Nets down the stretch of the season.


One of those well-heeled semi-stars, Nets center Brook Lopez, did eventually start to produce at a rate commensurate with his pay – he earned two Eastern Conference Player of the Week awards late in the season and was the strongest force behind a six-game winning streak that put Brooklyn back in the playoff picture. Of course, Brooklyn lost four of six following that (losing two consecutive games by a total of 50 points, with their playoff lives on the line) before squeezing into the playoffs with a win over Orlando on Wednesday.


That win cemented the unseemly – a 38-44 team that at one point was 10 games under .500 (playing mostly in the East, no less) will make the postseason while a 45-win Thunder team and an honest-to-goodness batch of basketball saints from Indiana will sit out. The playoff appearance will also deny the Hawks a chance at a lottery pick this season – because Atlanta still has the right to swap its 29th pick for Brooklyn’s 15th pick as a result of that Joe Johnson trade that seems ever so long ago.


Head-to-Head


The Hawks didn’t need the incentive of that looming potential lottery pick to sweep Brooklyn 4-0 in the season series this year. Atlanta is just that good, and the Nets are so completely “meh.”


Atlanta won by an average of 17.2 points per game in those contests, the most embarrassing one for Brooklyn coming in a 32-point shellacking on April 4. Hawk small forward DeMarre Carroll will make nearly $21 million less to play basketball this season than Joe Johnson, and he limited the Nets swingman to four points on 1-5 shooting, while adding 20 points of his own. The Nets rebounded to make a game of it a few days later in losing 114-111 on its ineffective home floor on April 8, but that contest was performed just 24 hours after the Hawks had won at home against Phoenix, and a good 15 hours after Thabo Sefolosha and Pero Antic were arrested following an altercation with (or encouraged by, we’ll hopefully find out soon enough) police.


Joe had better luck in the team’s second-closest pairing, a 113-102 Hawk win on January 28. However, he was once again a 12-point afterthought on Dec. 5 as the Nets won by 23. In the April 8 loss, Brook Lopez had his worst game in weeks in turning in 11 points during the April 4 loss, but he made up for it quite nicely with a 26 and 10 outing on April 8. The Nets still lost, of course.


Likely Starting Lineups


Not since the 2005-06 Detroit Pistons have the Play the Right Way punters been as excited over a five-man lineup like Atlanta. It’s a devastating crew on paper and to watch, as the Horford-Millsap-Carroll-Korver-Teague share the ball effectively offensively and covers well on the other end. The team’s depth is to be admired even in the wake of Sefolosha’s season-ending injury, but by and large this is the crew for Bu(denholzer).


The Hawks finished the season sixth in defensive efficiency, and though the team does have some issues guarding the interior they remain a sneaky-good defensive team when it comes to closing out and especially limiting options after penetration. The Hawks will make you jump in the air to pass, and they won’t let you take three-pointers – teams finished last in the NBA in three-pointers attempted against ATL this season. As a result of all that coverage, the team can be taken advantage of on the offensive glass. This group is also the biggest reason Atlanta finished sixth in offensive efficiency as well, and second overall in three-point percentage.


As stated above, Thaddeus Young has played his typically-efficient, error-free (on the offensive end, at least) ball for Brooklyn since coming over in a trade, and he’ll be joined by Lopez, Deron Williams, Johnson, and Markel Brown in the starting lineup. Brown’s performance will be a brief one, as he gives way to Bojan Bogdanovic just a few minutes into each half. Bogdanovic scored a needed 28 points off the bench in Brooklyn’s playoff-clinching win over Orlando.


The Nets aren’t even mediocre. They rank 20th in offense and 23rd in defense. The team runs a slow pace and doesn’t do anything exceedingly well outside of taking and making two-pointers. Brooklyn is, however fantastic at free throw defense – teams shot just 73 percent against them on the season, the second-worst mark in the NBA.


Matchups to Watch


Brook Lopez vs. the Forward/Centers


Lopez isn’t quite a classic low post scorer, but he doesn’t rank amongst the NBA’s new breed of lengthy frontcourt shooters either. At 7-feet tall, he’ll be able to see over Mssrs. Horford, Millsap, and Elton Brand, but that doesn’t mean he can work his way past them. Lopez might have even more trouble against reserve big Pero Antic (especially defensively), who was out of the game that saw Lopez drop 26 points on April 8 due to his arrest.


Dennis Schroeder vs. the Nets’ Bench


This kid is fast, he’s got touch, and his confidence is growing by the game. Schroeder, the Hawks’ second-year reserve guard, could find a way to run circles around Jarrett Jack, or the oft-listless Deron Williams should the former All-Star stay on the court during the second quarter. The 21-year old managed to average double-figure scoring in just 19.7 minutes a game this year, and he’s often the best part of those 12-2 runs that have put Hawk opponents away all season.


Korver vs. Your Sanity


Watching NBA teams attempt to locate Korver either in a half-court or (especially) transition set was often times hilarious this season. Defenders would go batty attempting to locate Korver (who hit a ridiculous 49 percent of his three-pointers this season) as he ducked behind the line, even if the emphasis of the play wasn’t to find Kyle open for a three-pointer. Of course, these are the mindful teams that would be going nuts, and the Nets are hardly what you’d call a focused crew.


How Atlanta Can Win


By utilizing that typical mix of ball movement. Atlanta thinks on its feet and sways even the best defenses where they want them to shift while it whips the ball around or turns corners. If the participants stay ready, Atlanta should see scads of open shots.


How Brooklyn Can Win


All the percentages roll back to zero as the playoffs hit, and it is more than possible that Atlanta could endure a fortnight’s worth of bad shooting. If Brook Lopez stays on the court for major minutes, he could tilt the tide. With a 22-game disparity in wins, though, that seems like a long shot.


Totally Subjective Entertainment Value Ranking: 4 out of 10.


If you’re just tuning in now, don’t.


Actually, that’s not fair. Atlanta is a joy to watch on both ends for various reasons, and it’s to their credit that they will be able to create an entertaining series even while matched up against perhaps the NBA’s least-loved team.


Prediction: Atlanta in four.


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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 : Condi Rice, Larry Scott in favor of keeping the CFP at just four teams

Want to expand the College football Playoff?


Well, you’ll have to convince CFP committee member Condoleeza Rice it’s the right thing to do.


Rice, along with Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott, was a keynote speaker at the Stanford Graduate School of Business Sports Innovation Conference on Wednesday. Both were asked about possibly expanding the playoff and Rice towed the company line.


"I feel pretty strongly about four now because I thought that the rivalry weekend — that Saturday after Thanksgiving — almost felt like a play-in game," said Rice, per ESPN's Heather Dinich. "Now the Iron Bowl, Alabama has to beat Auburn. You could imagine the circumstances in another year where the Civil War, Oregon really has to beat Oregon State. There are questions whether they will.


"I agree that if it got much larger, I don't think you would have that momentum coming out of the regular season, so it's the best possible scenario."


A lot of people would agree with Rice's reasoning. We all want the rivalry games to mean something and with so few spots in the College Football Playoff, they do, especially in the SEC.


However, there’s still the argument that it’s ludicrous to have five power conferences and just four spots, but even Scott said he didn’t envision the playoff scenario changing, at least through the 12-year duration of the current contract, and he cited the drama the small field creates.


"I think we're all lamenting regular-season college basketball not being more popular right now, at a time when March Madness has never been more popular," Scott said. "To me, that's a great example of the field being so big that the regular season doesn't matter anymore.


"There's something about that drama, that tension that makes it very special and keeps a lot of value in the regular season, which is good for all of our schools."


Scott also mentioned the academic calendar as one of the reasons for the lack of expansion, and that did come into play during the national championship game when Ohio State was allowed more practice time because its students were still on a semester break while Oregon had returned to school the week leading up to the game.


What do you think? Is one season enough to make calls for a playoff change or do we need to let it play out for a few years and evaluate the process before making a real push for change?


My theory is that while yes, there were probably six teams that deserved to get into the playoff this season, the four teams that got in sure made for a fun run. I enjoy the exclusivity. I enjoy the idea that every game matters whether it’s early or late. If I had any gripe with the College Football Playoff, it’s the weekly rankings, which meant very little. The criteria for those rankings seemed to change weekly and when it came down to the final rankings — the ones that actually mattered — the protocol that had determined the standings in previous weeks was totally thrown out the window.


But those aren’t going away because they generate intrigue and ratings, which translates to money for ESPN. So there's no use in complaining about that. Speaking of those rankings though, the College Football Playoff committee met in Indianapolis earlier this month and decided to go with one fewer weekly ranking since the season starts a week later. That means, the weekly rankings would start Nov. 3. The proposal must be approved by the playoff's management committee, which is made up of the 10 FBS commissioners and Notre Dame AD Jack Swarbrick, when they meet later this month in Dallas.


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Graham Watson is the editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at dr.saturday@ymail.com or follow her on Twitter!


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News sport : Report: Group pushing for Navy-Notre Dame game in San Diego

Notre Dame running back Tarean Folston (25) runs away from Navy safety Parrish Gaines (2), linebacker Daniel Gonzales (58) and safety George Jamison (42) for a touchdown during the second half an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2014, in Landover, Md. Notre Dame won 49-39. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) A group is pushing for a regular season game between Navy and Notre Dame to be played in San Diego.


According to the Associated Press, the San Diego Bowl Game Association – the group that puts on the Holiday and Poinsettia Bowls – is in “preliminary talks with Navy to move its home game against Notre Dame to Qualcomm Stadium in either 2016 or 2018.”


The San Diego Bowl Game Association is certainly familiar with the folks at Navy. The Midshipmen have played in the Poinsettia Bowl four times – more than any other program. Most recently, Navy knocked off San Diego State 17-16 in last season’s game.


Mark Neville, the group’s executive director, said that Navy has been receptive to the idea, in large part due to the large Naval Base in the city.


“It aligns with our mission of generating tourism for San Diego and exposure,” Neville told the AP. “Of course Navy-Notre Dame would be a pretty attractive, high-profile event for our region. It certainly doesn’t hurt to talk with them about it.”


“Navy has a great fan base in San Diego. That’s kind of natural.”


Navy and Notre Dame have played on a yearly basis since 1927. Navy’s home games in the series are played in even-numbered years with recent games being played in Landover, Md., Dublin, Ireland, East Rutherford, N.J., and Baltimore.


The Fighting Irish are scheduled to host the Midshipmen in South Bend on Oct. 10 in this upcoming season.


For more Notre Dame news, visit BlueAndGold.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 : Scott Frost says he's gotten some dumb questions about Mariota

Oregon offensive coordinator Scott Frost has become a go-to for NFL scouts about Marcus Mariota.


The 2014 Heisman winner is a projected top pick in April 30's NFL draft and, predictably, he's been under intense scrutiny from the teams who are interested in his services.


So Frost has been quizzed about all things Mariota, including the quarterback's attitude, which, perplexingly, has been questioned as too nice. It's a notion that Frost calls ridiculous.


"Some of them were great questions and some of them were some of the dumbest questions I've ever heard," Frost said via OregonLive.com on the questions he's gotten from scouts. "I think it's ridiculous to think Marcus is too nice to play football. If that was the case, he wouldn't have won so many games around here."


In 41 games as Oregon's starting quarterback, Mariota threw for 10,796 yards, 105 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. His teams were 36-5 in those games and he scored a 33 on the Wonderlic test.


The first questioning of Mariota's niceness came in comments published in Sports Illustrated in October when the entity published a quote from a scout saying Mariota may apologize to you for punching him in the stomach. The hyperbole is typical of NFL scouts when granted anonymity.


And, honestly, it's not that surprising that Mariota's polite demeanor is being picked apart. This is the same league that has had scouts from teams allegedly shadow Jameis Winston on planes earlier this year. And no one can forget what Dolphins management said to Dez Bryant in a combine interview before the Cowboys drafted him.


NFL people are paranoid because drafting the next Ryan Leaf or JaMarcus Russell can cost them their jobs. The paranoia doesn't excuse the ridiculousness, but with all the game film from players' college careers already picked apart at this point, teams are desperate for any bits of new information. And in turn, apparently means a lot of dumb questions.


Only two more weeks until the draft.


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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News sport : Masters winner Jordan Spieth has taken plenty of cash from Tony Romo on course

Jordan Spieth wears his green jacket after winning the Masters golf tournament Sunday, April 12, 2015, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) Jordan Spieth is a 21-year-old who just won the Masters. You may or may not know this, depending on your affinity for non-football sports, but as an NFL fan, you will surely appreciate this: Spieth, a Texas product, has taken lots of money from Tony Romo on the course.


Romo has some skills on the golf course; he's tried a few times to qualify for the U.S. Open but hasn't ever come all that close. But for whatever reason, he's somehow gotten it into his head that he's almost good enough to take on a Masters champion straight up.


Talking on Jim Rome's Showtime show, Spieth discussed his games with Romo, and noted that the Cowboys QB's judgment may be a bit suspect on the course.


"The good news is he doesn't swallow his pride and take a lot of strokes," Spieth said. "He likes to play maybe like 2 or 3 a side, which means I'm usually on the winning end of that one."


(For the non-golf-aware: "Taking strokes" is a way of evening out the scores of players of different levels. An amateur taking two or three strokes against a pro is the equivalent of going over the middle against the Seahawks without wearing pads or a helmet.)


So how many times has Romo banged his head against this particular brick wall? Plenty, apparently. When asked about how much cash he's taken from Romo, Spieth laughed. "Oh man, I don't know. I can't even count that high. He's a good friend and a great competitor so we have fun out there."


Romo visited Augusta last week, but he was following Tiger Woods around at the time. Woods consulted with Romo about recovery from back surgery. But like Romo, he finished well back of Spieth.


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



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News sport : Daily Dime: Adam Lind, come on down

Below, you'll find today's ten-pack of solid options. As always, please make sure to hit the weather reports and check the lineups before finalizing your selections.


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Adam Lind, 1B, vs. STL (Lackey), $3700 at FanDuel: Lind has gone 15-for-28 in his career against Lackey, with six doubles, six RBIs and only two Ks. That's ownership, friends. Start him with confidence. With glee. With gusto. With verve.


Asdrubal Cabrera, SS, at Tor (Sanchez), $3000: Jays starter Aaron Sanchez was something less than dominant in his first start this season (please note the 2.70 WHIP), so he shouldn't scare you away from any Rays. Cabrera bats third for Tampa Bay, he plays a premium position and Thursday's schedule is light.


David DeJesus, OF, at Tor (Sanchez), $2800: Again, it's only a six-game slate. DeJesus is a top-of-the-order hitter at a bargain price, a good bet to reach base and cross the plate. He's a career .287/.364/.445 batter against RHPs, and he's certainly hitting well to open the year.


Marcell Ozuna, OF, at NYM (Gee), $3200: OK, so Ozuna has not exactly raced outta the gate in 2015. But on Thursday he's facing an ordinary starter against whom he's 5-for-10 in his short career (with zero punchouts). It's not the worst setup. There's at least a small chance Ozuna clears the fence.


Lorenzo Cain, OF, at Min (Milone), $3600: Cain's season is off to a terrific start (.387/.474/.581), and the soft-tossing left-handed Milone should be a favorable matchup. While he's not the cheapest option in the OF pool, Cain is a solid play here, batting third for KC.


Alcides Escobar, SS, at Min (Milone), $3400: Escobar is leading off for the Royals, he's currently batting .412, and he has at least one hit in every game thus far (including five in his last two). I'm in. Again, Milone shouldn't scare you off.


Jason Vargas, SP, at Min (Milone), $7900: OK, this is my final Royal for the day, I promise. If you're looking for a less-expensive pitching alternative to Bumgarner (see below), consider Vargas. He's facing a light-hitting, two-win team, and I'm obviously bullish on KC's chances to offer run support against Milone.


Ben Revere, OF, at Was (Fister), $2800: Revere has had a messy start to his season, true (.139 AVG), but he's 9-for-28 in his career against Fister, with only two Ks. Also, he's a dirt-cheap OF on a day that offers limited options.


Matt Duffy, SS, vs. Ari (Bradley), $2400: I felt it was important to discuss Duffy, if only to bring to your attention his family's disturbingly large cat. Just ... wow. That's really a lotta damn cat, Duffy family. Maybe consider limiting Jabba's Skeeter's rations.


Duffy is currently batting .292/.357/.458, he homered on Wednesday, and the dude hit .332 in the Eastern League last year. He can play a little. He's facing Archie Bradley on Thursday, a promising young pitcher with control concerns. It's tough to beat this price.


Madison Bumgarner, SP, vs. Ari (Bradley), $10,500: Duh. You shouldn't need an expert for this pick, really. Bumgarner and the Giants are strong favorites against the D-backs (-190). It's a significant price, but this feels like such a safe, blue-chip play.






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News sport : Robinson Cano has costly, embarrassing baserunning blunder

By all accounts, Seattle Mariners second baseman Robinson Cano appears to be a smart player with high Baseball IQ. Unfortunately for the struggling Mariners, that IQ briefly eluded Cano on Wednesday night.


Trailing 5-2 in the sixth inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers the Mariners were threatening with Cano on third, Nelson Cruz on second and just one out. Logan Morrison then worked a walk off Dodgers reliever Paco Rodriguez when Cano inexplicably started casually jogging toward home. We’ll let the great Vin Scully describe the scene:



The only explanation is that Cano thought the bases were already loaded and he’d just been walked in. The baserunning blunder proved costly, too. Instead of having the bases loaded with one out and the go-ahead run coming to the plate, the Mariners instead had runners on first and second with two out. The next batter was Mike Zunino who promptly grounded into a fielder’s choice.


“Robby just thought the bases were loaded,” Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon told the Associated Press. “We got in the way of our talents, there's no question about that.” The Dodgers held on for a 5-2 win and completed a three-game sweep of the Mariners who fell to 3-6.


The Cano mistake was a unique, rarely seen event but brings back memories of other baseball blunders, notably every time a player forgets how many outs there are. The most memorable is perhaps Larry Walker who, as a member of the Montreal Expos in 1994, made a catch near the foul line then gave the ball to a fan, not realizing it was only the second out. That game was also against the Dodgers in L.A., maybe it’s something in the Dodger Stadium water?


Courtesy of MLB, here’s a list of 10 times players forgot how many outs there were. Cano now feels their pain.


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News sport : Closing Time: Steven Souza surging for Rays

When the Rays acquired Steven Souza back in December, in that complicated three-team, zillion-player deal with the Pads and Nats, the 25-year-old outfielder immediately became a buzzy fantasy sleeper. He was coming off a tremendous season at Triple-A (.350/.432/.590), and he'd landed in a spot that offered guaranteed playing time.


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And then the spring stats rolled in. Souza slashed just .130/.203/.259 over 58 spring plate appearances, striking out 17 times and delivering only three extra-base hits. Not great. He was relatively quiet in the first week of the real season, too, going 2-for-16 over Tampa Bay's first six games.


But a trip to the Rogers Centre in Toronto seems to have fixed Souza's issues, whatever they were. He's 6-for-13 in the series, he's homered in back-to-back games — check the moonshot from Tuesday — and he's lifted his season slash to a respectable .276/.382/.517.


Here's hoping you were patient with Souza, because it's easy to see the 20/20 potential. He went 18/26 last season at Syracuse in just 96 games. It's hard to imagine Souza hitting for average considering the high K-rate (13 in 34 PAs), but he can still assist in multiple categories. Assuming good health, put me down for 80-25-85-20-.264. Wish I owned an additional share or two.


Brandon Morrow's season is off to a pretty fair start in San Diego, and he delivered a useful no-decision on Wednesday: 7.0 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, BB, 5 K. After two turns, Morrow's ERA is 1.29 and he's up to 12 Ks in 14.0 IP. It's tough not to like the team/league context, as well as the home park. Health will always be a worry with Morrow, but the stuff is legit. He should draw two starts next week, but both have a high degree of difficulty (at Col, LAD).


Trevor Bauer, good again. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak) Trevor Bauer took another quality turn, earning a win over the White Sox while striking out eight batters in 6.0 innings. You'll recall that he gave us six no-hit frames in his season debut last week versus Houston. With two starts in the books, Bauer is now 2-0 with a 1.50 ERA and 19 Ks in 12.0 innings. Walks are an issue (9), but he'll continue to deliver punch-outs. Bauer will draw the Sox again next week.


Michael Morse homered for the first time this season, in Miami's 6-2 win at Atlanta. Morse seems oddly under-owned (39 percent), considering his favorable lineup position and well-established power. Add as needed, if you're in search of pop.


Speaking of widely available power: O's second baseman Jonathan Schoop (11 percent) hit his third homer of the season on Wednesday, a solo shot in a win over the Yanks. Schoop is hardly a perfect fantasy commodity — he doesn't steal, doesn't walk, hits at the bottom of the order — but he offers 20-homer potential at a middle-infield spot. He clearly has some value in mixers with MI slots.


Adam Ottavino earned his second save in as many days, striking out two in another perfect inning. He's a major early season victory for save-chasers. For those looking for a deep dive into Ottavino's arsenal, click this terrific piece by Eno Sarris, over at FanGraphs.


My only regret in dropping Taijuan Walker this morning is that I could only do it once. He's been lousy, after a stellar spring. The future is bright; the present, less so. Hopefully he'll be allowed to face Houston's K-prone lineup next week.


Friendly reminder: Thursday might just be Kris Bryant eve, as baseball's top prospect should be clear of the pesky service-time hurdle in time for the weekend series against the Pads. The Cubs have a pile of broken third basemen on their hands at the moment, so they can certainly use the power boost. If you own Bryant in a PCL-only league, I'd advise you to sell. He's off to a .333/.379/.625 start at Iowa.






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