News sport : 2015 NBA playoff predictions


Will LeBron James deliver an NBA championship to Cleveland? Can Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors continue to roll after winning 67 games during the regular season? Or, can the San Antonio Spurs reach the NBA Finals for the third straight season and win back-to-back titles for the first time?


The playoffs are here, and Yahoo Sports' NBA experts give their picks for each series and the league's annual awards.










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Problems mount for Bayern

Bayern Munich's long-time team doctor Hans-Wilhelm Mueller-Wohlfahrt has surprisingly resigned following their Champions League loss to Porto.


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Berlin - Bayern Munich's long-time team doctor Hans-Wilhelm Mueller-Wohlfahrt has surprisingly resigned following their Champions League loss to Porto, saying the medical department was blamed for the defeat.


Mueller-Wohlfahrt, a respected doctor, has been in charge since 1977 and has also treated many other top global athletes, including sprinter Usain Bolt, while also being the German national soccer team doctor as well.


“After the Champions League game at Porto for unexplained reasons it was the medical department that was chiefly blamed for the defeat,” Mueller-Wohlfahrt said in a late night statement on Thursday.


He said “the relationship of trust has been permanently damaged.”


Bayern have been struggling with injuries in recent weeks with Bastian Schweinstieger, Franck Ribery, Arjen Robben and David Alaba all missing the game against the Portuguese team on Wednesday.


The ties with Pep Guardiola who took over in 2014 were tense from the first season with midfielder Thiago Alcantara being sent for treatment to Barcelona by the Spanish coach without consulting the team doctor.


The most recent incident was involving Ribery. The player was initially ruled out for a few days with an injury but the winger has already missed the last five weeks.


“Ask the team doctor, I have no idea,” Guardiola said last week when asked when the player would make his comeback.


Mueller-Wohlfahrt's resignation comes at a crucial time for Bayern, who are chasing a treble of titles, entering the crucial phase of the season.


Bayern, who are 10 points clear at the top of the Bundesliga, face Borussia Dortmund in the German Cup last four and have to overturn the 3-1 deficit against Porto in the return leg in Munich next week.


The club could not be immediately reached for a comment. – Reuters






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Chelsea duo up for PFA award

Chelsea pair Diego Costa and Eden Hazard were named on the shortlist for the Professional Footballers' Association Player of the Year award.


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London - Chelsea pair Diego Costa and Eden Hazard were named on the shortlist for the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) Player of the Year award.


The Premier League leaders are the only club to have two players nominated for the end-of-season accolade.


Liverpool's Philippe Coutinho, Manchester United keeper David de Gea, Tottenham Hotspur striker Harry Kane and Arsenal forward Alexis Sanchez are also on the shortlist.


Brazilian-born Spain striker Costa is the league's top scorer with 19 goals, having joined Jose Mourinho's side from Atletico Madrid in the close season.


Belgian international Hazard has flourished in the playmaker role, helping Chelsea open a seven-point gap at the top of the table with a game in hand and seven matches still to play.


Hazard also makes the Young Player of the Year shortlist where he is joined by Coutinho, De Gea and Kane as well as his Chelsea team mate and Belgium goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois.


Liverpool forward Raheem Sterling, who has made headlines after footage emerged of the England international apparently taking nitrous oxide as well as for his contract standoff at the Merseyside club, is also up for the Young Player of the Year award. – Reuters






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Napoli closing in on Europa League semis

Napoli put a foot in the Europa League semi-finals with a perfectly crafted 4-1 win at VfL Wolfsburg.


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London - Napoli put a foot in the Europa League semi-finals with a perfectly crafted 4-1 win at VfL Wolfsburg as Marek Hamsik scored twice in an Italian masterclass to bring cheer to beleaguered coach Rafa Benitez.


Napoli are seven points adrift of the Serie A Champions League places but their chances of reaching Europe's elite competition by winning its second-tier cousin look strong after they crushed the German side in their quarter-final first leg.


The other three ties are in the balance with holders Sevilla coming back to beat Zenit St Petersburg 2-1 in Spain, Dynamo Kiev conceding late in a 1-1 home draw with Fiorentina and Club Bruges drawing 0-0 with Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk.


Sevilla's hopes of retaining their title looked under threat when Aleksandr Ryazantsev lashed home for the visitors but Carlos Bacca equalised and fellow substitute Denis Suarez grabbed an 88th-minute winner with an exquisite volley.


Zenit, though, will fancy their chances of overturning the deficit in next Thursday's return leg, keeping alive the possibility of a final between clubs from Russia and Ukraine amid simmering political tensions between the two countries.


Dnipro will be the happier of the two Ukrainian sides left in the competition and need only to win at home against Bruges to progress, while their compatriots face a tougher challenge.


Kiev took the lead against Fiorentina through Jeremain Lens's deflected effort after 36 minutes and led until the second minute of stoppage time when Khouma Babacar equalised with an overhead kick to snatch a crucial away goal.


Wolfsburg might have fancied their chances against Benitez's stuttering Napoli outfit having dispatched another Serie A side Inter Milan comprehensively in the last round, but when it comes to Europe the Spanish coach is a canny operator.


A European champion with Liverpool in 2005 and seeking to become the second man after Giovanni Trapattoni to win the Europa League trophy for a third time, Benitez knows how to approach the cut and thrust of continental knockout competition.


The manner in which Napoli took the lead was controversial, however, with Gonzalo Higuain controlling a lofted through ball with his arm before firing home after 15 minutes for his fifth goal in his last five Europa League appearances.


The Argentina striker then set up Hamsik with a delightful crossfield through ball which the Slovakian walloped home eight minutes later before adding a third 19 minutes after the break.


Substitute Manolo Gabbiadini headed in under the trailing foot of Wolfsburg keeper Diego Benaglio to effectively kill the tie, before Nicklas Bendtner grabbed a late consolation.


Things looked to be going awry for holders Sevilla when Ryazantsev fired home at the second attempt to hand Zenit the lead after 29 minutes, but their hopes of overturning a woeful record against Spanish clubs fell apart late in the second half.


Zenit, who have won only twice in 15 games against Spanish opponents and are without a victory in their last eight against La Liga teams, were pegged back after 73 minutes when Bacca powered home a header.


The comeback was completed when Suarez produced a feat of clinical technique to bury a stunning volley from the edge of the area with two minutes remaining.


There was also late drama in Ukraine where Dynamo Kiev were hoping to meet the Fiorentina side who have struggled recently in Serie A rather than the swashbuckling Europa League version who put paid to Tottenham Hotspur and AS Roma in the last two rounds.


It all seemed to be going to plan when Lens's shot from the edge of the area took a wicked deflection and looped into the net over Fiore keeper Neto in the first half.


Babacar's late acrobatics, however, meant that the two sides return to Florence in a week's time with the scores level and the Italians carrying a precious away goal. – Reuters






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News sport : Wild’s perfect road game humbles Blues in Game 1


ST. LOUIS, MO - APRIL 16: Devan Dubnyk #40 and Matt Dumba #55 of the Minnesota Wild celebrate after beating the St. Louis Blues during Game One of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2015 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Scottrade Center on April 16, 2015 in St. Louis, Missouri. The Wild beat the Blues 4-2. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images)

Jake Allen will start Game 2 for the St. Louis Blues. That’s good news. That means the goalie wasn’t the problem in their Game 1 loss to the Minnesota Wild.


Now, they just have to work on the other things that have plagued their playoff disappointments: Struggling to generate offense with any consistency, and demonstrating a killer instinct.


The Wild took Game 1, 4-2, a score pumped up by a pair of empty net goals by Minnesota and a shorthander by the Blues in the last 1:13 of the game. They played a quintessential road game – limiting the Blues’ chances, and during the second period, completely snuffing out their offense.


The Blues were outshot 14-4 in the second period, and were dominated in puck possession (62.50 percent Corsi-For, in favor of the Wild). Matt Dumba’s power-play goal in the second built on Jason Zucker’s first-period goal for a 2-0 lead they’d never relinquish.


They outshot the home team, 29-21, giving Devan Dubnyk his first playoff win. They were more disciplined, as the Blues finished with 18 penalty minutes to four for the Wild – two of them on an ill-advised cross-checking minor on captain David Backes with 1:11 left.


"We didn't get the shots. They boxed out. We had a lot of zone time in the 1st period and they did a better job of clogging the middle. They gave us the top of the zone. We couldn’t get the pucks through,” said Hitchcock.


The coach said the Blues’ early struggles on offense made his players overthink plays, eschewing simplicity to make “two or three extra plays.”


Vladimir Tarasenko didn’t have a shot. Ditto linemate Jori Lehtera. Backes had one.


“We didn’t bring our ‘A’ game from the drop of the puck,” said Backes. “We’ll take blame where it’s due.”


As for the Wild, as Michael Russo writes, the win bucked several trends:


The Wild, 1-9 in the past two postseasons on the road, waltzed into an arena that has been unkind since 2007 and played a terrific hockey game. Typically in St. Louis, the Wild spend most the night being pasted against the boards and running around its own zone.


The Wild was 3-8-2 in its previous 13 games at St. Louis, having been outscored 43-24 in that span. It had won once in regulation in the previous 14 visits since Oct. 20, 2007.


But the Wild, winners of 12 of its final 13 road games in the regular season, played a solid defensive game. It blocked 12 shots in the first period and held the Blues to four second-period shots, including none in the final 8:32 of the period.


“I don’t think we expected to win four straight,” said Allen. “Saturday’s a new day.”






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News sport : BDL’s 2014-15 Playoff Previews: Los Angeles Clippers vs. San Antonio Spurs

How They Got Here


Los Angeles: Unburned from having to be known as the team that works for the NBA’s most onerous executive, the Clippers overcame depth and injury issues per usual to wrest the three seed out of the wicked Western Conference. Lumped in with several other Western championship contenders to start the year, the Clippers managed to overcome Blake Griffin’s rather frightening staph infection in his right elbow, one that forced him to undergo surgery and leave the Clipper lineup for 15 games.


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


Just as Griffin circled the wagons the year before, point guard Chris Paul turned in an MVP-level season both with Blake and without. The All-Star ran the NBA’s best offense and managed 19.1-point and 10.2-assist averages while turning it over just 2.3 times a contest. J.J. Redick shot the lights out for most of the season, and coach/president Doc Rivers wrested capable performances from yet-again laughable crew of role players both familiar (Hedo Turkoglu shot 43 percent from long range, Glen Davis saw major minutes) and way-too familiar: Rivers traded draft picks for his son Austin midway through the season, and the younger Rivers failed to take off in his father’s presence.


Understandable concerns about the team’s defense lingered for most of the season, despite Rivers’ pronouncements that center DeAndre Jordan (leading the league in rebounds at 15 a game while becoming the first player to shoot over 70 percent since Wilt Chamberlain) was far and away the league’s top defensive player – an argument that is shaky at best and a little embarrassing at worst once one considers the hyperbolic nature of Rivers’ statements. That defense improved considerably in the second half of the season, however, as the Clippers look to take their first title with a top-ranked offense and overall middling defensive statistics.


San Antonio: It was stereotype San Antonio performance, really, not exactly playing possum for 2014-15’s first months but still relying on a white hot run of play to end the season to strike fear into the Western Conference bracket yet again, doing so for the 54th time since the construction of the Berlin Wall. Turning in at “only” the sixth seed, the Spurs hope to recreate the magic of a sixth-seeded Houston Rocket team from two decades ago, one that won close series after close series in a similarly-packed West on its way to consecutive titles.


San Antonio wasn’t just resting its players while biding its time until the snow melted, point guard Tony Parker struggled with age and injury prior to righting his play in the final third of the season. Manu Ginobili suffered an ankle sprain after the All-Star break, and Kawhi Leonard was limited to just 31.8 minutes a contest over 64 games due to a hand injury and coach Gregg Popovich’s righteous quest to keep his players at peak form in June’s second week. Leonard’s gifts remain tantalizing, he’ll lead the league in steals by a sound margin despite playing so few minutes, and his post-up game is improving by leaps and bounds. Tony Parker wasn’t just pumping the prospect up when he called the Spurs Leonard’s team earlier in April.


Then there’s Popovich, thinking on his feet once again and taking advantage of his younger swingmen’s (including Danny Green) ability to cause turnovers and leak out onto the controlled break. The Spurs finished second in defensive efficiency once again, but it’s to Coach Pop’s everlasting credit that the team climbed to that ranking in entirely new ways with an emerging crew that supports its bulwark coach and Hall of Fame-bound veterans.


We’ve also made it this far without mentioning Tim Duncan, who turned in a superior defensive season while providing All-Star level per-minute production at age 38. The man is an absolute marvel, and he has as good a chance as any NBA superstar in leading his team to a title this year.


Head to Head


Depending on your definition of a classic, the teams may have given us one when the Clippers hung on to down the Spurs in the team’s last regular season meeting on Feb. 19, with San Antonio purposely sending DeAndre Jordan to the line 28 times (he made 10 and finished with 26 points and 18 rebounds). Tim Duncan, giddy at the thought of a slowed-down game, scored 30 with 11 rebounds in one of his better games of the year. The Clippers also beat San Antonio at home on Jan. 31 during the dregs of Tony Parker’s (2-10) shooting woes.


The Spurs took another two close games, with Parker going off for 26 on Dec. 22 in one of his better games of the season and Leonard notching the same amount in an ugly four-point early season Spurs victory.


Likely Starting Lineups


Coach Popovich reserves the right to surprise, as 12 different Spurs have taken in starts this season, not including nominal starter Manu Ginobili (who didn’t start once but averaged the sixth-most minutes per game), but health-willing he’ll likely trot out Duncan alongside Tiago Splitter, Leonard, Parker and Danny Green. Splitter remains the question mark, he missed 30 games this season with a strained right calf and was held out of Wednesday’s crucial season-ending loss to New Orleans after it tightened up on him. Rotations shorten in the postseason, but Popovich has no problem sitting all of his starters for 15 minutes of a close game – it was a killer core when healthy during the latter part of the season and should remain that way in the playoffs.


The same can also be said for Los Angeles lineup of Jordan, Griffin, Matt Barnes, Redick and Paul. That lineup gets to the line a ton, it rarely crashes the offensive boards (a Doc Rivers staple) and it stands to order whenever Chris Paul furrows his brow. Blake Griffin proved last season that he is eminently capable of running an offense through the pinch post and his passing stats this season (5.3 a game for a big forward?) are once again superb, but this is Paul’s team and for good reason – how can one argue with a top offensive ranking? J.J. Redick is also to be credited for his career year, much needed with reserve guard Jamal Crawford missing 18 games.


Key Matchups


Kawhi Leonard vs. Chris Paul


This is what everyone is waiting to see. The Clippers haven’t played San Antonio since Leonard’s late-season (healthy) ascension into the NBA’s Next Great Thing, and though Leonard may not start off on the NBA’s best point guard defensively, you can be sure the 23-year old Kawhi will be asked to hound the veteran for long stretches. Paul has made a career out of incredibly efficient, turnover-less play, and the Spurs (until this season) never used to pine for picking up steals, but something’s gotta give when someone like Kawhi Leonard suits up.


DeAndre Jordan vs. Gregg Popovich


We know it’s going to happen. Gregg Popovich is not only going to demand that his cadre of bigs (Duncan, Splitter, sometimes-starter Aron Baynes, Boris Diaw) wrap up Jordan when he attempts to bring that 71 percent field goal “shooting” mark in to the postseason, but we might see the Spurs (who once again were a top ten team when it came to keeping the hacks at home) foul Jordan intentionally off the ball.


Jordan only shot five free throws (making three) in three previous games against San Antonio prior to that 10-28 monstrosity in the teams’ first game after the All-Star break. DeAndre made just 39.7 percent of his freebies this season, and though Popovich admits he isn’t a fan of the strategy, you can’t blame the coach for going with what works.


Time vs. Time


Both of these teams have to win, now. Blake Griffin may be just 26 and Leonard won’t turn 24 until after the Finals, but these are both win-now crews that have to put something together in 2015. Chris Paul and Tony Parker aren’t going to fall apart any time soon, but the Clippers would be deadened after wasting what was just about a perfect season from CP3, and the Spurs have to strike while Parker (who turns 33 next month) is still potent. Los Angeles’ inability to add rotation help in the offseason (thanks to some win-now gobbling by Rivers as GM) and the looming potential for Tim Duncan’s retirement also come into play.


And they’re playing in the first round. Bloody hell, this West.


Totally Subjective Entertainment Value Ranking: 10 out of 10.


Even if Popovich spends far too much time fouling Jordan, even if the Clippers continue to curse and complain at the referees, it hardly matters. These are two championship-level teams that could (hopefully) provide us with two weeks’ worth of knockout basketball. Pity that it has to end for one of them in the first week of May.


Prediction: Spurs in six.


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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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Congress turns into pro-Blatter rally

Hailed as an icon and compared to Jesus Christ and Nelson Mandela, Fifa’s Sepp Blatter has gained new backers.


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Nassau, Bahamas - Hailed as “the father of football” and compared to Jesus Christ and Nelson Mandela, Fifa chief Sepp Blatter got backing from across Caribbean and Central American countries at the CONCACAF congress on Thursday.


Blatter received pledges of support from 10 federations as the congress quickly turned from a business meeting into a rally to support the incumbent president of soccer's world governing body.


The Trinidad and Tobago FA chief Raymond Tim Kee praised Blatter as the “father of football” while the president of the Dominican Republic federation Osiris Guzman compared the 79-year-old Swiss to Moses, Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill and Martin Luther King Jr as well as Jesus and Mandela.


Guzman was suspended by Fifa in 2011 for 30 days and fined following an Ethics Committee investigation into the allegations surrounding the cash for votes scandal at the last Fifa presidential election.


There were no speeches in favour of any of the opposing candidates - former Portugal international Luis Figo, Dutch FA chief Michael van Praag and Jordanian Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein all of whom were present as observers.


“I think CONCACAF membership is sending a clear message that we continue to support president Blatter,” said CONCACAF president Jeffrey Webb, who was later re-elected, unopposed, as head of his body.


Figo was unhappy with the way the congress proceeded.


“When some speak and others are silenced, democracy and football lose. Elections are, per definition, a democratic process. Otherwise they are not elections,” Figo told Reuters.


The heads of football federations from Jamaica, Haiti, Turks and Caicos, Cuba, Panama, St Vincent and the Grenadines and Puerto Rico also expressed their support for Blatter.


On Thursday Gordon Derrick, president of the Caribbean Football Union, said there would be no block vote from the region but some speakers called for the return of that practice.


The speeches came during a time put aside for the formal approval of minutes from the previous congress and appeared to be well choreographed.


“President Blatter has been playing on our team for the first half and as coaches of that team we are not going to take him out of the game. We ask congress to let him play the second half,” said a Cuban delegate.


“Loud and clear” replied Webb.


Despite the eulogies to Blatter, opposition candidates said that behind the scenes they had picked up support.


“We knew in advance there was support for Mr Blatter in this region,” Van Praag told Reuters. “I know from my meetings that there also countries in CONCACAF that want a change, they are sure of that and they are not going to vote for Mr Blatter.”


Reuters






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News sport : Jameis Winston sued by accuser in sexual assault incident

Jameis Winston (AP) Almost exactly two weeks before the NFL draft is to begin, news broke that the presumptive top pick James Winston is being sued by his accuser in an alleged sexual assault incident from 2012.


The story was first reported by Matt Baker of the Tampa Bay Times. Baker reported the lawsuit was filed by Erica Kinsman on Thursday in the Circuit Court of the Ninth Judicial District. In the lawsuit, according to the Tampa Bay Times, Kinsman accuses Winston, the 2013 Heisman Trophy winner at Florida State, of sexual battery, assault, false imprisonment and "intentional infliction of emotional distress arising out of forcible rape." The incident in question happened in December of 2012.


Winston was not criminally charged in the case due to insufficient evidence. He was cleared in a Florida State code of conduct hearing. Kinsman also filed a Title IX federal lawsuit against Florida State this year. Florida State filed a motion in March to dismiss that suit.


This news, while very close to the draft, isn't likely to change much about Winston's draft status. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers knew about the allegations from the incident. Everyone who has followed Winston did; it became a huge story in 2013. Buccaneers coach Lovie Smith has already said he is comfortable with Winston off the field.


Yahoo Sports' Charles Robinson said that Bucs ownership, and Darcie Glazer Kassewitz in particular, "has raised some internal questions about the community relations impact of the pick." But it's not like the lawsuit filed on Thursday changes any of the facts the Bucs knew of the case. Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times confirmed through sources that the lawsuit won't affect the Buccaneers' decision.


Here is the statement Kinsman's attorney, John Clune, gave to Baker of the Tampa Bay Times:



"Today, a very brave young woman filed her lawsuit against Jameis Winston for the sexual battery that she reported to police in December 2012. Over the past two years, this survivor of sexual violence has had to endure a delinquent police investigation, a hostile FSU athletic department, and Mr. Winston's bullying lawyer. But the more these forces sought to silence her, the more determined she has become to step forward and hold Jameis Winston accountable for his actions. With the support of her family, she is prepared for this fight and for the counterclaims and the smear campaigns that will surely follow.




"We know that quite often the public is quick to support the cause against sexual violence but at times can be slow to support the individual women who come forward. We hope that this case becomes a model for understanding what real sexual assault cases look like as well as the barriers that survivors face in coming forward. Perhaps more than anything, Erica hopes to show other survivors the strength and empowerment that can come from refusing to stay silent no matter what forces are against you.




"Jameis Winston in contrast has proven time and time again to be an entitled athlete who believes he can take what he wants. He took something here that he was not entitled to and he hurt someone. There are consequences for that behavior and since others have refused to hold him accountable, our client will."



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






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News sport : Ryan Newman's points penalty reduced to 50 on appeal

Richard Childress Racing's appeal of penalties to Ryan Newman's No. 31 team at California netted the team a reduction in punishment.


NASCAR initially penalized the No. 31 team 75 points for manipulating tires during the March 22 race. Newman's team was found to have drilled holes in the car's tires. The slow loss of air via the holes allows the tires to better maintain a lower air pressure and, therefore, speed, throughout the duration of a tire run.


While the penalties were upheld, the points penalty is down to 50 points after the appeal. Crew chief Luke Lambert also saw his fine cut to $75,000 from $125,000 though his six-race suspension was upheld.


With the 50-point penalty, Newman has 172 points and is 18th in the standings.


According to a NASCAR release, NASCAR's appeals panel of John Capels, Hunter Nickell and Dale Pinilis

found that the violations matched what NASCAR defined them as. However, the penalties were lessened "because there is no written explanation of what constitutes a post-race inspection."


When announcing the penalties, NASCAR said the points penalty was 75 instead of 50 and the fine $125,000 instead of $75,000 because the violations were found after the race. Tires are leased from Goodyear and can be taken from teams during a race. It's unclear what set of tires from Newman's race at California were found to be manipulated.


RCR tire tech James Bender and engineer Philip Surgen are also suspended for six races with Lambert. The three worked in their same capacities Saturday night at Texas and will miss Bristol, Richmond, Talladega, Kansas and the All-Star Race and Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte unless RCR decides to appeal again. After the initial appeals panel, teams have the opportunity to make a final appeal. The team has not announced if it will do so.


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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 : Stanley Cup Playoffs Preview: Anaheim Ducks vs. Winnipeg Jets


Yahoo

(Ed. Note: There are five Canadian teams in the 2015 Stanley Cup Playoffs, trying their hardest to recapture Lord Stanley’s Cup and return it to the Great White North after it’s been in the grimy, unworthy hands of American teams since 1994. Here is Puck Daddy’s Playoff Preview for the first round, complete with a celebration of their Canadian elements.)


Teemu Selanne was never considered a physical player. In his prime, he was too fast, and too smart to be hit. With that in mind, it’s probably best he retired when he did because now that his two teams are meeting in the playoffs, there will be blood.


Anaheim and Winnipeg are two of the more physical teams in the league. The Jets were No. 8 in total hits and the Ducks were No. 10. Both teams are in the top 10 for total penalty minutes, total penalties received, total major penalties, and total game misconducts.


Really, with the likes Corey Perry and Dustin Byfuglien in the lineup, would you expect anything less?



NHL Schedule

Forwards


Remember when the Jets had Evander Kane? The loss of Kane didn’t seem to have much of an impact on the forwards, if anything, it might have made them better. The Jets have two 60+ point scorers, one 50+ point scorer, and four 40+ point scorers.


The combination of Andrew Ladd, Bryan Little, and Michael Frolik have combined for 156-points of total offense this season. Using the NHL: Player Chemistry index, Ladd and Little are the most dangerous on the ice together; 30 of the pair’s combined 48 goals have come from one another. The second line of Drew Stafford, Mark Scheifele, and Blake Wheeler are just as deadly with a total of 153-points (when including Stafford’s stats from Buffalo). Coming to Winnipeg has reinvigorated Stafford. He had 19 points in 26 games, including a 9-game point streak. The third line contains two mid-season acquisitions, Jiri Tlusty and Lee Stempniak, and they’re centered by Adam Lowry, who is filling in for the questionable former-Duck, Mathieu Perreault. The fragile Perreault has suffered through various injuries through out the season, but still managed a respectable 41 points in 62 games. Perreault is in Anaheim and listed as a game-time decision.


For a long time, the Ducks were known as a one line team, and rightfully so. Yet after years of developing talents, and some well-timed trades, Anaheim has a balanced scoring attack through all four lines. Bruce Boudreau’s has said from day one he wants all his players to be able to play with everybody on the team. In Bruce speak, that’s saying, “When I have no f-ing clue what to do, I’ll throw the lines in a blender and see what happens.”


As always, the offense begins and ends with Ryan Getzlaf and Corey Perry. Getzlaf had another strong season with 70-points in 77 games played. Perry hit the 30-goal plateau for the fifth time in his career; his total offense was down due to missing significant time with an injury and the mumps. Since the Bobby Ryan trade, the left wing position on the top line has been a revolving door of players. For the moment, Patrick Maroon finds himself up with the two stars to add some beef.


The acquisition of Ryan Kesler did exactly as was expected, giving the Ducks a one-two punch down the middle. Kesler’s 47 points in 81 games and 56.3-percent on the dot provided an excellent counter to Getzlaf. For now, Kesler has Matt Beleskey (career high 22 goals in 65 games) and Kyle Palmieri, on his wings. Palmieri and Kesler have 5 power play goals and 11 power play points each.


Jakob Silfverberg, a part of the Bobby Ryan trade, had his first healthy season in a Ducks sweater since he was acquired. His sneaky fast wrist shot gave him 39-points in 81 games played. Andrew Cogliano continues to chug along as the NHL’s active Iron Man leader; he gave the Ducks 3 short-handed goals during the year.


The Ducks will be without the services of stalwart centerman Nate Thompson, at least for Game 1. He was injured in Anaheim’s final game of the season. Thompson led the Ducks in hits at 206, and was second to Kesler in face-offs at 52.7%. Look for sophomore revelation Rickard Rakell (31-points, 71 GP) to take over a majority of his work.


ADVANTAGE: Even


Defensemen


Everyone knows about Dustin Byfuglien. Before injuries and suspensions set him back, he was having one of his best offensive seasons on the blueline with 45-points in 69 GP, and set the team record for penalty minutes at 124. He was third on the team in power play scoring with 17 points. He can and will destroy a player if given the opportunity. Jacob Trouba is continuing to be one of the stars of the d-corps. He's third on the team in time-on-ice at 23:18 per game and blocks the second most shots on the team. With his very good CF%, his name is list with top veteran d-men who've played at least 1,000 minutes and he's only 21-years old. Acquired from Buffalo at the deadline, Tyler Myers is an absolute beast. He's logging the most ice time on Winnipeg, and like Stafford, he's been reborn with the Jets with 15-points in 24 GP.


It wasn't a secret the Ducks biggest liability was their defensive group. Bob Murray did something about that and added Simon Despres, Korbinian Holzier and James Wisniewski. It appears Despres has been the only one of the new guys that's stuck as he'll be starting the series with Cam Fowler (34-points, 80 GP). Francois Beauchemin (plus-17) and Hampus Lindholm (plus-25) make up Anaheim's top pair. Rounding out the group is offensive defenseman Sami Vatenen who will never hesitate to join the forward rush. Partnered with Vatanen is Clayton Stoner. He's the biggest question mark on the top six. He's struggled, mightily at times, this season, but he's always willing to throw down, so that could be why Bruce keeps relying on him.


ADVANTAGE: Even



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You know what screams "old time hockey?" A LINE BRAWL! Everyone loves a line brawl!



Fighting Tyler Myers is like trying to fight a giraffe after you steal a carrot from its mouth, assuming giraffes eat carrots. Or have mouths.



Goaltending


At the beginning of the season, if you would’ve told Jets fans that Ondrej Pavelec would be their savior to get into the playoffs down the stretch, they would have punched you in the face. For all intents and purposes, Pavelec has spent much of his career with the Thrashers/Jets organization as a very average goaltender. It appeared to be another season of the same when Pavelec lost his net to rookie Michael Hutchinson. However, when Hutchinson faltered in mid-March, right when the Jets entered ‘must win’ game territory, Pavelec ceased the chance to take back the crease. In his final 12 games, he was 9-2-1, gave up zero goals in his final 3 games, and was named the second star of the final week of the season. Here’s the thing, neither Pavelec or Hutchinson have appeared in any playoff games. Will the bright lights and the exuberance of the atmosphere in Winnipeg be help or hindrance?


As for the Ducks, their goaltending conundrum appears to have been solved for them. Frederik Andersen missed a chunk of the back half of the season with a neck injury. Since returning, he’s helped the Ducks limp over the finish line. Neither Andersen nor wunderkind backup John Gibson were absolutely stellar to finish off the regular season, but they were good enough when the team playing in front of them didn’t care too much after punching their post-season ticket. Andersen wrapped up the regular season with a respectable 35-12-5 record, 2.38 GAA and .920 SV%. As for Gibson, he was injured during practice over the weekend and is not expected to be ready to back up Freddie in Game 1. Veteran Jason LaBarbera was called up from Norfolk and will back up Andersen for now.


This is beginning to feel eerily like the goaltending drama the Ducks went through in their playoff stint last season. One big factor that makes the two situations different – the lack of options Boudreau has at his disposal. Last season, Boudreau bungled the goaltending situation with Andersen, Gibson, and Hiller. Boudreau has to go with Freddie this time because Gibson just isn’t available. If he opts for LaBarbera for no reason other than a zombie apocalypse and Freddie is now a zombie, then he might as well start looking for another job.


ADVANTAGE: Ducks



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Ducks: 7.5. Could they be the least Canadian team? The half a player is for Cam Fowler. He was born in Windsor, Ontario; however, he’s half-American and chooses to play for the good guys…er… Team USA.


Jets: 15. It might be Canadian law that your NHL team be nearly half homegrown boys.


Coaches


There is one thing that Paul Maurice has over Bruce Boudreau – a trip to the big dance. In the ’01-’02 season, Maurice led the Carolina Hurricanes to the Cup finals, but would lose in five games to Detroit. Boudreau has coached a lot of good regular season teams, but he has yet to get to the promised land. Heck, he has yet to get out of the second round.


ADVANTAGE: Jets (Bruce’s worst enemy is his own mind.)


Special Teams


The Jets were No. 18 on the power play at 17.5 percent, and had the sixth-most opportunities on the man-advantage. For the penalty kill, they were No. 13 with 81.8 percent efficiency. They tied with the Islanders for most short-handed goals in the league at 10, and led the league in most times short-handed.


To say the Ducks power play is atrocious is being nice when they're No. 28 (15.7 percent). Missing Corey Perry and Sami Vantanen for a significant amount of time didn’t help. It’s probably a good thing they had the sixth-least amount of opportunity on the PP. As for the penalty kill, it was better than the power play at No. 15 (81.0 percent) with 9 short-handed goals.


ADVANTAGE: Jets



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Ducks: Until he was traded, no one was quite sure how to pronounce Simon Despres name. Thanks, TSN!


Jets: Adam Pardy. He’s from Bonavista. No, not (Lake) Buena Vista in sunny, warm Florida, but Bonavista… Newfoundland.


Players to Watch


Dustin Byfuglien because he’s gigantic; it’s impossible to miss him. Boudreau is going to try to keep Getzlaf and Perry away from him because he’s bound to make their lives miserable. If he can get under shut them down by getting under their skin and roughing them up, causing them to take bad penalties as they’ve been known to do, that can only lead to good things for the Jets.


Size-wise, Sami Vatanen is the polar opposite of Byfuglien, but he has a similar cannon of a shot. The Liliputian defenseman missed a chunk of time with an injury and that’s when the Ducks’ power play went down the toilet. Sami leads the team with 7 power play goals and 17 power play points. He’s the highest scoring defenseman with 37 points.


Prediction


Ducks in six. The Jets will be carried by the spirit of the fans in the first game at home, but the pressure may be too much for that young squad. Anaheim has the confidence, and playoff experience, to get them past the first round, at the very least.


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Jen Neale is an editor for Puck Daddy on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or follow her on Twitter!










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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.


[Yahoo Sports Fantasy Baseball: Sign up and join a league today!]


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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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 : 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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