Van Gaal proud of United

Louis van Gaal hailed the best performance of his Manchester United tenure even after seeing his side lose to Chelsea.


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London - Louis van Gaal hailed the best performance of his Manchester United tenure even after seeing his side lose to title-chasing Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.


United's six-game Premier League winning streak came to an end, but Van Gaal said: “I am not frustrated, I am very proud of my team. We played the best match of this season. But in football you can lose in spite of being the better team.


“We were the dominant team on the pitch. We created more chances. We were always in their half. It was an unbelievable performance.”


Jose Mourinho was just as pleased after seeing his team move so close to the title. “The team was fantastic,” he said. When asked about John Terry saying the players almost felt champions, however, he warned that they were not there yet. “I am not happy if John said that,” he said. “We need eight points to be champions. Football is not about 'if', it's not about 'almost', it's about mathematics.


“When mathematically it's done, it's done, we celebrate. But until that moment, we need two victories and two draws.”


The Independent on Sunday






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News sport : Silfverberg scores with 19.8-seconds left, put Ducks up 2-0 on Jets


ANAHEIM - If the hockey world wasn't aware of Jakob Silfverberg, they are now.


With 19.8-seconds remaining, the forward acquired in the Bobby Ryan-to-Ottawa trade, snapped a wrist shot past Ondrej Pavalec to ice the game, 2-1, for the Ducks.





The hard-hitting game was not without its controversies. And they both included Ryan Kesler… not in a good way.


Kesler aided the Jets in scoring their only goal of the game after he shoved Lee Stempniak into the net. As Stempniak was starting to leave the crease, Adam Pardy slipped a wraparound shot into the net.





Everyone in orange and black (and purple, if you include the color of Bruce Boudreau’s face) wanted the goal waived off, but as the official plainly states to Kesler, “You pushed him.” From Stephanie Vail:



If Adam Pardy's name doesn't ring a bell, at least on the score sheet, it's not surprising. This was the first goal he's scored since January 26, 2011 when he was a memeber of the Calgary Flames. He's better known as the guy who had his helmet stolen in the stands.


Shortly after the goal, Kesler follows through with an elbow to the head of 6’8” defenseman Tyler Myers. Myers was not injured and Kesler was only given two-minutes for an illegal check to the head. Is supplemental discipline on the play warranted? You be the judge!



The win put the Ducks up 2-0 as the teams travel to Winnipeg for what will be an emotional and electric Game 3.


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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! Follow @MsJenNeale_PD.


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News sport : A healthy Derrick Rose drops 23 in Chicago's Game 1 win over Milwaukee

CHICAGO – The Chicago Bulls are not the defensive team they once were. They’re also not the offensive team they once were. The Bulls can shoot now.


Chicago downed the defensive-minded Milwaukee Bucks 103-91 in Game 1 of the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs, in what was a surprisingly potent offensive affair. The Bulls, who ranked second in defensive efficiency last season, managed 60 first half points while this year’s No. 2 defensive outfit from Milwaukee added 51 of its own. The Bulls prevailed in the second half, however, behind a surprisingly potent three-point touch from Derrick Rose, who finished with 23 points and seven assists despite playing just 27 minutes.


Those minutes weren’t just a result of an ongoing minutes restriction. Rose was limited to shorter minutes during the regular season after undergoing his third knee surgery in three years in late February, and he made all of his hometown crowd gasp by falling awkwardly early in the first quarter. After a couple of uneasy possessions Rose left the contest, and though Chicago thrived in his absence, all of the United Center seemed to be staring at the Chicago bench – where Rose waived off all medical assistance.


Returning four minutes into the second quarter to rapturous applause, Rose managed to assuage all fears with a killer performance. Playing his first postseason game since tearing his left ACL in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference’s opening round in 2012, Rose nailed all five of his shots in just six and a half second quarter minutes, scoring 10 points as Chicago pulled away to enter the half with an eight-point lead.


Returning seemingly without hesitancy in the second half, Rose took to the three-point line – hitting three of four three-pointers in nine minutes (three of seven on the game), dropping 21 points in two quarters as Chicago built its lead.


Asked about his first quarter stumble and bench stint following the contest, Rose laughed and chalked up his sitdown to his need for a rest. “I was just tired, that was it. And Joakim Noah was telling me to take a break.”


Growing serious as he described his return to postseason action, Rose called the return “an honor,” crediting his teammates for support and the Bucks for “not double-teaming me” as he surveyed a Milwaukee defense that fell short in the face of a finally-healthy Bulls lineup.


Sitting next to backcourt mate at the Chicago podium, guard Jimmy Butler reminded everyone that Rose “makes everything better for everybody,” a sentiment that was supported with Butler’s white hot inside/outside scoring barrage from Saturday. The Most Improved Player candidate managed 25 points on only 14 shots with six assists in the win, leaking out in transition and showing the needed sort of confidence that apparently has sustained over from a superb regular season.


The killer here is building upon this outburst.


Milwaukee coach Jason Kidd may well have been speaking for the opposing team when he pointed out that his Bucks’ “first quarter was fool’s gold for us” and that his squad is “not an offensive team.” The Bucks ranked 25th in offensive efficiency on the season, and they seemed to get caught up in Chicago’s both sides now-attack as the game moved along. Young swingmen Giannis Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton combined to shoot 11-31 while attempting several long-range two-point attempts, and point man Michael Carter-Williams could not utilize his length in keeping Derrick Rose in check both on the perimeter, in transition, and in the half-court. After shooting 29 percent in the second quarter, the Bucks failed to string together consistent stops and scores as Chicago held them at arm’s length all game.


Chicago is not without its mitigating worries. Forward/center Taj Gibson was clearly pained by the same left ankle that caused him to miss nine games in March, and he had to leave the game early – though Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau told media that Gibson was cleared to play late by the medical staff. Chicago managed 30 assists but they also turned the ball over 19 times total. Eight of those came in the first quarter, and Thibodeau credited Chicago’s ability to clean things up in the miscue department for his squad’s ability to hold Milwaukee to 62 points over the final three quarters.


Circumspect as always, and mindful of the long series ahead and frustrating impermanence of a former MVP that hasn’t played a full and healthy season since winning the MVP in 2010-11, Thibodeau was cautious in his assessment of Rose. “He’s still working his way back,” was all Thibodeau offered, before getting back to more important things like his team’s propensity to overpass and the matchup issues Nikola Mirotic creates.


That’s the Bulls way, thus far. And so far in the 2015 postseason, it’s been a healthy way. The bloom may come off of Chicago’s particular Rose as he continues to line up for the same sort of three-pointers he hit just 28 percent of in the regular season, but for one night in Chicago things seemed as they should.


Took them long enough.


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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 : Paige VanZant shows she's no fluke with brutal beatdown of Felice Herrig

If anyone was still questioning Paige VanZant's ability after her rousing UFC debut in November of 2014, they won't be anymore.


The 21-year-old former ring girl was labeled just a pretty face when she squared off with Kailin Curran at UFC on Fox 15 – when it was over, she was $50,000 richer after dominating her opponent en route to a performance of the night bonus from UFC president Dana White.


On Saturday, in front of pumped-up Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, VanZant put on a performance that should continue to quell any debate on just where exactly the blossoming flyweight belongs.


For facing a self-professed "idol" in veteran Felice Herrig, VanZant showed a complete lack of regard, or any semblance of respect. From the opening bell, VanZant was relentless with her attack. When the fight went to the mat – a place where the ground-based Herrig was said to have an advantage – VanZant dominated with wily, veteran-like scrambles and postured punches.Felice Herrig and Paige VanZant grapple during their women's strawweight bout. (Getty)


Those same postured punches spelled the end for Herrig as the final seconds ticked away in round three, her face swollen and battered by the frenetic onslaught of the Team Alpha Male prospect.


"I can't believe I just beat Felice Herrig," said a giddy VanZant to UFC commentator Joe Rogan after the fight. "She was one of my idols. This is huge."


Herrig (10-6), is a six-year veteran with a host of bigger league experience (Bellator/Invicta) under her belt, so it's understandable that VanZant is pleased with her performance. It would stand to reason that VanZant (5-1) might find herself with a touch of nerves heading into such a big fight against an opponent she held such reverence for. However, ask VanZant about nerves, and that's when the bubbly former cheerleader shows her true colors.


"I don't feel any pressure," she said. "I'm the underdog, I'm supposed to lose. So, winning makes it feel that much better."


Even better? She's only 21 with just six professional fights under her belt – two in the UFC. VanZant couldn't help but admit she was emotionally overwhelmed in the Octagon on Saturday.


"I started crying before the fight was over,' she said with a laugh. "So, it's very emotional."


That may have been a first for the sport of MMA – but after two incredibly exciting UFC bouts to her credit, a newly-inked Reebok sponsorship, and plenty of attention, Paige VanZant could celebrate however she wanted.






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News sport : Floyd Mayweather on Conor McGregor's taunt: He's a joke

When UFC fighter Conor McGregor said earlier this week he would “kill” boxing’s Floyd Mayweather in less than 30 seconds, more than a few people wrote it off as hyperbole – a bit of gamesmanship on the part of the vocal Irishman.


Mayweather once famously said, “I don’t know who he is,” when asked about the UFC's Ronda Rousey. But apparently Mayweather heard McGregor’s jawing loud and clear – and Mayweather thinks he's a 'joke'.


According to the report, Mayweather scoffed at McGregor’s taunts, saying, “I don’t take that dude seriously. He is just trying to get publicity.”


And it worked.


Mayweather is two weeks out from the biggest fight of his career against Manny Pacquiao on May 2 in Las Vegas, and apparently McGregor’s threats hit a bit harder than when Rousey said she could beat the pound-for-pound king in the past.


Conor McGregor plays the crowd before the UFC 179 weigh-in. (Getty) “I wouldn’t even stand up, I wouldn’t even be anywhere near him,” Rousey said to Power 106 FM (Los Angeles) in March. “I would just do like a little army crawl over there, and he would have to run away. I would just be skittering after him like the one dude in Bloodsport that was doing the whole monkey crawl fight system. I would do that. I would just bear crawl over there, too low for him to hit me, and I’d tackle him down.


“I spent a lot of time [on the ground], and I doubt that he does.”


That is where the disconnect will always rest with these discussions: we are talking about two different sports. Mayweather will never fight McGregor, and Mayweather will certainly never fight Rousey, but it's fodder for fans to debate.


And just when you think the monthly callouts and fantasy matchmaking have run their course, here comes Conor McGregor, turning the spotlight on him (to a degree) two weeks before the biggest fight in boxing history.


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News sport : Greg Cosell's draft preview: Dante Fowler should be Titans' pick at No. 2

Dante Fowler (AP) Everyone has an opinion on what the Tennessee Titans should do with the second pick. Should they go with a quarterback? Or take USC defensive lineman Leonard Williams?


I'd have a different answer if I was making that pick for the Titans. I'd take Florida outside linebacker/defensive end Dante Fowler. I think Fowler is the best defensive prospect in the draft.


When I watch film of college prospects, I like to watch a couple games on a prospect, move onto other players, and a couple weeks later watch a couple more of that prospect. I don't want my first impression to carry through six or seven games in a row on a player. I'm glad I took that approach with Fowler.


Early on, I saw a few flaws. I saw a troubling tendency when he was at defensive end to play too high at the point of attack and get moved by tackles and tight ends. He was engulfed by big tackles. I wondered if he had the size and girth to play defensive end.


The more I watched, the more I liked of Fowler, to the point where I'd take him over any other defensive player in the draft. Fowler has natural athleticism and flexibility, good balance, lateral quickness with explosion, closing burst and speed – all the traits you look for in an NFL pass rusher.


He's still a projection as a pass rusher (remember, all college players are projects) but he is just scratching the surface of what he can become. But he flashed explosive traits with a quick first step and excellent closing speed; Fowler has a chance to be a multi-dimensional pass rusher who can win with quickness, power and speed. He was even deployed at times as a coverage defender, and he had the athleticism and natural movement to do that effectively. He's really a plus athlete with quick feet and fluid athleticism, and a competitive playing personality.


There are still a few questions. I don't think he can transition to an NFL defensive end; he's not big enough to even match up to tight ends in the run game. C an Fowler transition to the NFL as a weak-side linebacker in a 4-3? Can he develop into a run-and-hit linebacker? I think his best transition position will likely be 3-4 outside linebacker. Rushing the quarterback is his best skill and that’s always a priority in the NFL. I see similarities to Green Bay Packers outside linebacker Clay Matthews and Kansas City Chiefs outside linebacker Justin Houston when they were coming out of college.


There are a ton of tools to work with when it comes to Fowler. He has a lot of athletic and explosive traits to work with, He has a chance to be a high level NFL pass rusher my sense is he will be a better pass rusher in the NFL than he was in college.


Here is a look at some of the other edge defenders in this draft (and there are many good ones):


Shane Ray, Missouri


Ray mostly played defensive end at Missouri, and he has t he natural explosion off the ball you look for in a pass rusher. He won a number of times because he was first off the snap. He showed the initial burst to beat the outside shoulder of the offensive tackle and the body flexibility to bend the edge and close with speed. Ray is very strong and powerful for his size; he plays a violent, explosive game with tremendous passion. He is competitive with a bit of nasty edge, the kind of player that doesn’t accept getting beat.


Even though he was 245 pounds he also worked as a "3 technique" tackle in passing situations and was effective in that role too. Against guards he used excellent hand usage and technique and was often too fast for them. Still, his best NFL position is probably 3-4 outside linebacker. If he ends up at 4-3 end, the best comparison for a player his size might be the Indianapolis Colts' Robert Mathis.


Randy Gregory, Nebraska


Randy Gregory (AP) Gregory can do a little of everything because he's so athletic. His excellent movement flexibility, loose and fluid hips reminds me of a basketball player. He also has point of attack strength to stalemate and set the edge in the run game. Gregory is a high-level athlete who can rush the quarterback or play in coverage.


To me, he's an even better prospect than Jadeveon Clowney, who went with the first pick last year. He's a better athlete with more flexibility and explosive movement traits as an edge player. I think he best projects as a 3-4 outside linebacker in a base defense, but he can align in a three-point stance at defensive end in sub packages and rush the quarterback. Gregory will need to get stronger but has the body type to gain weight without losing his outstanding athletic traits.


Vic Beasley, Clemson


Beasley can't play defensive end in a 4-3. He just doesn't have the size for it and would not hold up. Beasley isn't a point of attack player. He n eeds space to operate most effectively; the more room he has off the ball the more he can utilize his quickness and speed.


Beasley does have explosive closing speed as a pass rusher, and an outstanding short area acceleration. he also has a nice array of pass-rush moves for a young player. But this point he's a quickness/speed/explosion pass rusher, because he does not have the body frame or strength yet to be a speed-to-power rusher. The question is can Beasley develop into a Von Miller type of player? That comparison may be valid.


Alvin "Bud" Dupree, Kentucky


Alvin Bud Dupree (AP) I really like Dupree. The more I watched him, the more I really liked his traits as a player and a pass rusher.


Dupree just moves differently than most guys. He's a really good athlete. Athletically a good comparison might be Jamie Collins of the New England Patriots, and I don't take that lightly because I think Collins is an exceptional athlete. Dupree is a little different than most of the players on this list because he wasn't a designated pass rusher for Kentucky. He was utilized often in coverage, even in sub packages. He was asked to fill multiple roles with a lot of different responsibilities in Kentucky's defense. Yet, if you line up Dupree and tell him to rush the quarterback, I sense he could turn into a good NFL pass rusher.


Dupree must play stronger to make an immediate impact in the NFL, as he did not play to his size and explosiveness consistently. And at this point no real moves as a pass rusher. But he showed the natural athletic movement and off-the-ball burst to develop into a quality pass rusher in the NFL, if a team wants to use him in that way.


Eli Harold, Virginia


My initial sense is Harold not quick enough to be an edge pass rusher and not strong enough to be a power rusher. He's not a true bend-the-edge pass rusher. He did not show the flexibility to get low and skim the edge. Also, at this point he is not strong at the point of attack in the run game; he did not show ability to stalemate or defeat blocks.


How does Harold project with coaching, NFL training and experience as an edge pass rusher? That will determine his draft position. What is his upside? I do not believe he should be a first day choice in the NFL draft. He's a significant projection as a pass rusher. At this point I see similarities to Erik Walden of the Colts, a base 3-4 outside linebacker who also plays in the nickel as edge rusher, but isn't a great rusher.


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NFL analyst and NFL Films senior producer Greg Cosell watches as much NFL game film as anyone. Throughout the season, Cosell will join Shutdown Corner to share his observations on the teams, schemes and personnel from around the league.






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If Blatter is Jesus then...

Poor Sepp Blatter. At least Jesus didn't have to suffer the indignity of re-election every four years. boo hoo!


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C S Lewis famously argued that if you aren't prepared to accept Jesus was the son of God then you must conclude that he was either a liar or a lunatic.


We deduce then, that it was solely in the interest of narrowing down this theological trilemma still further that a Caribbean football executive chose to liken Fifa's own immortal deity, Sepp Blatter, to the Saviour of Mankind. The Fifa president would no doubt admit himself he is not the Light of The World. And he is certainly not a lunatic. So what do you have left?


There remains a chance, we admit, that it was merely venal sycophancy and not some learned purpose that caused Osiris Guzman, president of the Football Association of Dominican Republic, to draw comparison between a septuagenarian Swiss lawyer whose name is a joke on every football terrace in the world, and not only Jesus himself but also Moses, Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King.


Indeed, he was one of only 10 Caribbean disciples to give unprompted speeches in gushing praise of the “Father of Football” - as Tim Kee of Trinidad & Tobago called him - when the football blazerati of North and Central America met this week in a grand Bahamas hotel to confer their support on president Blatter in the upcoming Fifa presidential election he cannot possibly lose.


It is a joyous coincidence of the calendar, rarer even than a solar eclipse or Scottish World Cup qualification, that Fifa's election, which occurs on 29 May, should have synchronised with our own rather more parochial affair.


Sports politics geeks are used to watching football's dubious tail wag the dog. When Nigel Farage levels the same metaphor at the SNP, the implication is that some part of the system is misfiring, that there has been a malfunction. Fifa, on the other hand, is a beast deliberately grotesque by design. When Jamaica, Haiti, Cuba, Panama, Puerto Rico and St Vincent & the Grenadines are set up to wield as much influence over world football as Germany, Spain, France, Italy, England and the Netherlands, once you've got a firm grip on the tail, you don't have to worry what the dog is up to.


In any case, a dog is the wrong metaphor. Were a leading political satirist to tell the Fifa tale through the life of animals, he wouldn't write a genteel parable set on a farm, but a horror story unfolding high up in the Alpine lair of a madman, his glabrescent head shimmering in the terrifying glare as he surgically conjoins a cabal of entirely complicit African elephants, Arabian camels, Russian bears and Caribbean Pirates. Behold: The Blazered Centipede. See its secret hole, somewhere round the back, where the money goes in. And up at the front, a wrinkled old arse with spectacles on, the excrement pouring out its mouth.


It was not Blatter of Nazareth who made it this way, this perfectly oiled engine primed for nefarious purposes. That was his predecessor, Joao Havelange, but you don't need a turtle-necked Harvard professor dashing around the Zurich streets to uncover Fifa's secret bloodline.


In fact, it is not Jesus but King Herod who is the more pertinent analogy. It can't have escaped Blatter's attention, as he signs up for another four years as the world's sporting pantomime villain, that in the now unfavoured (and widening) shape of Michel Platini, he has taken the sword to his heir apparent.


Poor Sepp. At least Jesus didn't have to suffer the indignity of re-election every four years. The Apostles don't record how their leader came to be Chairman of Christianity's first Executive Committee, nobly painted 1 500 years later on the wall of a Milanese monastery by Leonardo da Vinci (and who is now suspected of chucking in a woman for a bit of a laugh, a clever tactic recently cottoned on to by Fifa itself).


One imagines the occasional catering or weather-based miracle was sufficient to keep the Disciples on their toes, and to that end Sepp probably thought he'd done enough when he somehow managed to deliver a World Cup to a country that thinks soccer is probably something you smoke after Friday prayers with a nice mint tea. In fact, it's just made matters worse.


In the meantime, at least unlike silly old England he doesn't have to get bogged down with such trivialities as a debate, or a manifesto. He refused the former some time ago, and as for the latter, he has only angrily stated, “My record is my manifesto,” which is fighting talk given that his organisation is about as loved by the non-blazer-wearing football world as the woman selling lucky heather outside Nigel Farage's local.


So when, some time after 7 May, as whoever it might be walks into 10 Downing Street with Nick Clegg beside them, don't be sad. There is another election to enjoy, and this one's got Jesus, Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King all rolled into one. Yep, course it has.


The Independent






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Coutinho's taking tips from Pele

Philippe Coutinho's ambition is to follow in Pele’s footsteps and make Brazil’s fabled No 10 shirt his own.


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London - It was a moment that gave Philippe Coutinho ‘the creeps’ - standing in the players’ lounge, awaiting the arrival of football royalty, he had nerves like never before.


Not much flusters Coutinho, whom The Kop has christened O Magico (The Magician), but before Liverpool’s tussle with Manchester United last month he and Lucas Leiva were given the chance to meet Brazil’s most famous son. Spending time with Pele did not disappoint.


‘It’s the ultimate honour because Pele is the greatest player of Brazil and probably the world,’ says Coutinho. ‘We only spoke for a little bit but he asked us how things were. Yes, I got a photograph. I’m going to keep it alongside the one I have with Ronaldinho.’


In terms of looking for sources of inspiration, Coutinho could hardly choose two better. His ambition is to follow in their footsteps and make Brazil’s fabled No 10 shirt his own but, before then, his first task must be to dominate Anfield’s landscape.


There is no doubting Coutinho’s class. Look on YouTube and you will find footage of him bamboozling opponents as a 10-year-old in Rio de Janeiro. A decade on and the same tricks and shimmies are flummoxing defenders in the Barclays Premier League.


During Monday’s 2-0 dismissal of Newcastle United, Coutinho produced one moment of skill - a step-over and dummied pass all in the same movement - that prompted Brendan Rodgers to applaud. ‘When you see the manager trusts you and gives you a lot of confidence it makes you play even better,’ says Coutinho.


Since the turn of the year, Coutinho’s form and confidence have risen dramatically. There have been a number of spectacular moments, particularly in the FA Cup - his goals in replays against Bolton Wanderers and Blackburn Rovers are the reason Liverpool travel to Wembley to face Aston Villa in the semi-final on Sunday.


Rodgers feels the resurgence of Coutinho, who is on the six-man shortlist for the PFA Player of the Year, comes from him feeling settled after signing a new long-term contract at the beginning of February. The 22-year-old does not disagree with his manager.


Unlike the situation surrounding Raheem Sterling’s negotiations, the discussions for Coutinho were straightforward. ‘Liverpool have always shown a great warmth to me so when they came to me with a proposal I did not need to think twice,’ he says.


‘I have always been looked after very well by this club and I am very happy here, so I didn’t even have to think about it. My mind is at Liverpool.’


And so on to Wembley. Again Coutinho expects to feel ‘the creeps’ at one of the sport’s most iconic venues but he is also aware of how imperative it is to deliver.


He says: ‘We will try to finish the season on a high but games like this are always tough. We have to start well, do our best to play our game. It would be important to win the cup, not only for me, but for the club. That would be a massive achievement.’


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PSL top eight hopefuls face off

Top-eight hopefuls Bloemfontein Celtic and Maritzburg United face off in their PSL clash in Botshabelo.


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Johannesburg - Top-eight hopefuls Bloemfontein Celtic and Maritzburg United face off in their Premiership clash at Kaizer Sebothelo Stadium in Botshabelo, on Sunday.


The Free State hosts come off one of the biggest upsets of the season when they beat Mamelodi Sundowns 5-0 in their previous league encounter on the hallowed home turf of The Brazilians on Wednesday.


The result left Celtic in fifth spot on the log with 37 points with five games remaining.


Maritzburg, meanwhile, lie one spot out of the lucrative top eight in ninth position on 30 points from their 25 games in the league this season. In contrast to their opponents, Maritzburg come off a deflating 1-0 loss to Mpumalanga Back Aces in their midweek fixture.


In 17 matches played between the two sides since 2006/2007 league season, Celtic has managed two wins with the visitors having an upper-hand after winning five games, and ten matches have ended in a draw.


Celtic team manager John Maduka said Maritzburg had always been a tricky fixture for his team to navigate.


“Maritzburg United has always given us some tough times,” said Maduka.


“Our major challenge in this game will be dealing with complacency. Our technical team has done tremendously well even in the past dealing with psychological well-being of our players and I’m incredibly positive about their ability to prepare our team for various games”.


Following their thrashing of Sundowns, which also ended any glimmer of hope they had of winning the title, Maduka backed coach Clinton Larsen to build on that result.


“Clinton is a shrewd and tactically sound professional coach, strategically knowing how to counter attacks and subsequently attack with venom,” said Maduka.


“Our offensive style of play will see us winning this game; we are urging supporters to come in numbers to witness a team willing to play for them.”


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‘It’s easier to manage Man United’

Jose Mourinho says it’s easier to manage Man United than Chelsea within the modern confines of UEFA’s Fair Play rules.


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London - Jose Mourinho claims it is easier to manage Manchester United than Chelsea within the modern confines of UEFA’s Financial Fair Play rules.


United, as one of the biggest earners in world football, have the financial scope to fund a massive squad, while Chelsea are forced to sell players such as Juan Mata to balance the books.


‘Yes, it’s easier,’ said Mourinho. ‘It was easier before at Chelsea, but it’s more fun like this. More difficult of course. We sold a lot of players, not just Juan.’


United boss Louis van Gaal will be without Michael Carrick, Phil Jones, Marcos Rojo and Daley Blind for the Barclays Premier League clash at Stamford Bridge on Saturday. But Mourinho said: ‘Their squad is amazing in terms of numbers, players, experience, solutions.


‘I have on the big screen in my office, not the team I’m going to play against but the squad and all the options.


‘This week, when I arrived in the room, for the first time, I realised what they have. I’m not saying it’s the best squad. It’s a very good squad. I went to QPR with Didier Drogba and no strikers on the bench and, for a long time we were in trouble. You have to cope.’


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Benni wants to be like Mourinho

Two years after his retirement, Benni McCarthy feels there is more he can offer in the world of football.


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Johannesburg - Two years after his retirement, Benni McCarthy feels there is more he can offer in the world of football.


He says he wants to become a professional football manager in a few years. More like José Mourinho to be more specific.


Too far-fetched you might think? The former Bafana Bafana international and Orlando Pirates predator begs to differ.


He says he’s been studying Mourinho like a book. After all, it was Mourinho who unleashed the Cape Town-born striker into winning the 2004 Uefa Champions League after he had two unsuccessful seasons at Celta Vigo in Spain, having signed from Ajax Amsterdam.


In the two years he had spent under Mourinho at FC Porto, McCarthy said there was one special principle the “Special One” always implemented on his players - man-management skills. McCarthy says he hopes to implement it on his players once he gets his Pro Licence in the next two years.


“Being in Europe provided me with an opportunity to learn from some of the best coaches in the world and that’s what I believe will set me apart from the rest (former players who turned coaches). Mourinho is one of those I’ve been learning from,” McCarthy says.


“I would love to bring his man-management skills to my style of management.


“Mourinho understands his players on a personal level. And that’s why he is able to get positive results out of them.


“When you are having an off-day as a player, Mourinho would know without you even having to approach him about your situation. Sometimes he would even bench you to give you time to deal with whatever you are going through. That’s the kind of coach he is. I hope to emulate him one day.”


McCarthy then pauses as he brings to mind some of the finer scenarios he had seen Mourinho handle in some awkward situations both on and off the field.


The name of former teammate Ricardo Carvalho comes to mind. Benni smiles as he begins to talk about his former teammate.


“Ricardo Carvalho is a perfect example,” he says.


“For me, he’s one of the best defenders in the world I have ever played with.


“He was exceptional in game situations but the exact opposite when we reported for training. I mean, the worst training partner you can ever find. He was just lazy (at training), and that’s how he was.


“But Mourinho understood his character. Had Carvalho worked under a different manager, his career would have been over a long time ago. Other players would be often shocked that he was always the first name on the team list and how he was able to be awarded Man of the Match honours each time we played.


“The answer is simple: Mourinho knew how to get the best out of him.


“And that’s what I want to do when I become a coach. I want to understand my players on a personal level. That’s what helps coaches get positive results out of their players. Tactics always comes in later in game situations. (As a coach) you need a team that will play for you, otherwise you are doomed.”


But McCarthy understands that it’s not only popularity among players that will see him reach the heights he had achieved as a player plying his trade in top-flight football, but that you also need football knowledge to go with it.


He says one needs to be tough to survive as a footballer, and it gets even tougher as a coach.


”You need guts and will-power,” he says, recalling how he resuscitated his football career in Europe, after having been benched for two consecutive seasons under his then coach Victor Fernández at Celta Vigo.


“That experience almost destroyed my career,” he confesses.


“But I knew I was not the one at fault.


“I knew I had to continue working hard in order to keep myself fit just in case he opted to play me. But it never happened. The truth is, you are not going to be everybody’s favourite and so I knew I had to continue working hard until I got my chance. That’s how I saw it. That’s what kept me going through that period. Things started working out for me when I finally joined Porto. And the rest, is history.”


Saturday Star






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Pellegrini not happy with Yaya

Manuel Pellegrini has admitted he is disappointed in Yaya Toure but vowed to back the City midfielder, for now.


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London - Manuel Pellegrini has admitted he is disappointed in Yaya Toure but vowed to back the Manchester City midfielder - at least until the end of the season.


Sportsmail revealed City would listen to offers for the Ivorian as they look to overhaul an ageing squad at the end of a faltering campaign.


Toure is determined not to be forced out but the Chilean, speaking ahead of Sunday’s visit of West Ham, acknowledged the midfielder had underperformed and dismissed claims he should be given a rest.


‘I don’t think he’s happy with his performance this year - and nor am I,’ said Pellegrini. ‘He doesn’t need a break.’


Toure, who has two years left on a £220 000-a-week deal, has come in for criticism amid the collapse of City’s Premier League defence. But Pellegrini, who faces questions over his own future, said the 31-year-old would be backed. ‘He’s a very important player and he will have my support until the end of the season,’ he said. City, who have taken just 18 points from the last available 39, take on Sam Allardyce’s side knowing that defeat will leave fifth-placed Liverpool with the chance to close the gap to one point with victory at West Brom next weekend. City will also face the Hammers without captain Vincent Kompany, who could miss the rest of the campaign with a muscle injury.


With his manager in the firing line, City goalkeeper Joe Hart insisted the players should take responsibility. ‘People have been disappointed in their own performances,’ said the England No 1. ‘We’ve let the manager down a few times and we’ve baffled ourselves because we feel like we’ve got the quality to beat anyone and that’s not been the case.’


Hart added that Pellegrini retained the backing of the dressing room. ‘He’s been great,’ Hart said. ‘He’s hard, he kind of says it how it is and you can’t ask for much more than that from a manager.’


Pellegrini, however, said: ‘The players have responsibility but I choose the players.’


Daily Mail






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Ajax end AmaTuks bogey

Ajax Cape Town finally broke their University of Pretoria bogey with a hard-fought victory at the Cape Town Stadium.


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Cape Town - Ajax Cape Town finally broke their University of Pretoria bogey with a hard-fought 2-0 victory at the Cape Town Stadium .


The Cape side, over the last few seasons, haven’t had the best of times against the team nicknamed AmaTuks.


In fact, before , they hadn’t beaten the team from Pretoria in six previous meetings. But Ajax changed all that on Friday, even though it was a tough, tense contest and they had worked really hard and dug deep to register the win.


The game, as expected, got off to a tight, cagey opening, with AmaTuks not offering the Capetonians any space or time on the ball.


The Pretoria side have a reputation as a disciplined, organised unit and this was exactly what they brought to the Mother City. They always had bodies behind the ball, they kept things narrow, heaped pressure on Ajax, who initially struggled to find any rhythm.


With play restricted to dour midfield exchanges, scoring chances were few and, by the 15th minute, neither goalkeeper had yet been called on to make a save.


Gradually, though, the game started to open up, with Ajax using either the pace and trickery of Riyaad Norodien or the height of Nathan Paulse to get behind the resolute Tuks defence.


The first opportunity, though, fell to the team from Pretoria in the 17th minute when Denver Mukamba’s whistling free-kick was tipped over by Ajax goalkeeper Anssi Jaakkola.


Ajax then had a fantastic chance to take the lead when Paulse’s flick-on from Jaakkola’s clearance put Keagan Dolly in the clear.


With only Tuks goalkeeper Washington Arubi to beat, Dolly should have done far better, but only managed to side-foot the ball straight into the keeper’s grasp.


At the other end, too, Tuks were desperately unlucky not to open the score when Atusaye Nyando struck the upright with a powerful shot.


Goalless at halftime, both sides went in search of a goal early on in the second period, with Erwin Isaacs sliding an effort over the bar for Ajax, and Thabo Mnyamane heading wide for Tuks.


Attackers Tashreeq Morris and Bantu Mzwakali came off the bench as Ajax looked for fresh inspiration to try to break down an opposition side that weren’t prepared to give anything away.


The Cape side were also forced into a defensive change when centre-back Abbubaker Mobara was forced off injured. He was replaced by Cecil Lolo, who took over at right-back with Nazeer Allie moving to the centre of defence.


The change in attack had the desired effect when, after a slick inter-play that involved Isaacs, Norodien and a cross from Mosa Lebusa, it was Morris who headed the winning goal in the 80th minute - his sixth strike of the season.


But the best, in a game of few opportunities, was left for last, in injury time, as Granwald Scott produced a moment of magic. The central midfielder lined up a free-kick and whipped a wicked, curling shot beyond a despairing Arubi in the Tuks goal.


Weekend Argus






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Ramsey not giving up on double hopes

The chances of Arsenal winning an FA Cup and league double may be slim, but Aaron Ramsey is still hopeful.


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London - The prospect of Arsenal winning an FA Cup and Premier League double may be remote but, while it is still mathematically possible, midfielder Aaron Ramsey is not giving up hope.


Ramsey secured a place in the club's history books when he scored the winner in last season's 3-2 FA Cup final triumph over Hull City and told reporters on the eve of Saturday's semi-final against Reading that it had only whetted his appetite for more success.


That is more likely to come by retaining the FA Cup than winning a first league title since 2004 with Chelsea seven points clear of Arsenal at the top of the table, having played one fewer match.


But if Chelsea lose at home to Manchester United on Saturday and to Arsenal, who have won their last eight league matches, at the Emirates next weekend, the outcome might not look quite so clear-cut.


“The double? Yes, that is still a possibility,” said the 24-year-old Welsh international.


“We are just trying to win our remaining games. We are on a fantastic winning run and that's all we want to keep on doing.


“It's going to be difficult. Chelsea have still got a lot of points so they will have to slip up a few times for us to catch them so it will be difficult - but it's still possible.”


Arsenal have won the double three times, in 1971, 1998 and 2002. On the first two occasions they only clinched the title by a point.


“You cannot rule it out,” said Ramssey. “When you have that momentum it is still possible. Even though it will be difficult we have to win our remaining games and see where that leaves us.”


Even if they fail Ramsey believes Arsenal's long wait for the title will soon be over.


“I feel we're getting closer,” he said. “Even last season we started off really well and maybe just faded away at the end.


“We lost against the bigger teams but this season we have done a bit better against them.


“This season we didn't start too well, it was a bit interrupted, but the second half of the season we have been really good and consistent in our performances. I feel we are very close.”


The winners of the Arsenal v Reading game will play Liverpool or Aston Villa in the final at Wembley on May 30.


Reuters






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News sport : RCR appeals tire penalty to final appeals officer

Richard Childress Racing isn't satisfied with the decision it got from NASCAR's appeals panel Thursday.


The team has decided to appeal its tire penalty from California to NASCAR's final appeals officer. NASCAR's appeal panel upheld the violation for manipulating tires but reduced the penalty assessed to the team by 25 points to 50 (and crew chief Luke Lambert's fine by $50,000) on administrative grounds.


NASCAR teams are granted two attempts at a penalty appeal.



The deferral of the suspensions means that Lambert, tire tech James Bender and engineer Philip Surgen can work at Bristol. The three were suspended for six races for the penalty and the suspensions were upheld on Thursday.


Early season discussion in the garage mentioned the rumor of teams poking holes in tires to help regulate air pressure throughout the duration of a tire run. Lower air pressures mean more grip, and therefore more speed.


RCR's penalty was initially 75 points because the violation was found after the race. However, since tires are leased and can be taken during the race, the panel ruled the post-race penalty wasn't applicable and dropped the penalty to 50 points.


Newman is currently 20th in the standings with the 50-point penalty.


NASCAR's final appeals officer is Bryan Moss. Moss has already heard an appeal this year after Kurt Busch was suspended before the Daytona 500 because of domestic abuse allegations. After Busch's initial appeal was denied, he appealed a second time the day before the race and Moss denied his appeal. Busch was reinstated three races into the season after he wasn't criminally charged.


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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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