News sport : Glenn Healy said Canadiens traded Cameron Diaz for Dale Weise

Glenn Healy of Sportsnet has earned one or two detractors over the years for his hockey commentary, which can sometimes reside at the corner of Crazy Lane and Cuckoo Street.

They’re probably still laughing over Healy’s gaffe Sunday night in discussing Montreal Canadiens Game 3 hero Dale Weise, in which he envisioned a scenario where the Habs acquired him for Kimmy from “My Best Friend’s Wedding.” Said Healy: 

“ANOTHER GREAT TRADE BY [Montreal GM Marc] BERGEVIN. HE TRADED HIM FOR CAMERON DIAZ, DEFENSEMAN, TO VANCOUVER.”

Forgetting the odd syntax of the statement itself – Bergevin traded Weise? – Healy was obviously going for defenseman Raphael Diaz, who as far as we can tell never used any of Ben Stiller’s hair gel.

They’re easily confused, of course: Raphael Diaz is Swiss, and Cameron Diaz once dressed like this. But other than that, they're literally Knight and Day. Confusing them on Any Given Sunday leads to Very Bad Things.

Unrelated: Healy also said that we can expect the Calder Trophy to go to Ottawa rookie Sharon Stone.  

s/t Eyes On The Prize

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News sport : 2015 NFL Rookie Predictions: Maxx Williams has All-Pro promise

Poked, prodded, pricked -- pro prospects have been thoroughly examined by franchises leading up to this month's NFL Draft. However, fantasy owners are just now dissecting their Year 1 potential. Over the next several weeks, we'll attempt to channel our inner Mayock determining whether Rookie X will be fantasy flame or lame material this fall. Monday's profile: Minnesota tight end Maxx Williams.

College Highlights: The Mackey Award finalist and second team All-American arguably owns the most long-term upside of any tight end in this year's class. In 25 career games with Minnesota he grabbed 61 passes for 986 yards and 13 touchdowns, averaging an impressive 16.2 yards per catch. His eight receiving TDs as a sophomore were the most ever by a Golden Gopher tight end in a single season. Was Academic All-Big Ten in 2012. 

Pluses: Williams was a Combine wonder setting the pace at his position in the 40-yard dash (4.78), shuttle run, broad jump and vertical jump. He is by no means a blazer, but accelerates to top speed quickly. Combine that with his 6-foot-4 length and wide catch radius and he's an imposing target to contain inside the red-zone and on seam outs across the middle. Excelled after the catch, particularly on designed screens. When the ball is in his hands, he lowers pad level and drives through contact. In general, he's fluid, shifty, athletic and blessed with large, soft hands. His outward appearance and outstanding playmaking ability explain why many scouts believe he's a future All-Pro. The son of a coach, he has high football aptitude. 

Minuses: Despite weighing in at 250 pounds, Williams needs to add muscle and strength to decisively win one-on-one matchups at the next level. Though he showed improvement as a route runner from his freshman-to-sophomore years, he's still relatively unpolished. Without exceptional speed and wiggle off-the-line cleverness will be key to gain separation. Blocking remains a work in progress. Snap count will be limited until coaches trust his execution in the ground game. 

Pro Comp(s): Jason Witten, Heath Miller, Dwayne Allen

Team Fits: Cleveland, Buffalo, New Orleans, Baltimore, Atlanta

Projected ADP/Auction Value ($200 cap): 200+/$1-$3

Fearless Forecast: It won't be long before fantasy owners want to hang at The Maxx. Still, history is typically unkind to first-year tight ends. Highly publicized youngsters Jace Amaro and Eric Ebron, for example, barely moved the meter last year. Additionally, Antonio Gates, Jimmy Graham and Greg Olsen were minimal contributors in their inaugural campaigns. Really only Rob Gronkowski, who made a splash in 2010 with 10 TDs, was the rare rookie tight end to accumulate TE1 numbers out the gate. Keep in mind no rookie tight end has surpassed 900 yards in a season and only two since 2000 (Gronk and Aaron Hernandez) have eclipsed five scores in a season. Williams owns tremendous ball skills, but his somewhat svelte build and questionable blocking elongates the learning curve. He's a highly recommended investment for dynasty owners, but expect his maiden NFL voyage to be filled with more more valleys than peaks. 

Want to bull rush Brad? Follow him on Twitter @YahooNoise 



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News sport : What We Learned: Reconsidering the Edmonton Oilers’ failures

(Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it.)

There are a great many things for which the Edmonton Oilers can, are, and should be criticized over the last decade. A great many things.

But when they won the draft lottery on Saturday night, the immediate reaction among many hockey fans and pundits alike was to trash them for picking first overall for the fourth time in six years.

“It's rewarding failure,” and so on, as though this isn't what the draft order being predicated upon reverse order of finish isn't the same exact thing.

“They don't deserve another first pick,” and so on, as though the Penguins getting the Nos. 5, 1, 2, 1, and 2 again in four straight draft years was in some way fine and dandy while this is not.

And the best one: “Look how they screwed up the other first-round picks,” and so on, as though Taylor Hall, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Nail Yakupov are somehow horrible players contributing to the Oilers' continued failure. People are obviously allowed to think what they want about the system and the way it rewards ineptitude, but to say that any of these players somehow haven't “worked out” for the Oilers is ludicrous.

It's been said before but when you pick first overall, you're kind of a slave to what's available to you. You could, in theory, trade down, but that happens on very, very rare occasions, and indeed doesn't necessarily guarantee any sort of success even if you aren't super-enamored of the consensus No. 1 guy. It's not like the Oilers went off the board to draft Hall, Nugent-Hopkins, or Yakupov. All were the clear No. 1 choices, and all are working out to be at least among the best in their draft classes. The Oilers, if anything, are victims of circumstance in some regards.

Because the first thing to keep in mind here is that if you're trapped by the responsibility of picking first overall, and you have to take what you're dealt in terms of “best player available,” that doesn't mean you're necessarily getting what you need as a franchise (not that “drafting for need” is a necessarily good thing either). Hall is a left wing, Nugent-Hopkins a center, and Yakupov a right wing. Tough bounces to draft an entire line in three straight years and not, say, a franchise-changing defenseman like Aaron Ekblad — a rare blue line talent who at 18 years old looks like he absolutely belonged at the NHL level — which is what they really need. Maybe you criticize the choice of Yakupov over Ryan Murray in that regard, but Murray only has 78 games of NHL experience under his belt and has mostly looked only a little above average when he's been healthy.

It's also not the Oilers' fault that the years in which they picked first overall were not exactly ones in which major difference-makers were available. And that's not to slight Hall or Nugent-Hopkins, both of whom influence the game at high levels, but rather to say that they are not necessarily a Stamkos or Tavares (the two years before the Hall draft) or MacKinnon and Ekblad (the two years after the Yakupov draft).

Looking at it individually, in fact, it becomes clear that the Oilers couldn't really have expected to do a lot better than they have when drafting first overall.

There was Taylor vs. Tyler, of course, but it's not as though either has done much to separate himself as the clear winner here. You can argue that centers are more important than left wings, and you'd be right, but these are extremely comparable players at the very least. (Hall, for instance, has a higher points-per-game over his career than does Seguin, though certainly their circumstances have varied.)

Were it not for myriad injuries slowing Hall — and causing him to play 55 fewer games than Seguin — the issue becomes even muddier. Certainly, Hall has been among the premier left wings in the NHL more or less since his arrival in the league, and if you can get a guy like that first overall, then you cannot have failed in any way.

And if injuries have been a problem for Hall, they're a nightmare for Nugent-Hopkins, who has missed at least a few games in every season but one in his young career. But if you strip away the injury concerns and just look at this year, for instance, you see a picture of an emerging great center in this league. Based on the “similarity scores” calculator on War on Ice, the players to which Nugent-Hopkins' output in 2014-15 — which he started as a 21-year-old — was most comparable were guys like James Neal at age 23 (good player); John Tavares at 19, 20, 21, and 22 (good player); Jordan Eberle at 23 and 24 (good player); Alex Galchenyuk at 20 (good player); Eric Staal at 21 (good player); Nathan Horton at 23 (good player); and Jonathan Toews at 19 (good player). So the idea that Nugent-Hopkins has somehow failed is, clearly, based on his team's lack of success rather than his own.

And then you come to Yakupov, who just wrapped up his age-20 season. His comparables are a little iffier (age-20 Matt Duchene is great as the top one, age-22 Mason Raymond not so much as the second). In fact, examining these two at a similar age goes a long way toward telling you what Yakupov might become.

Yak

The only huge differences in that chart are for faceoff percentage (Yakupov is a right wing so it doesn't matter), and takeaways per 60, which is an iffy stat awarded with supreme subjectivity. But other than that, they look pretty good, even with the acknowledgement that this was Duchene's “Uh oh” season. And if Yakupov, who improved immensely under Todd Nelson after maybe not necessarily being well-suited for the roles into which he was thrown earlier in his NHL career, can take even a remotely similar step forward, this is at the very least a good No. 2 right wing. And when Jordan Eberle is also a right wing, that's a good situation for the Oil going forward.

So no, none of these three guys are to blame for the failures in Edmonton. Coaching? Yes. Team-building? Yes. Drafting once you get outside the No. 1 spot? Oh my yes. Since the 2010 draft, the combined number of NHL games played by Oilers draft picks excluding the No. 1 guys is 270; Hall has played 299 by himself, and the oft-injured Nugent-Hopkins is at 258.

Now, with Connor McDavid about to be in the fold, things are very much looking up. Leon Draisaitl as a No. 3 center in a year or two is looking pretty great. Darnell Nurse seems NHL-ready and could actually shore up that defense. Other young players are still developing. They might be able to find a decent goaltender in free agency. And all of a sudden, the Oilers are, at the very least, competitive for a playoff spot. But in a real and tangible way based on talent, not luck.

That might be a year or two out, but you don't get a player like this and do nothing with it. The Penguins, again, were in a similar situation to the Oilers prior to getting their famous No. 87; the hopeless, meandering, poor-drafting dross of the league. Having Evgeni Malkin helps, but things aren't magically cured for a terrible franchise just because they draft a generational talent. This was the Penguins roster in Crosby's rookie year (Crosby had 102 points, the next-closest guy was Sergei Gonchar at 58). This was the roster a year later (Crosby at 120, Malkin at 85, Mark Recchi at 68, and a lot of garbage was starting to get cleared out). It's not impossible that they get another high pick next year and then terrorize the league for a while to come.

The perception that the Oilers are going to screw this up somehow is baffling. You can't screw up Connor McDavid. He'd be a 90-point player playing with an AHL lineup. And that people are now rooting for him to fail — outside of, like, Calgary and Vancouver, where you have to expect that kind of treatment —  is pitiful, and reflects poorly on them.

Years of sorrow in Edmonton were washed away, if briefly by this lucky bounce of a ping pong ball. That doesn't make Craig MacTavish a good GM, and it doesn't make the Oilers a good team. But it's a lot easier to build around The Next Sidney Crosby than the next, I dunno, Matt Duchene.

There's some hard work ahead for this franchise, and no doubt purging bad deals and worse players from the lineup won't be easy. But now there's a clearer purpose. The Oilers aren't in win-now mode. But they're about to be in win-for-the-next-decade mode if things go right. And they probably will. But they also might not. Because, y'know, it's the Oilers.

But that won't be on McDavid or Hall or Nugent-Hopkins or even Yakupov. That'll be on the people who pay them. You knew that. You've always known that.

What We Learned
Anaheim Ducks
: That was a bit of a dramatic end to Saturday's game, no? The Ducks are the only team in league history to start a series 2-0 after playing with a deficit in the third period.

Arizona Coyotes: Coyotes president, CEO, and co-owner Anthony LeBlanc on the nightmare scenario of losing the draft lottery and ending up third: “The business boost we would have received had we either moved up or stayed where we were at the second spot, I'm not going to lie, we won't see the bump that I had hoped for in the short-term. But I think in the long-term, we definitely will.” Yeah, in Seattle.

Boston Bruins: Elliotte Friedman said on actual TV the other night that when the Bruins fire Claude Julien — that's “when,” not “if” — one of the guys they might look at is Mike Milbury. Oh my god I hope so.

Buffalo Sabres: Did Jack Eichel die or something and I missed the news? You'd think the draft lottery loss also involved running over Tim Murray's dog instead of “falling back on” another franchise-changing center. It would be great if this whining led to Eichel staying another year at BU.

Calgary Flames: Oh yeah, putting Brandon Bollig and Deryk Engelland on the ice at the end of a blowout loss is totally just a normal thing coaches do and not at all part of trying to start fights that could potentially put someone — say, I dunno, on Vancouver — out of the lineup.

Carolina Hurricanes: Should the Hurricanes buy out Alex Semin? That's a $14 million check to write. I dunno if ownership has the stomach for that.

Chicago: Speaking of buyouts, Corey Crawford...

Colorado Avalanche: Like, okay, you're looking for someone to blame for this season in Denver. Makes sense. But are people really acting like Jarome Iginla is a problem? He had 29 goals! At 37! He's literally one of the most amazing players in the modern era.

Columbus Blue Jackets: This is one of those things where you're like, “Wait, there was an AHL team in Cleveland this whole time and it wasn't Columbus's affiliate?” This move makes a lot more sense, doesn't it?

Dallas Stars: See also: “We're not spending a lot of money this summer.”

Detroit Red Wings: In what universe is optimism a reasonable reaction to getting shelled like Detroit did in Games 1 and 2?

Edmonton Oilers: What I literally do not get about all this Oilers-griping is that people would have rather seen teams that tried to tank win out over a team that's just genuinely poorly run? Every team that wins the draft lottery is rewarded for its ineptitude. That's how the draft lottery literally works.

Florida Panthers: Love when a team gets locked into a spot, then people are like, “Uhh, yeah, Anze Kopitar was a No. 11 pick.”

Los Angeles Kings: Jarret Stoll is a UFA on July 1. I'm sure there will be lines around the block. I mean line around the block.

Minnesota Wild: Love any goal scored with a broken stick.

Montreal Canadiens: Bell Centre is a lovely place to catch a game.

Nashville Predators, America's Favorite Hockey Team: This Shea Weber injury seems like it's pretty serious. That is, uh, bad.

New Jersey Devils: If I'm Lou Lamoriello I might seriously consider trading the No. 6 pick. Y'know, to save my job and whatnot.

New York Islanders: Count the Islanders on this Alex Ovechkin goal and you will see that it is somehow not a Capitals power play. Gotta maybe get a little more active in your own zone. And maybe cover the perennial 50-goal guy.

New York Rangers: It's really easy to forget that Kevin Hayes almost lost his damn leg in college.

Ottawa Senators: RIP the Hamburglar.

Philadelphia Flyers: Dan Bylsma coaching the Flyers would be an amazing outcome. I can't think of a better one. This would be perfect.

Pittsburgh Penguins: Remember when everyone thought Sidney Crosby was a playoff-losing bum? It was before Game 2. Now he's great again. Crazy how that works.

San Jose Sharks: This is a baffling headline.

St. Louis Blues: Saturday's result seems more in line with what people expected from this series.

Tampa Bay Lightning: Ben Bishop remains a mildly important piece of the puzzle for the Bolts. He was very good on Saturday.

Toronto Maple Leafs: Oh no, now the Leafs have to settle for Dylan Strome. How horrible for them.

Vancouver Canucks: Calgary turned a gorilla into a Canucks fan. This is fantastic.

Washington Capitals: The Caps have a very good offense but they may wanna tighten things up defensively. You shouldn't have to rally from two separate two-goal deficits. Doing so is great, but having to do so is not.

Winnipeg Jets: A franchise made to suffer, apparently. Avoidable collapses made very much unavoidable.

Play of the Weekend

This Crosby kid is okay.

Gold Star Award 

ST. LOUIS, MO - APRIL 18: Vladimir Tarasenko #91 of the St. Louis Blues celebrates after scoring an empty-net goal for a hat trick against the Minnesota Wild during Game Two of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2015 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Scottrade Center on April 18, 2015 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images)

Scoring a hat trick in the playoffs is good, in my opinion.

Minus of the Weekend

Connor McDavid speaks to reporters in Toronto on Saturday, April 18, 2015. The Edmonton Oilers have won the NHL draft lottery and the right to select Connor McDavid with the first pick in the draft. (Darren Calabrese/The Canadian Press via AP)

Gotta love the image of the a dozen GMs rushing to the league to complain about the draft lottery after Edmonton won. “Boo hoo, this stupid and already unfair system is all of a sudden stupid and unfair now that it hasn't benefited me.” Come on here.

Perfect HFBoards Trade Proposal of the Week
User “SufferingCatFan” will probably keep suffering.

Ekblad + Panther's No. 1 (11)

for

Oiler's No.1 (McDavid)

Signoff
I was thinking about making fondue with cheddar cheese for dinner tonight.

Ryan Lambert is a Puck Daddy columnist. His email is here and his Twitter is here



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Barca move made Suarez nervous

Barcelona striker Luis Suarez has admitted he was nervous at the prospect of playing alongside Lionel Messi and Neymar when he joined the club.

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Barcelona - Barcelona striker Luis Suarez has admitted he was nervous at the prospect of playing alongside Lionel Messi and Neymar when he joined the club.

The Uruguayan, who arrived under a cloud following his ban for biting at last year's World Cup, has made a rapid adjustment to life at the Catalan club and has scored vital goals to help put them on course for a treble.

Barca face Paris Saint Germain looking to book a place in the Champions League semi-finals with a 3-1 lead from the first leg in which Suarez struck twice.

Suarez has scored 19 goals in all competitions but most importantly he has found the net in key games.

He got the winner in the El Clasico against Real Madrid last month and struck twice in the first leg against Manchester City in the Champions League last 16.

Despite scoring 31 goals for Liverpool in the Premier League last season, the prospect of proving himself in Barca's vaunted attack was intimidating.

“When I arrived I was timid with Messi and Neymar but they just said to me to play as I had done at Liverpool. Now I feel fine off and on the pitch and we have a good time together,” Suarez told a news conference on Monday.

Suarez said he has concentrated on being level-headed and that his team mates have helped him fit in at the club.

“I always have gone out to try and do well and I didn't listen when it was said that I was the best in the world or the worst. I am very self-critical and I carry myself the same,” Suarez said.

“When things were not going well for me I was grateful for the support of people close to me. The players always were behind me and so was the coach.

“At the moment I feel that I am helping the team with goals and assists but as long as the team is doing well then I am happy as well. It is not important who scores as long as the team progresses.” – Reuters



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Pep rubbishes City link

Pep Guardiola insists he will remain Bayern Munich's coach next season amidst reports he is set to take over at Manchester City.

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Pep Guardiola insists he will remain Bayern Munich's coach next season amidst reports he is set to take over at Manchester City when his current contract expires in June 2016.

“My future is: Wednesday free, Thursday training, and, of course, next year to be here. That's my future,” said Guardiola when asked about his plans on Monday.

Over the weekend, ex-England midfielder Paul Scholes claimed Guardiola will take over as City boss when his Bayern contract expires with current coach Manuel Pellegrini under severe pressure after a slump in form.

Guardiola's Bayern are staring down the barrel of a Champions League exit at the quarter-final stage as they host Porto on Tuesday needing to overturn a two-goal deficit after losing last week's first leg 3-1 in Portugal.

With a 12-point lead, Bayern can be confirmed as German league champions for the third season running on Saturday at home to Hertha Berlin.

But with their hopes of winning the treble of Bundesliga, European and German cup titles currently on a knife edge, Guardiola insists winning only a single title this season would not be enough to satisfy the Bavarian giants.

“This is a big club, so you can't say we are in a cosy situation,,” said Guardiola, who won 14 titles in four years at Barcelona and has so far won four in nearly two years at Bayern.

“If you win, you're a genius. If you lose you have lots of problems, but that's the nature of my job.

“We have to take more risks after the first-leg result, but I am happy to be here in this stage of the competition.

“I know it won't be easy, but I am 100 percent optimistic that we'll do it.

“We are just a few steps away (from winning) the German Cup and the German league, if we win on Saturday against Berlin, we'll be champions.

“That impresses me when I see how many problems we have had.

“But I know which club I am at, it isn't enough to win the Bundesliga and the cup.

“Only a treble is enough for a club like Real Madrid, Barcelona or Bayern, but I am proud to be here with these players.” – AFP



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United set to challenge Chelsea

If the game against Chelsea is anything to go by, Manchester United will surely be serious title challengers next season.

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There was a mild tremor felt in the room when Louis van Gaal banged a fist on the table to reinforce his point after Manchester United had lost at Stamford Bridge.

The eruption follows next season.

Van Gaal revealed that he had 11 disappointed faces looking up at him in the dressing room, with the sunken eyes of United’s players pleading with him to explain how they had come to be beaten.

They dominated possession, completing nearly three times as many successful passes than the champions-elect, yet they were unzipped by a goal in the 38th minute from Eden Hazard. Life can be cruel.

Despite United’s defeat there were signs on Saturday that the battle lines have been drawn ahead of a proper title race next season. Van Gaal’s team are coming for Chelsea and this is what English football needs.

This year undoubtedly belongs to Chelsea, winning the Capital One Cup in March and sitting 10 points ahead of Arsenal in the Barclays Premier League with six games to play.

Should Chelsea win at the Emirates on Sunday and beat Leicester three days later they will be champions. This used to be United territory.

In the summer Van Gaal’s side will spend serious money again, intent on assembling a squad to threaten Chelsea, a re-energised Manchester City and possibly even Arsenal.

Van Gaal will prioritise centre backs (Mats Hummels and/or Marquinhos), an attacking midfielder (Paul Pogba) and a winger (Memphis Depay).

For now he can reflect on a promising performance, with Ander Herrera dictating the tempo of the game so impressively in front of the back four.

Luke Shaw, who has missed United’s last four Premier League games, returned at left back because of an injury to Daley Blind. He looked solid, if short of fitness.United still need to address a problem in attack, where Radamel Falcao plays without confidence and lacks sharpness. He will not be staying.

But Van Gaal’s regime, brutal as it is at times, is having a positive effect on most of this squad.

The captain Wayne Rooney, playing in a deep-lying midfield position because of injuries to key players, spoke of ‘dominating the match’.He said: ‘In terms of the way we moved the Chelsea players about, making them work, it was excellent. Over the last few months it has all started to click and the players understand what the manager wants. ‘I’ve rarely seen a team come to Stamford Bridge and dominate so much. All that was missing was the goal.’

Mourinho negated the threat of Marouane Fellaini, one ofUnited’s scorers in their 4-2victory over Manchester City the previous weekend.There was doubt whether he would be playing when his lookalike brother Mansour arrived at Chelsea’s team hotel on Saturday morning to collect tickets from Eden Hazard.

‘I had to Google him,’ explained Mourinho after a bum steer from the doorman.

In any event, he had a plan to keep the United midfielder quiet.

‘Zouma played to stop Fellaini playing in the box,’ added Mourinho. ‘He is doing amazing jobs for us. Mentally he is very strong. He has learned a lot from a tactical point of view. He is 20, so we can imagine Chelsea will have him for 10 years.’ This win extended Mourinho’s undefeated run against top-four teams to 11 games since returning to England. ‘Louis is my friend but we had them in our pockets,’ he claimed. Next season, though, promises to be very different. – Daily Mail



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Chiefs success down to teamwork

Defender Tefu Mashamaite says the key to the success of the AmaKhosi this season has been teamwork.

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Johannesburg – With Kaizer Chiefs on the verge of lifting the Premiership title, defender Tefu Mashamaite says the key to the success of the AmaKhosi this season has been teamwork.

Despite their almost unassailable 13 point lead at the top of the table, Chiefs do not have a player in the top 10 scorers in the league this season but Mashamaite said that was testament to their all-round dominance.

“You can look at it both ways. You can say the strikers didn’t get goals, but at the same time you can see it’s a team effort,” Mashamaite told the African News Agency (ANA) at a training session in Naturena.

“It’s Tower [Eric Mathoho] getting a goal from a setpiece. It’s Yeye [Reneilwe Letsholonyane] getting those deep runs. It’s Mandla [Masango] coming off the wings. It’s George [Lebese] and Kingston [Nkatha] contributing. It’s been very much a team effort. The strength of the wolf is in the pack. This pack has been hunting really nicely. We hope on Wednesday we can bring home the meat.”

Chiefs need just three points to secure league honours, and a win against Polokwane City at FNB stadium will see the trophy heading back to Soweto.

With the title tantalisingly well-within their grasp, Mashamaite had a unique perspective on how his side would handle the nerves on matchday.

“Pressure. I think pressure is the most overused word in football,” said Mashamaite.

“Everything is pressure. You win a game it’s pressure, you’re number one there’s pressure, you’re number two there’s pressure. There’s always pressure talked about. We have a chance of winning the league and people are talking about pressure. Pressure, what pressure?”

Fittingly coach Stuart Baxter returns from the stands to the bench after serving a two-game suspension, but Mashamaite said the mentor’s influence extended beyond simply issuing orders on the sidelines.

“It’s important to have structure. When a father is not there, the kids know that they have to wake up, make breakfast and go to school. Doc [Doctor Khumalo] has been great, he’s always here at training so he knows what the coach would do at certain stages of the game. It also helps to have leaders on the field of play who can change the game at any given moment.”

While the league was by no means close, the 5-0 thrashing of Mamelodi Sundowns at the hands of Bloemfontein Celtic effectively ended the title race. The result, however, did not change the approach of Chiefs according to Mashamaite.

“After the Sundowns loss, he told us not to suddenly feel good about ourselves because our neighbours faltered.

“We just need to stick to want we want to achieve and get on with the job.

“We don’t want to look at who is chasing and who is in front of us. Those things go on to create extra pressure on you. We just come to training, have fun and come game time we just go and have fun.” – ANA



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News sport : Mostly MLB Notes: Talking Alex Rodriguez, Danny Salazar and a look around the league

Alex Rodriguez looks fantastic while off to a .316/.447/.711 start, and while it’s easy to say he’s going to regress, not all small samples are created equal when it comes to importance. It was fair to question whether Rodriguez was done as an impact hitter after missing all of last season thanks to a suspension, and he’ll turn 40 in July, so his hot start has certainly helped disprove that. ARod clearly worked hard during his time off (cue the jokes), and it’s been remarkable to see him turn on fastballs so well after slugging .430 in 2012 and .423 in 2013. In fact, there’s an argument the time off helped him heal, and this may be the first time Rodriguez has been truly healthy in years.

He’s already back hitting in the middle of the Yankees’ lineup, and a full-time DH role should help him stay healthy. Rodriguez currently sports a K% (35.7) that’s nearly twice his career mark to go along with a .438 BABIP, so there’s no question his hot start includes good fortune. But he’s also walking a ton (16.7 BB%) while hitting a bunch of line drives (25%) and fly balls (50%), and third base looks awfully thin right now in the fantasy landscape. Despite some glaring stats that all but ensure some regression, I’d hold Rodriguez as opposed to trying to “sell high. “ Plus, sometimes it’s more fun to root for the villain. 

This person was in a big hurry to get through a car wash

Here’s a 92-year-old crashing into nine cars while attempting to exit a parking lot

This guy in a high-speed chase with the cops picked the wrong soccer mom to mess with

Cole Hamels somehow has nine walks and has allowed a whopping seven homers over 18.0 innings (although still maintaining a 1.17 WHIP). His velocity isn’t down, and his SwStr% (11.7) remains more than healthy, but while we can chalk up all the long balls to some poor luck, I have no idea what to make of all the walks. It also doesn’t help him pitching for a Phillies offense that’s been the worst in baseball. Practically, there’s little else Hamels owners can do other than hold him and hope for the best. 

Headlines of the Week: Woman Blames Coffee-Drinking Parrot For Car Crash...32-Year-Old Woman Wakes Up Thinking She’s 15...Meet The Man Who Lives With Two Girlfriends – And Is Looking For A Third...Redhead Banned From School For Being Too Ginger...Earth’s Last Male Northern White Rhino Gets Personal Armed Bodyguards...Woman Gets Accused Of Sleeping With Entire Wu Tang Clan On ‘Divorce Court.’ 

Jordan Zimmermann is another hurler off to a shaky start, and while one outing in which he gave up seven earned runs over 2.1 innings is almost entirely responsible for his ugly ERA (6.14), there are other causes for concern. Zimmermann’s velocity has been way down, as he’s averaged just 91.9 mph with his fastball after getting 93.8 last season and 93.9 the two years before that. The result has been an anemic 4.2 SwStr% that’s the third lowest among all pitchers, and while he’s never been a huge strikeout guy, his current 7:5 K:BB ratio over 14.2 innings is especially ugly. Zimmermann also has to deal with a poor Washington defense and a Nats offense that’s been worse than expected, although the latter will hopefully improve as the team gets healthier. Zimmermann has a long track record of success, and the one outing in which he was bombed came in Fenway against one of the better offenses in baseball. Most encouragingly, he showed increased velocity during his last start, even reaching 95+ mph a couple of times. This could be a window to buy.

This might be the best ping-pong shot of all time

Here’s someone brilliantly giving his order at Starbucks as Karl from “Sling Blade.” 

This solved ‘Wheel Of Fortune’ puzzle was legit

Enough of the negativity regarding pitchers, as Danny Salazar is back! He struck out 10 over six innings during his first start after being recalled from the minors, featuring much better velocity than last year when he was dealing with an injury, so hopefully the Indians are finished messing with him. Salazar faces the Tigers in Detroit during his next start, so don’t worry if there’s a small hiccup soon, but over 168.0 career innings in the majors, he has a 27.5 K%, which is better than Clayton Kershaw’s career mark (26.4%). Of course his floor is low, but Salazar also has the upside to be a top-20 fantasy starter from here on out.

Police Blotter: Police Impersonator Pulls Over Detectives...Tulsa Roommates Stab Each Other Over Debate Between iPhone & Android...Shooting Suspect Wants ‘To Chill This Weekend,’ Will Turn Himself In Next Week...Man Arrested For Drunk Driving While On A Horse...Caged Puppies On Van Roof Trigger 911 Calls, Driver Unaware It’s Wrong...Florida Man High On Flakka Attacked Officer, Said He Was God, Had Sex With Tree.

Quick Hits: While Pablo Sandoval and Victor Martinez each produced their first extra-base hit of the year Sunday, Ryan Braun is still searching for his. I’m worried about Braun, and I’d sell him for 75 cents on the dollar right now...Devon Travis has a .356-9-3-12 line over 13 games (really 12, as he left Sunday after getting hit by a pitch in his first AB, an injury that hopefully proves minor after X-rays revealed no fractures). He’ll move back down in the lineup once Jose Reyes returns, but it’s crazy Travis is owned in just 55% of Yahoo leagues, as he should approach 15 homers with 10 steals this year, easy...Ian Desmond entered Sunday with eight errors on the season, more than 17 other teams in baseball (the Braves somehow have just one all season). Desmond has also botched more than a couple of would-be double plays, as he’s cost DFS owners of Nationals starting pitchers a countless amount of money early on...This is one of the worst baserunning mistakes you’ll ever see...Rookie pitchers are always risky, let alone ones who throw in a home park that’s increased run scoring (by 10%) more than any other than Coors Field over the past three years, but even while beginning in relief, Carlos Rodon should be owned in all fantasy leagues. His upside is worth it.

Longread of the Week: The Murder That Has Obsessed Italy.

Quick Hits Part Deux: Clayton Kershaw’s homer allowed to Charlie Blackmon on Friday matched the total he yielded against left-handers all of last season...Curtis Granderson currently sports a .340 OBP to go along with a .146 SLG. That’s not normal...Well, that’s one way for Jon Lester to work through his yips when throwing to first base...It’s safe to say fantasy owners expected more from Marcell Ozuna and Christian Yelich so far. The latter has hit two fly balls and 24 groundballs this year, which isn’t exactly conducive for home runs...This Bryce Harper homer was no joke...In the bottom of the ninth inning Sunday with runners on first and third in a tied game with one out, Austin Jackson took second base, which removed any option of an inning-ending double play and meant the middle infielders moved from playing in back to normal depth, yet the scorer ruled this “fielder’s indifference,” robbing Jackson owners of what should’ve been his first steal of the season. What an injustice...Neftali Feliz was left in to throw 47 pitches in this same game, which doesn’t exactly seem smart given his arm history...Sure, there’s no way he keeps this pace, but I can already safely say I was dead wrong about fading Nelson Cruz this season. He looks fantastic and is basically a must start in DFS against lefties. Cruz is going to approach 40 bombs once again, and I wanted no part of him in March.

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News sport : Truculence reigns supreme in Calgary's 4-2 win over Vancouver

It's pretty clear now that there is no love lost between the Calgary Flames and Vancouver Canucks. In Games 2 and 3, the teams have combined for 213 penalty minutes in the THIRD PERIOD alone.

Although Game 2 was much more of a melee, the teams mellowed out a bit for Game 3. A bit.

Calgary entered the third period on Sunday with a 2-1 lead. Minutes after puck drop to start the period, 18-year-old Sam Bennett scored his first NHL goal to put the Flames up 3-1.

 

Then, as it had in games past, 'ish started to hit the fan. The penalties from the third period were as follows:

NHL.com

For those keeping score at home, Alexandre Burrows won the penalty minute contest for the period with 19 minutes. The Department of Player Safety will take a look at everything transpired and dole out punishments as they see fit. It's possible the Canucks could be without Burrows for his boarding hit on little Johnny Gaudreau.  

From our friends at ProHockey Talk, here's a look at the fisticuffs throughout the third:

The Flames put the game nearly out of reach when Sean Monahan converted on a 5-on-3. With the goalie pulled, Jannik Hansen brought the Canucks within 2 goals, but it wasn't it enough with the time remaining. Calgary wins 4-2 and goes up 2-1 in the series.

So, what now for Vancouver? Eddie Lack has 3 starts in the series and only 1 win. Could Ryan Miller find himself in net for Game 4? Never say never when it comes to goaltenders in Vancouver... 

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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 : Paul and Griffin help Clippers pull away from Spurs for big Game 1 win

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 19: Chris Paul #3 of the Los Angeles Clippers brings the ball up court against the San Antonio Spurs in Game One of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2015 NBA Playoffs on April 19, 2015 at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images)The 2015 playoff series between the West's No. 3 Los Angeles Clippers and No. 6 San Antonio Spurs has been tabbed by nearly all observers as the most competitive of the first round, with one of two contenders going home after just a few weeks. That expectation played out over the first half and much of the third quarter of Sunday's Game 1 at Staples Center before one team pulled away for a major opening-game victory.

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

After playing each other to a standstill for roughly 30 minutes, the Clippers used a 20-7 run over roughly five minutes of the third quarter to open up a double-digit lead and take Game 1 by the eventual score of 107-92. Chris Paul and Blake Griffin were tremendous for the Clippers while the Spurs shot poorly nearly across the board.

The Clippers got out to a quality start on the strength of their excellent starting lineup, ending the first quarter with a 30-18 lead. But the Spurs almost wiped out that deficit with a 10-0 run in the first two minutes of the second quarter, proving their massive advantage in the matchup between the team's two benches and forcing the swift return of key Clippers like Paul, Griffin, DeAndre Jordan, and J.J. Redick. It's that disparity that caused many pundits to pick the Spurs in this very tight series, and these few minutes did not bring cause for confidence in players like guard Austin Rivers (much-maligned son of head coach Doc Rivers) and veteran forward Hedo Turkoglu. The Spurs won their title last spring largely on the strength of their excellent depth, and it's possible that they'll take this series in the same way. That's the case both because of these head-to-head minutes and due to the Clippers' stars succumbing to fatigue from carrying such a heavy load.

In Game 1, though, those big minutes benefited Los Angeles. The Clippers built up another small lead in the second quarter, succeeding enough to convince Gregg Popovich that it was necessary to send DeAndre Jordan to the line on four consecutive possessions to change the game. Jordan missed his first three attempts but hit four of his last five to deter Popovich for the rest of the night, and the Clippers headed into the break with a 49-43 lead.

That margin remained relatively steady for the first six minutes of the third quarter. That changed over a five-minute stretch from the 5:30 to 0:40 marks of the period, when the Clippers went on a 20-7 run to turn a 59-54 score into a 79-61 lead. Blake Griffin's very loud dunks on Aron Baynes were the biggest plays from the run, but the Clippers exerted control over the game in many ways. Their defense frustrated the Spurs into contested misses, Chris Paul made all the right decisions, and players hit shots when called upon.

The Spurs cut the lead to nine points with four three-pointers in the first 4:30 of the fourth quarter, but Redick found Griffin for a lay-up out of a timeout on the next possession and the Clippers never saw the lead dip below double digits again. The final stats suggest a dominant performance. The Clippers shot 51.3 percent from the field and 10-of-18 on threes, Paul was terrific with 32 points on 13-of-20 shooting, Griffin contributed everywhere (26 points, 12 rebounds, six assists, three steals, three blocks in 43 minutes), Jamal Crawford chipped in 17 points on 7-of-10 shooting off the bench, and no one performed so poorly as to sink the operation. Meanwhile, San Antonio saw serious troubles — they shot 36.6 percent from the field (including 17-of-37 inside eight feet) with only three notable players (Kawhi Leonard, Marco Belinelli, and Patty Mills) making over half their shots and many more experiencing borderline nightmares.

The reality was a little less overwhelming, if only because it's difficult to count the defending champs out of any game. But the teams that have troubled San Antonio in recent seasons have often had decided athletic advantages, dynamic rim protectors, and the ability to hit tough shots with some regularity. The Clippers starters — particularly Griffin, Paul, and Jordan — have those qualities, and it's tough to argue that the Spurs can easily neutralize those players in this series. They are most likely going to have win by other means, such as improved shooting, keeping top players fresh, and exploitation of their overwhelming superiority on the bench.

There is no point in counting out the Spurs after one game. Yet this loss served as a reminder that they will not win a competitive series simply because they've been there before. As ever, they must focus on and solve the unique challenge posed by the Clippers. The Spurs' supposedly ineffable aura of unstoppable professionalism exists only as long as they are able to take advantage of what they do best on the court.

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



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Bale adds to Real’s injury woes

Real Madrid winger Gareth Bale looks set to miss the European champions decisive Champions League quarter-final, second leg against Atletico Madrid after scans confirmed a muscle injury in his left calf.

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Real Madrid winger Gareth Bale looks set to miss the European champions decisive Champions League quarter-final, second leg against Atletico Madrid after scans confirmed a muscle injury in his left calf.

Bale limped off after less than five minutes of Madrid's 3-1 win over Malaga on Saturday.

“After the tests carried out on Gareth Bale by the Real Madrid medical team, a muscle injury in his left calf has been diagnosed,” the club said in a statement on Monday.

The club refused to add how long Bale will be sidelined for, but it seems highly unlikely he will be fit for the eighth Madrid derby of the season that will decide who progresses to the semi-finals with the score locked at 0-0 after the first-leg at the Vicente Calderon last week.

Madrid have been unable to beat Atletico in any of those seven previous meetings and face mounting problems due to injuries and suspensions.

Luka Modric has already been ruled out with a knee ligament injury, left-back Marcelo is banned and Karim Benzema also faces a race against time after missing the Malaga game with a knee problem.– AFP



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Can Swallows save themselves?

Coach Craig Rosslee has challenged bottom-placed Moroka Swallows to save themselves from looming relegation.

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Polokwane – Craig Roslee conducted one of the longest post-match team talks in the history of Moroka Swallows on Saturday night and emerged from the dressing room with an uncharacteristically huge smile on his face.

His side having given away what appeared a much-needed victory by conceding a last minute equaliser to SuperSport United at the Peter Mokaba Stadium, the Birds coach stayed locked in the changeroom with his team for close on an hour afterwards.

When he came out, walking side by side with club CEO Leon Prins, Rosslee oozed the air of a man who has just won the lottery – his elation belying the fact that he is in charge of a team perched at the basement of the 16-team Absa Premiership table with the season fast approaching its end.

“It was a fantastic performance,” he said. “We hadn’t played in three weeks when we went to Chippa (United on Wednesday) and we were unlucky to lose that match. Then we came off a flight from there to come here and play against a team that has been playing week in and week out and winning. We had the better chances although they got the goal late.”

While he would have loved his side to at least defend their lead until the end, Rosslee was very happy with his team’s overall effort. “The belief was there. In the first half we were outstanding, Siyabonga Nomvethe scored a great goal, and everyone was outstanding. I am happy that the will is there although the goals did not come.”

But he expressed contentment at having taken a point on the road. “It’s good we got the point. I am happy we got something from this match. We’re now on the same points with AmaZulu, so we’re still in the mix. And the key for us is to stay focused and remember that we have no control over what the other teams do.”

On Saturday night they would have done well to focus until the final whistle. But for some reason they switched off and allowed SuperSport captain Clayton Daniels to head in the goal that cancelled out Nomvethe’s fantastic strike from a tight angle.

Rosslee lamented the fact Mario Savic was off the field at that time. “He came off because of cramp. Cramp? During our time we used to get head injuries and just get patched up with Vaseline and returned to the field. Mario had been doing a fantastic job on Clayton and then he comes off at a crucial time and he scores,” said the former Hellenic star.

He challenged his team to save themselves from the relegation zone. “I am committed (to keeping Swallows in the elite league) and all I can do is motivate them to motivate themselves. I can’t feed them so they have to go out there and perform and I expect the bigger players to lead the way.”

Mich D’Avray believes Chippa United have what it takes to win all their remaining fixtures in the league in a bid to move away from the relegation zone, writes Mohau Ramashidja

Such a belief was sparked after Chippa held Wits to a goalless draw at Milpark at the weekend. This followed a 1-0 victory over Moroka Swallows in midweek. And now with four games remaining before the season ends, D’Avray is confident that they can win all of their upcoming fixtures. The caretaker coach stated that 32 points would be just about enough to see themselves saunter into the next season’s premiership campaign.

D’Avray also praised his side’s technical discipline in defence against the Clever Boys. The caretaker coach said that he was happy to have walked away with a point, as loss against Wits could have dented their hopes of doing well in their remaining fixtures.

“We are happy to have walked away with a point,” he said. “Wits are a quality side and we knew that we had to contain them, if we were to see ourselves salvage a point. And that’s what we did. We contained throughout and we are happy with how our side performed.”

Wits coach Gavin Hunt said he was disappointed on how his team played on the night and believes that they could have done better upfront to unlock the defence of their opponents. “I’m disappointed that we didn’t get the three points,” Hunt said. “Let’s be fair, they didn’t come here to win. They came here, and defended throughout the entire match.” - The Star



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Liverpool lack big-game mentality

Liverpool's reputation as the nearly men of English football was reinforced in a 2-1 FA Cup semi-final defeat to Aston Villa.

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London - Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers admitted his team lack a big-game mentality after their reputation as the nearly men of English football was reinforced in a 2-1 FA Cup semi-final defeat to Aston Villa.

The seven-times competition winners were outplayed in almost all departments by an Aston Villa side struggling for points in the Premier League.

It was a second semi-final defeat of the season for Liverpool, who were knocked out of the League Cup by Chelsea earlier in the campaign.

On the back of last year's runners-up finish in the Premier League, having stuttered in the final throes, Rodgers knows his team need to discover a winning habit when the pressure is on.

“We need now to have the courage and bravery to play better in the big games, because we didn't play well enough today,” he told reporters after goals from Christian Benteke and Fabian Delph cancelled out Philippe Coutinho's opener for Liverpool.

“We weren't quite on it. We looked as if maybe the occasion and the energy got to us a bit today, but that's what can happen with young players...

“We have come up short in a few games and it is something we certainly need to improve. We are a team that is growing, but all these experiences will hopefully help.”

At a club where winning trophies has been the most basic requirement for managers over the years, Rodgers will probably not need reminding of his own shortcomings in that department.

Sunday's defeat means he will become the first Liverpool manager since Phil Taylor in the 1950s not to win any silverware in their first three seasons in charge.

Should Liverpool fail to finish in the Premier League's top four and qualify for the Champions League, the lack of a trophy could count against Rodgers when the club's owners make their end-of-season assessments.

Sunday's defeat also ensured that Steven Gerrard's glittering Liverpool career would finish without a showpiece cup final send-off before he packs his bags for LA Galaxy in the close season.

Restored to the starting lineup after serving a three-game suspension, the midfielder was unable to produce any trademark heroics to dig his side out of the mire on the Wembley turf where he has so often shone in the past.

“I think he was doing everything he possibly could today to help the team,” Rodgers said. “I thought he was excellent, collectively we did not perform well enough.” – Reuters



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Kane hits 30 goals for the season

Harry Kane scored his 30th goal of the season in their 3-1 Premier League win against Newcastle United.


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London - Harry Kane was the toast of Tottenham Hotspur once again as the England striker scored his 30th goal of the season in their 3-1 Premier League win against Newcastle United on Sunday.


The 21-year-old has reached that total in all competitions, including 20 in the Premier League, and is the first Spurs player since Gary Lineker in 1991-92 to reach 30 in a season.


Kane, who has been nominated for the PFA Player of the Year and PFA Young Player of the Year awards, has become a fans' favourite at White Hart Lane this term, lauded as “one of our own” after coming through the youth ranks since the age of 11.


“I'm very proud but there are five games left and, hopefully, I'll get a few more goals,” Kane told Sky Sports.


“We deserved it today. We played well. We've had some disappointing performances in the last couple of weeks and we wanted to put that right.


“I had a couple of chances and the keeper made some good saves but I'm delighted to get back on the scoresheet.”


Kane also scored 80 seconds into his England debut as a substitute in a 4-0 win over Lithuania at Wembley last month.


The youngster showed his killer instinct in front goal at St James' Park, scoring the third against Newcastle, and manager Mauricio Pochettino was delighted he equalled Lineker's tally.


“It's fantastic, congratulations to him because he deserves this moment, it's historic, the first time since Gary Lineker in 1992,” Pochettino told Sky Sports.


“I think he needs to pay for a dinner this week for his team mates. The team work a lot and try and help the striker score.”


Sixth-placed Spurs are level on 57 points with Liverpool in fifth having played a game more and Pochettino is pleased they are still competing for a European place with five games left.


“Our performance was good. We deserved the win as we were better than Newcastle,” he said. “It is important because we are in a position where we can fight for something until the end of the season.


“It's very important to finish the season on a good level and then we have to analyse.” – Reuters






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No fairytale ending for Gerrard

Aston Villa ended Liverpool skipper Steven Gerrard's dream of bringing his 17-year career at Anfield to a close with a cup winner's medal.


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London - Aston Villa will meet holders Arsenal in the FA Cup final next month after goals from Christian Benteke and Fabian Delph gave them a 2-1 win over Liverpool in a pulsating semi-final at Wembley on Sunday.


Villa's unexpected but thoroughly deserved come-from-behind victory ended Liverpool skipper Steven Gerrard's dream of bringing his 17-year career at Anfield to a close with a cup winner's medal on his 35th birthday in the final on May 30.


Tim Sherwood, who has revitalised Villa since replacing Paul Lambert as manager in February, told reporters: “We bamboozled them. They could not cope with our tactics and I think we were the better side.”


Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers said: “We were nervous for some reason. Maybe when you want to win something so much, perhaps it plays on your mind. We were second best today.”


Liverpool made the breakthrough in the 30th minute when Philippe Coutinho scored after sloppy Villa defending.


But Villa, who last won the cup in 1957, were only behind for six minutes before they deservedly equalised when skipper Delph, guilty for his part in the build-up to the Liverpool goal, did everything right in the move that led to Villa's.


He surged forward before playing a one-two with Jack Grealish and crossing for Benteke whose first time shot flew past goalkeeper Simon Mignolet.


Villa went ahead nine minutes into the second half when Delph scored after another superb move which included a Benteke backheel and a Grealish through ball for his captain who cut in and gave Mignolet no chance from 12 metres.


The opening spell was cagey but Villa more than held their own against a Liverpool side who had Gerrard back after a three-match suspension.


But the Liverpool skipper, who has strutted the Wembley pitch so many times for England, made little impact even though his side took the early lead.


Villa, though, were far from deflated and levelled when Benteke struck his ninth goal in his last seven matches.


Rodgers continually tinkered with his formation and brought striker Mario Balotelli on as a halftime replacement for Lazar Markovic but the Italian never seriously troubled the Villa back line.


He fluffed one glancing header, although the linesman's flag was in any case raised for offside, and then, with time running out, he did put the ball in the net only to be ruled offside again, this time more controversially.


Gerrard's final act in the drama saw his looping header cleared off the line by Kieran Richardson as Villa held on for a famous win. – Reuters






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