lundi 30 juin 2014

Kyrie Irving accedes to the system, agrees with a contract extension in Cleveland

Kyrie Irving was never going anywhere. The Cleveland Cavaliers, despite two reports from former and current New York tabloid writers, were never going to balk at offering him a maximum contract. NBA players are not going to sit out productive years in their 20s, working through a relatively piddling qualifying offer season along the way, to sign for less money some years down the line.


One shouldn’t doubt that Kyrie’s excited about a future with the Cleveland Cavaliers, and his new five-year and $90 million contract extension mostly reflects that. In spite of four years of wasted words and bum moves in the wake of LeBron James leaving the Cavs, he has what should be a great rookie coach and a great running mate to line up alongside starting in 2014-15. Whatever Irving says at the press conference announcing his understandable decision after July 10, you should believe.


You should also understand that the way NBA rookie contracts are set up, that Irving was always going to sign a maximum extension this summer, even if the Cavs had clung onto the deposed Mike Brown as head coach, and selected Uncle Drew with the top overall pick in the draft in June.


Even at the solid rate (nearly $9.2 million in 2015-16), there was no way Irving was going to play out both next year and his qualifying offer year in Cleveland after more or less making his intentions known by turning down a max deal offered by the Cavs – making him an unrestricted free agent two years from now. And, again, his current intentions are likely quite sincere – the Cavs have options moving forward, even after whiffing on draft pick after draft pick that wasn’t named “Kyrie Irving” after 2011. I don’t doubt for a second that he’s interested in this team’s future moving forward – new coach David Blatt, new top overall pick Andrew Wiggins, a respected and competent new general manager in David Griffin – regardless of how much cash Cleveland just dumped in his lap.


This is not a shot at Cleveland, nor the Cavs, nor the team’s ownership, front office, players or coaching staff. This is the NBA’s new reality. If you are a top overall pick that is worth a maximum contract in theory – and Irving certainly falls in line with that description – then the NBA’s collective bargaining agreement has made it increasingly tougher to decide to ride your rookie contract out, and eventually join a team of your liking as an unrestricted free agent.


Even if Irving had turned down Tuesday’s contract offer, played for over $16.2 million (including that qualifying offer) over the next two seasons, he still would have made less per year and in total after signing a “maximum” contract with another team with a clear cap sheet in the summer of 2016. Had he dared to sign a “maximum” offer sheet as a restricted free agent in the summer of 2015, the Cavaliers would have quickly moved in to match the sheet and sign Irving to a discounted rate, locking him into the team he didn’t want to play for. This extension, as was agreed upon by most sane NBA observers even when the Cavs were at their most laughable earlier in 2013-14, was always how things were going to turn out.


Luckily for Irving, things have turned out. The Cavs’ cap situation isn’t ideal, especially if they overpay to keep Spencer Hawes, but they do have flexibility and the chance to turn down extending all of the contracts of the lottery picks that former GM Chris Grant blew. Wiggins is no panacea, he’s a work in progress, and David Blatt will need time as he acclimates to both this league, its players (that’s a lot of scouting to do) and an 82-game season, but Irving is just 22 and still has yet another year to go on his rookie deal.


He better understand that there is no quick fix. And if he takes the trade demand route that most cynics are predicting, he better be ready to cool his feet in the team’s Gatorade cooler in order to make things untenable – because Cleveland isn’t going to fall for him whining as soon as the first bit of toil and trouble hits. That’s the hope, at least, that the team’s front office doesn’t stand for any passive or aggressive attempts to flee northern Ohio.


The real hope is that Cleveland’s fortunes turn on court, with a coach that players actually listen to (seriously, how do you re-hire Mike Brown after everything already know about the guy?) and a GM worth his weight in this league (seriously, how do you stick with Chris Grant after he refused to rebuild in the summer of 2010?). And that an Irving moan-fest in the first season of his new deal, pitched somewhere in the middle of 2015-16, will be met with crisp indifference.


The NBA’s owners and general managers, should they decide to utilize it, are now allowed the luxury of such indifference. If their disgruntled young stars want to play for two seasons, one at a reduced rate, and sign for less money elsewhere some two years after turning down a max contract … go for it, slugger. Your fractured and hapless Players Association signed off on as much in a repeated series of three collective bargaining agreements that led to this.


Some 15 years ago, when NBA teams were signing youngster after youngster to max contracts without much provocation, restricted free agency was an anachronism left over from another era. In 2005, it was brought back, and in 2011, it was given some sturdy legs in response to a series of owners that dared not utilize it as they attempted to make friends with their young charges and fire away financially prior to claiming poverty.


Now? It’s a real threat, and both the Cavs and Irving were correct in their collective approach to a late night connection.


With that in place, and even with tens of millions to come in his name, Kyrie Irving was just about leverage-less here. That’s significant, as this tug of war between players and owners continues.


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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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George Springer and the sound of a ball being absolutely crushed (Video)


Were the Houston Astros celebrating Fourth of July early? Did someone light a firecracker at the same time George Springer hit a mammoth two-run homer in the first inning of Monday's game against the Seattle Mariners?


No, you say? That was just the sound of Springer absolutely crushing a pitch from Taijuan Walker? All right then, Mr. Springer, go 'head with that potent bat of yours.


Seriously, listen to this thing. We measure all types of data points for homers, how about decibels? Speaking of those measurements, here are a few fun factoids about Springer's big blast:




Well, 110 mph sure ain't slow. This was Springer's 16th homer, which ranks him ninth in the American League despite starting the season in Triple-A. Like the scouting report says, Springer strikes out a lot, but he can sure hit the long ball. Maybe this one will get him some consideration for the Home Run Derby.


The Astros could have used a few more bombs from Springer and his buds. The Mariners


@EvanDrellich%20110%20mph,%20didn't%20get%20a%20distance


—%20Mike%20Fast%20(@fastballs)%20July%201,%202014%20">won the game 10-4 behind four homers of their own. Springer, however, still wins for "loudest."

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






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Marcin Gortat rode a Humvee with a massive gun into his basketball camp in Poland

A professional basketball player's official camp offers young fans quite a bit. They get quality instruction in a sport they love (or that their parents think they should love), spend some time with likeminded peers, and get to meet at least one of their heroes. Naturally, it's that last part that really sets the experience apart. For once, an athlete becomes a real person, not a figure on a television. He's right there in all his glory.


By all reasonable standards, Washington Wizards center Marcin Gortat made his arrival at his basketball camp in Poland a little more memorable, if only because it'll give campers nightmares for years. As the photo below shows, Gortat rode in on a Humvee complete with a massive military gun (via Deadspin):



But Gortat did stop there. In addition to bringing along teammate Chris Singleton, Gortat added a caravan of Volkswagens behind the Humvee:



Your move, Chris Kaman.


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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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Details of Houston Rockets' free agent pitch to Carmelo Anthony emerge

On Tuesday, the NBA will change from a slightly ridiculous league of mostly functional basketball competition to an all-out irrational fight for an uncertain future. As quality players under contract morph into prized free agents sure to push a team to a title, general managers and fans consider delusions of grandeur. Everyone gets caught up in the moment, because that's often what's required to land a good player in the first place.


The Houston Rockets have been very active on the free agent market over the past few summers, with general manager Daryl Morey regularly opening up enough cap room to land one or two players at max-level salaries. Although the Rockets didn't succeed in a major way until nabbing Dwight Howard last summer, they're big players once again with New York Knicks All-Star forward Carmelo Anthony set to visit Houston on the first day of free agency. Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle has details of their prospective pitch:



The thrust of the presentation will be about the Rockets’ contention that Anthony, a 6-8 forward, would be joining a contender. According to an individual familiar with the plans, they would cite their roster, expected to include every starter off a 54-win team.




They will describe how Anthony, 30, would be used. They will use many of the same representatives — owner Leslie Alexander, CEO Tad Brown, general manager Daryl Morey, coach Kevin McHale, former player Clyde Drexler, trainer Keith Jones and James Harden — as those who landed Howard. Howard will also be a part of the presentation, replacing free agent Chandler Parsons on the welcoming committee.




But the Rockets will hope to use home-court advantage as they could not last season. Howard’s meetings were set up in Los Angeles, with the Rockets contingent making their appeal at a hotel dinner. On Wednesday, Anthony is scheduled to be at Toyota Center where the Rockets plan to pull out all the recruiting stops the $7 million upgrade to the basketball facilities allow. [...]




Anthony planned to begin his tour in Chicago. When he gets to Houston (with a trip to Dallas scheduled for later Wednesday), the Rockets hope to make his visit memorable. As much as the Rockets will emphasize the more sober facts and figures related to team building, they plan to use their extensive collection of gadgetry, from the video boards and sound system in the locker room to the new weight room, video room and player’s lounge in ways they could not last summer when recruiting Howard.



As noted by Feigen in this article, this pitch isn't especially different from how the Rockets sold Howard. In that case, there's something about off about their logic. Anthony would add considerable firepower to Houston, but he doesn't necessarily turn them into an instant title contender. In reviewing this news, Matt Moore of Eye on Basketball correctlly pointed out that the Rockets, already one of the best offensive teams in the NBA, need superior defense to get to a championship level, which isn't exactly Anthony's best area. For that matter, the Rockets' plan for future with Melo appears to include small forward and pending restricted free agent Chandler Parsons, who might be tough to keep without some major moves and/or a considerable luxury tax hit.


In other words, the Rockets are not selling Melo on what the future could legitimately look like so much as what it would appear as in a frictionless world. As the Miami Heat have learned, a collection of superior talent doesn't guarantee eternal championships, both because it requires a ton of hard work and trial-and-error to get just one and because excellent players often get significantly worse as they age. A team of James Harden, Dwight Howard, Chandler Parsons, Carmelo Anthony, and a random friend might sound like it could win every game 140-95, but they would have to decide on an offensive hierarchy, their roles, and defensive rotations, to say nothing of executing well.


Every person in a free-agent pitch and negotiation knows these things to be true, but for some reason this process tends to shunt reason to the periphery. It's about convincing the free agent, not making a logical argument that he's best fit for this particular team. Whether the Rockets provide an accurate picture of their future is beside the point — the goal is to make themselves attractive to Melo. It's part of the business of basketball, but it'd be wrong to act like it has much to do with the realities of what happens 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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Chael Sonnen fired from FOX Sports and UFC broadcasting positions

After it was revealed that UFC fighter Chael Sonnen failed a random drug test administered by the Nevada Athletic Commission (NAC) on May 24, the three-time title challenger retired. And now, after it was announced that he failed a second random test given by the NAC on June 5, the UFC and FOX Sports organizations have fired him from his broadcast positions.


FOX and the UFC released a joint statement late Monday night announcing that the UFC Tonight co-host was terminated.


"The UFC and FOX Sports organizations announced today the termination of their respective broadcasting services agreements with analyst Chael Sonnen. This decision comes in light of Sonnen failing a second test conducted by the Nevada Athletic Commission for banned substances in June. Sonnen was previously under temporary suspension by the Nevada Athletic Commission for failing an initial test conducted in May."


Sonnen has failed three drug tests in his MMA career. The first came after his 2010 title fight against Anderson Silva in Oakland.


After that failed test, Sonnen was suspended by the California athletic commission but then made what turned out to be false claims at his hearing in order to succesfully have his suspension reduced. The California commission would later suspend him a second time on suspicion of perjury.


Since testing positive for multiple long-banned substances in the two random drug tests he's been subjected to this year, Sonnen has continued his pattern of using misleading and false statements in order to deflect blame from himself. Sonnen has not yet released a statement about his broadcast contract termination.


Follow Elias on Twitter @EliasCepeda & @YahooCagewriter






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2014 NBA free agency tracker

Live Blog 2014 NBA Free Agency tracker


What will happen to the LeBron James and the Miami Heat? Where will Carmelo Anthony end up?


Follow all the NBA's free agency news with Yahoo Sports' NBA experts Adrian Wojnarowski, Marc Spears and the Ball Don't Lie crew.






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Kaka signs with Orlando City, gets mobbed at airport

For complete World Cup 2014 coverage visit Yahoo Sports and follow @YahooSoccer


Major League Soccer's Orlando City completed the signing of Brazilian legend Kaka on Monday, fulfilling one of the sport's worst kept secrets after the MLS expansion side hinted at the star's imminent introduction over the last several days. While Kaka's arrival might not have been a shock after news leaked of his flight itinerary, it certainly gave fans a perfect opportunity to welcome Kaka to Orlando in full-force.


With jerseys, scarves, and irritating horns and vuvuzelas, local fans gathered to meet Kaka as the star disembarked his flight. And as can be expected with one of the sport's most adorable figures, Kaka responded in kind, signing autographs and posing with local children.


While it's unclear whether Kaka plans to take the next logical step and run for local office, fans on hand had a rare opportunity to interact with one of their heroes.



For his part, Kaka seems pleased to have moved to the United States, remarking to Yahoo Sports in an interview that he considered MLS to be "...a nice league and a nice place to play."



Whlie contractual details are still yet to be confirmed, it'll be interesting to see how Kaka responds when he realizes that he meant to sign with David Beckham's club in Miami, and that the team doesn't actually practice within the confines of Harry Potter World, and that he hasn't become the first Brazilian World Cup-winner to make the transition to professoinal Quidditch.


There's plenty of details to hammer out, but the future looks bright for both Kaka and Orlando City.






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Juggernaut Index, No. 28: The Tennessee Titans

We're entering the fourth and possibly final year of the Jake Locker era in Tennessee, and, so far, you'd have to say the pre-draft scouting reports were prescient. Locker was always billed as an excellent athlete, a mobile quarterback with abundant arm strength. These things are clearly true. But the weaknesses he displayed as a collegiate QB remain part of his NFL profile.


[Get in the game with Yahoo! Sports Fantasy Football]


Here's a review of Locker's major negatives from his Pro Football Weekly write-up, prior to the 2011 draft:


- Questionable football instincts and timing


- Inconsistent ball placement, accuracy


- Very average career completion percentage


- Too quick to tuck and run, and physical run style invites injuries


So yeah, they pretty much nailed it. Every other scouting source did, too. Back in 2010, the big worries with Locker were accuracy, efficiency and injury-risk, and he hasn't erased any of those concerns. Locker's career NCAA completion percentage was just 54.0, and it's only 57.2 with the Titans. His net yards per attempt has declined in each NFL season. He's also suffered three significant injuries over the past two years — it was a left shoulder in 2012, then right hip and right foot (Lisfranc) in 2013.


Ken Whisenhunt observing his next project (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey) Locker isn't under contract beyond the upcoming season — the team declined to pick up his fifth-year option — so he's playing for his NFL life, auditioning for everyone. Honestly, his setup isn't terrible. Tennessee has rebuilt its offensive line into an impressive group (at least on paper), while assembling a decent-if-not-deep receiving corps. The team also hired noted quarterback rehab specialist Ken Whisenhunt as head coach, which seems like a win. You might recall the fine work he did in San Diego last season, reanimating Philip Rivers. If Whiz can't wring a little improvement out of Locker, then perhaps Jake is unfixable.


As a fantasy asset, Locker is strictly for the deep-league crowd — seriously deep leagues, like with 18 teams and/or multiple QB spots. In standard formats, he's simply a bye-week sub, a guy you might add for a friendly match-up. There isn't anyone threatening him on the Titans' depth chart, not with Charlie Whitehurst and LSU rookie Zach Mettenberger as Plans B and C. Mettenberger is a moderately interesting dynasty option, but he's coming off an ACL injury, not likely to make noise until 2015.


Third-year receiver Kendall Wright is coming off an outstanding PPR campaign, having caught 94 balls for 1,079 yards on 140 targets in 2013. Wright finished with only two touchdowns last year, a function of his chain-moving slot role — he led all NFL receivers in slot receptions last season (63), per Pro Football Focus. This year, there's talk of him expanding his role, lining up inside and out. But fantasy drafters shouldn't give Wright credit for things he hasn't yet done. I'll continue to view him as a WR3 in standard leagues, bumping him in PPR.


Justin Hunter flashed talent at various points in his rookie season — he went 6-109-1 at Oakland, then 4-114-1 at Denver — but he was quiet more often than not. He's a gifted player with excellent size (6-foot-4), capable of winning single-coverage battles . When you're looking for upside receivers in the later rounds, keep him in mind as a low-risk/high-ceiling target. Nate Washington is still on the scene in Tennessee and coming off a decent year (58-919-3), but we've seen his best. Michael Preston figures to be the No. 4 wideout for a team that won't deliver three ownable fantasy receivers.


Delanie Walker had the best season by far of his pro career last year (60-571-6), but he still wasn't a top-12 fantasy tight end on a per-game basis. Someone in a 16-team league will probably have to own Walker, but that person doesn't have to be you. I wouldn't draft him ahead of emerging talents like Ertz, Reed, Eifert and Green.


The Titans released Chris Johnson back in April, a move that surprised no one. CJ was due to receive $8 million in 2014, which is roughly $4 million more than the market eventually decided he was worth. He might very well remain a productive player for another season or three, but he's no longer the all-world, record-setting talent who wowed us in '09. So the team understandably moved on. That's the NFL.


Bishop Sankey, minicamping in Tennessee, preparing for a serious role (Frederick Breedon/Getty Images) Shonn Greene is still lurking on the roster, but ... well, c'mon. Greene is a plodder entering his age-29 season, coming off knee surgery. He's a short-yardage guy by default, because he's incapable of long yardage. You can ignore him on draft day. Dexter McCluster was added to this team's backfield mix via free agency, and the widespread expectation is that he'll see a limited number of carries, with perhaps 60-70 targets as a receiver. It's easy to imagine him playing the Danny Woodhead role in Whisenhunt's offense, or something like it, which would put him on the fantasy map. But still, he's not the guy to target in this backfield.


Tennessee spent a second-round pick on Bishop Sankey back in May, making him the first running back off the board. Sankey was a hugely productive back in the Pac-12, rushing for 3,309 yards and 36 touchdowns over the past two seasons at Washington, averaging 5.5 YPC. More than one well-respected draft analyst didn't completely love Sankey's tape — he doesn't have breakaway speed, nor uncommon power — but I'm a fan of his work. For one thing, he clearly outperformed a sketchy O-line, particularly in 2012. He reads gaps well and has more elusiveness and tackle-shedding ability than you may have been led to believe. Sankey also hauled in 61 receptions for 553 yards over the past two years, so he can be helpful in the screen game.


I can't promise you that Sankey will be a full-workload RB in year one, but the kid has a relatively unobstructed path to 235-250 touches. He's the first rookie I'd target in fantasy drafts, no question. I'll sign off on his current Yahoo ADP (74.9, RB21). Again, this team's offensive line isn't going to be a liability. Sankey is a solid second back for a fantasy roster.


Tennessee's defense was perfectly mediocre last season, ranking middle-of-the-pack all over the board. Don't mess with this D/ST, unless the matchup is unusually appealing. Bernard Pollard (99 tackles) and Jurrell Casey (10.5) are approved for use in IDP leagues, but I won't give you a hard sell on any other Titans.



2013 Tennessee Titans team stats: 22.6 PPG (NFL rank 19), 231.9 pass YPG (22), 22 pass TDs (20), 118.4 rush YPG (14), 28.9 rush attempts per game (10), 33.3 pass attempts per game (23)






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Germany edge out impressive Algeria 2-1 in extra time

For complete World Cup 2014 coverage visit Yahoo Sports and follow @YahooSoccer


Algeria held an underwhelming Germany scoreless for 90 minutes while also threatening to pull off the World Cup's latest improbable upset with a goal of their own, but the Germans came alive in extra time and won 2-1. After struggling to put together a coherent attack for the whole match, Andre Schurrle finally broke through in just the second minute of extra time for Germany and Mesut Ozil put them up 2-0 in the 119th minute. But as they had done the whole match, Algeria maintained focus and got one back in injury time of the second period of extra time to give Germany one last scare before the final whistle.


The match started with Algeria on the attack and Germany playing as if they just woke up in the middle of class. Goalkeeper Manuel Neuer refused to stay within the confines of his penalty area and went on nervy expeditions up the pitch early and often.



Though Germany had no shortage of shots on goal, a combination of uncharacteristically poor execution and Algeria denying them by any means necessary kept the match scoreless until the first 90 minutes was up. But even after Germany seemed to take control with their two goals in extra time, Abdelmoumene Djabou finished Sofiane Feghouli cross to set up Algeria for one last chance at an equalizer at the death that wasn't quite strong enough.


Many of the Algerian players were in tears after the final whistle, but their performance both in this match and this World Cup as a whole deserves high praise.


Germany will now face France in the quarterfinals and with neither team looking terribly impressive in their round of 16 match, it's difficult to predict a winner. One certainty, however, is that Germany should never attempt the "falling Muller" free kick routine again.


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Uruguay's President has harsh words for FIFA


RIO DE JANEIRO — The chances of Uruguay and FIFA mending fences after the Luis Suarez ban are officially nil.


Uruguayan President José Mujica had some choice words for soccer’s governing body, which banned his country’s star striker Suarez, after he bit an opponent during the group stage game against Italy.


Suarez was banned nine international games and four months from soccer, one of the harshest punishment ever handed down.


When asked about FIFA, Mujica didn’t mince words.


“The FIFA is a bunch of old sons of bitches,” Mujica said before placing his hand over his mouth jokingly like he had just said something he shouldn’t. “They could have punished him without these fascist sanctions.”


Guarantee this isn’t the first time anyone has called FIFA either of those nouns, but it might be the first time the President of a country has had such harsh tones.


Sen. Lucía Topolanski, the first lady, sided with Mujica by saying she, “adheres to the words of the president.”


Suarez’s absence had a clear effect on Uruguay, which was beaten 2-0 by Colombia in the Round of 16. The Uruguayans had trouble mounting a consistent offense and when they did, Colombian goalkeeper Faryd Mondragon was there for the stop.


Uruguay’s Football Association said it planned to appeal the suspension and had seven day from last Saturday to do so.


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






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Jameis Winston pranked a teammate on a bus ride (Video)

Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston has been known to have a goofy sense of humor. That was on display when he pranked teammate Cameron Erving on Monday.


Winston and some teammates, including Erving, were on a bus trip on Monday when Erving, a 6-foot-6, 302-pound offensive lineman, fell asleep in a pretty awkward position with his head leaning into the aisle of the bus.


That left a perfect opportunity for Winston to mess with the first team All-ACC lineman.



As you can see, Winston got a lighthearted response from Erving, who was all smiles even after the 6-foot-4, 235-pound quarterback fell on him.


Well played, Jameis.


For more Florida State news, visit Warchant.com.


(H/T College Spun )


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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Thomas Muller takes a tumble on failed Germany free kick routine

For the first 90 minutes of Germany's round of 16 match against Algeria, they played like their bodies had been possessed by uncoordinated school children. Goalkeeper Manuel Neuer repeatedly sprinted out of his area as if he kept hearing an ice cream van in the distance and even leading goalscorer Thomas Muller suddenly seemed incapable of putting the ball in the net.


This strange phenomena came to a climax late in regular time when Germany attempted to execute an elaborate free kick routine and Muller fell down on his run-up.



The fall might have been a purposeful attempt to fool Algeria, but it came off so poorly that it also seemed accidental. Needless to say, the free kick didn't work and everyone laughed at the Germans.


But as soon as extra time began with the score still 0-0, whatever magic spell of ineptitude was cast over them instantly wore off and Andre Schurrle scored with a lovely flick in front of goal.






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Players in video game settlements could reportedly receive up to $20,000

The college football and basketball players whose likenesses appeared in NCAA-themed video games could receive as much as $20,000 each.


The terms were reached as a part of the proposed $20 million settlement between the NCAA and a group of players led by former Arizona State quarterback Sam Keller, as well as the proposed $40 million settlement in the claims against video game manufacturer Electronic Arts and Collegiate Licensing Company.


According to USA Today, the settlements’ “combined value per player” depends on “the number of players who can make valid claims, whether a player was on a football or men’s basketball roster, whether a player also was depicted in a game as an avatar, whether a player’s photograph also appeared in the game, and the number of years in which a player was on a roster, appeared in the game and/or had their photograph used in the game.”


If a player “appeared as an avatar” in four different years of the game, the player could receive $5,000 per year for a total of $20,000.


“This is a great settlement. It will benefit all of these student-athletes, former and current – and this is real money,” said Robert Carey, an attorney for the Keller plaintiffs.


According to CBSSports.com, the cap of $5,000 per roster appearance would be made up of $1,818 from the NCAA settlement and $3,182 from the EA settlement. Additionally, an appearance on a video game roster from a player since May 5, 2007 “is worth eight times the amount from before that date.”


Per CBSSports.com, the Keller plaintiffs say they have a “working database of players” from the games that includes over 3,900 teams and 75,000 players. Proving a likeness is based on “matching uniform number, school, division, sport, position and home state.”


The NCAA has reportedly agreed to reach out to schools in order locate players based on their last known contact information.


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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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Eagles OT Lane Johnson reportedly faces four-game suspension for PEDs

As a rookie last season Lane Johnson developed into a very good tackle for the Philadelphia Eagles, and by the end looked like he was well worth of the fourth overall pick the Eagles invested in him.


Now that progress might be stunted a bit, because Johnson faces a four-game suspension after testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs, the Philadelphia Daily News' Paul Domowitch first reported.


Johnson was the fourth pick in 2013, an athletic tackle out of the University of Oklahoma. He started slow last year at right tackle for the Eagles, which isn't surprising for a rookie lineman, and improved as the season went on. The Eagles' skill position players in Chip Kelly's up-tempo attack got a lot of attention, but the truth is a great offensive line was the lynchpin of a fantastic offense. Now that line will reportedly be without Johnson for four games, and it's pretty late in the offseason to add a competent replacement.


The Eagles, who are favored to win the NFC East again, open with games against the Jaguars, Colts, Redskns and 49ers. Those games would be a little tougher without one of their better players.


The Eagles and NFL have not confirmed the suspension.



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






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A report states that the NBA is considering moving its draft back, adding an awards show

For the first time since 2009, the NBA’s champion dismissed its opponent in a relatively swift five-game span, bringing the Finals to an end a week and a half before the league’s draft was held. For many NBA scribes, it meant hitting the draft sites and YouTube channels in a desperate bid to catch up on the players that draftniks had been studying for months prior. For NBA fans, even the ones whose season ended nearly two months prior, even that week and a half felt like an ultra-quick blur between the league’s showcase events.


This is why the NBA is considering moving the draft back deeper into summer. This is also one of many reasons why I think the NBA should follow through on this consideration.


Last Friday, USA Today’s Jeff Zillgitt reported on that consideration:



The NBA remains "very interested" in moving the draft after July 1 and packaging it with a season-ending awards show possibly on consecutive nights, a person familiar with the league's thinking told USA TODAY Sports.




The league would like to create more space between the end of the Finals and the draft so it can better promote the draft. The person requested anonymity because negotiations remain before both become official.



Zillgitt went on to point out that the league is uneasy with the potential for “major free agent transactions taking place in August when the league normally begins its down time,” which seems rational on the surface. Still, if you’re the NBA, why do you want “down time?” Everyone likes a tidy summer vacation, but isn’t it in the league’s best interests to have people discussing the NBA for as many months as possible?


The idea of an award show, not unlike the one the NHL holds every year, is a terrible one. It would alternate bouts of too-precious sentimentality with endless attempts at humor and entertainment led by people who have no business attempting to make us laugh. Shaq would be prominently involved.


Worse, you would lose out on the intimate setting that made Kevin Durant and Derrick Rose’s MVP speeches so memorable, on top of the embarrassment of possibly of a player having to accept an MVP award just a few days or even weeks after his team lost in the Finals. And we don’t need some swirling, string-laden and formal setting to award some guy a Sixth Man Award. It would be schlocky and a chore to watch – and this is coming from someone that watches in upwards of three or four Detroit Pistons games a year.


Teams scout and consider potential draftees for years before they’re chosen in the NBA draft, whether they’re one and done players, four-year returnees, or international prospects. Squads aren’t lacking for time prior to the draft; and even the team with the closest and toughest selection in last week’s draft, the Cleveland Cavaliers, still probably made the best choice in grabbing Andrew Wiggins.


Moving the thing back gives teams a little time to breathe, though, and it allows for more and more hype leading up to an event that for years has been far more entertaining than the NFL draft, even if the NFL’s draft numbers dwarf the NBA’s version each year.


We’re all tapping our feet on Monday, waiting out the free agency deadline to pass and the ability to comment on actual moves, and not just rumors and smokescreen. This is a frustrating time to be an NBA fan, as we await something concrete with all this potential movement, but that doesn’t mean the NBA wouldn’t be better served stringing out its free agency period following a later draft. The NBA’s Summer League could be pushed back, and it might give its fans something to talk about in August or September beyond wondering which NBA contender a 34-year old guard on his last legs will glom onto for a minimum contract.


This, combined with an earlier training camp that would then allow for a real All-Star “break,” would keep the league churning apace and creating headlines through most of the calendar year. That’s good for business, it’s good for TV ratings, and the extended break is good for the league’s players and by extension the league’s fans.


The award show? That’s not going to be good for anybody. Except, maybe, Mike Epps or Jay Mohr.


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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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Netherlands striker Arjen Robben unapologetic about penalty against Mexico

RIO DE JANEIRO — Dutch striker Arjen Robben was two things on Monday — honest (or so he claimed to be) and unapologetic.


Robben admitted he took a dive during the first half of Sunday’s controversial 2-1 win against Mexico, but maintained that he did not dive during the decisive call that gave the Dutch a game-winning penalty kick in the waning moments of the contest.


FIFA announced Monday that Robben would face no sanctions for his admitted diving, which FIFA head of media Delia Fischer said was something that should have been identified and handled by the referee during the match.


Robben even laughed at the idea of a possible FIFA sanction when he was asked about it during a news conference Monday. It was the kind of cavalier and unapologetic attitude that he displayed throughout his 30 minutes with the media as he smiled and laughed his way through questions about that fateful play.


At one point, Robben was asked how he felt about the word “cheat” and Robben gave about as judicious an answer as he could.


“I think everyone can give their opinion,” Robben said smiling. “That’s the nice thing about futbol, there are so many fans around the world and there are so many people watching the World Cup that everyone is speaking their opinion. But I think you have to be realistic.”


Initially, when Robben admitted following the game that he had dove, many interpreted that to mean that he had fallen down easily during the play that led to the penalty kick. The Dutch FA clarified Robben’s comments and said they referred to a play earlier in the match. Robben spent part of Monday's media session making the same distinction.


“There was one foul in the first half where I went to the ground because I thought he was going to trip me,” Robben recounted. “But at the last moment I think he pulled his leg away and I went to the ground anyway. It was a stupid action for me, but what I said before is that it didn’t have any influence on the game.


“It’s a shame because after the game I was very honest and sometimes you’re punished for honesty.”


But Rafa Marquez, the Mexican player that committed the fateful foul, said after the game that Robben told him he took a dive.


“I spoke with him after the match and he told me that it was not a penalty,” Marquez said. “He said that the first foul was a penalty and that one was not called.”


Robben was asked Monday what he had said to Marquez after the play and he said he couldn’t remember.


But all of the questions and all of the scrutiny were moot because regardless of what happened, the Dutch still advanced to the quarterfinals.


And Robben is especially unapologetic for that.


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






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Two Syracuse recruits, including four-star receiver, fail to qualify academically

Two members of Syracuse’s 2014 recruiting class will not enroll at the school due to academic reasons.


Orange head coach Scott Shafer confirmed to Syracuse.com that wide receiver K.J. Williams and defensive back Treevon Prater both failed to qualify academically. Shafer said that both players are “deciding whether to go to junior college or prep school.”


Williams, a Rivals.com four-star prospect from Bethlehem, Pa., was the highest-rated recruit in Syracuse’s class. The 6-foot-2, 188-pound Williams was rated the No. 246 overall prospect in the country had been committed to the Orange since last July. He chose Syracuse over other offers from Arizona, Michigan, Missouri, UCLA and Wisconsin, among others.


Williams was rated by Rivals as the third-best player in the state of Pennsylvania and the 31st-best wide receiver in the country in the 2014 class.


Prater, a native of East St. Louis, Ill., was rated a three-star athlete by Rivals. Syracuse recruited him as a defensive back.


The 6-foot, 178-pound Prater had initially committed to Western Michigan, but flipped to the Orange in January, not long before signing day. He also had listed offers from Illinois State, Indiana State and Kansas, according to Rivals.


Syracuse’s 2014 class was rated No. 51 in the nation by Rivals.


For more Syracuse news, visit CuseConfidential.com.


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Kyle Anderson tells a group of kids that he wanted to be a Spur months before they drafted him (Video)

Almost immediately after the San Antonio Spurs selected Kyle Anderson with the final pick in the first round of the 2014 NBA draft, pundits and fans alike joined in a chorus crediting the Spurs with finding the most San Antonio Spurs-like player available at that particular spot. Some would argue that the do-it-all UCLA forward was the most Spurs-ready player available in the entire draft, much less in the lower part of the first round.


Apparently a documentary film crew, working on a film entitled “Slow-Mo” after Anderson’s nickname, caught the prospect making some prescient statements to a group of grade schoolers some two and a half months before the draft, and two months before the Spurs won their fifth title of the Tim Duncan era.


Give it a watch:



Anderson is right, you do have to watch the Spurs. We’re just over two weeks removed from being able to watch the Spurs play basketball just about every other night, and I badly miss watching the Spurs.


(The indifference of the schoolchildren is understandable, by the way, and pretty damned hilarious in retrospect. Hopefully they got their TNT act together by the time the playoffs rolled around 10 days later.)


(Hat-tip, Pounding the Rock.)


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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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Michigan fan has had block 'M' logo tattooed on his head since 1997 (Video)

Over the weekend, the Detroit Free-Press introduced us to Michigan fan named Larry Pietrangelo. Pietrangelo is known as “M-Head” because he has the maize-and-blue block M logo tattooed on his head.


For real.


Pietrangelo, 53, got the tattoo back in 1997 when he was competing in an “Ultimate Michigan Fan” contest. The winner of the contest would receive tickets to that season’s Michigan-Ohio State game at The Big House.


He told the Free Press that he didn't have cable at the time, so he had been riding his bike to his mother’s house to watch the Michigan games that season. His mother “got tired of (him) laying on her couch on Saturday afternoons,” so his she came up with the idea to tattoo his head so he could win the coveted tickets to the Ohio State game.


“She forked out $65 for the tattoo on my head. I’m that devoted to U of M that I would do anything to win tickets to a U of M game, especially (playing) that team from the south that sucks canal water through their butt. I can’t stand ‘em. I don’t wear red at all. I refuse to wear red. I bleed maize and blue,” Pietrangelo said.














Unfortunately for Pietrangelo, he lost the contest, and the tattoo remains. He’s had the tattoo for 17 years, but besides the initial disappointment of losing the contest, he does not regret having the tattoo.


“It’s become part of my personality,” he said.


You can watch the entire interview in the video above, which includes Pietrangelo’s hilarious of trash talk against the Buckeyes where he says that the Ohio State “is as irrelevant as the pimple on the butt of life,” whatever that means.


For more Michigan news, visit TheWolverine.com.


(H/T College Spun )


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Jason Kidd brings his big bag of mess to Milwaukee

Jason Kidd did good things as head coach of the Brooklyn Nets. Though many had the star-laden Brooklyn outfit pegged to fight for the Atlantic Division crown and easily exceed 50-some wins, it was clear from the outset of 2013-14 that these aging Nets were rapidly declining. A midseason foot injury to Brook Lopez knocked the All-Star-level center out for the season, and after the first two months the team had dug itself a 10-21 hole.


Kidd’s work on both ends helped turn things around, as he re-worked his defensive scheme and relied on a small ball lineup on the other end. The squad finished with a 34-17 mark, and even took a first round series from the Atlantic champs from Toronto. A second round ouster after having taken just one game against the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference semis seems like a disappointment in comparison to what was expected from the Nets prior to 2013-14, but it certainly was an impressive run once you factor in how bad Brooklyn looked to start the season.


In comparison, Larry Drew’s lone year in Milwaukee was a complete and total bust. Built to make the lower rung of an Eastern playoff bracket that doesn’t preclude sub-.500 teams from entering its ranks, the Bucks looked like a predictable, uninspired group of underachievers. Expecting another eighth seed from that lineup was probably irrational, but the sheer amount of losses that Milwaukee piled up was borderline shocking. There was locker-room infighting to go alongside indifferent play, and it says quite a bit that Philadelphia reeled off a near-NBA record 26 consecutive losses, and still finished with a better record than the Bucks.


So, why all the hand-wringing about Jason Kidd replacing Larry Drew as Bucks head coach?


Because Jason Kidd is the worst, mostly.


To be fair, Nets general manager Billy King is not much better, at least in terms of tangible work. It’s true that Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov was the check-writing influence behind some of King’s biggest win-now blunders, pushing his GM to acquire players at any cost in order to follow through on his championship promise, but King has a long history of making terribly short-sighted moves on his own – without being able to blame a tempestuous Larry Brown or Mikhail Prokhorov along the way.


That is to say, most wouldn’t want to work under Billy King either, despite his largesse. And most armchair critics probably think they could run an NBA team better than Billy King, least of all a former NBA All-Star, championship point guard and now well-regarded NBA head coach. To go about it in the way that Kidd has, reportedly berating his bosses and interviewing for the jobs of two other Milwaukee Bucks employees, is reprehensible.


Kidd has adeptly taken advantage of two star-struck new money Bucks owners, eager to now live the “look at me!”-lifestyle that buying an NBA team for over half a billion dollars, apparently, entails. How else could one explain such celebrity-sniffing alacrity in swiftly bringing Kidd in to replace a coach who had been given no indication that he wouldn’t at least be given a chance to turn things around? The Bucks had a terrible record last season, but they do have the rights to several coveted trade assets, and heaps of upcoming second round picks. It wouldn’t be the strangest turn of events to see those assets be turned into more expensive players, for more showy moves to follow, and for the new Bucks ownership group to cry poverty during the next NBA lockout when things don’t quickly turn around at the speed they expected.


Kidd will coach on, but he’s used up all of his free passes. For someone with such a sterling on-court reputation, he has a repeated series of off-court mistakes that date back to his time in college, from coach-killing to reported malingering to more serious charges like spousal abuse (reportedly in front of his child) and dangerously driving under the influence.


Coaches are a close fraternity with several unwritten sets of rules that aren’t too tough to recognize from a mile away, and it’s more than certain that Kidd won’t have many head coaching counterparts to happily chat up in the minutes before tipoff. Even assistant coaches, worried about working under the man that scuttled Lawrence Frank and forced the firing of longtime assistant Larry Drew (who once coached Drew as an assistant), will be given the stink eye from their cohorts across the sideline.


The Bucks will get better, because they can’t help it, because their health and conditioning will improve, because of Jabari Parker, and because Jason Kidd is a good basketball coach. After months of developing goodwill in terms of a civic-friendly change of ownership, the drafting of Parker, and the knowledge that Milwaukee Bucks fans have deserved better for years, though, it’s going to be pretty tough to enjoy this team’s ascension out of the NBA’s cellar. It’s going to be hard to look past Jason Kidd on that sideline.


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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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Random offseason tweets of the day: Big Ten mascots visit Washington D.C. (Photos)

Welcome to our Dr. Saturday feature titled "Random offseason tweet of the day." With real games still months away, coaches and players will be tweeting about non-football-related things as the season approaches. In this space, we'll try to find the funniest and goofiest tweets of the day. If you see something, don't hesitate to send it to us.


Believe it or not, we are just a day away from Maryland and Rutgers becoming official members of the Big Ten. Both schools formally accepted invitations from the Big Ten back in November 2012, but July 1 is the day where both the Scarlet Knights and Terrapins make it official.


To commemorate the occasion, mascots and cheerleaders from each Big Ten school – including Maryland’s Testudo and Rutgers’ Scarlet Knight – are making the rounds through Washington D.C.






Commissioner Jim Delany’s vision for adding Rutgers and Maryland was to extend the Big Ten’s footprint further east into the DMV (D.C., Maryland, Virginia) and New York metropolitan areas.


Delany looks absolutely thrilled, doesn’t he?



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Sam Cooper is a contributor for the Yahoo Sports blogs. Have a tip? Email him or follow him on Twitter!







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Caroline Wozniacki joins the growing push for shot clocks in tennis

On Monday at Wimbledon, Caroline Wozniacki fell to Barbora Zahlavova Strycova in her fourth round match, meaning this is her tenth straight exit at a Grand Slam before making the quarterfinals.


But Wozniacki wasn't just chatting about her play after the match, but about the time between points that her opponent was taking.


Wozniacki mentioned that the 20-second rule between points is being routinely abused, and that shot clocks might be the next thing to come to tennis if things don't change.


''I thought she was very slow,'' Wozniacki said. ''But I guess the referee, she has the time on it. If she's within the time, I guess it's OK.''


''I wouldn't mind,'' Wozniacki said. ''You have a clock. It shows exactly how much time you take in between points.''


The rules on time is something that is abused in just about every match you watch, and it's something that the stars in the sport seem to abuse more than anyone. Lukas Rosol, who lost to Rafael Nadal after taking the first set off him in their second round match, said he thought that Nadal took way too much time between points and that he doesn't get as much pressure to speed up because of his position in the game.


"I think all the players should have the same time between the points. But always the best players, they're taking much more than the normal players, and nobody is telling them nothing. I don't know why," Rosol said.


The one big name on the men's side that tends to agree with this is Roger Federer. The 17-time Grand Slam champion mentioned last week that he thought a shot clock might be smart considering that regular tour events allow 25 seconds between points, an eternity in a world that continues to want things quicker and faster.


"What you're going to see next is all of a sudden a shot clock," Federer said. "We discussed that as well. We said we didn't need to go that far. I wouldn't be surprised if that were to happen all of a sudden. Because you only just need a couple of guys always doing it, and that's when it happens."


Would a shot clock work? I believe so. While it probably won't look like our edited picture above, why not allow umpires, fans and players alike to see exactly the time between points, and get people going? Just like pitchers in baseball, the time between points and plays seem to elongate the more stressful the moment, but that isn't exactly fair to the player waiting on the other end of the net.


If tennis really wants to address one of its biggest issues, putting in a shot clock between points wouldn't be the wildest of ideas, and might actually work if the penalities are actually enforced.


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Shane Bacon is the editor of Devil Ball Golf and Busted Racquet on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shanebaconblogs@yahoo.com or






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Angry fan throws taffy at South Korean players upon their return from World Cup


For complete World Cup 2014 coverage visit Yahoo Sports and follow @YahooSoccer


South Korea finished last in World Cup group H with one draw and two losses. It was a disappointing, but not entirely unexpected, way to go out. And one fan was apparently angry enough about it to throw taffy at the players upon their return home.


The phrase "go eat a taffy" is apparently an insult in Korea, roughly equivalent to "get lost" or "screw you." So that's what the fan was trying to express as he threw actual taffies at the morose players while they were lined up for photographers in the airport. But on the bright side: free candy is free candy.


Plus, it's far better to have individually wrapped sweets thrown at you than rotten tomatoes — which are what hit the Italian national team at the airport after they were knocked out of the 1966 World Cup by North Korea.


South Korea coach Hong Myung-bo blamed his own "deficiency as a coach" for the team's shortcomings. But this might have just been an excuse to keep all the candy for himself.






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What the Cleveland Browns trying to sign Brian Hoyer to an extension means

The Cleveland Browns, per ESPN's Adam Schefter, are trying to sign quarterback Brian Hoyer to an extension, which makes sense in that he's their starter.



But we all know who lurks.


Which makes this extension talk so fascinating.


Johnny Manziel is a "when" not "if" starter. he could wrest the job away from Hoyer as soon as Week 1, or as late as the final few weeks of the season. Look, it's happening, and the only way it's not this season is if Hoyer — who was 3-0 as a starter last season, and the only QB to give the Browns life — gets hot early and leads the team to a playoff bid. Would that be shocking? No, but surprising, yes.


But you can step back and see the obvious wisdom in the Browns wanting a Hoyer extension.


One, he's hard working. You know what you're going to get with him. Hoyer backed up Tom Brady, and knows what it takes to be special in that department. Plus, even though Hoyer's talent might be understated as a former undrafted free agent coming into the league, he certainly has worked to get where he is.


That's the kind of thing that could be the perfect template for Manziel. You can envision a scenario where Mike Pettine explains to Manziel that he did not win the starting job and that he'll have to learn from Hoyer while he waits. That would not be a bad thing at all if Manziel were to heed that advice.


[Shutdown Corner's Overrated and Underrated: Backup quarterbacks]


Two, Hoyer can play. Look at the quality of backup quarterbacks in this league — it's shoddy in a lot of cases. Teams that have two starting-caliber quarterbacks are few and far between. Hoyer's accuracy might not be top-notch, but he has guts, intelligence and enough physical talent to win in spells.


Three, if you're going to have Manziel step in eventually, you know that his sometimes reckless style is going to make him more susceptible to injury. Yes, the Browns have invested heavily in their offensive line, but Manziel was a bit battered at Texas A&M — home of the best college OL factory going now — and certainly is going to be that way at times in the NFL.


This all makes sense ... for the Browns.


But if you're Hoyer, do you gamble on yourself to do well and hope to land a deal elsewhere to potentially start? It's risky. After all, his upside is very limited, and there only are so many Matt Cassels who continue to be handed starting gigs for so long. Hoyer turns 29 in Week 7 and could be smart to work out a deal as the present starter and the future hero who comes in to rescue the Browns when Manziel almost inevitably goes down with injury.


According to NFL.com's Ian Rapoport, who spoke to Hoyer's agent, Joe Linta, they might be willing to wait to see how this one plays out.



"It will be a very difficult deal to do," Linta said. "We're always open to talking with the Browns, but we're content to wait and see what happens down the road."



It will be fascinating to see how this one — especially the particulars, such as money and years, if it gets done — turns out.


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Eric Edholm is a writer for Shutdown Corner on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at edholm@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!






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Winners and losers from Quicken Loans National week

This past weekend saw a lot of great storylines and we are here to give you the good and the bad of it. Here are our winners and losers from the past week in golf.


Winners


Stacy Lewis — On Sunday evening, after Lewis had made a slippery left-to-right putt on the final green for a tournament-clinching birdie and a final round 65, she was asked about the pressure of playing in front of the pro-Lewis fan base. Lewis, who went to college at the University of Arkansas, said that this Sunday was more nerve-racking than the final round of the U.S. Open last week (she finished second at Pinehurst), but she handled it perfectly and won her third LPGA title of 2014. Lewis, the No. 1 ranked player in the game, continues to impress, and had to hold off the likes of Lydia Ko, Cristie Kerr and Michelle Wie to claim this title.


Justin Rose — His win on Sunday at Congressional now makes Rose the king of the tough golf courses, and while he did make a loose swing on the 72nd hole to possibly lose the golf tournament, it was that clutch bogey putt he cashed to get in his first ever PGA Tour playoff, which he won with ease. Rose now has a PGA Tour win in each of his last five seasons, and moves up to No. 8 in the world rankings thanks to this win at Congressional.


Shawn Stefani — Sure, he wasn't able to win in his playoff with Rose, but the 32-year-old is inching closer and closer to that first career PGA Tour win. Stefani hit a great approach shot on his final hole of regulation that didn't really feed towards the hole like he wanted, and his birdie putt to win the whole thing in regulation just slide by the hole. He will get that win eventually, and this week should only give him the confidence he needs next time he's coming down the stretch with a shot at that elusive first title, especially considering his play qualified him for the British Open at Hoylake.


Greg Owen — A week after we had a PGA Tour winner close his final round with seven birdies to win by a single shot, Owen did just about the same thing on the Web.com Tour. Playing in the United Leasing Championship, Owen made a triple-bogey on his opening hole on Sunday, but made seven birdies and an eagle over his final 13 holes to win by a single shot. His back nine 30 only had one blemish on the card, a bogey on his final hole, but it didn't matter for Owen who picked up his first ever Web.com win.



Screengrab/PGATour.com

Tiger Woods — He might have missed the cut, but just having him back on the PGA Tour makes golf that much more interesting. Even if he went out and shot 90-90 it would create as much of a buzz as an event without him in it, and the thing that a lot of people are missing about his performance is this was as much of a dress rehearsal for his golf game as a serious attempt at competing. Tiger wanted to see where his game was, he found out, and now it's back to the practice tee and putting green to smooth some things out before we get to Hoylake.


Losers


Patrick Reed — The youngster looked like he was setting up the perfect storm to shut up his critics and snag his fourth PGA Tour title in less than a year, but his Sunday 77 left him an afterthought and the only real pressure he faced all day was getting in as quick as possible so Rose and Stefani could start their playoff.


Seung-Yul Noh — Playing alongside Reed, Noh was two shots worse than his playing partner on Sunday, shooting a final round 79 to drop 28 spots on the leaderboard and bring back memories of Retief Goosen and Jason Gore in that final group at Pinehurst in the 2005 U.S. Open.


Rory McIlroy — Maybe the scheduling doesn't work, but it continues to baffle me that a man that won by eight shots on this same golf course during a U.S. Open skips an event that is played on the same course in similar conditions.


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Shane Bacon is the editor of Devil Ball Golf and Busted Racquet on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at shanebaconblogs@yahoo.com or






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Auburn fans roll Toomer's Corner in honor of Philip Lutzenkirchen (Video)

Toomer’s Corner – the intersection where Auburn University and the City of Auburn come together – has long been a gathering spot for the AU faithful. The corner gets rolled with toilet paper after a big win for the Tigers on the gridiron, but it can also represent a place of mourning.


As Auburn fans mourn the tragic death of former Tigers tight end Philip Lutzenkirchen, who died in a car crash Sunday morning, it was only fitting that Toomer’s Corner was rolled in his honor.


The Opelika-Auburn News was able to capture the scene on Sunday as fans gathered.



Several others on Twitter posted photos as the night went on.







Lutzenkirchen, who made 59 career catches, holds Auburn’s all-time record for career touchdowns by a tight end. He caught three game-winning touchdown passes in his career, including against Alabama in the Iron Bowl in 2010.


He signed with the St. Louis Rams as an undrafted free agent in 2013 and most recently was a volunteer assistant coach at St. James School in Montgomery, Ala.


For more Auburn news, visit AuburnSports.com.


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dimanche 29 juin 2014

10-man Costa Rica reach first World Cup quarterfinal with shootout win over Greece

For complete World Cup 2014 coverage visit Yahoo Sports and follow @YahooSoccer


Costa Rica seemed poised for heartbreak when Greece broke through with an injury-time equalizer nearly half an hour after Los Ticos were reduced to 10 men, but they came out with a historic win.


At 1-1 after 90 minutes, this round of 16 match was forced to extra time and that required even more of the outnumbered Costa Rica players after defender Oscar Duarte was sent off in the 66th minute. But Greece kept inventing new ways to not score and the seemingly endless match made its way to a decisive shootout — Greece's first ever shootout — to decided which side would appear in their first World Cup quarterfinal. Suddenly, no one could stop scoring and both sides made their first three shots, displaying impressive fortitude all around.


Then, after an exhausted Joe Campbell somehow willed his shot in to give Costa Rica a 4-3 advantage, Greek scoring legend Theofanis Gekas stepped up to the spot. And his shot saved by a diving Keylor Navas, who made seven saves during the first 120 minutes of play and came up huge time and time again throughout the match for Costa Rica.



(Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

All the pressure was then dumped on Michael Umana, who drilled his penalty to give Costa Rica a 5-3 shootout win and put them in the quarterfinals against the Netherlands.


It was a draining match for fans and participants alike and a horrible way for Greece to go out, but they had their chances and Costa Rica and goalkeeper Keylor Navas, in particular, deserve all the praise for their indomitable will.


Even when this World Cup is a bit boring, it still finds a way to be incredible.



Umana scores the final penalty. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)





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Arjen Robben apologizes for diving in first half against Mexico, but defends second-half penalty

For complete World Cup 2014 coverage visit Yahoo Sports and follow @YahooSoccer


Mexico coach Miguel Herrera put the blame squarely on the referee after the Netherlands' Arjen Robben was awarded a late penalty that helped complete a 2-1 comeback win that eliminated El Tri. Though replays showed Mexico captain Rafa Marquez stepping on Robben's foot, it was the third theatrical tumble of the match for the Dutch winger, who has long maintained a reputation for going down easy — even in training.


After the World Cup round of 16 match, Robben admitted that he did dive in the first half and apologized for it, but added that the penalty was deserved. From the Independent:



Speaking to Dutch television, Robben said: “The one at the end was a clear penalty but I have to admit there was an incident in the first half where I did dive. I must apologise. I should not be doing that.”



Robben usually evades these types of accusations, so it's a bit impressive that he actually admitted to it and expressed regret this time. When Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger accused him of diving in the middle of a Champions League match last season, he just laughed it off.


Whatever Robben did in the first half is irrelevant to Mexico's concerns, though. And no manner of apology for earlier transgressions will make them feel better about how that match ended.






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KLM tweets 'Adios Amigos' to Mexico and the Twitterverse takes offense

RIO DE JANEIRO — It seems like airlines are having trouble keeping their feet out of their social media mouths during this World Cup.


Following the Netherlands' controversial 2-1 win against Mexico, the Dutch airline KLM decided to troll Mexico and its fan base on Twitter.




A tweet like this is a great way to alienate customers, which is exactly what the airline did as many people tweet some not so savory things back to the airline.


Among those was Mexican actor Gael Garcia Bernal, who laid into the airline and vowed, in a colorful way, never to fly it again.




KLM did not apologize for the tweet, but did delete it from its timeline. However, that was not before it got more than 10,000 retweets and several more sceengrabs.


Don't worry KLM, Delta knows your pain. After the United States' win against Ghana, Delta sent out a tweet that depicted Ghana as a place with giraffes when there aren't any there. And Twitter responded furiously. Delta did issue an apology.


Sadly, this wasn’t the first anti-Mexican comment from the Dutch. World Soccer Talk noted that Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf ran a cartoon on its front Sunday morning of Netherlands manager Louis Van Gaal wearing a poncho and sombrero with the words “MexiGo Home.” Several players are featured as sombrero-wearing mice.


It will be interesting to see what KLM and De Telegraaf come up with for the quarterfinal against either Greece or Costa Rica.


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






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