dimanche 31 août 2014

Kasey Kahne at last nabs Chase spot as Kyle Busch's woes continue

HAMPTON, Ga. - Rest easy, mature ladies of NASCAR. Your boy made the Chase.


If this race were a romance novel, which fits the boyish good looks of race winner Kasey Kahne, it'd be titled "Kahne's Konundrum," or "Racin' Kasey," and it'd have dashing heroes (Kahne, of course) and scheming suitors (Matt Kenseth, Kevin Harvick) and even a villain (Kyle Busch) who almost vanquished our hero's chances of winning the heart of his beloved Chase Bertha. (All right, we'll work on the name.)


Alas, this was only a race, albeit a crucial one for the points standings, and the only romance taking place in the Atlanta Motor Speedway infield probably isn't the kind we can discuss in any detail on a family website. Regardless, Kahne captured his spot in the Chase, bringing a satisfying end to a long and frustrating regular season for the Hendrick Motorsports driver.


And for a moment, it looked like Kahne was going to watch it all slip away. He was dominant through the race's final laps, out in front of Harvick and riding the smooth clean air. But then Busch and Martin Truex Jr. got together — more on that in a moment — and Kahne saw his lead evaporate. Kenseth, Denny Hamlin, and Paul Menard all beat Kahne off pit road for a green-white-checkered finish, and for a lap or so, it appeared Kahne's best chance to make the Chase was over and done.


But then onetime teammates Menard and Harvick collided, taking them out of the mix and bringing out the second late caution flag. Kahne was able to outrun Kenseth, not exactly a surprise given the fact that Kenseth was on two fresh tires to Kahne's four, and just like that, the fourth of four Hendrick cars was locked into the Chase.


Kahne's three teammates — Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson, and Jeff Gordon — all stopped by victory lane to congratulate Kahne. After the race, team owner Rick Hendrick pronounced this year's quartet "the most balanced" he's ever fielded in the Chase.


The race's drama came about when Busch and Truex collided in the closing laps, each repeatedly hammering each other. After the race, Truex stopped his car at Busch's hauler, holding up the entire line of entering cars, and leaned in Busch's window to express his displeasure.



Truex continued the discussion with Busch's crew chief Dave Rogers as Busch climbed out of the car and left the garage without speaking. It marked yet another low point in Busch's ongoing late-season skid, and while Kyle is locked into the Chase, there's little indication at the moment that he'll be entering with any momentum.


The series now heads to Richmond for its regular-season finale on Saturday night. Two Chase spots remain up for grabs, with a victory guaranteeing a berth. If Sunday night in Atlanta was a romance novel, that night is going to be an MMA fight.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Facebook or on Twitter.







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Tony Stewart's return to racing ends in quiet, disappointing night

HAMPTON, Ga. - After three weeks of pain, sorrow, and horribly misinformed speculation, the Tony Stewart story returned to where it belonged: the race track. But for Stewart, the night ended early, and perhaps that's for the best.


This marked Stewart's first race since the accident in upstate New York that resulted in the death of fellow driver Kevin Ward Jr. Stewart has remained in seclusion since the incident, not speaking publicly and missing three races. His return to race in Atlanta brought with it many questions, questions that Stewart himself was not willing or able to answer.


Certainly, Stewart didn't race to lose, or to leave the track more than 150 laps early. But this weekend almost surely wasn't about victory, or qualifying for the Chase, or satisfying sponsors, or anything else other than just allowing Stewart to spend some time in the one place where he's still in control.


The weekend began with an emotional press conference, and ended with Stewart's wrecked No. 14 being loaded onto a hauler, the result of a blown right front tire and a collision with the wall. Along the way, Stewart received the support of both NASCAR, which granted him a waiver into the Chase should he qualify, and fans, who showed their support with cheers, signs, and scrawled messages on the white paint of the wall in front of his pit stall.


Stewart's first true public appearance since the tragedy came when he stepped out onto the narrow catwalk of the drivers' stage at Atlanta, and while he looked downcast, he entered to the loudest cheers of the afternoon:



Stewart started 12th, and raced as high as third before sliding back into the pack. On lap 122, Kyle Busch collided with Stewart, sending the No. 14 into the wall. A few dozen laps later, Stewart's right front tire gave way, ravaging Stewart's car and ending any chance of a reasonable finish.


After driving the car to the garage, Stewart dodged the horde of waiting media and disappeared inside his hauler. He'll presumably race again at Richmond, and from a purely competitive perspective, that race would be his last opportunity to make the Chase this year.


However, Stewart's reps have said the Chase is the last thing on Stewart's mind. Racing for racing's sake, as grief therapy and a return to whatever will now pass for normalcy, is all that's on the table right now.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Facebook or on Twitter.







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Tennessee's young team proves to be better than expected

Tennessee was the youngest team in the country this season, but it didn’t look like it in its season opener against Utah State.


The Vols jumped out to a 14-0 lead and never looked back trouncing the Aggies 38-7.


It was a result no one who wasn’t a Tennessee fan saw coming. Utah State was returning a veteran quarterback and a strong defense while more than half of Tennessee’s roster was new. But cpach Butch Jones' recruiting appeared to pay off as Tennessee was faster, more efficient and even coached better than their Utah State counterparts.


The way Tennessee played in its season opener makes the Sept. 13 contest against Oklahoma far more intriguing than it was even a day ago. Oklahoma had its way with Louisiana Tech 48-16 on Saturday.


The Vols have to get past Arkansas State next weekend and Oklahoma has Tulsa, but that Sept. 13 contest, if both teams stay undefeated, could have some meaning later in the season, especially for Oklahoma, which might need a quality win to offset the fact that the Big 12 doesn’t play a conference championship game.


But Tennessee is no longer a gimme and this game might have raised expectations for the Vols. Jones’ team looked ready to compete and appeared to be — albeit against a Mountain West team — a better squad than it was during his first season.


We’ll see if that’s the case as the year treks on the opponents get more difficult.


For more Tennessee news, visit VolQuest.com.


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


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NFL All-Pro CB Patrick Peterson requests a selfie with coach Les Miles following LSU win (Video)


After LSU’s exciting comeback win against Wisconsin on Saturday, former LSU cornerback — and NFL All-Pro — found coach Les Miles on the sideline and requested a selfie.



Peterson, a three-time Pro Bowlers for the Arizona Cardinals, went photo happy after the game snapping photos with LSU running backs coach Frank Wilson and safety Jalen Mills as well.




Wonder whether Peterson would have been requesting postgame photos had LSU not scored 21 unanswered points to win 28-24?


For more LSU news, visit TigerBait.com.


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


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Cat, or maybe squirrel, runs out on Atlanta track in front of Kevin Harvick

HAMPTON, Ga. - Strange things happen when NASCAR goes under the lights. Sunday night at Atlanta, something, either a cat or a squirrel or a mixture of both, darted across the track right in front of race leader Kevin Harvick.


Here you go, decide for yourself:



Watch out for the squirrelcat.

Was that a cat? A squirrel? Or some kind of nefarious combination of both? Harvick thought it was a cat, but NASCAR.com offered this photograph:



NASCAR has a history of animals making their way onto the track, though it's mostly in Pocono; there, everything from deer to bears to chickens have wandered onto the concrete.


Shortly after seeing the squirrel/cat, Harvick surrendered what had been a dominant lead, and began having problems under the hood. Coincidence? We think not.


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Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Facebook or on Twitter.







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The 'Baylor Line' makes its inaugural appearance at McLane Stadium

Baylor might have a new stadium, but the traditions from it old home remained intact. Included in those traditions was the “Baylor Line” where members of the Line get to run down the opposite tunnel from the players and onto the field.




Here's a little more information from the Baylor website:



Prior to each home football game, the Line gathers at one end of Floyd Casey Stadium and, led by the cheers of alumni and fans, runs onto the field and creates an enormous human tunnel to welcome the football team to Floyd Casey Stadium. After each player and coach has entered the stadium, The Line takes their seats in an exclusive Baylor Line section behind the opponent’s bench to cheer on the Bears to victory.



As you can imagine, this can sometimes get a little dicey as it did for the poor students who were trampled on the right side of the video. Still, if you can manage to keep your feet and avoid injury, this is a pretty cool tradition, especially to christen a new stadium.


For more Baylor news, visit SicEmSports.com.


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


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Kansas City Chiefs, Alex Smith agree to four-year, $68 million extension

Another acrimonious contract stalemate has come to an end on the verge of the NFL season.


The Kansas City Chiefs and quarterback Alex Smith, who had butted heads for months over a new deal, have come to an agreement on a four-year, $68 million contract. The new contract includes $45 million in guaranteed money.


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At an average per year of $17 million, Smith will be paid on the lower end of the top-shelf quarterbacks, between the New York Giants' Eli Manning ($16.25M average) and the Detroit Lions' Matthew Stafford ($17.67M).


At first glance and considering the guaranteed money, Smith's deal also appears to be more of a sure-thing deal than the incentive-laden deals signed earlier this offseason by the Cincinnati Bengals' Andy Dalton and the San Francisco 49ers' Colin Kaepernick (Smith's former teammate in San Fran).


Smith was entering the final year of the deal. The Chiefs had the option of franchising Smith, but they also must take care of impending free agent Justin Houston and have a tight salary-cap situation. The two sides had exchanged several rounds of negotiations without making much progress, per reports, and the situation could have turned ugly.


Luckily, for the Chiefs, Smith showed up to camp, remained quiet about his contract and hoped for things to work out, which is exactly what happened. He is coming off a career season, with 3,313 passing yards and 23 touchdowns and some impressive play down the stretch as the Chiefs went from winning two games in 2012 to 11 and a playoff berth in 2013.


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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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Caroline Wozniacki earns one of her biggest career wins against Maria Sharapova at the U.S. Open Sunday

NEW YORK – When the final assessment is made of Caroline Wozniacki's career after she retires, history will probably treat her with more consideration than the present and past have.


Throughout the highs and the lows, the 24-year-old from Denmark has kept an even keel, enjoying her time at the top, sloughing off criticisms warranted and otherwise, and just carrying on.


After a spring of discontent that included a rather insensitive telephone ending of their engagement by her former fiancé, golf superstar Rory McIlroy, Wozniacki has proceeded to have an outstanding summer on the hard courts.


She crowned that with a well-earned 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 victory over Maria Sharapova in the fourth round Sunday at the U.S. Open, and now has to be considered a major favorite to get to the final out of a half of the draw decimated with upsets.


"Yeah, definitely it ranks up there. Maria obviously is a tough competitor. She's won here before. She won the French Open this year. You know, it was a really good win for me. Beating her here at the U.S. Open, you know, it's a tough task. I'm really happy to be through and have another chance to play in the next round," Wozniacki said. During her on-court interview earlier, here was a little emotion in her voice, a little quaver that you rarely see, testament to what it meant to her and how difficult the task was with the wind and the humidity making it a struggle for both.



"The season for me has been a little bit up and down, and it's so nice to kind of start feeling like I'm playing the way I want to. ... I actually started already feeling really good on court since Eastbourne. I have just been building on my game since then," Wozniacki added. "I'm serving well, I'm running well, I'm staying aggressive when I have to, and I make the right decisions at the right moment. And I enjoy playing."



When she was No. 1, as recently as three years ago, Wozniacki was criticized for getting to the top of women's tennis without having won a major title. She was in good company back in those years, with the likes of Jelena Jankovic and Dinara Safina also getting to the top spot without one of the big trophies in their case. At the moment, Simona Halep is the No. 2 player in the world behind Serena Williams, and she's in the same boat.


But Wozniacki enjoyed being at the top. She handled it well. She didn't treat it like a millstone around her neck. She took the constant criticism about her lack of big titles, her essentially defensive game, her omnipresent father and whatever else came her way with impressive equanimity. When she dropped out of the top spot – indeed, came close to dropping out of the top 20 earlier this year – she handled that the same way.



"I never doubt myself. I work hard every day. I know I have the levels to compete against anybody, and I can beat anyone on a good day. But as I said, the women's game is really evolving and it gets tougher and tougher," she said.



Wozniacki will face No. 13 seed Sara Errani in the quarter-finals, which she will take in a New York minute.






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North Carolina State shows off black jerseys for Old Dominion game


North Carolina State is riffing off AC/DC for its next game.


The Wolfpack are wearing black uniforms September 6 against Old Dominion. And if you didn't already guess what the AC/DC reference is, it's Pack in Black. (The video above has AC/DC as the soundtrack.)


The school showed off the uniforms to the players on Sunday. We're going to call it a subdued excitement. There are some whoops, but not the sheer pandemonium we've seen before with uniform unveilings.


As for the uniforms themselves, it looks like a wolf has attacked each player's shoulders and they are playing with severe wounds. The wolves should be attacking the opposing team.



The helmets look good though. We're a sucker for black helmets, and the patterning is a cool and subdued.


NC State had to come back and beat Georgia Southern 24-23 in the first game of the season Saturday.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Team USA eventually finds its rhythm, comes back to down Turkey in its second FIBA World Cup outing

Do not let what appears like yet another blowout score fool you. Team USA may have downed Turkey in the FIBA World Cup on Sunday by a 98-77 mark, but this squad was put through the paces on Sunday.


The outfit knew it would have a challenge on its hand as it set to take on Turkey in the second official game of its World Cup run. The team knew that the international stalwart boasted far more international-level talent than the Finnish squad that Team USA easily dispatched on Saturday, coach Mike Krzyzewski’s crew understood that it would have to properly execute offensively in the face of an expected Turkish zone, and the still-developing team knew it would have to build upon what limited chemistry it had developed during a pell-mell practice and exhibition season, and Saturday’s blowout win.


Turkey’s zone stylings and competent offense were enough to not only keep the score close in the first half, in stark contrast to Saturday’s Team USA blowout win over Finland, but Turkey actually established a well-earned five-point lead heading into halftime. The Ergin Ataman-helmed lineup baited Team USA into what felt like solid enough three-point and midrange tries, while employing an NBA-styled screen and roll attack on its own offensive end. Turkey eschewed the midrange shot and relied on a series of either long range bombs or attempts at the rim, in an attack that wouldn’t look out of place at a San Antonio Spurs practice.


On Team USA’s offensive end, the squad’s own three-point attempts could be argued away. The roster is littered with lights-out shooters from long range, shooters that are now working behind a shortened international three-point line, and though the team’s attempts from that end could be classified as “impatient,” they certainly weren’t poor or low-efficiency tries.


The problem is that Team USA missed eight of nine three-point attempts in the first quarter, and it needed Turkey’s litany of turnovers (13 in the first half) to keep things close. Turkey made 8-13 shots from the field in the second quarter, including one missed half court heave at the buzzer, and for a while the game resembled Team USA’s loss to Greece in the 2006 FIBA World Championships. That defeat saw an ill-prepared lineup fall victim to sound ball movement and stout defense, as the players were out-maneuvered and the coaching staff was certainly outcoached.


Despite the halftime deficit, Team USA’s fortunes never seemed all that desperate. All it needed was a few counter moves offensively and for the shooting percentages to eventually work their way back toward what we expect from this admirably talented young lineup.


Team USA immediately set Anthony Davis to work in the first possession of the second half, he responded with a three-point play, and on the other end Turkey responded with eight third quarter turnovers. Team USA’s pick and roll defense stiffened, its active hands continued to frustrate Turkey’s ball handlers, and the ensuing transition possessions turned what was once a competitive ballgame into an unrepresentative rout.


Turkey still managed five third quarter three-pointers, but Team USA’s withering full court defense eventually broke the game wide open. Anthony Davis continued to star, he managed 19 points and six rebounds and several gorgeous alley-oop finishes. Kenneth Faried’s weak side defense, as is his custom, was a little lacking; but he also counts all-out aggression and active hustle amongst his other customs, and as a result (off of absolutely no plays called for his number) the Denver Nuggets forward led Team USA with 22 points and eight rebounds.


Coach Mike Krzyzewski did well to settle Team USA’s affairs as the contest moved along, and though the quick-hit perimeter looks in the first half were a little worrying, they genuinely were not poorly-conceived attempted bombs in the face of Turkey’s rather formidable matchup zone. The best news for Coach K’s crew is that his squad will not line up against anywhere near as strong a challenge as it rounds out its Group C bracket schedule, as contests against New Zealand (on Tuesday), the Dominican Republic (Wednesday) and Ukraine (Thursday) will seem like a relative breeze in comparison to what Team USA stared down on Sunday.


That doesn’t mean there still isn’t room to grow, and learn. Luckily, you get the feeling that Team USA understands this.


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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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Bastia forced to borrow training shirts for Ligue 1 match due to camouflage clash

Bastia were very eager to show off their know camouflage third shirt, so they turned up at Bordeaux looking like one of Mario Balotelli's cars. The players warmed up in their camo tops, but when the referee realized that the dark colors clashed with the home side's shirts, they were ordered to change.



(Getty)

Unfortunately, Bastia didn't think to pack an alternate shirt, so they were forced to borrow plain white training tops from Bordeaux.


So with Bastia in white shirts by Puma and white shorts by Kappa, the match went ahead.



(Getty)

Bastia's referee troubles would continue though, as the official missed a handball in the box.



The match ended in a 1-1 draw and Bastia learned a valuable lesson: nothing good comes from trying to play football in camouflage shirts.


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Brooks Peck is the editor of Dirty Tackle on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him or follow on Twitter!






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Report: New England Patriots trade QB Ryan Mallett to Houston Texans

A long-rumored trade finally has happened.


The New England Patriots have dealt quarterback Ryan Mallett to the Houston Texans, according to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport.



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There had been talk up to and during the draft in May that Mallett, who becomes a free agent after this season, could wind up with the Texans and new head coach Bill OBrien, especially after the Texans only signed Ryan Fitzpatrick to start and drafted fifth-rounder Tom Savage as their developmental project.


O'Brien was the quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator with the Patriots when the team drafted Mallett in the third round in 2011.


Although Mallett has a mere four regular-season passing attempts as Tom Brady's backup the past three seasons, he reportedly has come a long way since entering the league.


Mallett rebounded from a so-so first performance in the preseason to post strong numbers in the second and third contests with the Patriots. The Patriots drafting of Jimmy Garoppolo in Round 2 — and his strong preseason play — alowed the team to send Mallett to the Texans.


Now the question becomes if the Patriots sign a third quarterback to the active roster. They worked out Cornell's Jeff Matthews yesterday after he had been cut by the Atlanta Falcons.


For the Texans, it's likely that Fitzpatrick will remain the starter for now and that Savage is third in the pecking order, with Mallett likely to come in and challenge Fitzpatrick if he falters over time. Will the team keep Case Keenum, who had been the backup? It's not clear if they have the roster space for four quarterbacks.


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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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Michael Sam appears to be unclaimed; could sign with Rams' practice squad

MIchael Sam's journey to the NFL has hit another snag, but he is free to keep trying to make it with the first team that gave him a chance.


The St. Louis Rams made Sam one of their final cuts, which subjected the seventh-round pick to the league's waiver process. Any team could have put in a claim to sign Sam to their active, 53-man roster, but it appears that none have.



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That could mean that Sam ends up back in St. Louis on the Rams' 10-man practice squad (the league recently expanded from eight).


Rams head coach Jeff Fisher said of Sam on Saturday:



“Well, it was a football decision and it was no different than any other decision that we make. It was a football decision. It was a football decision back in May to draft Mike. And once again, it’s been all about football.


"I will tell you this: I was pulling for Mike. I really was. I don’t say that very often, but Mike came in here and did everything that we asked him to do. He got a chance to play a lot of snaps. He had the second most snaps on the defensive line, to Ethan Westbrooks. He had well over 120, 130 snaps and was productive.


"But as we said on the front end of the whole...when we drafted Mike, on the front end, we mentioned that this was going to be a tough road. Those four defensive ends that we have on the roster are good and they play a lot and they’re very productive, as well as the tackles. It’s the strength of our football team. But again, it was a football decision.”



Is that a signal that the Rams could be interested in adding Sam to their practice squad? Perhaps, but it also shows that Sam getting on the field anytime soon with the the Rams — barring a slew of injuries — could be tough.


Sam also could field offers to sign with any other team's practice squad now, too, but with so many teams running 3-4 schemes for which he's a poor fit, the options could be a bit limited.


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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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Juggernaut Index, No. 3: The Green Bay Packers

Aaron Rodgers is, at the present time, the NFL's all-time leader in both passer-rating (104.9) and interception percentage (1.8). He also ranks second in net yards per pass attempt (7.14), third in completion percentage (65.8), fifth in passing yards per game (257.4) and fifth in touchdown percentage (6.4, easily the best among active players).


Rodgers, in a nutshell, is disturbingly good. He's efficient, he limits giveaways, he's mobile and inventive and unnervingly accurate and ... well, he's great. Near perfect. As good as it gets. A one-man clinic on quarterback play at the highest level. Rodgers' real-world brilliance obviously translates to fantasy, as he finished either first or second at his position in standard scoring every year from 2008 to 2012. Last year, if we factor out the November game in which Rodgers fractured his collarbone on Green Bay's opening drive, he ranked third among all QBs in per-game fantasy scoring.


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Simply put, Rodgers is a historically great player at the game's most important position. Hall of Fame-bound. Fantasy wise, he should clearly be one of the first three quarterbacks off the board in all leagues. If you play in a format that deducts heavily for turnovers, there's a case to be made for taking him first or second at his position.


Jordy and Randall, green machines. (Photo Tom Lynn /Getty Images) One of the many things that makes Green Bay's passing offense so reliably great is, of course, year-to-year continuity. Mike McCarthy has been the team's head coach for each of Rodgers' 87 career starts, and for most of his pro development. Jordy Nelson has been with the Packers since 2008, Randall Cobb since 2011 and Jarrett Boykin since 2012. Obviously Green Bay has lost a few featured receivers in recent seasons — notably Greg Jennings, James Jones and Jermichael Finley — but this team is forever developing high-quality replacements. Nelson was basically an understudy for his first three years in the league, a cameo player; over the past three seasons, he's delivered 3,322 receiving yards and 30 touchdowns. He's coming off career single-season highs in catches (85), targets (126) and yards (1,314). Nelson has excellent hands, size (6-foot-3), ball skills and big-play ability, plus he has a weird telepathic connection with Rodgers. He should fall no further than late-Round 2 in fantasy drafts.


Cobb is a menace as well, elusive and smooth, entering a contract year. He led the Packers in both receptions and receiving yards in 2012, and he was on-pace for a 100-catch, 1,300-yard season in 2013 before suffering a fractured fibula in October. Cobb returned in Week 17 and converted two targets into a pair of touchdowns, the second of which was the most important play of Green Bay's season . As the clear top receiving options in a high-yield offense, Nelson and Cobb should probably go within 3-5 picks of each other, in the early rounds of any draft.


Boykin is a terrific late fantasy flier for 2014, as he'll open the year as Green Bay's unrivaled No. 3 receiver. Boykin held off rookie Davante Adams with a good-enough preseason, and he's well-positioned for a quality fantasy campaign. We've learned over the years that Rodgers can support 3-4 starting-quality fantasy pass-catchers. When a 4,800-yard, 40-touchdown quarterback is at the controls of an offense, everybody eats. Boykin has experienced occasional issues with drops — he was brutal on the day Cobb was injured — but he earned trust in the second half of 2013. Ultimately, he finished with 49 catches and 681 receiving yards on 82 targets. McCarthy has talked up Boykin in recent days...


"Clearly, Jarrett Boykin has taken the next step," McCarthy said. "I just love the way he plays. He's had an excellent camp.

"He's physical, his toughness, he's relentless. I think he's exceptional at the top of his route. You see his strength and balance to separate from a DB."

...which, in all likelihood, will boost his fantasy stock in late drafts. I'm in. I've invested in multiple leagues. Boykin is on the approved list, a key supporting receiving in a terrific passing game.


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There is no temperature below which these Lambeau fans won't tailgate. (Mike DiNovo-USA TODAY Sports) Green Bay likely will not feature one tight end this season to the extent that they leaned on Finley in his best years. But this team certainly won't ignore the position, either. The Packers used a third-round pick on Cal's Richard Rodgers, and the rookie currently tops the TE depth chart. He's the guy to snag if you're looking for an end-game flier at this position in deep leagues. As we've discussed before, rookie tight ends are a terrible fantasy bet, with very little impact historically. So don't go crazy in the draft room, thinking you've landed a total steal. But if Rodgers can block, he'll play. Brandon Bostick is dealing with a multi-week leg injury, so he's off the radar for now. Andrew Quarless is depth. Moving on...


Eddie Lacy looks like the sort of back who will terrorize the NFC North for the next six years, rolling up one 1,200-yard, 10-TD season after another. He's a load, the clear featured runner for this team, and a capable receiver as well (35 catches on 44 targets). Lacy is clearly a first-half-of-first-round fantasy commodity, an outstanding high-volume runner in an elite offense. He ranked fifth in the league in carries as a rookie (284), finishing with over 300 touches in 15 games. Don't expect less in the year ahead. Draft early and enjoy. He's great. James Starks and DuJuan Harris seem to be the co-handcuffs.


Green Bay's defense has no shortage of talent — Clay Matthews, Sam Shields, Margan Burnett, Julius Peppers, et al — but the D/ST wasn't anything special last season, fantasy-wise. The team only generated 22 takeaways last year and 23 the season before. Use this defense when the matchup is right (vs. the Jets in Week 2, for example), but don't hold this group all season. In our 2014 position ranks, no member of the Yahoo fantasy team had Green Bay's D higher than No. 15.



2013 team stats: 26.1 PPG (NFL rank 9), 283.6 pass YPG (5), 25 pass TDs (13), 133.5 rush YPG (7), 28.7 rush attempts per game (12), 35.6 pass attempts per game (18)



Previous Juggernaut Index entries: 32. Oakland, 31. Miami, 30. Jacksonville, 29. NY Jets, 28. Tennessee, 27. Cleveland, 26. Baltimore, 25. Carolina, 24. Buffalo, 23. Tampa Bay, 22. St. Louis, 21. NY Giants, 20. Kansas City, 19. Houston, 18. Arizona, 17. Minnesota, 16. Pittsburgh, 15. San Diego, 14. San Francisco, 13. Atlanta, 12. Cincinnati, 11. Washington, 10. New England, 9. Indianapolis, 8. New Orleans, 7. Seattle, 6. Philadelphia, 5. Dallas, 4. Detroit






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Xabi Alonso is already wearing lederhosen

Xabi Alonso started for Bayern in their 1-1 draw with Schalke on Saturday after making his surprise move from Real Madrid on Friday and now, to properly complete the whirlwind weekend, he's taken part in the club's annual beer and lederhosen photoshoot. The Spaniard joined all of his new teammates in traditional Bavarian garb, looking like he's been celebrating Oktoberfest his whole life.



(Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Bongarts/Getty Images)


(Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Bongarts/Getty Images)


(Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Bongarts/Getty Images)

"I could get used to this..."


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Brooks Peck is the editor of Dirty Tackle on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him or follow on Twitter!






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samedi 30 août 2014

LSU capitalizes on Wisconsin turnovers and injuries to win 28-24

LSU was thoroughly outplayed for the first half of Saturday night's game against Wisconsin. But thanks to some errant passes by Tanner McEvoy and two key injuries on the Badger defensive line, the Tigers came back to win 28-24.


It's the 46th consecutive non-conference win for LSU coach Les Miles.


In the first half, Wisconsin DE Konrad Zagzebski was carted off the field after he suffered a neck injury making a tackle. He was taken to a local hospital and ESPN reported that he had movement in his extremeties. Then, Warren Herring, the Badgers' starting nose tackle, went down with an injury.


The absence of the two was noticeable on what proved to be LSU's game-winning drive. With both integral pieces of the Wisconsin line missing, LSU RB Kenny Hilliard gashed Wisconsin on three straight runs up the middle, the last of which was a 28-yard TD.


Hilliard's run was sandwiched between two Tanner McEvoy interceptions. The first was a great play by Jaylen Mills, who saw the route from his safety position and glided over towards the receiver to swipe the ball as McEvoy threw it.


The second, on a drive that was Wisconsin's last best chance at the win, McEvoy and Reggie Love must have had a miscommunication. Receiver and ball weren't in the same zip code and Ronald Martin had an easy interception.


McEvoy beat out Joel Stave, who started last season for Wisconsin, for the starting QB job in fall camp. And the second-guessing has already started among Wisconsin fans. McEvoy finished 8-24 passing for 50 yards and the two interceptions.


While McEvoy struggled, Wisconsin RB Melvin Gordon shined. He ran for 140 yards and a touchdown on just 16 carries. But there's the rub. While McEvoy couldn't find anything resembling a groove in the air, he threw the ball eight more times than the Heisman candidate ran it.


His carries seemed inversely proportional to LSU's success as well. He ran the ball 12 times in the first half as Wisconsin controlled the game. But as LSU crept back in the final 30 minutes, Gordon only got two carries in each of the final two quarters for reasons apparently unknown to coach Gary Andersen.



Had Wisconsin beaten LSU, the Badgers would have immediately vaulted into alongside Michigan State as the Big Ten's preeminent College Football Playoff Contenders as Nebraska is the only ranked team remaining on Wisconsin's schedule.


Now, with the loss, the schedule works against the Badgers. Barring madness and an upset of a very highly ranked opponent in the Big Ten title game, the Badgers may already be on the outside looking in.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Cody Kessler leads USC to a therapeutic win after a turbulent week

LOS ANGELES — The joy was unmistakable on the faces of Cody Kessler and Steve Sarkisian.


Seconds after Kessler delivered his final touchdown strike of USC's 52-13 season-opening demolition of visiting Fresno State on Saturday night, the junior quarterback ran in the direction of his head coach and the two met in midair for a flying chest bump.


The fun-filled night was just what the Trojans needed at the end of a chaotic, distraction-filled week. Kessler threw for a career-high 394 yards and four touchdowns in less than three quarters of action, leading USC to a therapeutic victory that shifted the focus from everything that went wrong off the field this week to everything that could be possible on it later this season.


Of course, shredding Fresno State isn't the same as doing it against elite opposition, but consider Saturday's performance a warning shot from Kessler and the Trojans. USC shouldn't be discounted as a potential Pac-12 title threat even though it plays in the same conference as highly ranked Oregon, UCLA and Stanford. Nor should Kessler be overlooked as one of the quarterback-rich Pac-12's top passing threats even if he plays in the same league as Heisman hopefuls Marcus Mariota and Brett Hundley.


"Cody had a great game," Sarkisian said. "I've always thought Cody would be a good fit in this system. I think it fits his skill set. The athleticism he has in short areas is better than people think. I think it showed tonight in his ability to buy time and make plays downfield, which is critical to what we do. And then he throws an accurate ball, which is something he has always done."


Kessler's heroics were the most noteworthy aspect of a USC victory that seemed a bit more momentous than a season-opening rout of a Mountain West foe would normally be.


Fresno State returned 13 starters from an 11-win team and was eager to avenge its season-ending loss to the Trojans in the Las Vegas Bowl. USC also badly needed a convincing victory to start the Sarkisian era on a positive note and to provide a sweet finish to the sourest of weeks.


The buildup to Sarkisian's first game as USC coach began Monday with co-captain Josh Shaw's fabricated tale of how he sprained both his ankles jumping off a second-story balcony to save his nephew from drowning. Once it became clear Shaw was a liar and not a hero, Sarkisian faced three days of tough questions about how USC had vetted the senior corner's story and what his punishment would be for attempting to cover up the truth with a fairytale.


About the time the fallout from the Shaw saga appeared to be subsiding, another fire erupted for Sarkisian to put out. Ex-USC running back Anthony Brown said he quit the team the previous week because he couldn't play for a "racist" coach, a charge Sarkisian and many of his players vehemently denied.


Sarkisian said he only addressed those sagas twice with his team in the days leading up to Saturday's game. To a man, USC's players were adamant they didn't let those distractions affect them, noting that the three coaching changes they went through last season calloused them to off-the-field issues.


"This is USC. This is a special program," USC receiver Nelson Agholar said. "We don't worry about outside things. We really don't. It's all about performing, practicing hard and having fun. That's what we did. Whatever happened this week, that was out of our control."


The man who had the most to do with making sure those two scandals didn't derail USC was a quarterback Sarkisian wanted on his side long before he made his return to Troy.


Kessler was the quarterback prospect Sarkisian coveted most in the 2011 recruiting class, but the 6-foot-1 Bakersfield, Calif., native spurned the Washington coach in favor of USC after the Trojans finally offered him a scholarship. That proved fruitful in the long run for Sarkisian after he left Washington this past winter, accepted USC's head coaching job and inherited Kessler as his starting quarterback.


Though Kessler completed 65.4 percent of his passes in his first season as a starter last year, he appears to have made a big leap this offseason. He's more confident commanding the huddle, he is better at going through his reads to find the open receiver and he's more comfortable using his legs to escape pressure or make something out of nothing.


The fast-paced, no-huddle offense Sarkisian installed also appears to be a good fit for Kessler. He didn't throw any interceptions and completed 25 of 37 passes Saturday, from quick outs when Fresno State gave his receivers too much respect at the line of scrimmage, to deep balls when USC's receivers got behind the defense.


"I was impressed with the way [Kessler] utilized all his weapons out there," Agholar said. "He did a great job of that. Sometimes it doesn't work out with a lot of skilled guys because it's about feeding guys and making sure they're happy, but he did an amazing job of that.


What was especially encouraging for USC was how many young receivers made an impact Saturday. It was no surprise that veterans Agholar and George Farmer combined for eight catches, but sophomore Darreus Rogers had five catches for 60 yards, freshman Juju Smith had 4 for 123 and high school quarterback-turned-receiver Adoree Jackson had 3 for 36.


"Ever since the summer, these guys have come in wanting to learn," Kessler said. "They're asking questions and texting me to meet for film. We threw them in there and I knew that they were going to run the right route and not miss their assignments. I was excited for them, especially in their first game."


There wasn't much for Sarkisian to complain about with USC's performance but he did find one minor quibble. At the end of a Kessler scramble early in the second half, it pained Sarkisian to watch his quarterback fall awkwardly to the turf instead of going into a baseball slide.


Quipped Sarkisian when asked what he learned about his team Saturday night, "Our quarterback doesn't know how to slide."


Explained Kessler sheepishly, "It was my knee brace. I tripped."


Kessler shouldn't worry. On a night when his performance helped shift the focus away from USC's turbulent week and toward the Trojans' bright future, his coach will probably forgive him.


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







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Florida State survives Oklahoma State's upset bid and wins 37-31

Florida State's first game as defending national champions was not an exercise in domination.


Oklahoma State hung with a Seminoles team that looked out of sync at times before a costly fourth-quarter turnover gave Florida State a two-possession lead and ultimately a 37-31 win in Dallas.


After Florida State kicked a field goal to go up 30-24, Oklahoma State had the ball at its own 44-yard-line with just over five minutes left. On the third play of the drive, QB J.W. Walsh, who had been an effective runner for most of the evening, scrambled and flipped over as he was tackled. The ball slipped out of his hand before his elbow hit the ground and Florida State fell on it.




On the second play following the fumble, Heisman-winning QB Jameis Winston threw into traffic to Rashad Greene, who snagged the ball and raced 50 yards for a touchdown and a 37-24 lead.


While Oklahoma State scored with two minutes to go via a Walsh run, it never got the ball back for a chance to win the game.


Winston looked liked his dynamic self in flashes, especially on a nifty 28-yard touchdown run in the third quarter where he hurdled a teammate and immediately sidestepped a defender. However, for the glimpses of Heisman brillaince, there were also moments of ineptness. He threw two interceptions (and nearly a third) and took a couple of sacks that could have been minimized.




He finished 25-39 passing for 370 yards.


The Seminoles' biggest playmaker was Greene. He had 11 catches for 203 yards. For as well as Oklahoma did stopping Florida State's running game, it didn't have an answer for Greene, who seemingly created his own space in Oklahoma State's secondary at will.


While it was a bit more dramatic than expected, the win should do nothing to rattle the Noles bid for a return trip to Dallas in January for the title game of the College Football Playoff. Florida State's immense talent was evident; it just wasn't consistent throughout the entire 60 minutes. And much like the BCS Championship Game in January, the talent came through at the right time. FSU is still penciled in for the College Football Playoff. It just may not be as easy as last year.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Eastern Michigan players try to knock down a concrete wall in a fantastic field entrance fail (GIF)

Teams are always trying to come up with new and exciting ways to introduce their teams, but sometimes they try just a little too difficult.


Case in point, Eastern Michigan, which thought having it’s players smash through a brick wall would be a great way to introduce this year’s team.




Unfortunately, this stunt took three players with sledgehammers and nearly 20 seconds to pull off while all 8,748 fans in attendance patiently waited for the first game under coach Chris Creighton to begin.




For the sake of the players, who edged out a 31-28 win against Morgan State, we hope Eastern Michigan just sticks with the fog machine and some techno music next time.


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


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Todd Gurley runs wild in Georgia's 45-21 win over Clemson

Todd Gurley stole the show Saturday night in Athens.


In Georgia’s convincing 45-21 win over Clemson, the junior running back registered more all-purpose yards (293) than the entire Tigers team gained on offense (291). He ran for 198 yards on just 15 carries, scoring on touchdowns runs from 23, 18, and 51 yards, and also returned a kickoff 100 yards for a score.


He put the team on his back in the second half, almost singlehandedly propelling the Bulldogs to a resounding 24-point win. But the final score doesn’t tell the whole story.


In fact, the game was extremely tight most of the way – Georgia led by just three points through three quarters. Clemson’s combination of Cole Stoudt and Deshaun Watson were steady enough to give the Tigers a chance. Clemson even led midway through the second quarter before Gurley’s kickoff return tied things at 21.


Perplexingly, Gurley only touched the ball five times in the first half. Fellow junior Keith Marshall and highly-touted freshman Sony Michel were seeing significant touches, but were not nearly as effective as Gurley.


Recognizing this, offensive coordinator Mike Bobo went back to Gurley in heavy doses when the second half began. Gurley delivered in a big way and at times, it didn’t even seem fair.


Of his 198 rushing yards, 154 came in the second half, including 111 in a dominant fourth quarter. He showed every facet of his game. The vision was on display when he cut back and scored on an 18-yard pitch. His rare combination of speed and power was showcased on a game-clinching 51-yard scamper.


And when Clemson finally thought they were getting a break from the bruising style of the 6-foot-1, 226-pound Gurley, stud true freshman Nick Chubb (5-foot-10, 228 pounds) showed Georgia’s depth at the position by breaking a handful of tackles on a 47-yard TD run.




But in the end it was Gurley’s show. Not many players can average over 17 yards per touch against the No. 16 team in the country. It’s only week one, but this is the kind of performance that gets the Heisman talk started.


Gurley and the Bulldogs have a week before they take their show on the road to South Carolina on Sept. 13. Steve Spurrier and company will have their hands full.


For more Georgia news, visit UGASports.com.


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







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Cal gets first FBS win since 2012 on the road against Northwestern

Cal has matched last season's win total. And even if the Golden Bears lose every game the rest of the season and have consecutive 1-11 seasons, 2014 is already better than 2013 because of that lone win.


The Golden Bears' 31-24 win over Northwestern Saturday was the first time Cal beat an FBS-level team since beating Washington State on Oct. 13, 2012. Yes, almost two years, and coincidentally, the same day that Georgia State last won a game before winning on Wednesday night against Abilene Christian.


Last season, Cal's only win came against FCS Portland State. And it was by seven. Of it's 11 losses, one was against Northwestern, who won at Cal 44-30.


It wasn't even close to that on Saturday. Cal stormed out to an early lead thanks to two touchdown passes by sophomore Jared Goff. Goff, who was Cal's primary QB last season as a freshman, finished 21-34 passing for 281 yards, three touchdowns and an interception.


Northwestern, meanwhile, looked much more like the team that finished 2013 on a seven-game losing streak before beating Illinois in the season finale than the team that started the year 0-4.


QB Trevor Siemien, now without the shadow of Kain Colter, both on the field at quarterback and off the field with a union movement, was inefficient, only completing 23 of his 43 passes. The loss of Venric Mark, the potential sixth-year senior star at running back, was evident. Justin Jackson had eight carries for 40 yards and Treyvon Green had 13 carries for 37 yards.


The highlight of Northwestern's day was a trick play for a TD. But it only cut the deficit to 31-21. After a fourth quarter field goal to make Cal's lead seven, Northwestern's potential game-winning drive went flat.


The win could also be the start of a two-game winning streak for Cal. Next week, the Golden Bears play Sacramento State, another FCS school. A 2-0 Cal is incredibly possible.


However, we won't get ahead of ourselves. Cal has five ranked teams on its schedule, plus games at Arizona, Washington State and at home against BYU. Bowl aspirations seem unlikely. But this is a good start for coach Sonny Dykes' second season and a sign that a turnaround is possible.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Northwestern runs a throw-back pass for a touchdown (GIF)

Northwestern’s offense hasn’t exactly been lighting it up against Cal on Saturday, but it did have this gem of a trick play to get itself back in the game.



Northwestern runs a trick play to cut the score against Cal.

After an interception by senior linebacker Colin Ellis put the Wildcats on the 17-yard line, quarterback Trevor Simien threw a screen pass to Jayme Taylor who threw it back to Simien. Simien, not known for his running ability or athleticism, somehow made a defensive back bite on his one and only move and then stretched out for the touchdown.


There’s no doubt that DB will be hearing about that play all season.


The entertaining and painfully slow-developing play cut Cal’s lead to 31-21 late in the third quarter.


For more Northwestern news, visit WildcatReport.com.


For more Cal news, visit GoldenBearReport.com.


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


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Nebraska WR Jordan Westerkamp makes insane behind-the-back catch (Video)

It didn’t take long for Tavaun Smith’s awesome catch from earlier Saturday afternoon to get one-upped.


Nebraska wideout Jordan Westerkamp, known for catching the game-winning Hail Mary pass in the Huskers’ win over Northwestern last season, somehow managed to haul in a Tommy Armstrong BEHIND HIS BACK during the third quarter against Florida Atlantic.


That’s right – behind his back. You have to see it to believe it.



I’ve really never seen anything like it. FAU defensive back Christian Milstead actually made a great play to dive and tip Armstrong’s pass, but Westerkamp somehow had the concentration to corral the ball behind his back while getting both feet in bounds.


The catch was part of a great day for Westerkamp. The redshirt sophomore has caught seven passes for 125 yards and a touchdown while the Huskers maintain a big lead in the fourth quarter.


The best catch of the 2014 college football season may have come in week one because Westerkamp’s play is going to be hard to beat.


For more Nebraska news, visit HuskerOnline.com.


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







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San Diego State to wear helmet decal to honor Tony Gwynn (Photo)

San Diego State is wearing a helmet decal Saturday to honor baseball legend Tony Gwynn, who died of cancer this summer.



Gwynn played basketball and baseball at San Diego State before he played for the San Diego Padres for 20 years. After he retired from the Padres, he was the baseball coach at San Diego State for 12 years. Gwynn was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2007 and finished with a career .338 batting average and 3.141 hits.


Gwynn was first diagnosed with cancer of the salivary gland in 2010. After numerous cancer treatments, he died on June 16. If you're not incredibly familiar with Gwynn's career, this post by Mike Oz at Big League Stew is required reading.


San Diego State starts its season against Northern Arizona.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Team USA holds Finland to 2-point quarter, dominates FIBA World Cup opener

No one gave Finland much chance to challenge the United States in Saturday's opener of the FIBA World Cup of Basketball in Bilbao, Spain. Yet it's doubtful that anyone expected the domination to reach such an extreme so early in an extremely comfortable 114-55 win.


After an already impressive 31-16 first quarter in which Finland looked out of the game after eight minutes, Team USA turned the second quarter into one of the most dominant periods in history. The 29-2 advantage tells a story in itself, but the specifics are even worse. For instance, Finland failed to convert a field goal over the entire 10 minutes, getting just two free throws from Teemu Rannikko at the 6:25 mark. Take a look at this shot chart:



Finland managed to create a few open shots, but the length and quickness of the U.S. defense clearly flustered their opponents, a wild-card selection for the tournament. Team USA has so much talent that they overwhelm most teams they face, but this game was a different story altogether. Finland, even with several quality players on the roster, didn't look they belonged on the same court.


Their offensive struggles will earn most headlines, but their troubles carried over to the defensive end, too. In this highlight-reel dunk from Derrick Rose (via EOB), Finland conceded an open lane to the basket that may have reminded the Bulls star of an All-Star Game:



Things got substantially better for the Finns in the second half, but a 54-37 disadvantage still led them to a 59-point loss. They will look to bounce back against Ukraine on Sunday in their second-group game.


Team USA will obviously be pleased with such an overwhelming victory, but the relatively low quality of competition ensures that it will be seen as little more than business as usual. They should face a tougher test on Sunday vs. Turkey, but the fact of the matter is that the Americans likely won't see a real challenge for at least another week.


That's not to say that head coach Mike Krzyzewski and his staff will be pleased with everything they saw out of their team. While 59 percent shooting from the field, 18 steals, and eight players with at least nine points look great, Team USA also turned it over 19 times and shot just 6-of-18 from the three-point line. Those numbers will have to improve against the best teams in the tournament.


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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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UCLA's defense shines while it's offense has work to do

UCLA’s much-hyped 2014 debut didn’t go the way it hoped, but it least it got out of Virginia with a 28-20 win against the Cavaliers.


The Bruins, a team many thought could challenge for the College Football Playoff, looked out of sorts on offense as Heisman hopeful quarterback Brett Hundley was harassed by the vaunted Virginia defense most of the game.


Hundley completed 20-of-33 passes for 242 yards and had the Bruins’ only offensive touchdown on a 6-yard run.


The day actually belonged to the UCLA defense, which had three first-half touchdowns on turnovers. That kept UCLA in the game early, otherwise Virginia probably should have won the game.


So, the defense answered whether it would be a strength for the Bruins this season, but the offense has a lot of work to do. Virginia’s defense was its strength coming into the season and it showed on Saturday. But what UCLA faced isn’t an anomaly. It’s going to see similar and better defenses in conference play, so it needs to figure what went wrong and correct it in a hurry.


It will get a chance to have an offensive feel-good game against Memphis next week before it has to face Texas. Only then will we know what this offense really learned from its season opener.


For more UCLA news, visit BruinSportsReport.com.


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


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Ohio State knocks off Navy 34-17 in first game without Braxton Miller

Ohio State’s first game without Braxton Miller wasn’t easy, but things came together in the second half in a hard-fought 34-17 win over Navy in Baltimore.


Redshirt freshman J.T. Barrett made his first start at quarterback. Despite early struggles, he lived up to his dual-threat billing with 226 passing yards and two touchdowns and 50 rushing yards. Barrett threw just 15 passes, completing 12, as head coach Urban Meyer relied heavily on a bevy of talented running backs, three of whom rushed for more than 40 yards.


With a new quarterback and four new starters on the offensive line, the Buckeyes’ offense looked a bit out of sorts from the jump, but a bruising running game wore the Midshipmen down as the game went on.


The first half trudged to a close after a DeBrandon Sanders one-yard TD run for Navy and two Sean Nuernberger field goals for OSU. The second half was a different story.


Less than two minutes into the third quarter, Ohio State linebacker Darron Lee returned a Keenan Reynolds fumble 61 yards to give the Buckeyes their first lead and first touchdown of 2014. Navy was able to quickly respond, however, when a 67-yard run from Ryan Williams-Jenkins set up a 1-yard TD run from Reynolds on the next drive to retake a 14-13 lead.


Later in the third quarter, Barrett found Devin Street behind the Navy secondary for an 80-yard touchdown pass to give OSU a lead it would not relinquish for the rest of the game. Though it did allow a field goal, OSU’s defense stiffened while the running game grinded out the clock and sealed the victory.


So what did we learn about the fifth-ranked Buckeyes? For one, the offense won’t look a whole lot different under Barrett compared to Miller, it’ll just be a simplified version. Save for his interception inside the red zone, Barrett made most of the right decisions in his first game action.


Also, the Buckeyes have a slew of talented running backs who can shoulder the load. Though Barrett led the team in rushing, Curtis Samuel (7 rushes, 45 yards), Ezekiel Elliott (12 rushes, 44 yards, 1 TD) and Dontre Wilson (6 rushes, 43 yards) all showed flashes. The inexperienced offensive line wasn’t always opening up the biggest holes for the trio, but Meyer has options to work with in efforts to replace the effort of Carlos Hyde. The offensive effort as a whole was something to build on.


The defense looked solid in dealing with Navy’s option offense and another test awaits OSU next weekend when Virginia Tech travels to Columbus.


For more Ohio State news, visit BuckeyeGrove.com.


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







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Iowa's Tevaun Smith made a fantastic one-handed TD grab (Video)

Iowa wideout Tevaun Smith gave us an early candidate for top catch of the week early in the second half against Northern Iowa.


Leading 17-13, the Hawkeyes were looking to increase their lead on a third-and-goal from the 6-yard line. Quarterback Jake Rudock looked Smith’s way and the junior delivered, hauling Rudock’s pass with one hand in the back right corner of the end zone to increase the team’s lead to 24-13.



Rudock’s pass was on the money, allowing Smith to make a play despite tight coverage from the Panthers’ Makinton Dorleant.


After registering 24 catches for 310 yards as a sophomore in 2013, Smith was expected to see an increased role this season. Iowa head coach has to like what he’s seen from Smith thus far.


Smith's team, however, is in a battle. Early in the fourth quarter, the Hawkeyes have just a one-point lead over their in-state FCS opponent. Maybe Smith can come to the rescue.


For more Iowa news, visit HawkeyeReport.com.


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UCLA scores three defensive touchdowns in first half against Virginia

Prior to the season, a lot was made about UCLA’s offense and quarterback Brett Hundley as a possible Heisman Trophy contender.


Through the first half of Saturday’s season opener against Virginia, it’s the UCLA defense that’s points on the board for the Bruins.


All of UCLA first-half touchdowns have come off Virginia turnovers — all in the second quarter — and they have the Bruins ahead 21-10 at halftime.


Defensive back Ishmael Adams got the scoring going with an interception returned for 20 yards.




With 2:55 remaining in the half, defensive back Randall Goforth had a 75-yard fumble recovery for a score.




Linebacker Eric Kendricks capped the first-half scoring with a 37-yard interception return with 1:20 remaining the half.




If not for the defense, UCLA would be losing this game because the offense has done very little against a surprisingly stout Virginia defense. Hundley completed 9-of-13 passes for 113 yards in the first half and the running game managed just 23 yards.


If UCLA hopes to win this game, the offense will have to show up in the second half because there’s little chance the defense will be able to repeat its stellar first-half performance.


For more UCLA news, visit BruinSportsReport.com.


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Ohio State TE Jeff Heuerman wears No. 5 in honor of Braxton Miller (GIF)

Ohio State TE Jeff Heuerman ditched his No. 86 jersey for a different one against Navy.


With QB Braxton Miller out for the season with a torn labrum in his throwing shoulder, Heuerman wore No. 5 on Saturday.




He posted a picture of the jersey to his Twitter account on Saturday morning.



Last year, LB Ryan Shazier switched to No. 2 from No. 10 in October to honor Christian Bryant after Bryant broke his ankle. Shazier wore No. 2 for the rest of the season. No word if Heuerman will go back to his No. 86 after Saturday or keep wearing Miller's No. 5 for all of 2014.


In 2013, Heuerman had 26 catches for 466 yards and four touchdowns.


Unfortunately, Heuerman didn't put a bandage on the shoulder of his jersey to mimic the Braxton Miller mannequin at the Ohio State bookstore. After news that Miller was out for the season spread, someone at the Ohio State bookstore put bandage on the right shoulder (Miller's throwing shoulder) of the mannequin.


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Nick Bromberg is the assistant editor of Dr. Saturday on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at nickbromberg@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter!







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Ficken, Hackenberg lead Penn State to last-second win over UCF in Ireland (GIFs)

Penn State dominated the first half of the inaugural Croke Park Classic, but it let UCF hang around. It almost doomed the Nittany Lions, but senior kicker Sam Ficken came through in the clutch when it mattered most.


Ficken drilled a game-winning 36-yard field goal as time expired to give Penn State a dramatic 26-24 win over the Knights in Dublin, Ireland. It was Ficken’s fourth field goal of the day and it ensured that James Franklin’s first game as Penn State head coach was victorious.




Ficken’s kick capped off a drive that started with just 1:13 to go after UCF took a 24-23 lead on a 6-yard touchdown run by Knights quarterback Justin Holman, who came on in relief of struggling starter Pete DiNovo. The Penn State offense, led by sophomore quarterback Christian Hackenberg, was able to move its way up the field on a seven-play drive to set up Ficken’s heroics.


Hackenberg became the first Penn State quarterback to throw for over 400 yards in a game, racking up 457 yards and a touchdown on 32-of-47 passing attempts. Most of those passes were directed to sophomore Geno Lewis or redshirt freshman DaeSean Hamilton. Hamilton, in his first ever collegiate game, came up huge with 11 catches for 165 yards.


Lewis caught eight passes for 173 yards, including a 79-yard touchdown in the third quarter. Lewis also made an acrobatic catch for a 41-yard gain late in the fourth to give Hackenberg the school’s single-game passing record.




UCF was held to just 35 yards of total offense in the first half, but managed to keep the deficit to just seven points at halftime. After another DiNovo (3/8, 18 yards) drive fell flat to open the second half, head coach George O’Leary then inserted Holman into the ballgame midway through the third quarter and he immediately provided a spark.


Holman’s first drive resulted in a score. His second drive did, too. A few Penn State turnovers followed and when the Knights took over again down six with 3:30 to go, Holman, who finished 9-of-14 for 204 yards, led an eight-play, 75-yard drive in just 2:17 to give UCF a 24-23 lead.


Unfortunately for Holman, the Knights’ defense could not hold the lead.


If it's any consolation for UCF, I think we know who’ll be under center for the Knights next week against Missouri now.


For more Penn State news, visit BlueWhiteIllustrated.com.


For more UCF news, visit UCFSports.com.


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







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