jeudi 31 juillet 2014

Manny Machado makes a great play to throw out Albert Pujols — yes, again


Stop us if you've heard this one before: Manny Machado, the Baltimore Orioles third baseman who is quite good at defense, made a highlight-worthy play to throw out Albert Pujols.


No, we're not talking about the play from Wednesday night. Machado did it again Thursday, during Baltimore's 1-0 extra-inning loss to the Angels.


He ranged to his right, falling into foul territory, then gathered himself and threw an absolute rocket to first base to get Pujols. We'll offer the same caveat as last time: Yes, Pujols isn't a very fast runner and, yes, lots of other guys would have beaten that out. But holy moly, look at that throw. It's like Machado's arm is a T-shirt gun.


Here's Machado's Wednesday night play, which is the better of the two. But as a pair they're further proof that his play at third base is special.



While throwing out Pujols from across the diamond might be like knocking out Glass Joe, you still have to give credit to the players who wow you while doing it.


More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:



- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1xIIWwz

Air Force unveils new alternate uniform (Photos)

With less than one month to go until the 2014 college football season kicks off, a number of programs have begun to roll out alternate uniforms that will be worn at some point during the season.


Air Force is one of these programs, and the new alternate uniform the Falcons unveiled today is one of the best we’ve seen this offseason.


Take a look:




The light blue helmets with the lightning bolt logo make for an especially sharp look. Per Air Force’s Twitter, the team will wear the new uniforms for at least one game in the upcoming season.


Coming off a disappointing 2-10 season, the Falcons’ season opens up at home against Nicholls State on August 30.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1u573oL

The 10-man rotation, starring Isaiah Thomas, a point guard scorned

A look around the league and the Web that covers it. It's also important to note that the rotation order and starting nods aren't always listed in order of importance. That's for you, dear reader, to figure out.


C: Sactown Royalty. Isaiah Thomas makes it very clear that he believes he is better than Darren Collison, the man signed to replace him as the point guard of the Sacramento Kings, and that he believes everyone associated with the Kings will soon think the same thing now that he's joined up with the Phoenix Suns: "They always say you don't know what you got until it's gone, and I feel like that's going to happen […] I tell everybody I love Sacramento, I always will love Sacramento, but when we play them I'm going to kill Sacramento."


PF: Mavs Moneyball. Jason Gallagher recalls the strange things that winning championships, one-click ordering and copious amounts of booze can do to a man.


SF: BSports. A deep-dive, SportVU-based statistical look into which teams passed the ball most frequently and most effectively, as measured by how often their passes led to assist opportunities, converted buckets, and so on.


SG: VICE Sports. Colin McGowan: "You will fail to utterly ignore DurantWatch 2016 and piffle like it because you're a person, and people are weak. But you should give it your best shot."


PG: Grantland. Jordan Ritter Conn talks to scouts, coaches, players and observers of all stripes in search of an answer to a question posed by many in the basketball world: When, and why, did New York City stop being "The Mecca?"


6th: Bulls.com. Good stuff from Sam Smith on Derrick Rose's looking-good-so-far return to the court for Team USA in Las Vegas, and how the Chicago Bulls point guard's approach to the comeback is different now than it was after his first season-ending knee injury.


7th: Pounding the Rock. Jesus Gomez explains why he doesn't think there's some grand conspiracy behind the San Antonio Spurs ruling Manu Ginobili out of competing for Argentina in the upcoming FIBA World Cup.


8th: espnW. Kate Fagan talks to Natalie Nakase about her groundbreaking stint as an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Clippers' Summer League squad, from how the opportunity came about to the importance of practicing how to practice.


9th: The Reversal. With Lance Stephenson now in the fold, just how high is the ceiling for the rebranded Charlotte Hornets?


10th: Hardwood Paroxysm. The people behind SlamBall want to bring back SlamBall. They have started a Kickstarter asking you for money to help them bring back SlamBall, presumably because, like me, many prospective big-money funders remember that horrific SlamBall ankle injury that I definitely will not link to but can definitely be found online if you've got an iron stomach. Best of luck raising money, devil-may-care wildfolk.


- - - - - - -


Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow BDL's Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1pJWFyH

Report: Metta World Peace heading to Chinese Basketball Association to join Sichuan Blue Whales

Metta World Peace, it turns out, is a man of his word — the 34-year-old forward really isn't retired. But he also won't be playing professional basketball in the NBA next season. Or, at least, he won't be at the start of the season.


After tweeting early Tuesday morning that he "met with three teams" about playing in China, that a "deal [was] done" and that he "just [had] to sign now," the former Ron Artest has reportedly reached an agreement to join the Sichuan Blue Whales of the Chinese Basketball Association, as first reported by ESPN New York's Ian Begley and subsequently confirmed by Chinese news outlet Sports Sina (via Sportando).


Apparently, World Peace already has his first order of business lined up:



RealGM's Shams Charania reports that World Peace will receive a one-year deal worth $1.43 million, which is a shade less than what he'd make on a 10-plus-year veteran's minimum deal stateside, but will make him the highest-paid import player in the CBA. World Peace still hopes to land a roster spot with an NBA team once the Chinese pro season wraps up in February, according to Charania.


World Peace's chances of piquing NBA interest would figure to improve dramatically if he can show a capacity to make a consistent impact against younger competition, even in a lesser league. First thing's first, though — he'll have to stay on the floor.


That was no easy feat during a 2013-14 NBA campaign that saw him play only 388 minutes for the New York Knicks due in part to struggles with a strained left knee — the same knee in which he suffered a tear to the lateral meniscus during the previous season with the Los Angeles Lakers, only to return, somewhat shockingly, less than two weeks after undergoing surgery.


While his coaches and teammates appreciated his willingness to get back as soon as possible in an attempt to secure a playoff spot, World Peace's contributions waned considerably after his return from injury. His shooting accuracy, always more sporadic than reliable, plummeted; his attempts at playmaking, always at least somewhat adventurous, became more chaotic; his defensive work, formerly his calling card, declined due to decreasing foot speed, lateral quickness and (one would assume) trust in the structural integrity of that repaired wheel. What was left was a bulky, defensive-minded power forward without the quickness to credibly check the best in the business and unable to offer much else.


The Lakers, understandably, weren't too keen on paying $7.7 million for such a player, so they amnestied World Peace. And while the Knicks were quite keen on paying him a tick over the league minimum, World Peace didn't look significantly better after a few months of rehabbing the knee injury, hitting just 39.7 percent of his shots and 31.5 percent from 3-point land while failing to regain that lost defensive step, and soon finding himself excised from head coach Mike Woodson's rotation before eventually receiving a contract buyout.


The 14-year NBA veteran, who won the 2003-04 Defensive Player of the Year award with the Indiana Pacers and the 2010 NBA championship with the Lakers, had his sights set on linking up with a contender in time for this spring's playoffs, but there weren't any takers. Apparently, there still aren't.


"I think because of last year, people think I'm still hurt," World Peace told Larry King during a recent television interview. "I'm not hurt. I got hurt a year ago, a year and a half ago," he said. "Just like anybody else, if they got hurt a year and a half ago, they'd heal. Two years, I'm healthy."


He'll now try to prove it with a Sichuan squad that earned promotion to the CBA last season after winning China's second-division championship two years ago. The Blue Whales employed a trio of former NBA players last year — former Memphis Grizzlies and Phoenix Suns center Hamed Haddadi, ex-Oklahoma City Thunder, Charlotte Bobcats and Boston Celtics forward D.J. White, and guard Darius Johnson-Odom, who had cups of coffee with the Lakers and Philadelphia 76ers. World Peace, of course, is a much higher-profile player than they are and ought to increase the level of interest and attention on Sichuan this season, but just how much he's able to move the needle on the court for a Sichuan team that ranked 13th out of 18 CBA teams in points allowed per possession and 17th out of 18 in points scored per possession (according to RealGM's numbers) remains to be seen.


Maybe World Peace winds up finding a comfortable niche as a player and person in China, as fellow New York City-born former All-Star Stephon Marbury has after his U.S. career petered out. Maybe he performs brilliantly enough on both ends of the floor to generate real interest in an NBA return come the spring. Or — and this certainly feels at this stage like the most likely option — maybe the decline in his game over the past couple of years continues unabated, and this last attempt at hanging onto an on-court life falls short. However it plays out, though, Metta seems to be heading overseas with a positive attitude.


"People think I can't play anymore, so my agent, he's got a lot of questions when he's going to these other teams," World Peace told King. "I told him, 'Don't worry about it,' you know. 'We'll go somewhere, we'll play amazing, and other teams will just lose out.' [...] You know, wherever I go, I'm going to be amazing."


- - - - - - -


Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow BDL's Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1m2FZkU

Cultural Leonesa wore their tuxedo kit for the most elegant charity match ever played

Spanish third-division club Cultural Leonesa made headlines around the world when they unveiled a special tuxedo kit last week and now they've actually worn it for a match. The kit, which was designed specifically to draw as much attention as possible to the club's charitable interests, was used for a one-day preseason tournament benefitting the local mining industry. Ten percent of all shirt sales will go to charities for mining families.


Henning Nielsen, marketing manager for kitmaker Hummel, told CNN:


"The club wanted to help the mining industry in the region, which is having some really tough times.

"We wanted to go in and explore the club's heritage and find what has local character, and incorporate that into the design.

"The club is celebrating its 90-year anniversary, so instead of having a formal reception with wine and drinks and snacks the club decided to do something ... another way with a bit of character."

The white tux goalkeeper kit was a particularly inspired creation.



- - - - - - -


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






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1uM4fkL

Preseason polls are devolving into talking points instead of credible ways to rank teams

It’s not easy being No. 1.


Florida State, last year’s national champion, sits atop the recently released coaches poll in an unenviable position. No preseason No. 1 in the coaches poll has gone on to finish with that ranking since USC in 2004, and five of the past six preseason No. 1s have finished their season ranked No. 8 or lower.


There are just too many things that happen during the year that can change the outcome of the season. From injuries to disciplinary issues, the composition of a team can change in an instant and any hope of winning a national title can go down the drain with it.


That’s not to say I disagree with ranking Florida State at No. 1. It is, after all, coming off an undefeated season and does have the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, who was far-and-away the best player on the field a year ago.


But to understand my dismay with preseason polls, one only has to look back to the top five that started last season and the top five that ended it.


Here’s what the 2013 preseason coaches poll looked like (with each team’s poll finish in parentheses):



  1. Alabama (8)

  2. Ohio State (t-10)

  3. Oregon (9)

  4. Stanford (t-10)

  5. Georgia (unranked)


And here’s what the coaches poll looked like at the end of the season (with each team’s preseason ranking in parentheses)



  1. Florida State (12)

  2. Auburn (unranked)

  3. Michigan State (unranked)

  4. South Carolina (7)

  5. Missouri (unranked)


No one could fault the coaches for leaving Auburn, Michigan State and Missouri out of the rankings. Of the three, only Michigan State had a winning record (7-6) after the 2012 season. But it speaks to the point that you never know what you’re going to get until you play the game.


That’s why haters of preseason polls should be encouraged by the College Football Playoff. The coaches poll and the AP poll, which will be released Aug. 17, have nothing to do with who will play for a national championship this year (and for years to come). Of course, there’s no doubt the voting committee in the College Football Playoff will look at these rankings to get a good jumping-off point, but those committee members don’t release their poll until Oct. 28, and then every Tuesday for five weeks afterward until we get our four-team playoff. It’s a complex system that you can read all about here, but it seems to be the fairest way to choose a champion.


So does that mean college football preseason polls will eventually become obsolete?


Not necessarily.


We as a society love to be able to quantify things and until the poll that actually matters comes out in October, we need a way to distinguish the top teams from the riff-raff. We want to be able to call our team No. 1 even if it might not be the top team in the eyes of the College Football Playoff committee.


And that is where the true mettle of polls such as the coaches and AP will prove their worth.


Perhaps both polls will have Florida State as their No. 1 team, but what if, say, Arkansas, a preseason unranked team, is undefeated as well? According to the NCAA, Arkansas has the nation’s toughest schedule and it plays in what many consider to be the nation’s toughest conference. In the coaches and AP polls, an undefeated Florida State would stay No. 1 because that’s where it started, however, Arkansas could rise to No. 1 in the College Football Playoff because of what it’s achieved regardless of how it was perceived prior to the season.


That’s because, according to the College Football Playoff website, the committee “will emphasize obvious factors like win-loss records, strength of schedule, conference championships won, head-to-head results and results against common opponents.”


With the strength of schedule coming back into play, a team like Florida State, which has the NCAA’s 47th-best schedule, might not be as highly rated in the eyes of the committee because its conference isn’t doing it any favors.


That’s not to say an undefeated Florida State team wouldn’t make the playoff — any team that manages to go undefeated in a major conference should make the playoff — but it might not command the top spot over an undefeated team from a better league.


While all of this is hypothetical, it goes to show that preseason polls could devolve into talking points instead of credible ways to rank teams. And the teams that have good seasons aren’t going to be locked out of a possible national championship because of where they started in the preseason rankings.


- - - - - - -


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!


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/XljyC5

Wake Forest suspends top returning RB Dominique Gibson

Wake Forest’s running game took a hit Thursday when the school announced that running back Dominique Gibson had been indefinitely suspended from the team.


An undisclosed violation of team rules was the only reason given for the discipline.


Gibson was the team’s top returning rusher with 138 yards and a pair of touchdowns. He and senior Orville Reynolds, who returned to running back after spending the past two seasons as a flanker, were in line to either battle for the starting role or become a two-back tandem as Wake Forest tried to resuscitate one of the nation’s more anemic offenses.


Wake Forest ranked 118th nationally in total offense last season and 116th in rushing offense with just 94.1 yards per game. The offense had just two games with more than 124 yards rushing and those games came against Presbyterian and Army. Of the Demon Deacons’ 24 offensive touchdown, 11 came on the ground.


- - - - - - -


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!


And don’t forget to keep up with all of Graham’s thoughts, witty comments and college football discussions on Facebook






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1pJoIyl

Nationals get infield help, acquire Asdrubal Cabrera in trade with Indians

The Washington Nationals added Asdrubal Cabrera from the Cleveland Indians in a trade Thursday afternoon, as the Nats continue to shuffle their infield.


Cabrera played shortstop for the Indians, but figures to see time at second base for in Washington, which currently leads the NL East by a game and a half over the Atlanta Braves. He's in the last year of a three-year, $21 million contract, so it's a quick late-season rental for the Nats as they race toward October.


The Nats gave up Zach Walters, a 24-year-old shortstop who got a brief appearance in the big leagues this season, but only hit .205 in 43 plate appearances. He's not a "top prospect," but a young player with many years of team control left. He hit .300 in Triple-A this season with 15 homers and 48 RBIs.


Cabrera has hit .246/.305/.386 this season with nine homers and 40 RBIs. He had a great 2011, hitting 25 homers and driving in 92 runs, but hasn't been able to match that production since. With Nats third baseman Ryan Zimmerman hurt, and the team shifting second baseman Anthony Rendon to third, there's a hole at second where Cabrera will fit. He played some second base early in his career with the Indians. Ian Desmond is Washington's every day shortstop.


While Cabrera hasn't been especially potent with his bat, he represents an upgrade over second baseman Danny Espinosa, who is hitting just .217.


More MLB coverage from Yahoo Sports:



- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1n7Xvnf

Auburn paints Philip Lutzenkirchen's number in practice field end zones (Photo)

As Auburn opens up fall practice on Friday, the program will honor a fallen member of its family.


The official Twitter account of Auburn athletics revealed Thursday that No. 43 has been painted in the end zone on the team’s practice field to honor former tight end Philip Lutzenkirchen, who was killed in a car accident on June 29.



Lutzenkirchen, along with University of Georgia student Joseph Davis, were killed in a single-car crash when Davis, who was driving, failed to stop at a stop sign of a T-intersection. The car then crossed another road and “impacted multiple ditches” before hitting a fence and going airborne. Lutzenkirchen, who was not wearing a seatbelt, was ejected from the vehicle.


Lutzenkirchen was an all-SEC tight end for the Tigers who holds the program’s all-time record for touchdown catches in a career for a tight end. He caught three game-winning touchdowns in his career, including against Alabama in the 2010 Iron Bowl.


Auburn fans rolled Toomer’s Corner in Lutzenkirchen’s honor the day after the accident. Additionally, Auburn head coach Gus Malzahn and athletic director Jay Jacobs spoke at his memorial in his hometown, Marietta, Ga.


Painting Lutzenkirchen’s number on the field is just one of what is sure will be many ways Auburn honors his memory in the 2014 season and beyond.


For more Auburn news, visit AuburnSports.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1tyZxFq

Oregon's season tickets to feature the scratch-and-sniff scent of burger buns

Do you smell bread in the oven? Possibly. The smell could also be Oregon's 2014 season tickets.


The school known for its flashy uniform combinations is breaking out scented tickets for this season. All season tickets will have a scratch-and-sniff marker that smells like hamburger buns. Seriously.



The hamburger icon is sponsored by Carl's Jr. If you're wondering why it's bun-scented instead of burger-scented, the chain is highlighting its bread and Craig Pintens, Oregon's senior associate athletic director for marketing told Yahoo Sports that "the burger scent doesn't translate real well on scratch-and-sniff."


According to Pintens, the school had been kicking around the idea of scratch-and-sniff tickets for a couple of years. It had discussed tickets based off a scents of Autzen Stadium theme, but since there was no signature smell or a signature smell could be different for each person, the team ultimately went in the direction of food.


And given that it's Oregon, it's only natural that the school would try something like this. While it's certainly an out-of-the-box idea and relatively unexpected, it'd be much more unforeseen if a school like Notre Dame or Penn State unveiled scratch-and-sniff tickets.


Each season-ticket has the same burger bun smell. While it was possible to have a different smell on each ticket, the resulting combination of smells wouldn't have been incredibly palatable.


And while people wondered all Thursday morning what scented tickets at other schools could smell like, Stanford used it as an opportunity to boast about consecutve Rose Bowl appearances. The Cardinal have beaten Oregon in each of those seasons too.



- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1tyZt8q

Vin Baker is auctioning off his gold medal from the 2000 Summer Olympics

In 1993, when he was drafted by the Milwaukee Bucks in the years before rookie scale contracts, Vin Baker signed a 10-year agreement with the team. That deal included an opt-out after the sixth season, by which time Baker had made nearly $17.3 million. He then signed a seven-year, $86.7 million contract with the Seattle SuperSonics, though he chose to negotiate an opt-out settlement after five years in order to make himself a free agent, strangely negating the final two years of the deal. The smaller contracts that Baker played on over his final few seasons put his official career earnings at nearly $100 million.


Half of that career was spent disappointing his teams and various fan bases, as Baker struggled with weight issues and an admitted alcohol problem. Though he made four consecutive All-Star teams from 1995 through 1998, Baker’s confidence tailed off in 1997-98 (especially at the free throw line), and his weight ballooned extensively in the lockout months following that campaign.


Baker was still held in high enough regard in 2000 to be awarded a spot on Team USA’s men’s basketball entry at that year’s Summer Olympics. Though the team isn’t as fondly remembered as other recent Olympic outfits, it still earned a gold medal in the tournament.


According to Grey Flannel auctions, via Sports Illustrated, Baker has decided that he doesn’t need his medal any more, and he’s deciding to put it up for auction. From the Gray Flannel description:



The gold-plated silver medal weighs 6.85 oz, is 5mm thick and measures 68mm across. It is attached to a 39” turquoise-blue ribbon embroidered with “SYDNEY 2000” in silver. The medal features a design by Australian designer Wojciech Pietranik; it depicts Nike, the Greek goddess of victory, seated above the stadium and chariot along with “XXVII OLYMPIAD SYDNEY 2000”. This translates to “Games of the 27th Olympiad Sydney 2000”. The artist’s initials “WP” appear at the bottom of the design in relief. The verso of the medal features the Olympic rings along with an image of the Sydney Opera House and an Olympic torch. “BASKETBALL” and “MEN” have been engraved along the perimeter. The medal is in MINT condition and comes in a white leather case.



The minimum bid starts at $35,000, and the auction runs until August 20.


Whether or not Baker is selling the medal because of financial constraints is anyone’s guess, but we can at least try to make an educated one. Baker still has lawsuits pending against his former business advisers, seeking eight figures’ worth of reimbursement from one Daniel Brodeur. From the Hartford Courant in 2012:



According to the lawsuit filed earlier this month in Superior Court in Middletown, Baker says Brodeur and the accounting firm "advanced their own interests to the detriment of mine, and breached their fiduciary responsibilities, obligations, and duties imposed on them by engaging in … dishonest, disloyal and immoral conduct."




According to Baker's application for prejudgment remedy, Baker says that "virtually all of my earnings were spent and/or my investments lost all or nearly all of their value, such that my home in Durham was foreclosed and I was forced to liquidate substantial assets for little or no value, leaving me without resources to meet my financial obligations and living expenses."




Brodeur on Thursday called Baker's allegations "unfounded." Brodeur said he worked closely with Baker's parents throughout the years and that his firm was "just one aspect" of Baker's financial team.




"He had other business advisors," Brodeur said.



Vin Baker, in a more recent New York Daily News interview, professed that his career earnings were actually around $105 million, which gives us further insight into the uncounted amount he received in his 2004 buyout. In that same interview, Brodeur is quoted as saying that Baker lost “in the neighborhood of $16 to $17 million” in his settlement with the Boston Celtics, a pretty steep price to pay for wanting to work for another team.


That decision may have been clouded by drinking. As of the Daily News interview from 2013, Baker claims to have been sober for two years, and it features him doing volunteer work at his local church, while studying to get a master’s degree in divinity at a theological school in Manhattan.


It’s unclear as to how much Baker’s medal will fetch. It certainly is a rare artifact, but a memento from a somewhat-disgraced player working on a rather unloved Dream Team entry (Saturday Night Live even produced a parody ad to mock the team’s endless mean-mugging) isn’t exactly the hottest buy around.


Which is a shame. We hope things turn up for Baker, starting with this auction.


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1oRvXbf

DTotD: Brawl between Mexico and Northern Ireland U-20s includes nasty kick to the head


A Milk Cup match between Mexico and Northern Ireland's U-20 squads devolved into a vicious brawl two second-half brawls that saw four players sent off. During one of the fights, a Mexico player kicked a Northern Ireland player in the head.


Northern Ireland won the match 2-1 and a total of four players were sent off as a result of the violence — three from Mexico and one from the winning side. After the match, Northern Ireland coach Stephen Craigan expressed his displeasure with the day's opponents. From the BBC:



"It was not nice. There were young kids here from around the world. They were here to watch a football match; they do not expect to see that. Mexico did it last year - they had a man sent off for punching. They have a history of it. I have to be careful what I say, but I would like to think Mexico will not be back at the Milk Cup."



The Mexican FA later apologized for the brawls and the four players sent off were suspended by tournament organizers.


This has been the Dirty Tackle of the Day: a chronicling of unfortunate events.


Video via 101GG


- - - - - - -


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






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1ADJd85

Violet Palmer, NBA's first female referee, publicly announces she is gay, will marry partner Friday

Violet Palmer came into the NBA as something of a trailblazer and pioneer, as she and Dee Kantner became the league's first ever female referees upon their arrival in 1997. Nine years later, she became the first woman ever to officiate a playoff game, refereeing Game 2 of the 2006 first-round series between the Indiana Pacers and New Jersey Nets. Now, Palmer has added another historic "first" to her résumé, becoming the NBA's first ever openly gay referee.


Palmer will marry her longtime partner, hair stylist Tanya Stine, in Los Angeles this coming Friday, a little over five months after the now-Brooklyn Nets signed Jason Collins, making him the first openly gay active player in league history. In advance of the impending nuptials, the veteran NBA referee publicly came out as a lesbian in an interview with Dan Gelston of the Associated Press, saying that her officiating colleagues have known since 2007, but that she now feels it's time to share the information with the world:


"This is actually the big formal coming out," Palmer said. "We are saying to the world, to everyone, here's my wife of 20 years. This is the big coming out." [...]

Palmer said she had been open about her sexual orientation in the NBA for years. There was never a formal public coming out because she didn't want it to overshadow her work blowing the whistle on every star from Shaq to Kobe to LeBron.

"I always wanted people to just look at my work," she said in a phone interview. "Not look at my personal life, not look at my sexual preference. That doesn't matter. I just wanted people to say, 'Wow, she is a pretty damn good referee.'"

As it is with any ref, of course, whether people say that or not is a matter of some debate; Steve Nash, for one, once famously disagreed with Palmer's view on matters. And as it is with any groundbreaking individual standing at the nexus of athletics, homosexuality and social mores, there will be those who take a negative, or more negative, view of Palmer after her announcement than they did before so, even if such "knuckleheads" are relatively few and far between.


But Palmer is made of stern enough to withstand such treatment, thanks to both her upbringing (as she told espnW's Johnette Howard in response to concerns that a female ref would wilt amid the coarse language of players and coaches, "I'm from Compton. I've heard worse in the streets") and 17 years of taking the best and worst that the loudest mouths in the world's biggest league can dig out. More than that, though, as Palmer — who turned 50 on July 20 — told Gelston of the AP, she just felt it was time.


"I think you just get to a certain point in your life where you go, you know what, it doesn't matter anymore. I think that's where I am at that point in my life."

Palmer and Stine always joked they would marry if they celebrated 20 years together. Once gay marriage was legalized in California — and with that Labor Day weekend anniversary date on the horizon — the couple realized it was time to get hitched. They'll marry in front of about 130 guests, including several of Palmer's fellow NBA referees.

She's feeling the kind of nerves she's been able to steel herself from when working in front of players, coaches and 20,000 screaming fans.

"It's a different feeling. This is one of kind of making my life and family complete," Palmer said.

It sounds like a pretty cool feeling for Palmer, Stine and their three daughters. In three months' time, we'll be back to taking Palmer to task for missed calls, whistles blown a half-second too early or too late, or free throws given on shots taken 90 feet from the rim. For now, though, a tip of the cap seems to be all that's in order. Well, that and congratulations to the long-tenured trailblazing zebra and her longtime partner.



- - - - - - -


Dan Devine is an editor for Ball Don't Lie on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at devine@yahoo-inc.com or follow him on Twitter!



Stay connected with Ball Don't Lie on Twitter @YahooBDL, "Like" BDL on Facebook and follow BDL's Tumblr for year-round NBA talk, jokes and more.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1oRcVBD

Florida State is tops in preseason Coaches Poll ahead of Alabama and Oklahoma

Florida State is starting 2014 where it ended the 2013 season: atop the Coaches Poll.


The 2014 preseason Amway Coaches Poll was released on Wednesday and the Seminoles are No. 1 ahead of Alabama and Oklahoma, last year's participants in the Sugar Bowl. Oregon is No. 4 while the team that FSU beat in the BCS Championship Game, Auburn, is No. 5.


Florida State garnered the vast majority of first-place votes with 56 of the 62 available. Oklahoma received 3, while No. 6 Ohio State, Oregon and No. 9 South Carolina each received one. It's the first time since 2009 that Alabama has not received a first-place vote in the preseason Coaches Poll.


In what's likely a mere coincidence, or a sign that college football coaches can't accurately predict a season, the top team in the preseason poll hasn't ended the year in the top spot for 10 seasons.


The SEC has three teams in the top 10 and seven teams in the top 25, the most of any conference. However, it's curious why Texas A&M is the final SEC team in the poll. A&M needs to replace Johnny Manziel and have a vastly improved defense to live up to this ranking. Oh, and should we mention that the Aggies also have to face other teams in the preseason top 25 including road games at No. 9 South Carolina, No. 2 Alabama and No. 5 Auburn.


One of the SEC teams not ranked is Missouri, who is first among all other teams receiving votes. Mizzou is behind not only Texas A&M, but Texas, which is somehow ranked 24th. (Though Missouri fans should take heart. If A&M loses its season-opener to South Carolina and the Tigers beat South Dakota State, Missouri will be in the rankings for week 2.)


The Pac-12 has six teams in the top 25, including UCLA in the top 10. The Big 12 and Big 10 have four apiece while Clemson and North Carolina are the two other ACC teams in the poll. Notre Dame is the lone independent.


The full poll is below. What stands out to you? If we were the sole deciders of the poll, we'd move Oklahoma down a couple spots and do the same with Georgia. In addition to removing Texas A&M from the ballot, we'd also leave off Texas.


1. Florida State, 1543 (56)

2. Alabama, 1455

3. Oklahoma, 1382 (3)

4. Oregon, 1314 (1)

5. Auburn, 1271

6. Ohio State, 1267 (1)

7. UCLA, 1085

8. Michigan State, 1050

9. South Carolina, 1009

10. Baylor, 965

11. Stanford, 955

12. Georgia, 905

13. LSU, 833

14. Wisconsin, 654

15. Southern Cal, 627

16. Clemson, 535

17. Notre Dame, 509

18. Arizona State, 358

19. Ole Miss, 346

20. Texas A&M, 266

21. Kansas State, 257

22. Nebraska, 228

23. North Carolina, 175

24. Texas, 143

25. Washington, 142

Others receiving votes: Missouri, Florida, Central Florida, Mississippi State, Oklahoma State


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1qsUSQc

MLB Network duped by fake trade

With the trading deadline counting down Thursday, the MLB Network briefly fell for a fake story published on Twitter about the Tampa Bay Rays trading David Price and Ben Zobrist to the Detroit Tigers. The worst part: Ken Rosenthal, the reporter being used in the fake tweet, was in the studio as host Matt Yallof read the bogus trade on the air.



There's a line in "Anchorman" befitting of this moment: "Ron Burgundy will read anything that is put on that teleprompter. Anything!"


As the network went to commercial, the tweet was dismissed as fake, and the real Ken Rosenthal (who also reports for Fox Sports), took to Twitter to stop the disinformation from spreading:



Hey, tell that to your own network!


Rosenthal also showed up on TV just to prove the real guy was out there, working on vetting actual rumors and not faking stories:



A likely story. In the meantime, don't fall for fake Twitter accounts like @KenRosenthai or @KenRosentall or @KenRosenthralled.


More MLB coverage at Yahoo Sports:





- - - - - - -


David Brown is an editor for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at rdbrown@yahoo-inc.com and follow him on Twitter!


Follow @AnswerDave






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1nNJgch

Report: Oklahoma has not filed waiver request for Dorial Green-Beckham, waiting on 'paperwork' from Mizzou

When the news came out that former Missouri wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham was transferring to Oklahoma, it was also reported that Oklahoma intended to pursue a waiver that would grant the star wideout immediate eligibility to suit up for the Sooners, instead of sitting out for a season per normal transfer rules.


At Big 12 Media Days, Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops said that the program was awaiting word from the NCAA on Green-Beckham’s status, but Guerin Emig of the Tulsa World reported Thursday that the school has not yet been able to file the waiver request.


Per Emig, the Sooners are waiting on “one last bit of paperwork from Missouri.” Emig also notes that Mizzou has been generally “cooperative” with Green-Beckham’s transfer to this point, but now OU needs more from the Tigers, and it needs more quickly.


Since he was booted from Mizzou following multiple drug-related arrests and a “physical altercation” where he allegedly pushed a female, Green-Beckham’s appeal case being approved doesn’t seem likely in the first place. But any hopes of having him for the season opener – which is just a month away – depends on the Sooners filing an appeal in a timely matter.


At this point, a decision from the NCAA might not even come until several games have already been played. Green-Beckham potentially joining Oklahoma’s offense would provide an immense boost for the Sooners, a team that is considered a favorite to compete in the first four-team College Football Playoff.


The 6-foot-6. 225-pound Green-Beckham was the top-rated recruit in the nation in the 2012 class. In two seasons with Missouri, he caught 87 passes for 1,278 yards and 17 touchdowns.


If Green-Beckham does have to sit out in 2014, there is always the chance he enters the NFL draft without ever playing a down for the Sooners, too.


This is definitely a situation to keep an eye on moving forward.


For more Oklahoma news, visit SoonerScoop.com.


- - - - - - -


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







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1nNJctc

Iowa's free tuition program suspended because of state raffle law concerns

Iowa's offer of free tuition to five students who bought football season tickets may be too good to be true.


The program was suspended Wednesday evening as it's unclear if the promotion complies with state raffle laws.


"I have suspended the promotion temporarily as we determine how to make sure that this promotion is in complete compliance," Iowa athletic director Gary Barta said in a statement. "In the end, our goal is to do everything possible to make sure that the student experience at Hawkeye football games is as fun and exciting as possible."


The deadline for students to purchase season tickets was Friday, and in an attempt to boost sales, the school said five students who purchased season tickets would be eligible to win free tuition.


From the Des Moines Register:



David Werning, spokesman for the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals, said Wednesday that the promotion raised "a lot of issues." Werning said the university has a license to hold gambling contests as a "social and charitable" organization. However, it must abide by laws regulating raffles, he said.




For one thing, state law says charitable raffle tickets may only be bought with cash, Werning said. They may not be purchased with credit cards.



The credit card issue may be a big hurdle, as many ticket sales are through Iowa's online ticketing system.


There's another compliance issue as well. Iowa has six and seven-game ticket packages that obviously have different price points. According to Iowa state law, all entries must be the same price.


Over the past two seasons, Iowa's student ticket base has fallen from 10,000 to 7,000. In addition to the free tuition promotion, the school also said it would add special gameday events for students.


For more Iowa news, visit Hawkeye Report.


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1pIIFoZ

Texas Tech fans take out full-page ad to ask Tech pay Leach his 2009 salary

Some Texas Tech fans believe former coach Mike Leach still needs to be paid approximately $2 million from Texas Tech.


On Wednesday, anonymous Texas Tech fans took out a full-page ad in the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal to demand that Tech pay Leach the balance of his 2009 salary.


Leach, now the coach of Washington State, was fired from Texas Tech in 2009 after the Adam James kerfuffle in which the son of former SMU player Craig James claimed to have been locked in an electrical closet after suffering a concussion while Leach said he was not treated wrongly.


Earlier that season, Leach had signed a new five-year contract with the school worth $12.7 million. After Leach's termination, the school had paid him $300,000, which was his base salary.


Leach was hired as coach of Washington State in 2012 and last year the Cougars went to the New Mexico Bowl. As part of the letter, those responsible for it say that it "would help to finally erase any negatives associated with the University and would bring fans, alumni, and the people of Lubbock and the state firmly behind this new leadership of Texas Tech."


Here's what the ad says in full:


Chancellor Robert Duncan, President Duane Nellis, and Texas Tech Regents Mickey long, Nancy Neal, John Walker, Larry Anders, Debbie Montford, John Steinmetz, John Esparaza, Rick Francis, and Tim Lancaster


The purpose of this letter is to respectfully request that the Chancellor, the President and the Regents of Texas Tech University consider the full payment of the salary for 2009 to Mike Leach. Leach was paid $300,000 of the $2.6 million 2009 salary which includes the $800,000 bonus that would have been due him for his ten-year career.


Texas Tech has a new Chancellor, four new regents, a new football coach, athletic director, and president; all who were not involved in the firing of Mike Leach. This request is not being made just because it is the right thing to do. This payment for 2009 to Leach would help to finally erase any negatives associated with the University and would bring fans, alumni, and the people of Lubbock and the state firmly behind this new leadership of Texas Tech.


Regardless of the opinion that the firing was or was not justified, the majority of fans and citizens believe this situation was handled poorly.


A previous basketball coach who was accused of player mistreatment over an extended period of time was paid over $486,000 as a buy-out for time left on his contract; time that he did not even work. Leach fulfilled all but thirty-six hours of his contact. It is the belief of this group that had there been a basis for the firing before the bowl game, there would have been a basis after the bowl game when the ten-year contact would have been completed.


The courts never decided for either party. The courts decided to uphold sovereign immunity which prevented Leach from having his case heard. Nevertheless, the truth from Adam and Craig James came out in the March 2010 depositions as follows:


Q. Did Leach ever tell you “I don’t believe you have a concussion”?


A. No, sir, he didn’t.


Q. You weren’t locked in an electrical closet for three hours, were you?


A. No.


Craig James emailed Kent Hance claiming his son was forced to stand for three hours in the cold without sitting.


Q. When you wrote this email of 12/26, you did not believe Adam had been confined to the electrical closet for a total of three hours, fair?


A. Yes.


Texas has pride in honest and integrity. Our word is our bond. Texas Tech signed a contract with Mike Leach and up to this point has refused to fulfill this contract.


Let’s do the right thing, the honorable thing.


Don’t hide behind sovereign immunity.


Pay Mike Leach his entire salary for 2009.


(Signed)


Alumni and fans of Texas Tech University


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1k9eWJl

2014 season preview: Five games to watch in week 9

The college football offseason is long and arduous, but its end is almost in sight. We’re going to take a look at five games you have to look forward to for every weekend of the season. (This is also a handy guide to decide how to RSVP for any autumn weddings.)


All times are Eastern and all games are played on Saturday unless otherwise noted.


These games take place the weekend of October 25. This is also not a particularly compelling week, so if you need a Saturday off, perhaps consider this one.


Previously: Week One (August 30) ~ Week Two (September 6) ~ Week Three (September 13) ~ Week Four (September 20) ~ Week Five (September 27) ~ Week Six (October 4) ~ Week Seven (October 11) ~ Week Eight (October 18)


Michigan at Michigan State (TBD)


Despite their supposed “little brother” standing in this rivalry, Sparty has won five of the last six and completed a near-perfect immolation of the Wolverine offense last year, sacking them seven times and holding them to -48 (yes, that’s negative 48) yards rushing in a 29-6 victory. Due in no small part to that game, Michigan has swapped out offensive coordinators, bringing Doug Nussmeier in from Alabama to replace Al Borges’. (Nussmeier was also quarterback coach for Michigan State from 2003 to 2005.) Michigan loses top receiver Jeremy Gallon but brings in five-star freshman Drake Harris at wideout, and with the Michigan State defense losing six starters (including stars Denicos Allen, Max Bullough and Darqueze Dennard) there might be some holes to exploit. The imperative word there is “might,” as defensive coordinator Pat Narduzzi has put together a system that plugs in three and four-star talent and churns out five-star results (top-six defensive efficiency the last three years). This is the first in a Michigan/Michigan State/Ohio State round robin to decide the fate of the Big Ten East. It might not be pretty but it will be fun.


Ole Miss at LSU (TBD)


We’ve talked a bit in this series about teams who look good in a vacuum until you see the schedule they have to play. The Rebels are one of those teams, but they’re blessed with relatively light crossover games (they play Vanderbilt and Tennessee from the East, missing Georgia and South Carolina) and home games against Alabama and Auburn. This is their most formidable road test, a possible night game in Death Valley against an LSU team that will have likely found a quarterback (sophomores Anthony Jennings and Brandon Harris were neck-and-neck throughout the spring) to go with its veteran offensive line and deep well of talent at tailback. Hugh Freeze has collected talent and wins, but he’ll need to put some sort of dent into the Alabama/Auburn/LSU triumvirate if he wants a shot at the division crown.


Auburn receiver D'haquille Williams. (John Reed/USA TODAY Sports) South Carolina at Auburn (TBD)


The SEC East may be decided by how the two top contenders fare against the Tigers, who travel to Georgia in November after this date with the Gamecocks. Auburn has won seven in a row in the series, including Cam Newton’s 56-17 drubbing in the 2010 SEC title game. In his coaching history, this will be the first time Gus Malzahn returns his starting quarterback, allowing him to teach Nick Marshall even more wrinkles in his spread attack. Another benefit for Marshall will be the addition of JUCO transfer D’Haquille Williams, a 6’2”, 216-pound wide receiver who played very well in the spring. South Carolina is riding three consecutive 11-2 seasons, but is dealing with issues in getting their latest recruiting class into the fold. South Carolina will be coming off a bye and a home date with Fuman while Auburn is coming off a bye.


Miami (FL) at Virginia Tech (7:30 p.m., Thursday)


The media voted the Hurricanes as the Coastal favorite, but Virginia Tech has represented that division in five of the nine ACC title games. Also working against Al Golden and Miami is the fact they’ve never won the division and need to find a quarterback after fifth-year senior Ryan Williams went down with an ACL injury in April. (Williams is planning on a late September return, but that seems like a best-case scenario.) Other options include BYU transfer Jake Heaps (the former five-star recruit and early favorite), redshirt freshman Kevin Olsen (who started the spring game), sophomore Gray Crow (who backed him up) and true freshman Brad Kaaya. Texas Tech transfer Michael Brewer is the likely replacement for departed Hokie quarterback Logan Thomas, but Brendan Motley had a strong spring and senior Mark Leal was the backup last season. They’ve alternated victories the last three years, all coming by double digits, including Virginia Tech’s 42-24 win in south Florida last year.


Arizona State at Washington


Two teams projected to be in the second tiers of their respective divisions, neither capable of affording a loss here if they want to compete with the favorites. While Todd Graham returns Taylor Kelly to orchestrate his offense, the Huskies have to replace Keith Price, the second-leading passer in school history. They have a pretty solid option to go with in sophomore Cyler Miles, one of the top dual-threat quarterbacks in his class. (Miles was suspended for the spring after a fight, but has been reinstated.) The PAC-12 is just unrelentingly brutal this season with too many good coaches and too much talent. In all likelihood there won’t be a conference champion as much as a conference survivor.


Other games to consider:


Arkansas State at LA-Lafayette (8:00 p.m., Tuesday)


Weeknight Sun Belt action! The Ragin’ Cajuns are your preseason conference favorite coming off a 9-4 season, league title and New Orleans Bowl win. Arkansas State – runner-up last season after consecutive titles in 2011 and 2012 – moves on to former North Carolina offensive coordinator Blake Anderson to run the show, their fifth head coach in as many seasons (Steve Roberts, Hugh Freeze, Gus Malzahn and Bryan Harsin, previously).


BYU at Boise State (9:00 p.m., Friday)


When BYU went independent in football, they needed a few big name schools to step up and stabilize the schedule. The Broncos obliged, and the two teams will play through 2023. The first game in their series was a profoundly weird 7-6 Boise win in 2012, while the Cougars took round two 37-20 last season.


Maryland at Wisconsin (12:00 p.m.)


Maryland’s been devastated by injuries the last two years, but those tribulations have allowed them to establish some nice depth in addition to their seven returning starters. Wisconsin is a conference favorite, coming off a bye and playing on homecoming, but as I’ve said in previous Terp discussions, they have a thrower’s chance.


Oregon at Cal (in Santa Clara, 10:00 p.m., Friday)


Following a 15-13 escape in 2010, Oregon has averaged 52.3 points per game in their last three against the Bears. The game is being played at Levi’s Stadium, new home of the 49ers and PAC-12 championship game.


USC at Utah (TBD)


A bit of a trap game for the Trojans. The Utes took down Stanford at home last year and return their leading passer, rusher and receiver. USC won 19-3 last year in the Coliseum.


Ohio State at Penn State (8:00 p.m.)


The Buckeyes cruised 63-14 last year, but it’s a night game at Beaver Stadium and if nothing else you can expect lots of fans, white shirts and “Zombie Nation.”


Texas at Kansas State (TBD)


Two teams projected in the center of the Big 12, this comes in the middle of a brutal stretch for the Wildcats (at Oklahoma, Texas, Oklahoma State, at TCU). The Horns won last year, but Kansas State has dominated this series since the late 90s, winning seven of ten since the two became conference mates.


Oregon State at Stanford (TBD)


The Cardinal needed a goal line stand to escape Corvallis with a win last year and had to come back from a 23-14 second half deficit to prevail 27-23 two years ago. This is homecoming for Stanford, a brief home respite between trips to Arizona State and Oregon.






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/WPeyFN

Donald Trump would sell casino holdings if he wins Buffalo Bills bidding: report

Donald Trump would sell his casinos if his bid to purchase the Buffalo Bills goes through, according to a new report in the New York Post.


Trump has offered $1 billion-plus to purchase the team, which went up for sale after owner Ralph Wilson Jr. died in June. If indeed he does win the bid, and there's serious doubt about whether he'll even be in the hunt, he apparently will sell his remaining stake in his casinos. The NFL's anti-gambling policy could mean that Trump would have a more difficult time getting approval, even though he only owns common stock in the casinos and has no executive authority.


Trump is one of three bidders on the team. Another is headed by Buffalo Sabres owner Terry Pegula, while a third includes Jon Bon Jovi. (Here's a helpful link to Bon Jovi's greatest hits for all your "Livin' on a Prayer"/"Bad Medicine" pun needs.)


Pegula's bid is approximately $1.3 billion, while the Bon Jovi bid could be as high as $1.2 billion. Approximately 15 groups expressed interest in bidding, but only the three bids came in by the Tuesday deadline. The Post reported that the Bills may be interested in extending the deadline because of the relative lack of bids.


Trump and Pegula would likely keep the team in Buffalo, while the Bon Jovi group would likely move the team to Toronto. Even so, Trump is not optimistic about his odds to win the team, "I would say the chances are very, very unlikely, because I'm not going to do something totally stupid," he said. "Maybe just a little bit stupid, but not totally stupid."


The team was valued by Forbes at $870 million, but the billion-plus price tag is not surprising because of the scarcity of NFL teams for sale. The prospective new owner could be announced before the start of the season, and could be voted on by other owners by midseason.


____

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.







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1s6Sl07

Donald Trump would sell casinos to pay for Buffalo Bills purchase: report

Donald Trump would sell his casinos if his bid to purchase the Buffalo Bills goes through, according to a new report in the New York Post.


Trump has offered $1 billion-plus to purchase the team, which went up for sale after owner Ralph Wilson Jr. died in June. If indeed he does win the bid, and there's serious doubt about whether he'll even be in the hunt, he apparently will sell his remaining stake in his casinos.


Trump is one of three bidders on the team. Another is headed by Buffalo Sabres owner Terry Pegula, while a third includes Jon Bon Jovi. (Here's a helpful link to Bon Jovi's greatest hits for all your "Livin' on a Prayer"/"Bad Medicine" pun needs.)


Pegula's bid is approximately $1.3 billion, while the Bon Jovi bid could be as high as $1.2 billion. Approximately 15 groups expressed interest in bidding, but only the three bids came in by the Tuesday deadline. The Post reported that the Bills may be interested in extending the deadline because of the relative lack of bids.


Trump and Pegula would likely keep the team in Buffalo, while the Bon Jovi group would likely move the team to Toronto. Even so, Trump is not optimistic about his odds to win the team, "I would say the chances are very, very unlikely, because I'm not going to do something totally stupid," he said. "Maybe just a little bit stupid, but not totally stupid."


The team was valued by Forbes at $870 million, but the billion-plus price tag is not surprising because of the scarcity of NFL teams for sale. The prospective new owner could be announced before the start of the season, and could be voted on by other owners by midseason.


____

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.







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1xEPdJy

Juggernaut Index, No. 19: The Houston Texans

After a shockingly poor season, notable for injuries and endless pick-sixes, regime change has come to Houston. Veteran quarterback Matt Schaub played his way out of town, and veteran head coach Gary Kubiak couldn't cling to his job during a two-win campaign. This season, Ryan Fitzpatrick will be at the controls of Bill O'Brien's offense. The Texans aren't likely to light up scoreboards in 2014, but the team might just be good enough on defense to reach eight wins regardless.


Of course we don't actually care about real-life winning and losing around here. In this space, we're primarily concerned with individual fantasy potential. Houston has a pair of consensus top-50 players — the usual suspects, Arian and Andre — but no one else on this roster projects as a must-own fantasy asset, aside from the D/ST.


[Smack talk season is back at Yahoo Sports: Sign up and play free Fantasy Football!]


Foster is returning from back surgery to address a herniated disc, plus he's dealt with a minor hamstring tweaking early in camp. But he's believed to be fully functional at the moment, prepared for a full workload in 2014. The man has been hyping himself during the offseason...


"I can tell you the surgery wasn't as major as it sounded," said Foster. "That's why I rebounded so quickly. I also worked my ass off. I'm expecting to do bigger things and bounce back."


...so he really doesn't need an additional boost from fantasy experts.


Foster was running well last season before he hit IR (4.5 YPC), and his receiving PPR credentials are well established (159 REC, 2010-12). If all goes according to plan, he's in line for a significant workload under O'Brien, and he'll own the passing-down work. Based on the player's history and his projected workload (300-plus touches), it's tough not to view him as a late-first round talent. I'm on board. Andre Brown should really only be of interest to handcuffers. Foster has said plenty of nice things about O'Brien's offense (here's a taste), so no worries or friction there.


Arian Foster, back in the game (AP Photo/Patric Schneider) For a few minutes there during the first round of the NFL draft, it appeared Houston was positioned to land both Jadeveon Clowney — the top overall player on most boards — and Teddy Bridgewater, arguably the most impressive quarterback in the class of 2014. Had the Texans pulled it off ... well, wow. That would've been an astonishing, franchise-changing haul. Alas, the Vikes leapfrogged Houston and snagged Bridgewater with the final pick of Round 1. So Fitzpatrick it is, at least for now. The Texans drafted Pitt QB Tom Savage in the fourth round, but he won't challenge for early-season snaps. (Also, "Tom Savage" seems like a fake name. Can't be trusted. Let's get the Roto Arcade investigative team on this.)


Fitzpatrick has been a streaky, scattershot passer throughout his pro career, completing just 59.8 percent of his throws, tossing nearly as many picks (93) as touchdowns (106). He's also given us a few legendary garbage-time performances, and for that the fantasy community is grateful. But we're not drafting him this year except in leagues of unusual size/shape. Fitz should have bye-week appeal, nothing more. He's not the prototype QB for any system.


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


Houston's receiving corps is a familiar and talented group, led by 33-year-old Andre Johnson. AJ gave us all a scare when it seemed as if a trade was a strong possibility, but he's now in camp, saying conciliatory things. Johnson has caught over 100 balls in four of the past six seasons, including 2012 and 2013, and he's ranked as a top-12 fantasy wideout in five of the last six years. When healthy, he's a monster — AJ topped 1,400 receiving yards last season, with a rogues gallery of QBs (Schaub, Keenum, Yates). He slips to the late-fourth round in many drafts, where he's an obvious steal. A common criticism of Johnson is his lack of career receiving TDs — his single-season high is nine — but that's not a result of some inherent flaw with the player. AJ clearly has the skill set and requisite size to be a terrifying red-zone weapon, but his team's offense in the Kubiak era was generally predictable and Foster-focused.


DeAndre Hopkins enters his second pro season, learning another new offense, coming off a promising first year (52-802-2). Hopkins has good size, strong hands, physicality and advanced skills. He's capable of highlight plays , and he only recorded one dropped-pass on 91 targets as a rookie. It wouldn't be much of a surprise if he topped 900 receiving yards in year two, with a modest uptick in TDs. He should find a place on fantasy rosters in most leagues, though not in early-season starting lineups.


Beyond Johnson and Hopkins, there really aren't any names on Houston's wide receiver depth chart that fantasy owners need to target. (Mike Thomas? Nope, not in standard leagues.) This team figures to roll with multiple tight ends fairly often, giving Garrett Graham, Ryan Griffin and Iowa rookie CJ Fiedorowicz opportunities to produce. Of the trio, Graham is the most interesting for 2014, based on presumed usage...



...with Fiedorowicz as a plausible dynasty target. We need to resist the temptation to make Pats comps with this group, however, despite O'Brien's New England ties. There are no Gronks here, no Hernandez-types. In a typical redraft league, with only 10 or 12 teams, you probably aren't going to mess with Houston's collection of tight ends.


The Texans defense should be the backbone of the team, a fearsome group if the key pieces remain healthy. JJ Watt is as good as it gets — the man has delivered 31.0 sacks over the past two seasons — Clowney is beastly (dominating in camp), and Brian Cushing should be good to go for the opener. Houston gets a seemingly friendly September schedule, too, opening with Washington, Oakland, the Giants and Buffalo. Draft this D/ST and enjoy.



2013 team stats: 17.3 PPG (NFL rank 31), 261.4 pass YPG (15), 19 pass TDs (25), 108.9 rush YPG (20), 25.9 rush attempts per game (22), 39.6 pass attempts per game (5)



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






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1xEP1dc

Northwestern's Pat Fitzgerald wants to overhaul the recruiting process

Pat Fitzgerald wants to get rid of the current recruiting system.


It's been overshadowed by players' rights discussions, but recruiting reform has been a big topic of the 2014 offseason. Some coaches want to move to a system similar to basketball with an early signing period while others are against it. Currently, players who have made verbal commitments to schools can't sign with their school of choice until National Signing Day.


Fitzgerald thinks that process is archaic.


"I'd blow it up and start over," Fitzgerald said at Big Ten media days (via WildcatReport.com). "I think it's really antiquated. Put integrity back in it."


How would Fitzgerald put integrity back in the recruiting process? Here's his plan, courtesy of Wildcat Report:



Fitzgerald proposes doing away with offers and verbal commitments, too. In his system, once a school makes "a legitimate scholarship offer," the prospect is free to sign it after a 48-hour "cooling off period," which, in Fitzgerald's mind, would ensure that college coaches don't put pressure or "strong-arm kids" to sign.




Fitzgerald would then employ better technology to improve the process of signing a national letter of intent. The coach would "click the mouse" to send the prospect a .pdf file of the LOI. The prospect signs it, sends it back in, and "we're done." It would all be tracked in a database for everyone to see.




There would be two instances in which a signed LOI could be voided: if the program gets put on probation for NCAA rules violations or the coach who signed him gets fired or leaves for another job.



Northwestern already has 16 commitments for the 2015 recruiting class according to Rivals, even though according to NCAA rules, a scholarship can't formally be offered until Aug. 1 of a recruit's senior year. (Which is Friday.)


"We technically, in the eyes of the NCAA, have not offered a kid a scholarship yet because we can't do it until August 1," Fitzgerald said. "And we have double-digit commitments. Give me a break. What are we doing? What are we doing here? It's a joke.


"It's an antiquated system. It needs to be looked at. It needs to be evaluated. What's best for the student athletes and their families, what's best for us so that we have some balance in our lives, and obviously what's best to protect the schools. But get rid of the nonsense that goes on. It's a bunch of nonsense, on both sides."


Even as Fitzgerald may want to get rid of verbal commitments altogether and considers the current recruiting system a bunch of nonsense, he's still sticking to his thoughts that a verbal commitment is like an engagement. Fitzgerald used the relationship analogy again to describe his current recruiting philosophy, saying that if players want to date someone else (look at other schools while being verbally committed) "there is no more getting married."


And while he's not a fan of the recruiting process because it hasn't changed since he was a player, neither has the relationship between schools and scholarship players. And Fitzgerald didn't take a pro-change stance in that debate. As Northwestern's players voted to unionize this spring, Fitzgerald testified against the union movement on behalf of the school.


For more Northwestern news, visit WildcatReport.com.


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1xEH5sC

Extra points will be just a little tougher early in preseason, starting Sunday

You might notice something interesting the first time either the Buffalo Bills or New York Giants score a touchdown in Sunday's Hall Of Fame Game.


The extra points will be just a little harder.


As Pro Football Talk wrote, the NFL is experimenting with the length of extra points, and for Sunday's games as well as the second week of the preseason, when the other 30 teams play games, the NFL will move the ball back from the 2-yard line to the 15-yard line for all attempts.


[ Smack talk season is back at Yahoo Sports: Sign up and play free Fantasy Football!]


Two-point conversions will be declared first, taking the rare fake out of the equation, and will be tried from the standard 2-yard line.


Will this work? Will it reveal much?


Honestly, doubtful. Kicks from 33 yards out are not that much tougher from those from 20 yards. NFL kickers missed only five extra-point attempts last season, and they all 14 combined kicks from 19 yards and in. Heck, they only missed six kicks (out of 242 attempts) inside 29 yards. The number of misses goes up from 30 to 39 yards — 30 misses out of 295 — so we're talking about about a 90-95 percent certainty versus a 99-percent make rate.


That said, this change is coming. Roger Goodell has suggested scrapping the extra point, and others around the league agree with him in theory. We already have goalposts that reach five feet higher, and the NFL could make the extra-point change full time in a season or two if there are enough proponents, and right now the extra point is, as Bill Belichick once so eloquently said, a "non-competitive play."


- - - - - - -


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!






from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/XjuW1e

Former Alabama RB Dee Hart transferring to Colorado State

Dee Hart, a former five-star RB recruit, is transferring from Alabama to Colorado State.


Hart told the Orlando Sentinel of his intentions on Wednesday and will play for former Alabama offensive coordinator Jim McElwain, who is the Rams head coach. Hart, who graduated high school in December 2011, never actually played for McElwain at Alabama, whose first year at Colorado State was in 2012. However, he's undoubtedly familiar with him from the recruiting process.


Hart suffered a knee injury before his first preseason camp at Alabama in 2011 and in 2012 had another one after he caught a punt against Ole Miss. In parts of 2012 and 2013, he had 43 carries for 164 yards. He'll be immediately eligible to play at Colorado State after he graduated from Alabama. Out of high school, Hart was listed as the No. 19 player in the country and the top RB according to Rivals.


It's good news for Colorado State too, as they have a canyon-sized hole in the backfield to fill. Kapri Bibbs ran for 1,741 yards and 30 touchdowns as a sophomore last season and declared for the NFL draft. (He went undrafted.) And Donnell Alexander, the likely successor to Bibbs, was granted his release from the program in March.


Hart will likely compete for playing time with Purdue transfer Dalyn Dawkins.


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1uKw1Ok

Oklahoma K Michael Hunnicutt says he has a simple iPad playbook (Photo)

Welcome to our Dr. Saturday feature titled "Random offseason tweet of the day." With real games still weeks 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.


A kicker's job can be complicated when it comes to technique. But the overall objective is pretty simple, especially when it comes to kicking field goals and extra points.


Oklahoma K Michael Hunnicutt tried to convey that simplicity Wednesday night.



Yes, Hunnicutt has more responsibilities than that. He's got to know all of the fake kick plays Oklahoma has. Need proof? He caught a six-yard touchdown pass off a fake field goal in the third quarter of Oklahoma's game against Oklahoma State in 2013. The touchdown tied the game and Oklahoma went on to win and go to the Sugar Bowl.


But if a kicker can't put the ball through the uprights, a fake is pretty worthless.


- - - - - - -


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!







from Yahoo Sports http://ift.tt/1pIgxCy